Pastor Speaks
February 25, 1999

A man arrived in heaven and was ready to be assigned to his permanent home. At the check-in desk he told the clerk that he didn’t understand why he was there in the first place. So, the clerk called for St. Peter. "How can I help you," St. Peter said. The man told St. Peter that he was a very religious man and was caught in a flood. The rains were coming down harder and he repeatedly called to God for help three times but no help ever came. He saw on the weather channel that the flood waters would continue to rise and local residents should take precautions. But, he decided to weather the storm and when the waters began to rise he went to the second floor of his house. Two men in boat came by and they asked if he needed help. But, the man said, "the Lord will help me," and they went their way. The waters continued to rise and he climbed on the roof. A few minutes later a helicopter came by and they asked if he wanted a lift. He again said, "the Lord will help me." So, the helicopter left. "I don’t understand," he said to St. Peter angrily, "Why didn’t God help me?" "But he did," replied St. Peter. God sent a message over the television, then sent you a rowboat and finally a helicopter, but you declined to be rescued. And the countenance of the man fell.

In Deuteronomy, Chapter 26, we find the Israelites giving a cry for help. The Israelites were in captivity and they called upon the Lord for help. "The Egyptians treated them harshly and afflicted them, and laid upon them hard bondage. Then they cried to the Lord for help and the Lord heard their voice." The Lord responded by bringing them out of bondage; "with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm." God provided the Israelites with leadership through Moses. He wasn’t a helicopter pilot but he was a leader, divinely appointed, to lead them to the promised land.

The plight of the Israelites was as bad as it gets. They had no freedom, no power, no resources. They had no hope. There only hope was in God. These were people of faith who recognized that their only escape would be at the Mercy of God.

When we are having a crisis we tend to say, "Why is this happening?" Or, we say, "Where is God when we need God?" How willing are we to cry out to God when we need help? Most of the time our pride gets in the way and we believe we can solve our problems ourselves. Our stubbornness and our inability to reach out to others prevents us from asking for help from an outside source.

First, we must be willing to cry out to God for help. We must admit that we can’t do this living stuff all alone. Second, we must grasp the hand that God extends. It may not be who or what we think. It may be a total stranger. It may be someone who we believe is not qualified or someone we think is not important. That hand that leads us may take us on a long journey, just as it did the Israelites.

It wasn’t a weak, wimpy hand that God extended to the Israelites, it was "a mighty hand." And it was "outstretched." It reached out to them, meaning it was visible and inviting. And it was strong. When the Israelites took that outstretched hand it led them to the "land of milk and honey." They finally found the freedom they had asked for.

When I was four years old I was swimming in a pool with my father and brothers. I was a few feet away from my father and I got in water over my head. All I remember is that I began to sink. I could feel the water closing in around me and the blurred images of the sun and clouds through the surface of the water. A few seconds passed and then I felt a huge hand grabbing me and then it pulled me out of the water. It was the strong hand of my father. I coughed a few times and continued swimming but only in arms reach of my father. Like the mighty hand of God that rescued the Israelites the mighty hand of my father rescued me.

My father’s hand was familiar and since I was so young I had no choice but to let it pull me up. Sometimes there is an outstretched hand that is unfamiliar and we are afraid to accept it. Just as pride prevents us from grasping those hands that reach out to us, fear keeps us from accepting hands we don’t recognize. Moses was not terribly popular among his people. They weren’t always willing to follow him. And when Moses experienced that fear he asked for help and God gave Moses other leaders to help him.

Like the man on the roof, why are we so afraid to recognize that those outstretched hands want to help us? Think of the many unfamiliar hands that the folks in the Southeastern United States will have to grab hold of to see them through their crises. Communities where tornadoes and winter storms have taken their toll. In California there was a tiny baby that was swept away from its family. The family could not locate it and they cried out for help. Fortunately, an unidentified rescue worker found the baby covered with mud and not seriously hurt. The child was safely returned to its parents. In that situation God provided a total stranger to retrieve the child from harm.

God cares. God sees our dilemma just as God saw the plight of the Israelites. The Lord "heard" their voice and "saw" their affliction. And God sees our affliction and hears our voices as well. God is totally aware of our problems and our hardships. God wants us to cry for help, and God wants to help us. God wants us to swallow our pride and be willing to ask for help. God is always there, extending hands of hope. They may be unfamiliar but God wants us to overcome our fear and hold on.

Dr. Keith Wagner
St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, Sidney, Ohio