Do you ever find yourself awed by how relevant the ancient Biblical
texts can be to our contemporary lives? I do. For example, several years
ago, I experienced a personal application of today's promise in Ezekiel.
It began with a vision in which I found myself looking down a long
tunnel. At the far end, I saw a bright light. As my focus drew towards
the light, I could see a stony surface at the bottom. Somehow, I knew
that this represented the light of God shining on the stones in my
heart. That is exactly what God would be doing over the next few years.
My life did indeed move in a downward direction -- or so it felt.
Through many downturns, I came to see "stones" in my character which I
had never seen before. These were hard spots which kept God's good seeds
of grace from flourishing in my life. The stones included flawed
assumptions about God, salvation, church, and so forth. They included
faulty ways of thinking about myself and about the meaning and purpose
of the Christian life. Those stones had made me resistant to God's
Spirit -- much like the stony ground that is inhospitable to good seeds.
As the stones became exposed and dislodged, I grew freer to recognize
and accept God's grace. God was shaping my heart -- my ways of thinking
and doing -- for His new and better way for me.
Some time later,
I again saw that vision of the tunnel. Only this time, I could see
mostly soft soil -- with a few stones scattered around. I considered
this to be God's report card. It was encouraging to know that, although
I didn't feel particularly more spiritual, I was moving in the right
direction. I had no idea what those remaining stones signified. There
was no need to know right then. After all, God's Spirit could manage my
life quite well. In fact, that is God's covenant promise, as
foreshadowed in today's verse from Ezekiel.
Farmers know that
they must pick up the stones in their fields. Farmers also realize that
over time, more stones will rise up to the surface and will need to be
removed. It's a never-ending job. It's like that with "stones" in our
hearts. Through salvation, God replaces the "heart of stone" with a
"heart of flesh" -- that is, a heart that is tender, sensitive, and
pliable to His Spirit. Yet stone removal is also an ongoing process.
Over time, other stones creep to the surface. We cannot see them while
they are submerged beneath the surface, but when, through life
circumstances, they rise and are exposed to the light of God, then we
can see them for ourselves. We are often troubled by them and deeply
humbled. We do not like seeing our sinfulness exposed. Yet this is an
important aspect of the Christian journey. In fact, seeing the stones
and desiring their removal is an indication that we truly belong to God
and that His Spirit is working in us -- just as promised in the ancient
prophesies of Scripture.
May this be for each of us our prayer:
Prayer: Lord, I desire that my heart be pliable and sensitive to
Your Spirit. Reveal to me any stones that are in the way, and give me
the courage to accept Your transformative work in me, that I may grow
increasingly tender towards You. Amen.
Diane Eaton
Kincardine,
Ontario, Canada
Thanks to
Daily Presbytarian