LEAD. June 2020 | Page 8

broader perspective. At times we’re in the dark because God is revealing some aspect of His glory that’s more than we can stare straight in the face. The beauty in the darkness is that God is close enough to cover us with His hand. Often at the end of a tremendously intense season, He’ll grace us with a glimpse of His back. He gives us just enough evidence of His presence for us to realize He was there all along—not as a spectator or even just as a protector, but as Lord over all. It may be fair to say that God is never closer to us than He is during the pruning process. He can’t avoid holding a branch when He’s pinching off blooms with His thumbnail. With God as Gardener, pruning is always a hands-on endeavor. He can’t let us go when He’s cutting us back. His tending is never impersonal. Never mechanical. Never by the long arm of the law. What most of us didn’t expect when we took up with Him was that His presence would sometimes cause pain. We expected His presence to relieve pain and, to our great relief, it usually does. But who would Isaiah have turned out to be without “Woe is me, for I am undone!” (Isaiah 6:5, NKJV)? Or what about David, without the repentant cry “Let the bones that you have broken rejoice” (Psalm 51:8)? Or Job, without “Even if he kills me, I will hope in him” (Job 13:15, CSB)? These slayings were their makings. They may be ours too. God cuts back a fruitful vine only to increase its fruitfulness. That’s why growing can look a lot like shrinking. Taken from Chasing Vines by Beth Moore. Copyright © 2020. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, a Division of Tyndale House Ministries. All rights reserved. BUY NOW Beth Moore is a dynamic teacher whose conferences take her across the globe. Beth founded Living Proof Ministries in 1994 with the purpose of encouraging women to know and love Jesus through the study of Scripture. She has written numerous bestselling books and Bible studies, including Breaking Free, Believing God, Entrusted, and The Quest, which have been read by women of all ages, races, and denominations. Another recent addition includes her first work of fiction, The Undoing of Saint Silvanus. 8