For what other nation is there that has a god so near to it as the Lord our God is to us whenever we call upon him? (Deut. 4:7)
The history of Israel demonstrates how close God is to his people, those with whom He has a covenant beyond death. In Jesus, that covenant/closeness is extended to all mankind, to whomever will accept it. Those of us who have walked through the shadow of death have had some glimpse of that closeness, but for many people, God is just "too busy" or too remote to bother about our little lives.
There is a current youtube video now about the second pilot shot down over Iran, whose plane crashed in the moutainous region where there was no vegetation to cover him. Exposed, without water, injured, he faced certain death, whether found by the Iranian search parties or not. But Jesus appeared to him, saying, "Follow Me!" Although the soldier had a crushed knee which was beginning to swell badly, he began to walk after Jesus, who eventually led him 48 kilometers, past four Iranian checkpoints, to a plateau where he could be picked up by American helicopters. Later, when he was debriefed by Army Intelligence, his story was held to be "impossible," as they traced his journey from the site of the crash to where he was rescued.
Last night, I watched a program called It's A Miracle, which tells of similar miraculous events. One story was of a pilot whose single-engine plane was about to crash. Suddenly, a man appeared in the cockpit, telling the pilot that he would not die in that crash. The pilot reported an unnatural sense of peace and calm as the plane nosedived into a field, burst into flames, and filled the cockpit with smoke. Unable to release the seatbelt, the pilot reported that the "man" with him began to breathe in his face, giving him fresh air in the midst of heavy smoke. Someone who had seen the plane go down ran to rescue the pilot and pulled him out of the plane, which immediately exploded. Later, the rescuer remarked that he could not understand how the pilot could have survived the intense smoke filling the cabin.
After viewing the program last night, I woke up this morning thanking God for the numerous stories like this of His Presence in the midst of almost certain death. As I sat down to pray, I heard in my spirit the word "Sirach." I kind of vaguely thought to myself that I needed to re-read Sirach at some point, but mostly ignored the message otherwise. After prayer, I reached for another book which I have been reading every morning. But immediately, I heard more insistently: Read Sirach!
Now curious, I reached for my Catholic bible (Sirach is not included in the Protestant Bible), and opened to Sirach, but for some reason, I went to the very last page of the book, where at some point, I had written the following words in an empty space at the end of Sirach:
I give you thanks, Lord and King/ I praise you, God my Savior!
I declare your name, refuge of my life, because you have ransomed my life from death;
You held back my body from the pit, and delivered my foot from the power of Sheol.
You have rescued me according to your abundant mercy/ From the snare of those who look for my downfall/ and from the power of those who seek my life.
Since it has been awhile since I read Sirach, I had forgotten writing those words, taken from the last chapter of the book. Startled to find them in my present contemplation of God's closeness to us, I turned to Chapter 51, to read the whole thing, and found these words included: from many a danger you have saved me, from flames that hemmed me in on every side; from the midst of unremitting fire, from the deep belly of the nether world (vv. 4-5).
Slowly the feeling crept over me that the Holy Spirit had not only guided my tv watching the previous night but somehow out of the multitude of Biblical words and stories, He also guided my reading this morning. I am in awe at how close our God is to us!
For those who don't usually read the Bible, I highly recommend perusing Sirach, especially the last chapter. It gives one pause.......