It comes without invitation as I’m surrounded on either side
by eager ears and tiny fingers that want to turn the pages long before I’m done
reading the words. On page 43 of the Jesus Storybook Bible, it slams up against
my stubborn heart.
“But Noah didn’t mind so much what other people thought, he
minded what God thought. So he just did what God told him to do.”
My girl elbows me and asks, “Mom, why’d you stop?” I keep
reading, forgetting for a split second that they are listening to the story as
well. I finish on the page with the
rainbow and they touch and name each color. Afterwards, they run off to play,
but since I can’t shake it, I grab my own bible and read the story out of
Genesis all over again.
I remember that Noah is included in the Faith Hall of Fame
over in Hebrews 11, so I flip there, too.
There’s not a whole lot about this man who walked with God, but this
phrase makes me stop and reach for my pen so I can underline words I need to
sink into the marrow of my tired bones.
“Noah… in holy fear built an ark…” (Hebrews 11:7)
I fear rejection; I fear judgment and misunderstanding, but
holy fear is something I am just beginning to grasp.
See, if I were Noah, I can promise you I'd spend lots and lots of time weighing out the cost of my obedience, wondering how it would affect my reputation, dragging my feet in saying yes. I might be out there
swinging away my hammer in obedience, but I'd also be trying to explain myself over my
shoulder simultaneously. I’d certainly make sure everyone who thought I was
crazy got a long, detailed explanation of what had gone down- that this
ridiculous plan was God’s idea not mine. I’d make sure they were crystal clear
with the fact that, though I was honored to be picked, I would have been fine
if He picked someone else to construct a contraption I had no business
building. Oh, and I’d be sure to tell
them to get out their umbrellas because God said it was going to rain buckets.
I’d laugh right along with them and agree that it made absolutely no sense at
all. See, I’d be way too concerned with
what they thought of me, what they said about me, and I’d be driven by how they
treated me.
Because my fear of them tends to
trump any holy fear that resides in my heart.
In the evenings when everyone is tucked in and the house is
quiet, I’ve been hashing out this struggle of mine on every page of Love Idol. Let me pause right here,
right now and say this: if you are a perfectionist, a people-pleaser, or an
approval addict like me, you must, must, really, really, must read this
insightful and endearing book about how common it is to crave love outside of
God. I’m about two-thirds in and I
already know that it’s one I’ll read over and over again.
Today I open to the dog-eared pages where truth has placed a
magnifying glass over my heart. It’s there on page 112 and again on page 153:
the reason holy fear was present in Noah’s heart.
“Getting over myself is the only way of getting more into
God.”
“When we make much of God, we no longer yearn for someone to
make much of us.”
Holy fear, reverent fear, or godly fear… it’s summed up with one Greek word, eulabeomai, and it means to stand in awe.
I keep reading the story line by line in Genesis and I park three quarters of
the way through this story my kids love to hear. I think I’m seeing this story I know by heart
in a whole new light. And I realize this.
There’s a difference between knowing
something by heart and allowing that something to sink in and change your
heart.
When the ark that had been tossed back and forth in the
flood of God’s fury finally came to rest, Noah built an altar. He built a boat... and then he built an altar.
He worshiped there at the altar and he thanked God for what He had done. Noah acknowledged God’s faithfulness in this
small act of love.
He could have begun work right away on a house for him and
his family, and really, who would blame him? After all, he had built a boat
over 400 feet long. He could have done a lot of things, but Noah worshiped God…
at the altar he built. And it was the labor involved in building the altar not
the labor that went into building an ark that made God smile.
I let that thought drop heavy. Isn’t Noah known for his
construction of that giant ark? Isn’t that what makes this story such a page
turner for the youngest soul? Isn’t the ridiculous thought of a ship in the
center of a parched desert what captures even the most educated mind? Isn’t the
mocking that became Noah’s reality the very driving force of this story?
Isn’t that what makes him a hero in
the eyes of my children- the fact that he obeyed God and built a boat?
Though we aren’t told a bunch about Noah, we know he walked
in God’s love. He understood He was loved by God, so he didn’t crave the love
of his family, friends, neighbors or strangers. He knew he was favored and
accepted by God, so the ridicule he suffered was of little concern to him. Noah knew that the most important thing he
could do in all his 950 years on this earth was to love God and be loved by
God. On the altar he worshiped God and on the altar he thanked God and on the
altar he loved God above everything else.
Building a boat without previous experience or expertise was
not the most important thing Noah did.
Being the leader God used to rescue a handful of creation was not what
brought a smile to God’s face.
Noah’s love for God trumped his love for validation from the
neighbors and affirmation from his friends and family. And that is what was so pleasing to God. Noah knew that God could
cover all his needs to be validated and affirmed. God was the only One who
could love Noah completely, perfectly.
And Noah recognized that God’s love
trumps all other love.
I want holy fear like Noah. The kind that places God’s Love
above all other love in my life. The kind that leads me again and again to the
altar, the ultimate altar: the cross. Accomplishments, accolades, affirmations
all fall short when I bow before the cross. And I notice that every last one is an idol that will never satisfy and will always prevent me from living
out of who God says I am.
The next day, I copy this verse out of Proverbs because it
is in synch with what God’s been trying to etch out in front of me: “Blessed is the one who always
trembles before God, but whoever hardens their heart falls into trouble.” Proverbs
28:14
Could it be that holy fear towards God must originate from a
heart that’s soft, not hard? A soft heart bends; a hard heart breaks. My heart
has known hardness, that tenseness and rigidness that tries to hold itself
together while it’s fully impossible. That kind of heart finds it difficult to
trust, a tough struggle to believe. It uses all of its effort to protect- or at
least it’s deceived into thinking that’s what it’s doing.
Softness is surrender.
It’s pliable, willing. A soft heart dares to dream and dares to
believe. A heart that’s soft doesn’t
miss the miracle, but stands- no kneels-
in awe of the One who’s responsible for it.
A soft heart doesn’t take itself so seriously. It recognizes that life is messy, people are
flawed, and grace is never-ending. A
soft heart is a happy heart, because it has full knowledge of the deep, deep
love of God.
A heart that trembles in holy fear understands
that every other love could never hold a candle to the wild, untamable,
consuming Love of God.
Jesus, soften my heart when it gets
jagged, hard and rough. I want to bend
to your will and fully receive the Love you’ve given. Give me holy fear and let me put to rest my
fear of what everyone else will think about me or say about me. Let Your Love be the only Love that steals my
heart and captures my soul. Bring me
back again and again to the altar where You demonstrated Your Love for me. And
let my life be a pleasing sacrifice to You always. Amen.