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Thursday, 28 July 2011 14:33
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I had to make a decision - do I go on, hopping along on one foot and find alternative footwear somehow at the airport?
Old Testament covenants are often sealed with some kind of footwear deal, and there is good reason for this. Without shoes, we are powerless. We are humbled. We are weak and incapable. We cannot go on. A soldier cannot fight without his boots, a farmer cannot plough his field, a traveller will not get very far... I once knew of someone who was robbed penniless and forced to travel through the baking desert barefoot because they also took his shoes - the anguish he must have gone through is unthinkable. God reminds the Israelites that their clothes - and their sandals - never wore out as they wandered for those 40 years in the desert, and this is a most remarkable and important provision. In Isaiah 9:1-7, the announcement is made (about a millenium before the event) that unto us a Son is born... right before that is a message of triumphant victory: The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; Taking a warrior's boots and burning them is pretty much a coup d'état. It's pretty hard to come back from that. It's a resounding victory for the boot-burner and a crushing defeat for the barefooted enemy. This rich also passage speaks to us of Yeshua's complete triumph and the contrasting powerlessnes of the enemy.
Shoes On Later in the Bible, in the New Testament, we see more references to footwear, but this time the significance is in putting it on. "Put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, To be shod with shoes is symbollic of being ready for action, and able to fight. But this passage speaks of standing, defending, and peace. I love that he chose footwear to represent our readiness based on the gospel - a lack of shoes is incapacitating, but if we have our shoes on, we are ready for action. Also, in Acts 12:7-8 we see the daily routine of waking up and getting dressed taking on a new twist when Peter is in jail: Suddenly an angel of the Lord appeared and a light shone in the cell. He struck Peter on the side and woke him up. “Quick, get up!” he said, and the chains fell off Peter’s wrists. Then the angel said to him, “Put on your clothes and sandals.” And Peter did so. “Wrap your cloak around you and follow me,” the angel told him. God does the miraculous chain dissolving trick, but Peter still has to get up and put his shoes on. God could, theoretically, have made him ready miraculously too, but it was part of the deal - Peter had to do what he could do, and the impossible business was taken care of by God's power. Peter had to act and be ready. He had to put his shoes on, and follow the angel to freedom.
Do it all for the glory of God So next time you take your shoes off, consider in that moment your barefooted inability, your weakness, your incapacity, and turn your thoughts to your dependence on God. You could let that moment be an act of submission and surrender to him - casting yourself on his mercy, and recognising his holy presence with you. And when you put your shoes on, consider Peter, dazed and confused, getting ready to take his next steps into freedom and the adventures God had for him. Consider Paul's encouragement to fit your feet with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. Equip yourself mentally and spiritually for the day and be ready for the tasks God has for you, whatever they might be.
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