By Rick Warren
It is easy to worship God when things are going great in your
life—when He has provided food, friends, family, health, and happy situations.
But circumstances are not always pleasant. How do you worship God then? What do
you do when God seems a million miles away?
God is Real, No matter How You Feel.
The deepest level of worship is praising God in spite of
pain, thanking God during a trial, trusting Him when tempted, surrendering
while suffering, and loving Him when He seems distant.
Friendships are often tested by separation and silence; you
are divided by physical distance or you are unable to talk. In your friendship
with God, you won’t always feel close to Him.
Philip Yancey has wisely noted, “Any relationship involves
times of closeness and times of distance, and in a relationship with God, no
matter how intimate, the pendulum will swing from one side to the other” That’s
when worship gets difficult.
To mature your friendship, God will test it with periods of
seeming separation—times when it feels as if He has abandoned or forgotten
you—when He feels a million miles away. St. John of the Cross referred to these
days of spiritual dryness, doubt, and estrangement from God as “the dark night
of the soul.” Henri Nouwen called them “the ministry of absence.” A. W. Tozer
called them “the ministry of the night.” Others refer to “the winter of the
heart.”
Besides Jesus, David probably had the closest friendship with
God of anyone. God took pleasure in calling him “a man after My own heart” (1
Samuel 13:14; Acts 13:22).
Yet David frequently complained of God’s apparent absence:
“Lord, why are You standing aloof and far away? Why do You
hide when I need You the most?” (Psalm 10:1 LB).
“Why have You forsaken
me? Why do You remain so distant? Why do You ignore my cries for help?” (Psalm
22:1).
“Why have You abandoned me?”
- Psalm 43:2 see also Psalm 44:23 Psalm 88:14, Psalm 89:49.
Of course, God hadn’t really left David, and He doesn’t leave
you. He has promised repeatedly, “I will never leave you nor forsake you”
(Deuteronomy 31:8; Psalm 37:28; John 14:16–18; Hebrews 13:5).
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