LAST WORD
Worshipping in the Rain
Martin Schlomer
We are all ready
for summer! I have had opportunities to taste and see and now I want
everything summer has to offer: motorcycle rides, BBQs, hiking,
working on my “zebo”. However, we’re not there yet! There will be rain
in our future for the next 3 months! This is not bad news! I recently
read a devotional by John Piper that I will share with you today. It
is called The Great Work of God: Rain. It is from his
devotional Taste and See: Savoring the Supremacy of God in All of
Life. As we go through the next 3 months, make time to get wet,
ponder and worship our gracious God who blesses us with the rain.
The Great Work
of God: Rain
A Thanksgiving
Meditation on Job 5:8-10
Job 5:8-10 8
“As for me, I would seek
God,
and to God would I commit my
cause,
9
who does great things and
unsearchable,
marvelous things without
number:
10
he gives rain on the earth
and sends waters on
the fields;
If you said to
someone: “My God does great and unsearchable things; he does wonders
without number,” and they responded, “Really? Like what?” would you
say, “Like rain”? When I read these verses from Job recently, I felt,
at first, the way I did on hearing some bad poetry that went something
like this: “Let me suffer, let me die, just to win your hand; let me
even climb a hill, or walk across the land.” Even? I would suffer and
die to have your hand, and even walk across the land? As if
walking across the land were more sacrificial than dying? This sounded
to me like a joke.
But
Job is not joking. “God does great and unsearchable things, wonders
without number. He gives rain on the earth.” In Job’s mind
rain really is one of the great, unsearchable wonders that God
does. So when I read this a few weeks ago, I resolved not to treat it
as meaningless pop musical lyrics. I decided to have a conversation
with myself (which is what I mean by meditation).
Is
rain a great and unsearchable wonder wrought by God? Picture yourself
as a farmer in the Near East, far from any lake or stream. A few wells
keep the family and animals supplied with water. But if the crops are
to grow and the family is to be fed from month to month, water has to
come from another source on the fields. From where?
Well,
the sky. The sky? Water will come out of the clear blue sky? Well, not
exactly. Water will have to be carried in the sky from the
Mediterranean Sea
over several hundred miles, and then be poured out on the fields from
the sky. Carried? How much does it weigh? Well, if one inch of rain
falls on one square mile of farmland during the night, that would be
2,323,200 cubic feet of water, which is 17,377,536 gallons, which is
144,735,360 pounds of water.
That’s heavy. So how does it get up in the sky and stay up there if
it’s so heavy? Well, it gets up there by evaporation. Really? That’s a
nice word. What’s it mean? It means that the water stops being water
for a while so it can go up and not down. I see. Then how does it get
down? Well, condensation happens. What’s that? The water starts
becoming water again by gathering around little dust particles between
.00001 and.0001 centimeters wide. That’s small.
What
about the salt? Salt? Yes, the Mediterranean Sea is saltwater. That
would kill the crops. What about the salt? Well, the salt has to be
taken out. Oh. So the sky picks up millions of pound of water from the
sea, takes out the salt, carries the water (or whatever it is, when it
is not water) for three hundred miles, and then dumps it (now turned
into water again on the farm?
Well,
it doesn’t dump it. If it dumped millions of pounds of water on the
farm, the wheat would be crushed. So the sky dribbles the millions of
pounds of water down in little drops. And they have to be big enough
to fall for one mile or so without evaporating, and small enough to
keep from crushing the wheat stalks.
How
do all these microscopic specks of water that weigh millions of pounds
get heavy enough to fall (if that’s the way to ask the question)?
Well, it’s called coalescence. What’s that? It means the specks of
water start bumping into each other and join up and get bigger, and
when they are big enough, they fall. Just like that? Well, not
exactly, because they would just bounce off each other instead of
joining up in there were no electric field present. What? Never mind.
Take my word for it.
I
think, instead, I will just take Job’s word for it. I still don’t see
why drops ever get to the ground, because if they start falling as
soon as they are heavier than air, they would be too small not to
evaporate on the way down. But if they wait to come down, what holds
them up till they are big enough not to evaporate? Yes, I am sure
there’s a name for that too. But I am satisfied for now that, by any
name, this is a great and unsearchable thing that God has done. I
think I should be thankful – lots more thankful than I am.