Recently in conversation a friend of mine referenced "hard ground" in ministry, how it seems difficult or nigh impossible to make an impact on others when they are resistant to the Gospel. In thinking over the phrase, it struck me how man has discovered techniques and developed tools to deal with hard ground. If digging a hole for a post or tree is too difficult for a spade, a mattock or digging bar may do the job. It is sometimes advisable to soak the area with water to soften the soil or to try digging after rain. Should a rotary hammer or jackhammer fail to make headway through rock in a mine, professional earth-moving equipment or even dynamite has been used to blast through hard ground.
It is good for us to acknowledge there is hard ground beyond our ability to dig through by our efforts, yet at the same time to focus on God's miraculous way of cutting up hard ground without breaking a sweat. Indeed, we likely are able to recognise hard ground in others because we have that same tendency in our own hearts: the hard ground of pride, self-sufficiency and unbelief in God often develops inside us. I take great comfort in God's word in Zechariah 4:6-7: "So he
answered and said to me: "This is the word of the
LORD to Zerubbabel: 'Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,' says the LORD of
hosts. 7 'Who are you, O great mountain? Before
Zerubbabel you shall become a plain! And he
shall bring forth the capstone with shouts of "Grace,
grace to it!" How awesome is God? The hardest heart can be pierced by God's word easier than a spade cuts through loose sand.
We might lament the ashes of our ruined dreams, the high cost of obedience, or the hard ground we wish was soft, yet we can gladly turn our eyes to God Who can move mountains with His word alone. While we struggle to dig a small hole in the earth, God can shift mountains of unbelief by the power of the Holy Spirit. He can redeem the death of His only begotten Son and provide grace and salvation to all lost sinners by grace through faith in Him. Rather than being an obstacle, the mountain is an opportunity for God to show His might, majesty and sovereignty over all--starting with us believing Him.
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