Don’t Look at the Clouds… & UK Fellowship Friday

I was up in the night several times from 4am onwards with little ones. Just as I was thinking I might get a small amount of sleep, another one woke up crying! So I got up feeling tired, wanting to go back to bed, struggling to keep my eyes open.

I kept thinking, ‘How am I going to get through today?’. It was our first day back at school after the Christmas holidays. The kids were grumbling and my mind was complaining.

Then my mind went back to Ann Voskamp’s reminder about ‘doing the next thing’, where she refers to Elisabeth Elliot, whose missionary husband became a martyr when he was killed on the mission field. Elisabeth Elliot said this:

‘Have you had the experience of feeling as if you’ve got far too many burdens to bear, far too many people to take care of, far too many things on your list to do? You just can’t possibly do it, and you get in a panic and you just want to sit down and collapse in a pile and feel sorry for yourself.

Well, I’ve felt that way a good many times in my life, and I go back over and over again to an old Saxon legend, which I’m told is carved in an old English parson somewhere by the sea. I don’t know where this is. But this is a poem which was written about that legend. The legend is “Do the next thing.” And it’s spelled in what I suppose is Saxon spelling. “D-O-E” for “do,” “the,” and then next, “N-E-X-T.” “Thing”-“T-H-Y-N-G-E.”

The poem says, 

“Do it immediately, do it with prayer, 
Do it reliantly, casting all care. 
Do it with reverence, tracing His hand
Who placed it before thee with earnest command. 
Stayed on omnipotence, safe ‘neath His wing, 
Leave all resultings, do the next thing.” 

That is a wonderfully saving truth. Just do the next thing.’

You can read the rest of her story about how it helped her at Back to the Bible, which is where I got this extract from.

So I tried to change my focus. Instead of wondering how I was going to get through the day, and whether I should just drop school for the day and try to rest, I thought, ‘Let’s just do the dishes right now and not think ahead more than that.’ I turned some worship music on – Hope’s choice since she already had said, ‘I’m not having a good day’! And just did the dishes.

It really did help an awful lot, and it reminded me of a verse I read recently which said,

‘He who regards the clouds will not reap’ Ecclesiastes 11:4

I think a lot of our troubles come from looking at the clouds. They might not actually be dropping rain on us, but we look at them and think ‘Rain is coming, is it worth starting if it’s going to rain? I might get wet, I might have to stop, maybe I just shouldn’t start…’

We focus on the negative thoughts, on what people think about us, on how bad we feel, whereas often we just need to forget the thoughts, feelings, discouragements and excuses and just do the next thing and get on with our responsibilities. Often when we do that we feel better as a result.

Matthew Henry says, ‘The discouragements we meet with in these duties are but as winds and clouds, which will do us no harm, and which those that put on a little courage and resolution will despise and easily break through.’

The outcome of the day was that by the time lunchtime came I felt an awful lot better, and we did manage to do school and everything else that was important. So it wasn’t as bad as it seemed at the beginning of the day!

Linking up with Bragging on God Friday, Spiritual Sundays (button on the sidebar)

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UK Fellowship Friday Blog Hop

I would love you to link up if you have recently written a post about your faith that might encourage other Christians – for example a testimony, reflection or challenge. The only other requirement is that you live in the UK. Please link to the specific post you’ve written, then it will help people to find it.

If you join below, it would be good if you could link to this post in a text-link on your blog so your readers can find the other blogs in the blog hop. I am planning to try and make a button at some point, when I can find the time to figure it out!

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11 Responses

  1. I am SO sorry I should have read the directions 🙂 You can delete my post! Have a great weekend.

  2. Love this, Rhoda. Thank you for the encouragement x

  3. Pamela says:

    I can’t believe I missed your instructions. I went back to create a link on my blog and saw what you said. Feel free to delete it.

    I did love your post. I’ve found I can change the emotional temperature of my whole family — either way! I love you did what needed to be done (dishes) and then the next think. I’m copying this poem in my journal.

  4. Anonymous says:

    God bless you for sharing this Rhoda. Needed to read this just now.

    Nma

  5. this is a great post and to think that you can actually write such an encouraging blog post even if you didn’t get enough sleep and do homeschooling! hat’s off to you!
    thanks for sharing,
    hugs, peggy aplSEEDS

  6. Brooke says:

    “How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time” is the version of “do the next thing” that I learned. It’s a great thing to learn how to persevere since, as believers, we’re running a race.

  7. Charlotte says:

    Good advice…and great poem! I feel for you not getting sleep and having young ones. God’s word says He gently leads those that are with young. I pray that for you:) I remember those days! My five boys are grown now. I home-schooled four of them from start to finish and I’m no worse for wear:)But I had many a tired day!
    God bless you,
    Charlotte

  8. Rhoda says:

    Hi Amber, don’t worry I know it’s a bit unusual confining a link up to one country!

    Thank you for linking up Alison!

    Hi Pamela don’t worry, I enjoyed finding your blog anyway though I did take the link off because I’m trying to keep it to the UK. Yes it does seem like we have a big effect on how our family is, I like how you put it with emotional temperature!

    Thank you Nma, I glad it was of some use!

    Thanks Peggy, I wrote this post after I’d done a few next things and figured it out in my head while I was doing them, as I realised God was trying to teach me something!!

    Thank you Brooke – that is a great analogy! Dishes and untidy houses and homeschooling do resemble elephants many days lol 🙂

    Hi Charlotte, I love that verse and have never thought of it in that context. He does remember our frame and what we can cope with so I need to remember that too! Thank you for your encouragement 🙂

  9. Virginia says:

    Don’t run ahead of God. Let Him direct your steps. He has plans. He has time. God’s clock is never early nor late. It always strikes on time.

  10. Linda says:

    I came blog-hopping to your blog. I’m not a Christian, but I can’t tell you how much your post has helped me get through this week. Thank you!

  11. Rhoda says:

    Hi Virginia, thanks for visiting and sorry for my late reply!

    Hi Linda, I’m so glad my post helped you 🙂