Collectors Weekly recently posted a fascinating series of pictures of the contents of suitcases left behind by deceased patients of the Willard Asylum for the Chronic Insane between 1910 and the 1960s. The images tell stories but leave many questions. One suitcase held a woman’s collection of whimsical hairbrushes, packed next to a small straw broom. Another suitcase held a clock, a tube of shoe cream, and a small hand-carved Scottish Terrier. There were books, musical instruments, photographs, and journals. Each photo reminds you that a person left this luggage behind, a person who was someone’s mother, brother, or friend. The scattered remnants give us vague glimpses of the people who owned them.
God speaks an assuring word to the prophet Jeremiah, a word that also assures us. “I knew you before I formed you in your mother’s womb. “Before you were born I set you apart” (Jeremiah 1:5). Jeremiah was no surprise to God. No person is.
He doesn’t merely know about us, as though we were a random fact lodged in His brain. Rather, God intimately knows us (meaning a deep, personal knowing—what people once called a soul knowing). Even more, God formed us. We are His idea, His creation. God desired us.
Still, Jeremiah protested. It’s as though he believed this word was too good to be true. God had affirmed a call on the prophet’s life, but Jeremiah was afraid. He said, “I can’t speak for you! I’m too young” (Jeremiah 1:6). Fear keeps us from hearing God’s words of love and from receiving His delight.
God persisted. “Don’t be afraid . . . for I will be with you” (Jeremiah 1:8). He knows and loves us completely.
NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: John 14:1-14
More:
Read Jeremiah 17:7-10. Who can know your heart? What blessing comes to the one who trusts in God?
Next:
What do you feel when encountering the fact of God’s deep knowledge of you? What space in your heart do you need to open up to God’s probing love?
ehdlive on September 14, 2013 at 7:12 am
In the same way that God knows us, He accepted us, as well.
rogermd on September 14, 2013 at 8:07 pm
edhive;
yes, this is a great truth, so long as we understand ‘accept’. If we mean God will accept us with all our faults, sins and blemishes, when we come to him in repentance with faith in Jesus, I say amen. But if we should understand it to mean he is OK with whatever we are and do, I strongly disagree. The Christian life begins with rebirth ‘making all things new’ and continues as long as it takes to bring us to the fullness of Christ, to grow in grace and knowledge, to be striving for the upward calling. God is in the business of not accepting us but making us holy.