So, I was sorting through some papers that had accumulated on the desk now removed from my room. It's surprising what builds up over a twelvemonth (ok... it's been longer...).
As I sifted through the piles, most of it well out of date and needing to meet the recycling bin, I came across a letter I wrote to a friend. But never got around to sending. Life gets a bit like that.
Still, I decided to read it. Wanted to know what I'd been thinking all those months ago. What I'd thought important enough to write down.
Having settled down to read it, the thick paper rough in my hands, I was glad I did. It reminded me of something I've been forgetting to do recently.
So, I'm going to share it here, because I'm sure I'm not the only one.
"I hope you'll stop a moment to read this letter. I hope you'll take a minute to breathe, to see that in this moment, in this second, you are blessed. This second, you are alive. In this second you breathe in the richness of God's world, you see the glory of His creation.
"I know that the next few months will be busy. know they will be full of goodbyes. I know they will be full of pain. I have been there.
"Time is the most precious of gifts, the most valuable of all commodities. Once it is gone, there is no bringing it back. Yet so many of us allow it to slip through our fingers, letting it run like sand, too busy to see that it is really gold dust.
"In the business of life and the distractions of work, it seems we can not find time to simply be. We long for hours with friends that we may have memories to share forever. Yet this is unattainable, for who has hours to spare? Not I, that's for sure.
"Stop a moment to read this letter. Take a moment to breathe, to see that in this moment, in this second, you are blessed. In this second, you are alive. In this second, you breathe in the richness of God's world, you see the glory of His creation. Enjoy this moment, for you may not get another.
"Forget about chasing after hours. It is meaningless, for when you turn, you find you have run past the hours, through them. Instead, look for the moments. Don't miss the joke your brother tells, or the sound of your friend's laugh. Don't be too busy to miss the sun or the rain. Look for each moment. Treasure every minute. For they are a gift from God. When you look on every moment, every laugh, smile, joke, tear, exchange in the hallway, you'll find He has given you hours.
"Stopping to smell the roses doesn't mean you sit with the roses and ignore the rest of the garden. It just means you don't rush through the garden and miss the colours and the smells. Pause with every moment and think "thank you, God, for now".
"In years to come, how you spent your hours with your friends will be forgotten, but those little moments will still be with you.
"And this is why I wrote a letter, instead of sending a Skype or Facebook message. I wanted you to stop a moment to read this letter. To take a moment to breathe, to see that in this moment, in this second, you are blessed. In this second, you are alive. In this second, you breathe in the richness of God's world, you see the glory of His creation.
"Give over worrying about how you'll spend tomorrow. Tomorrow may never come, and if it does, it will take care of itself. Today is a gift. Tomorrow is just a promise of more.
"With all God's love, LRD"
Thursday, 14 August 2014
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
Where is God when it Hurts?
In these days, weeks, months, of horrible brutality and suffering, the question that comes to mind is "where is God?"
As children are slaughtered by bombs falling in Gaza, the natural question is "does God care?"
As Christians, and other minorities, are forced from their homes with a path of destruction carved out through them, we all must ask "why does God let this happen?"
When we wake up to the news that one of the greatest comedians of our times has died - most likely by suicide - the belief that there is no joy, no God who cares seems almost reasonable.
On a more personal level when things are not working out the way you think they should, it's easy to wonder if God is really worth it.
And it is easy, seeing all the pain and the terrors in the world to grow numb. Numb to the pain. But numb also to the joy. Numb to the ugliness. But numb also to the beauty.
I was recently down at the river, the one near my house. It is a beautiful spot. The sunlight was warm through the leaves of the trees. The ducks swam in the water. A man fished on the bank while his children played around him. Music filled the air from a band performing near the play equipment.
It was beautiful.
And I didn't really notice it until I had left because I was too busy being upset and angry over everything else that was happening.
And I'm not saying we view the world through rose coloured glasses. I'm not saying that we pretend people are not capable of, are not doing, acts of horrible, horrible brutality.
