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The sun rose above him as he passed Peniel, and he was limping because of his hip.- Genesis 32:31
Jacob was a man who was a controller. He connived and manipulated
his way to get what he wanted. It was a generational stronghold passed
down through his mother, who encouraged her son to play a trick on his
father, Isaac, by pretending to be Esau. This trick led Isaac to give
the family blessing to Jacob, which meant Jacob would eventually
inherit the land God had promised to Abraham's seed. Jacob also learned
control from his uncle Laban who caused Jacob to work for 14 years to
take Rachel as his lifelong mate. One must ask which was more ugly in
God's sight, the self-centered nature and worldliness of Esau, or the
control and manipulation of Jacob?
Control is a problem for men and women. Many women use sex to
control their husbands. Many men use power and force to control their
wives. Control is at the core of that which is opposite the
cross-self-rule. What delivers us from this fleshly nature of control?
A crisis. Jacob's crisis came when he was faced with the prospect of
meeting a brother who said he would kill him the next time he saw him.
Esau had built his own clan and was about to meet Jacob and his clan in
the middle of the desert. Jacob was fearful, so he retreated. There he
met a messenger from God who wrestled with him. Jacob clung to God and
refused to let go of this angel. It is the place where Jacob was given
a painful but necessary spiritual heart transplant. From that point on,
Jacob would walk with a limp, because God had to dislocate his hip in
order to overcome Jacob's strong will.
For workplace believers, God often has to "dislocate our hip"
through failure and disappointment. Sometimes it is the only way He can
get our attention. Our nature to control and manipulate is so strong
that it takes a catastrophic event to wake us up. Yet God did not
reject Jacob for these character traits. In fact, God blessed him
greatly because He saw something in Jacob that pleased Him. He saw a
humble and contrite heart beneath the cold and manipulative exterior of
Jacob's life, and it was that trait that God needed to develop. He did
this by bringing about the crisis in Jacob's life that led to total
consecration. This event was marked by Jacob getting a new name,
Israel. For the first time, Jacob had a nature change, not just a habit
change. What will God have to do in our lives to gain our complete
consecration to His will and purposes?
"Beware of the Christian leader who does not walk with a limp."
"And the Lord said to Joshua, 'This day I will begin to exalt you in the sight of all Israel, that they may know that, as I was with Moses, so I will be with you.'"(Josh 3:7-8). Joshua had been a faithful number two man under Moses for 40 years. Can you imagine serving one man for 40 years? Now that is faithfulness! Even so, when the time came to pass the mantel to Joshua, God knew he needed to be elevated in the eyes of the people in order for Joshua to accomplish his purpose. That is the purpose for elevation - so that you and I can fulfill our purpose and our mission.
"Then Elimelech, Naomi's husband, died; and she was left, and her two sons. Now they took wives of the women of Moab: the name of the one was Orpah, and the name of the other Ruth. And they dwelt there about ten years. Then both Mahlon and Chilion also died; so the woman survived her two sons and her husband." Ruth 1:3-5 Naomi's life was going well. A great husband. Two fine sons who had two wonderful wives. Then the unthinkable happened. Her husband died. A little time later both her sons die. Her and her daughter-in-laws find themselves in the midst of shattered dreams. This isn't how life was supposed to be.
"While Peter was still thinking about the vision, the Spirit said to him, 'Simon, three men are looking for you. So get up and go downstairs. Do not hesitate to go with them, for I have sent them.'" Acts 10:19-20 Peter had never preached to the Gentiles. In fact, he believed it was against Jewish law to associate with the Gentiles. God needed to change Peter's attitude about this, so God gave Peter a vision that showed him it was permissible to preach to the Gentiles. The Spirit came to Peter and informed him that some men were about to come visit him, and he was to go with them. He went with them, and the Lord did great miracles in the lives of Gentiles through Peter.