"Have you not surrounded him and his family and all that he has with your
protection?" (Job 1:10).
It is God's love that puts a hedge about us; it is our choice to wander away
from that love which constrains us from doing harm to ourselves and others; to
wander beyond the security that He has lovingly determined for us. Sometimes we
want to do something and yet we know instinctively that it would be wrong. Our
conscience is one of God's hedges to warn us that certain actions, reactions and
transactions are against His goals for us, goals that are in God's best
interests as well as our own. He asks us to define that word hedge as a refuge,
not as a prison.
It is that master of deceit, Satan, who suggests that God has put this
enclosure around us. He started in the Garden of Eden, when he said, “Did not
God say…?” It is a fact that God protects us and it is a fact that the Adversary
is busy tearing down the border and exposing us, always. It is our decision to
circumvent God's hedge or to accept its boundaries of love for us, through
prayer and the diligent reading of His instructions that are in His Word to
us.
“There is many a hedge that we have hardly ever noticed, and certainly have
never properly valued. God has given some of us a hedge in the example and
teaching of good and pious parents; in the influence of good teachers; in the
form of good companionships; in the discipline we have to undergo in the home,
in the school, and in life. A hedge not only shelters, it often keeps us from
wandering. Sometimes we do not like hedges; we should like to see more of the
country, and wander at will. God’s way of hedging us in is not always by sending
us blessings which we are pleased to accept, but sometimes by sending us sorrow
and trial. He thus keeps us in our places and guards us against going astray.
That was the kind of hedge that Job did not like. The farmer sometimes plants
thorns in his hedges, and we must not be surprised if God does. After all, a
hedge may become a very lovely thing. What would the landscape often be without
hedges? God makes the hedges along the country full of beauty, poetry, and song.
And in our lives here, this is just what the Lord Jesus has done. The old Law of
Moses was like a stone hedge. The hedges of the Lord Jesus are like our
quick-set hedges. He makes His commandments sweet and welcome, and the ways of
His testimonies full of delight. It is the love of Christ constrains us, and
that is always a sweet constraint” (David Davies.)
The prodigal son broke through the hedges of his father’s love and wound up
in a far country of sorrow. Thank God that he finally said, “I will arise and
return to my father.” This broken son realized that his father’s hedges were
protection and salvation. Young people resent being “told what to do” but, in
the final analysis, parents, teachers and companions, if they walk with God, are
the beautiful hedges so these dear young people can realize their potential.
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