You have rescued me from all trouble. Not some trouble. All trouble. Was the psalmist special? Of course he was! He was, most likely, David, King of Israel, a man after God's own heart. But was he more special to God than you or me? The Scriptures tell us, God does not play favorites, and our salvation is not of our own works or merit, but by grace. God loved each person He created enough to send His Son that all might be saved! That being the case, those who come to Him are valued and esteemed equally as sons and daughters. For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. (2 Corinthians 5:21) That's all of us who are His! We can't get any more favored than that!
Back to the "all trouble" thing. IF God has rescued the psalmist and, by extension, each of us from all trouble, why do we have such a difficult time immediately obeying when He tells us to do something? I say "us," because I trust I'm not the only one who has been told by God to do something we didn't want to do. Just a few weeks back, I shared with you an encounter I had which did not go as I would have liked. (Feeling Really Uncomfortable -- Thank God!) I believe God gave me an opportunity to do more than I did, and I know He would have strengthened me and blessed me in my obedience. I also know whatever consequences would have come from that situation; it would have been okay. I would have been rescued from "all trouble." Now, perhaps I would have been late picking our youngest up from school. Perhaps I would have gotten sick from this poor man's cold. Perhaps he would have called me a heretic --or someone else might have heard and challenged me. But obedience to God is always an eternal honor. It is always rewarded eternally.
That being said, there is something I did this past week, something God has been prompting me to do for years. It's something that required money we didn't necessarily have. Did I not think God could provide the money necessary? Not at all! But I wasn't sure if God would. I'm being honest here. There are those times I've recklessly spent money He has given me to steward. Dinners we've ordered out simply because I didn't feel like cooking. Books I've purchased when I could have just borrowed them from the library. The condemnation and shame within me whispers, Reckless. Dishonorable. You wicked, lazy servant. And I wonder why God would now honor me by providing what I need to obey Him. Me thinks the shame implanted by legalism runs deep!
This week, when the Holy Spirit reminded me of the task I was given long ago, I did exactly that! And here's why. Number one, shame is not for the children of God. When we hear the voice of shame coming from the pit of a past without a Savior, we need to speak truth against it. This was me without Jesus, but look what He's done! I am a new creation! Number two, I am His child. I don't always pause to listen, I don't always understand, I am sometimes rebellious in my nature. But He loves me, He hears me, He accepts my sacrifice of repentance (not just remorse, but repentance), and we go on. He won't then tell me to do something for Him for the purpose of hanging me out to dry. See, I told you not to spend that money. Number three, we are rescued from all trouble. If the Holy Spirit has prompted me to do it, provision will come. Or it won't. But just like those other expenditures or times I've even unwittingly overdrawn our bank account; it will be okay. In the grand scheme of things, this is a blip; but obedience to our Master is eternal. Number four, obedience is our way forward, our way of acting in accordance with the newness of life in Christ, our way of celebrating His work and praising Him for His rescue --from all trouble. I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me! (Philippians 4:13) --including obey immediately.