
Numbers 6:22-24 “The Lord said to Moses: Tell Aaron and his sons, ‘This is how you are to bless the Israelites. Say to them, The Lord bless you and keep you.’”
When your pastor says, “The Lord bless you and keep you,” it doesn’t mean “keep” in the sense of “retain possession.” The Lord certainly intends to do that, too. One of the big messages of your baptism is God saying, “This one belongs to me now, and if the devil wants him (or her) back, he is going to have to fight me for him.”
You remember Jesus’ promise as our Good Shepherd, “No one can snatch them out of my hands.” I have been saying to my wife for some time now that we need to go through our bedroom closet and decide what to keep and what to get rid of. The old favorite shirt that feels so comfortable but has gotten a little stained and threadbare–it’s probably time for that to go. But the high-school jacket celebrating our 1982 football state championship– that’s still a keeper. The Lord keeps us around not because of our superior condition or special accomplishments, but just because he loved and redeemed us.
That, however, is not the kind of “keep” in the blessing. “Protect” could be a useful translation, though perhaps a little limited. This is more than a promise of angels, or supernatural intervention to protect us from sickness, violence, or catastrophe. Maybe we could expand this “keeping” to “preserve and protect.”
The Lord promises to take care of our daily lives and provide for our daily needs, the kinds of things that keep us alive and functioning. In this sense you “keep” your car by changing the oil and filters on a regular basis, washing and waxing the body from time to time. You keep your houseplants by watering them regularly. In the same way the Lord keeps us by seeing to our feeding, maintenance, and protection, as evidenced by the fact that we are all here today reading these words.
But because some of our parts may be a little worn, and some of them outright broken, we are tempted to doubt these words from the blessing. We don’t sense that God has been “keeping” us when we struggle to make ends meet. Chronic health conditions, like the asthma or allergies that will never go away, the high blood pressure or diabetes that is hard to control, leave us feeling neglected. Never mind that the momentary financial struggle has been the opportunity to see more clearly that God takes care of us, not because we are so talented and work so hard, but because he is active in our lives and puts people in our lives who love us generously. Never mind that we live in an age of medical wonders, and the health issues we battle day today would have killed us long ago if we were born in an earlier century. We may not understand God’s choices for keeping us as he does. But it is godless unbelief, not faith, that denies or questions whether he keeps us at all.
This keeping is our Father’s work. It is evidence of his fatherly love, even in the forms we may find painful or difficult to understand. Remember how Jesus once described it to his disciples? “Which of you, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake? If you, then, though you are evil, give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!”
That is just what he does. Have no doubt. The Lord is blessing you as he fulfills his promise to keep you.







