The encounters God gives
us in our lives
are never by chance!
“There
was also a prophet, Anna, the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher. She
was very old; she had lived with her husband seven years after her marriage and
then was a widow until she was eighty-four. She never left the temple but
worshiped night and day, fasting and praying. Coming up to them at that very
moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the child to all who were
looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem” (Luke 2:36–38).
As I meditate on this passage, I wish to receive the lesson it gives:
(1) When I meditate on this word, I become
interested in the encounters the Lord arranged within the Jerusalem temple. When Simeon, moved by the Spirit, went into
the temple courts, the parents of the baby Jesus brought in the child Jesus to
do for him what the custom of the Law required (Lk. 2:27). That was how Simeon met the baby Jesus. Likewise, “at that very moment,” the elderly
prophetess Anna also entered the temple and met the baby Jesus (vv. 36–38). Was this meeting a coincidence?
(a) I do not believe so. Simeon and Anna’s meeting with the baby Jesus
was not a coincidence but a divine appointment. It was the Sovereign Lord (v. 29) who led
Simeon and Anna to meet the baby Jesus.
(i)
In
Ecclesiastes 9:11, Scripture says, “But time and chance happen to them all.” However, the Korean rendering “chance” is, according to scholar Yoon-sun Park, a mistranslation,
because for Christians who believe in God’s
sovereignty, there is no such thing as “chance.” Everything happens under God’s sovereign providence; nothing occurs by mere
coincidence.
·
We believe
that all things are accomplished according to God’s sovereign will. That is why I personally do not use the phrase
“Good luck.” In the modern Korean
Revised Version, Ecclesiastes 9:11 is translated, “... for time and opportunity happen to them all.” This rendering, “opportunity,” is much more fitting, because it better
conveys divine providence rather than randomness.
(ii)
In a
devotional I wrote on November 10, 2010, titled “A Meeting of Prayer” (Acts
16:16), I said:
·
“In our life
journey, we experience encounters that seem good to us and others that do not. The good ones bring joy and benefit; the bad
ones cause pain and seem fruitless. But
how does God view them?
-
Personally,
I believe that none of our encounters in life are accidental. Every meeting is permitted by God within His
sovereign plan. Each has a divine
purpose, even if we cannot yet see it.
n When we faithfully live out our encounters in
the Lord, God unfolds His will and allows us to behold His glory.”
(iii)
The
Sovereign Lord (Lk. 2:29) led Simeon, a righteous and devout man in Jerusalem
(v. 25), by the Holy Spirit into the temple at the very moment when the parents
brought in the child Jesus for the purification ceremony. This encounter fulfilled the revelation
Simeon had received from the Spirit—that he would not die before he had seen
the Lord’s Messiah.
·
Therefore,
when Simeon held the baby Jesus in his arms, he praised God saying: “Sovereign
Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace.” (v. 29)
-
In other
words, Simeon could face death peacefully because God’s promise had been
fulfilled; his life’s mission was complete, and his heart overflowed with
thanksgiving and peace.
(iv)
In the case
of Anna, the daughter of Phanuel, from the tribe of Asher, who had lived with
her husband for seven years and remained a widow until the age of eighty-four,
never leaving the temple but serving night and day with fasting and prayer (vv.
36–37)—the Lord led her “at that very moment” into the temple to meet the baby
Jesus (v. 38). God’s purpose was for her
to “give thanks to God and speak about the child to all who were looking
forward to the redemption of Jerusalem.”
·
Interestingly,
the name Phanuel (or Penuel) comes from the place where Jacob wrestled with the
angel of God and said, “I have seen God face to face” (Gen. 32:30); the name
means “face of God.” And Anna
corresponds to the Hebrew name Hannah—the name of Samuel’s mother (1 Sam. 1:2)—a
devout woman of prayer and faith, like the prophetesses Deborah (Judg. 4:4) and
Huldah (2 Kgs. 22:14) (Hoekma).
-
Given the
marriage customs of the time, Anna likely married around age 14. Having been married 7 years and then widowed
for 84, she would have been about 105 years old. Yet even in her old age, she faithfully
served with fasting and prayer, demonstrating a life of total devotion and
longing for the redemption of Israel—the coming Messiah.
n When she “spoke about the child to all who were
looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem” (v. 38), her words echoed the
praise of Zechariah, father of John the Baptist, who said: “Praise be to the
Lord, the God of Israel, because he has come to his people and redeemed them”
(Lk. 1:68). It also harmonizes with
Simeon’s longing for “the consolation of Israel” (2:25) and the prophetic hope
in Isaiah 52:9—“Burst into songs of joy together, you ruins of Jerusalem, for
the Lord has comforted his people, he has redeemed Jerusalem.”
n Thus, the baby Jesus whom the prophetess Anna
spoke about (Lk. 2:38) is “the Lord’s Christ” (v. 26), “the consolation of
Israel” (v. 25)—the one through whom God visited His people to comfort and
redeem them by His death on the cross.
(2) As I conclude this meditation, I am reminded of
the gospel song “Our Meeting Is by the Lord’s Grace”: (v. 1) “Our meeting is by
the Lord’s grace; our gathering is the Lord’s blessing. We were created for the glory of God—make us
faithful for Your kingdom, O Lord. (v.
2) Lead all that we are, O Lord; we offer everything to You. O my Father God, let us live according to
Your will. (Refrain) O Lord, always
guide our calling; O Lord, always guide our calling.”
(a) I also reread a piece I wrote on April 14, 2019,
titled “The Lord Never Wastes Our Encounters.”
(i)
It says: “We
should desire not the meetings we want, but the ones God grants us, because the
meetings God gives or allows in our lives are never accidental—they always have
His good, pleasing, and perfect will (Rom. 12:2). Every meeting is for our good (1 Sam. 22:3).”
·
Perhaps God
allows us,
like David, to meet the distressed, the indebted, and the discontented
(1 Sam. 22:2),
or, like Job, to learn that only the Holy Spirit is our true Comforter
(Job 16:2; Jn. 14:16);
or, like Hannah, to pour out our bitterness to God amid misunderstanding
(1 Sam. 1:10–16);
or, like Gideon, to gain assurance through unexpected encounters (Judg.
7:9–15);
or, like Jonah, to be rebuked and led to repentance through unbelievers
(Jonah 1:6–12);
or, like Naomi, to find joy through a daughter-in-law like Ruth (Ruth
4:13–17);
or, like Joseph, to experience suffering and injustice that ultimately
lead to reconciliation and salvation (Gen. 45:5; 50:20–21).
As we meditate on Scripture, we come to believe
this truth: God never wastes any encounter.
Every meeting is woven into His sovereign plan to accomplish His good,
pleasing, and perfect will for us.
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