Many nations will come and say, “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD, to the house of the God of Jacob. He will teach us his ways, so that we may walk in his paths.” The law will go out from Zion, the word of the LORD from Jerusalem. Micah 4:2
Listen to What is This Mountain That You Want?
God rocks! Not in a musical sense, though I suspect any God who turns water into wine can boogie and line-dance, too. But “God rocks” litter my life: pebble-size problems that appear as boulders in my tiny eyes.
Every few months God calls me to the mountain. I love the beach and surf and the softness of the sand, but my encounters with God on the coast are filled with rest, warmth and reassurance. The God of the mountain is stern and strenuous.
So I came to His mountain, tripping over rocks until I fell to my knees. While a cool breeze wafted through the trees I laid back, resting my head on a flat rock in the meadow on Boggs Bunion. There I thought of Jacob and his dream and in the whisper of wind I heard: What is this mountain that you want?
“Is it your son or Me?” God asked Abraham from atop Mount Moriah. “Is it your people or Me?” God asked to Moses from atop Mount Sinai. “Is it your will or Mine?” God asked His Son, burdened with the weight of my sin.
“I’m here, Father. I won’t leave until you speak,” I said, sitting atop the rocks of Rattlesnake Mountain. So I waited. Rolling waves of green brushed against gray clouds; the freshness of fall chilled my bare legs. Still, God remained elusive and silent, so I listened harder.
“I called you to this mountain… I called you to this struggle,” God whispered to my heart. For a few moments I thought of the effort I’d expended to reach the summit and the work required to claim the dream He’d placed in my heart. Silently, and with less boldness, I asked, “Why, Lord. Why the struggle?”
“That you might see my glory.”
I long for the God of the coast, the carefree God of good times and leisure. But the God of creation and growth is a God of struggle and His glory is found atop His mountain.
What is this mountain that you want? Begin the climb.


















