Where My Soul Takes Refuge

I read a story from World War II about a US marine who was separated from his unit on a Pacific island. The fighting had been intense, and in the smoke and crossfire, he had lost touch with his fellow soldiers. Alone in the jungle, he could hear enemy soldiers coming in his direction. Scrambling for cover, he found his way up a high ridge to several small caves in the rock. Quickly he crawled inside one of the caves. Although safe for the moment, he knew that once the enemy soldiers looking for him swept up the ridge, they would quickly search all the caves and he could be killed.

As he waited, he prayed, "Lord, if it be your will, please protect me. Whatever your will though, I love you and trust you. Amen." After praying, he lay quietly, listening to the enemy as they begin to draw close. He thought, "Well, I guess the Lord isn’t going to help me out of this one." Then he saw a spider begin to build a web over the front of his cave. As he watched, listening to the enemy searching for him all the while, the spider layered strand after strand of web across the opening of the cave. He thought, "What I need is a brick wall and what the Lord has sent me is a spider web. God does have a sense of humor."

As the enemy drew closer, he watched from the darkness of his hideout and could see them searching one cave after another. As they came to his, he got ready to make his last stand. To his amazement, however, after glancing in the direction of his cave, they moved on. Suddenly, he realized that with the spider web over the entrance, his cave looked as if no one had entered for quite a while. "Lord, forgive me," prayed the young man. "I had forgotten that in you a spider’s web is stronger than a brick wall."

We will all face days of foreboding troubles and threatening situations. When we do, it is so easy to forget how God has delivered us in times past, sometimes in the most surprising ways. We must remind ourselves, in those close encounters with adversity, to trust in the Lord always. Pray as David did when he was on the run from King Saul, and found shelter in a cave—
“O God, have mercy on me, for in you my soul takes refuge. I will take refuge in the shadow of your wings until the disaster passes” (Psalm 57:1). Here we will say: This is where my soul takes refuge!
 
Devotedly yours,
 Pastor Ron

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