March 17, 2010

Please! Don't Put God in a Box!

I've contemplated whether I should do this post or not, but I think I can do it without being too critical of others.  In fact, that is my intent with this post - to not be critical, but to point out what I think is a flaw in a certain train of thinking.

Here goes -

A lady (and a very fine one, indeed, who is a God-fearing, loving person) stated that she didn't immunize her children, because 'you need to trust in God.'  Maybe I'm assuming too much here, but I take the 'trust in God' part to mean that one trusts the Lord to either prevent your children from receiving childhood illness (instead of vaccination) or you 'trust in God' that if your children do acquire said childhood diseases, then you know He will protect them and His will be done.  For some reason though I get the impression that it's more the former than the latter.

On that note - I must say that I have a very strong opinion about such sayings and cliche-type expressions. Why?  Well, let's see, it kind of reminds me of the Quiverfill movement.  'Trust in God' and He'll be sure to give you the amount of children that you should be having.  Well, unfortunately, I feel there is a bit of human interference with that kind of thinking, basically, because men and women share intimacy (which is the human element in all this), then the woman may find that she's 'with child.'  So, my thoughts are this, "Did God tell you to have relations with your husband last night?"  He might have.  "Did God tell you not to use any type of protection while engaging in said activity?"  He might have.  But to me - well, it sounds so much more like 'testing God' than worshiping Him.  The human life is a precious thing.  We do have a 'choice' to have or not to have children. We 'know' that engaging in marital bliss can result in a pregnancy, so we do have a 'choice.'  So, therefore, when people 'give it to God' I often wonder if they do.  Do they pray before having relations with their husbands to see if God approves?  I doubt it, but if you are giving it to God, then you MUST need to consult Him before taking action with your hubby. KWIM?

Anyway, back to the lady who stated that she doesn't immunize her children, because she's given it to God.  Well, apparently, a childhood disease is making the rounds throughout her community, and she refuses to 'go out' with the kids, because she doesn't want them to catch it.  Okay, where is the trust in the Lord there?  I really don't see it!  Do you?

I mean, if you trust in the Lord to the point that you don't inoculate, but you don't trust Him to prevent your children from getting the diseases - well, where's the trust?  Or perhaps you need to trust in the Lord that if your children get the disease, He'll take care of them.  Or on the other hand, you may need to trust in the Lord that if he doesn't make them well, it just might be His will.  I know that sounds cold and harsh, but truly, that's the main reason I find this kind of thinking dangerous.

The good Lord doesn't want to do us harm!  He wants us to come and surrender our life to Him fully - not just trust Him on one aspect, and doubt the rest.

Personally, I had my son vaccinated.  I don't like to think that I have put something before the Lord to say, "There you go, God, here's this situation in my life, and I'm going to find out how You deal with it."  That's what I mean by 'testing God.'  I'm not going to ignore the great medical advances in the world today to say, "God, I choose not to vaccinate my children, so therefore, You must take care of them."  I just don't think that's what God wants us to do.

I feel the Lord speaks to us through His word.  Have you ever been in a quandary about what to do with a certain issue in your life?  You search the Scripture for answer, and you just come up dry.  You pray that God will show you in which direction you should move in.  Then next thing you know, when you least expect it, you pick up your Bible, start reading without even considering the issue that you've been facing, and the Lord 'speaks to you through His word.'  Suddenly, the tears well up in your eyes, you bow down on your knees, and thank God for showing you what you need to do.   

I think the Lord has given the medical field great advances down through the generations, and He doesn't mind if we use them.  Personally, I also think this fine lady has children that have major health issues, and she doesn't want them to catch that bad, old disease.  That's fine!  But to say you don't inoculate your children, because you 'trust in the Lord', then I think you need to also consider 'trusting in Him' to let His will be done.  Which, I'll say it again, this smacks to me too much like 'testing the Lord.'

When my mother was in the hospital with pneumonia, and we thought we might lose her - I'll be very honest with you all in telling you that whenever someone coughed at work, I sprayed the Lysol.  Whenever anyone came near me to talk, then told me, "I've been feverish all night."  I sprayed Lysol.  Then, I stopped myself.  I don't think the Lord wanted me to carry another illness to my mother in the hospital that she most likely would have succumbed to, but I wasn't really thinking of that.  I was thinking of Mom, not the Lord - and well, that's where I think I got into a bit of a thought process about "How do I show that I trust the Lord?"  Once I examined the situation, I realized that indeed, I wasn't putting my faith in God, I was putting my faith in a can of Lysol.

Unfortunately, I often see very well-meaning people put God in a box.  They start to shove our Big, Awesome, Holy God down, down, down into a little tiny box, where they never really get to experience the loving-kindness that only He is so capable of showing.

Sometimes, we go through some very difficult times in our life.  Believe me, I've been through a few myself.  I often find when I totally surrender myself to the Lord a comfort and peace come over me that I've never felt before.  I've even experienced that comfort and peace when the most awful things have happened, and someone I love passes on.

So, as I said, during the everyday issues of our life, as mundane as they may seem, I really think we need to keep our focus on the Lord.  We need to trust that He will take care of us no matter what it is that we have to face.  As my very dear friend, Ella, always says, "God is faithful."  Amen, sister!

2 comments:

ehart said...

Laurie, I totally agree. She's not really trusting God--she's trusting in the walls of her house.

We need to remember that God allowed the doctors to make those medical advances and that when He made this great world, He put everything here that we would need. There IS a cure for cancer and heart disease here--if we haven't destroyed it with our thoughtlessness.

However, we need to be praying about all things and whether or not we should do them. I had an opportunity to have my sons vacciated for Whooping Cough as teens with a new Whooping Cough booster but I declined. I also knew that Whooping Cough was going around the school they attended. I still declined--after prayer. I just didn't feel the need to have them vaccinated. I also didn't keep them home. They went to school with kids, exposed to Whooping Cough. I did the same with the flu.

Some things I feel the Lord leading me to take action--others I feel He doesn't. In all things, we need to follow the Lord.

And what He tells me to do will not necessarily be what He tells the next person to do.

It's all about trust in HIS plan for US.

Laurie and Bill said...

Exactly my point, ehart. What the Lord lays upon me to do isn't what he lays upon another.

But I also think if you haven't prayed and meditated about a certain issue in your life, then you shouldn't say, 'Just trust in God' because sometimes that 'trust' looks more like 'testing' God.

I also didn't opt to vaccinate against the H1N1 flu or the Whooping Cough. The flu vaccination just seemed so rushed, that I wasn't sure if it was a good thing. Now that we're leaving flu season - I'm glad that I didn't.

God's plan for one person's life might be an entirely different agenda for another's life. As long as we continue to use the Bible as our guide, I can't see how we can go wrong.

I know the expression 'Don't put God in a box' seems a bit extreme, but I couldn't think of a better way of putting it - perhaps, "Don't limit our awesome God" would have been better.