But what I am saying is let's not view the world through grey coloured glasses. Let's not pretend that there is no beauty.
Let's not forget that people are still falling in love and committing to love each other for the rest of their lives.
Let's not forget that couple who, after more than 60 years of marriage, died together.
Let's not forget the sound of a child laughing.
Let's not forget the warmth of sunlight, the refreshment of rain, the beauty of sunset.
And when I remember those things, I remember something else: God does care. The fact that there is still beauty, still compassion, still joy when everything is telling us how terrible the world is shows us that.
And sure, it doesn't make the pain easier. It doesn't make the suffering less. I don't want to say it does.
I read Lamentations on Sunday. I'd advise you go do the same.
While I was reading Lamentations, I cam across words that were very, very familiar. Words that I've seen printed on mugs, on paintings, in cards. Words that people use almost like a catchphrase.
Except this time, they shocked me. They leapt out of the page at me. They seized me by the throat and instead I look at them. I read them. I understood what they were saying.
And it wasn't because of what is going on the world now.
It was because of what was going on in the book around them.
The context made them shocking and wonderful. It made them discordant and beautiful. It made them a reminder of God's faithfulness in the realest sense.
And what was the context?
Jerusalem, the poets home, was in ruins.
Many of his friends and family were enslaved by the Babylonians.
People were so desperate for food they were cooking and eating their own children.
The streets were littered with the corpses of people, cut down by the sword - people both young and old. The enemy had been indiscriminate.
The poet is acknowledging that it is God who has afflicted Israel. After all, He is in control. It is God who has decreed this horror befall them.
Yet in the midst of this, in the midst of this, he says:
And yet, his belief not based purely on his need to believe it - though that is a factor.
It is based on the history of his people. On the way God grew them from one man with no sons to an entire nation - in keeping with His promises to that one man. On the way God rescued them from slavery in Egypt. On the way He brought them into their own land and made them powerful. On the way He sent someone to rescue them every single time they were in trouble.
And history shows his faith was justified.
70 years after the Babylonians invaded them, leaving them for dead or as slaves, another king - one prophecied by name - came along and returned them to their home.
And not only did he return them, but he gave them protection. Not only did he protect them, he assisted them with rebuilding their temple and Jerusalem.
God had punished His people - but He had not abandoned them. He had not ceased caring.
The poet of Lamentations was absolutely right when he continued to trust in God.
And this doesn't necessarily answer all our questions. It doesn't really answer the question of "why?". But the why isn't really what matters, is it?
What matters is that we realize that God does care.
That God weeps for the pain and suffering just as much as we do. More, even, for He has nurtured each and every one of the people involved.
He formed them in the womb. He mapped out their lives.
He raised them. He nurtured them. He loves them.
Did He know this was going to happen? Yes.
Is He in control of what is happening? Yes.
Does He care about what is happening? That is absolutely one big, fat, definite YES!
And how can we know? How can we trust this? How can we have faith in this?
There is still beauty - the ugliness has not yet swallowed it up.
There is still freedom - the oppression has not yet stripped it away.
There is still love - the hatred has not yet crushed it.
There is still compassion - the cruelty has not yet sent it away.
There is still us - we can do something. We can bring relief to the suffering. We can pressure governments to do something. We can search for the truth and make it known.
But, and far more importantly, God has proven in the most dramatic way that He cares about us. That He cares that we are lost and suffering and trapped.
He sent His son to rescue us.
And this is something grounded in history (a discussion for another time), not just a vague mumbo jumbo thing from the mists of time.
So, we can have faith that God is there and God cares even when horrible things happen, because history shows He is and He does.
We can have faith because He is still present today.
We can hold onto the thought that "the faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease. Great is His faithfulness; His mercies begin afresh each morning."
As children are slaughtered by bombs falling in Gaza, the natural question is "does God care?"
As Christians, and other minorities, are forced from their homes with a path of destruction carved out through them, we all must ask "why does God let this happen?"
When we wake up to the news that one of the greatest comedians of our times has died - most likely by suicide - the belief that there is no joy, no God who cares seems almost reasonable.
