Dave’s Monday Blast – October 5, 2020
Pastor Mark Batterson shares a line from a sermon by Dr. Charles Crabtree entitled “God’s Grammar.” Batterson comments, “I found one little line to be absolutely unforgettable: ‘Never put a comma where God puts a period and never put a period where God puts a comma.'”
When Jesus heard the news that Lazarus was sick, He made a bold prediction: “This sickness will not end in death, but for the glory of God, so that the Son of God may be glorified.” (John 11:4) You will remember that Lazarus did in fact die. But the operative word is end. Jesus said the sickness would not end in death, and it didn’t. He knew Lazarus would die before He was able to get to their home in Bethany, but Jesus didn’t put a period there. He inserted a four-day comma!
“Sometimes it looks like God is missing the mark,” observed Oswald Chambers, “because we’re too short-sighted to see what He’s aiming for.”
Have you ever felt like God was a day late and a dollar short? I suspect that Mary and Martha felt like He was four days late! The window of opportunity closed when Lazarus drew his last breath, but remember my friends…it’s not over until God says it’s over! GOD ALWAYS GETS THE LAST WORD. And Martha knew it. Batterson comments: “What comes out of her mouth ranks as one of the greatest statements of faith in all of Scripture: ‘Lord…if you had been here, my brother would not have died. But I know that even now God will give you whatever you ask.'”
Did you catch that conjunction? There is a BUT between her statement of fact and her statement of faith. Evidently, Martha is still holding out hope four days after the funeral. At what point do you stop hoping and start grieving? Day 1? Day 2? Day 3? Day 4? Batterson continues: “Some would say that it was her grief speaking, but she was speaking out of faith. Faith often looks like it’s out of touch with reality, but that’s because it’s in touch with a reality that is more real than anything you can see or hear or taste or touch or smell with your five senses. Faith is our sixth sense. And if you’re truly in touch with God, sometimes it’ll appear as if you are out of touch with reality.”
The sentence should end after Martha says, “Lord, if you had been here my brother would not have died.” BUT Martha doesn’t put a period there. Her faith inserted a comma, even at the end of a death sentence. That’s what Martha does: “Even now God will give you whatever you ask.”
Batterson concludes: “I love the little phrase embedded in this statement of faith, EVEN NOW. It’s one of my favorite phrases in all of Scripture. Even when it seems like God is four days late, it’s too soon to give up. Even when it seems like your dream is dead and buried, don’t put a period there.”
That’s good isn’t it!