For the next several months, Susan had began to grow accustomed to Jonathan being away, though she still missed him greatly when he was on the road. She would feed the children and put them to bed, always remembering to say prayers. She had never felt unsafe or unprotected when Jonathan was away, because Susan knew that God was watching over the family.
One night, when Jonathan was away, Susan woke up in a dreadful fear. She glanced at the clock, which read: 2:00. She couldn't understand why, but she was simply rigid with fear. Susan, though an adult, pulled the covers over her head and said a brief but earnest prayer for relief and for protection from her prayers. She prayed that God would not allow any evil to injure her or her family. She breathed a couple deep breaths and drifted back to sleep.
When she woke up in the morning, she went downstairs to brew herself a cup of coffee. She peered out her window and across her lawn to see a police squad car parked in the street in front of her house. She closed her robe and walked outside to see the neighbor girl who babysat the family's children running towards her. The teenage girl was so excited that she could barely speak but Susan could pick out that a burglar had robbed three houses on the block last night but that they had caught him.
Susan walked over to the police officer and, after exchanging pleasantries, Susan asked the officer for some clarification of the previous night's foray. The officer shared that indeed three of her neighbors had been robbed last night and that her house had almost been robbed too but not to fear because they had caught the burglar. Susan was startled by that and asked for more information.
The police man said that the burglar had made it to her house after he had robbed the other houses and was about to break her in through the side window when, suddenly, the burglar suffered a minor cardiac arrest and passed out on the ground outside of her house. She was astonished and asked the officer when that happened. The officer looked at her and said, "Oh, about 2 o'clock."
God had saved Susan's family. Her prayer had been efficacious and God protected her and her family. This is incredibly scriptural. The writer of Hebrews, quoting Psalm 118, writes: "So we can confidentially say, 'the Lord is my helper; I shall not fear; what can man do to me?'" If, when faced with fear and gripping trepidations, we would turn to God for our support, we will always find that God is there. Although the above example may seem a bit far-fetched, it is a true story. God is our fortress and our shield, our ever-present help in times of trouble and need (Psa. 46:1). Let us then turn to Him when we feel uneasy with fear and find comfort in the shadow of His might!
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