On a more personal level when things are not working out the way you think they should, it's easy to wonder if God is really worth it.
And it is easy, seeing all the pain and the terrors in the world to grow numb. Numb to the pain. But numb also to the joy. Numb to the ugliness. But numb also to the beauty.
I was recently down at the river, the one near my house. It is a beautiful spot. The sunlight was warm through the leaves of the trees. The ducks swam in the water. A man fished on the bank while his children played around him. Music filled the air from a band performing near the play equipment.
It was beautiful.
And I didn't really notice it until I had left because I was too busy being upset and angry over everything else that was happening.
And I'm not saying we view the world through rose coloured glasses. I'm not saying that we pretend people are not capable of, are not doing, acts of horrible, horrible brutality.
But what I am saying is let's not view the world through grey coloured glasses. Let's not pretend that there is no beauty.
Let's not forget that people are still falling in love and committing to love each other for the rest of their lives.
Let's not forget that couple who, after more than 60 years of marriage, died together.
Let's not forget the sound of a child laughing.
Let's not forget the warmth of sunlight, the refreshment of rain, the beauty of sunset.
And when I remember those things, I remember something else: God does care. The fact that there is still beauty, still compassion, still joy when everything is telling us how terrible the world is shows us that.
And sure, it doesn't make the pain easier. It doesn't make the suffering less. I don't want to say it does.
I read Lamentations on Sunday. I'd advise you go do the same.
While I was reading Lamentations, I cam across words that were very, very familiar. Words that I've seen printed on mugs, on paintings, in cards. Words that people use almost like a catchphrase.
The faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease. Great is His faithfulness; His mercies begin afresh each morning. ~ Lamentations 3: 22 - 23They're familiar, aren't they? Comfortable?
Except this time, they shocked me. They leapt out of the page at me. They seized me by the throat and instead I look at them. I read them. I understood what they were saying.
And it wasn't because of what is going on the world now.
It was because of what was going on in the book around them.
The context made them shocking and wonderful. It made them discordant and beautiful. It made them a reminder of God's faithfulness in the realest sense.
And what was the context?
Jerusalem, the poets home, was in ruins.
Many of his friends and family were enslaved by the Babylonians.
People were so desperate for food they were cooking and eating their own children.
The streets were littered with the corpses of people, cut down by the sword - people both young and old. The enemy had been indiscriminate.
The poet is acknowledging that it is God who has afflicted Israel. After all, He is in control. It is God who has decreed this horror befall them.
Yet in the midst of this, in the midst of this, he says:
The faithful love of the Lord never ends!
His mercies never cease.
Great is His faithfulness;
His mercies begin afresh each morning.
I say to myself "the Lord is my inheritance;
therefore I will hope in Him!"
The Lord is good to those who depend on him,
to those who search for Him.
So it is good to wait quietly
for salvation from the Lord.
And it is good to submit at an early age
to the yoke of His discipline.
Let them sit alone in silence
beneath the Lord's demands.
Let them lie face down in the dust,
for there maybe hope at last.
Let them turn the other cheek to those who strike them
and accept the insults of their enemies.
For no one is abandoned
by the Lord forever.
Though He brings grief, He also shows compassion
because of the greatness of His unfailing love.
For He does not enjoy hurting people
or causing them sorrow.And the question on the table is surely this is foolishness? The poet himself has said God has abandoned him, has brought these sorrows on him. So why does he cling to the belief that God is faithful? That God is loving? That God will be compassionate?
And yet, his belief not based purely on his need to believe it - though that is a factor.
It is based on the history of his people. On the way God grew them from one man with no sons to an entire nation - in keeping with His promises to that one man. On the way God rescued them from slavery in Egypt. On the way He brought them into their own land and made them powerful. On the way He sent someone to rescue them every single time they were in trouble.
And history shows his faith was justified.
70 years after the Babylonians invaded them, leaving them for dead or as slaves, another king - one prophecied by name - came along and returned them to their home.
