Wrestling and Remembering: Faith Practices for the New Year

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The first habit that people like us do is we wrestle, and by wrestling, I mean we wrestle specifically with God. Now, that seems, depending on the type of church you grew up in, that could seem irreverent, maybe even heretical, somewhere in between. But I believe that this is actually a very biblical concept and lots of history. [00:37:56] (23 seconds)


When the man saw that he could not win... Oh, and sorry, side note, we find out in other ways that this is not a normal mortal man. This is someone who is some kind of heavenly being, an angel. He represents God. So when Jacob is wrestling with this man, he is actually, in essence, like literally in a wrestling match, physically scrapping with God. [00:38:49] (21 seconds)


Moses went back to the Lord and protested. Why have you brought all this trouble on your own people, Lord? Why did you send me? Ever since I came to Pharaoh as your spokesperson, he has been even more brutal to your people. And you have done nothing to rescue them. [00:40:59] (16 seconds)


Yet I want your will to be done, not mine. So we see here that the people like us, people of faith, people who claim to believe God have been doing this thing called wrestling for a long time. So that brings up the question, why? Why do we wrestle? [00:43:52] (20 seconds)


We also wrestle because we feel the pain of the fall. We feel the reality of a good but broken creation and world. We feel the pinch point of that theological truth that just drives us nuts of God is good and this is not. I don't know what this is in your life, but you can probably name it in under half a second. [00:44:20] (19 seconds)


You wrestle because you believe that God is there. If he wasn't there, you wouldn't wrestle. There's no point. Also, not only do you believe he's there, you believe he cares. This is part of our theology. God is there and he cares. And therefore, when you add one more thing here, we believe he can do anything about it. [00:45:32] (19 seconds)


Wrestling is actually an expression of faith saying, I believe that you are real and alive and active. And so I'm going to engage with you as such. So if the first habit of people of faith is wrestling with God, wrestling with God as part of our culture, people like us do things like this. We wrestle with God. [00:54:26] (20 seconds)


Remembering is simply holding onto God when you have reason not to. Remembering is holding onto God when you're stuck in the, and this is not good part. When the pain is so great, when the answers aren't coming, that's when remembering is important. That's what faith is. Faith is not just holding onto God when he's so near and he's talking and you can hear him and everything. [00:55:30] (23 seconds)


Because when we see God work at one point, we believe that if he has worked in the past, then our God, who is outside of time, if he was capable of working in the past, if he is capable of working in our past, he is capable of working in our present, and we assume he will work in our future. [00:56:31] (17 seconds)


In moments of darkness and doubt, physical reminders of God's faithfulness can ground us in his unchanging goodness. We need help remembering, because when the pain and the discomfort hit, the cortisol hits our system, and we go into fight, flight, or freeze, and theologically we forget. [00:59:58] (18 seconds)


Well, these two concepts of wrestling and remembering seem like two very different things. It's interesting that they are actually deeply interconnected and reliant on each other. Wrestling with God often leads to moments worth remembering, and remembering is often the very thing to sustain us through, future wrestling. [01:06:46] (19 seconds)


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