Comfortable In Our Bondage - Blackaby Devotional

Posted by Christopher on May 7th, 2008
2008
May 7

And they said to them,”The Lord look on you and judge,because you have made us abhorrent in the sight of Pharaoh and in the sight of his servants, to put a sword in their hand to kill us.”
Exodus 5:21

It is possible for people to become so accustomed to their bondage that they resist efforts to free them. The Hebrews had been slaves in Egypt for four hundred years. Slavery meant that they were not free to do God’s will or to go where they wanted. Moses had come to tell the Israelites how they could experience freedom, yet they were more concerned about the reaction of their taskmasters than they were about pleasing God. For them to be free would mean that the pharaoh they were serving would be angry! It would mean that the Egyptians they had served all their lives might attack them. Freedom from their slavery did not seem to be worth the hardships they would inevitably endure.

When God sets out to free us, there will often be a price we will have to pay. Grief can be a terrible form of bondage, yet we can become comfortable with it. We can grow so comfortable with fear that we don’t know how to live without it. As destructive as our sinful habits and lifestyle might be, we may prefer living with the familiar, rather than being freed to experience the unknown. We may recognize the harmful influence of a friend but choose to reject God’s will rather than offend our friend.

As incredible as it seems, the Israelites were angry at Moses for disrupting the life of slavery to which they had grown accustomed. Have you been lulled into a comfortable relationship with your bondage? Do you fear change more than you fear God? Are you willing to allow God to do what is necessary in order to free you?

 

Henry and Richard Blackaby
Experiencing God Day-by-Day

One Response

  1. e. barrett Says:

    It’s always hard to leave something we know, for something we don’t. No matter how good that “other” thing is.

    Christopher says:
    Agreed, however I believe that the underlying factor is or can be attributed in no small part to one’s fears concerning the unknown(s). Instead of trusting in the Lord to provide for and move us through life, fear causes us to recoil; the natural desire being to want to remain in our static comfort zone vs following the path that God desires to moves each of us in. We are after all compelled to change, when we accept Christ as our personal Lord and Savior (2 Corinthians 5:17).

    Proverbs 3:5-6
    5 Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; 6 in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight.

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