And not only did he return them, but he gave them protection. Not only did he protect them, he assisted them with rebuilding their temple and Jerusalem.
God had punished His people - but He had not abandoned them. He had not ceased caring.
The poet of Lamentations was absolutely right when he continued to trust in God.
And this doesn't necessarily answer all our questions. It doesn't really answer the question of "why?". But the why isn't really what matters, is it?
What matters is that we realize that God does care.
That God weeps for the pain and suffering just as much as we do. More, even, for He has nurtured each and every one of the people involved.
He formed them in the womb. He mapped out their lives.
He raised them. He nurtured them. He loves them.
Did He know this was going to happen? Yes.
Is He in control of what is happening? Yes.
Does He care about what is happening? That is absolutely one big, fat, definite YES!
And how can we know? How can we trust this? How can we have faith in this?
There is still beauty - the ugliness has not yet swallowed it up.
There is still freedom - the oppression has not yet stripped it away.
There is still love - the hatred has not yet crushed it.
There is still compassion - the cruelty has not yet sent it away.
There is still us - we can do something. We can bring relief to the suffering. We can pressure governments to do something. We can search for the truth and make it known.
But, and far more importantly, God has proven in the most dramatic way that He cares about us. That He cares that we are lost and suffering and trapped.
He sent His son to rescue us.
And this is something grounded in history (a discussion for another time), not just a vague mumbo jumbo thing from the mists of time.
So, we can have faith that God is there and God cares even when horrible things happen, because history shows He is and He does.
We can have faith because He is still present today.
We can hold onto the thought that "the faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease. Great is His faithfulness; His mercies begin afresh each morning."
Friday, 30 May 2014
He, The Vine - I, The Branch
So, I've been messing it up recently.
Like, really messing it up.
It's been three straight weeks since I opened my Bible to just read it. To just read it because I want to.
No wonder I'm so bone-weary. No wonder I'm barely holding my head up. No wonder I can't seem to see the bigger picture. And, yeah, the fact that I'm in Chronicles is no excuse.
And fundraisers, and talks, and Sunday school, and friends, it's all just been getting me down.
And how does one keep going when life is crowded with the little details? How does one start seeing the forest again when the trees are filling their vision?
And Luther, he says it out there, standing in front of that white metal cross, a branch from a bush in his hand, the birds singing overhead.
Jesus, He's the Vine. And we, well, we're the branches.
And the only way the branches can stay alive, can keep growing, can keep producing, is by staying connected to the Vine.
By accepting the Life-giving water the Vine provides us. By drinking it deep, till it fills us to overflowing. Till it flows out of us and into the world.
And the only place we can go, to connect to the Vine, to drink His water, is His Word.
His Bible.
And it's not enough to just admire His creation.
It's not enough to say He exists.
It's not enough to say we are sinners.
We must be living in Him.
We must be completely centred in Him - in His love.
We must drink from His water daily - read His Word. Pursue His heart. Study His wisdom. Live His love.
And there's this guilt in me. This guilt because I haven't been reading. I haven't been drinking.
Instead I've been chasing after the sweet drinks of this world - you know the ones. The ones that make you feel better, for a time, but end off worse than before. And it's true, water satisfies in a way nothing else can?
And I know I've mucked up. I've mucked up big time.
And I'm writing my talk, cause I'm going to be speaking to the kids about Gideon. I'm going to be telling them how God used Him. And I write it there, in my notes. Just five words. Small, insignificant.
But those five words, well, they hit me hard:
I muck up.
Again, and again, and again. And then again and again and again.
But each time, God's grace covers me.
Each time, God's grace draws me back.
Because as long as I draw breath, God's grace can give me life again.
And, yeah, I've got my own little Judges' cycle going - every time I muck up, God saves me. And I just muck up again.
And sometimes I wonder if this is the last time. If I can't be saved again. If that's time God's finally through with me.
But each morning, I wake up, I draw breath, and I know, God's giving me another chance at life. Another chance to depend upon Him fully. Another chance to let His grace cove my sins. Another chance to God take control.
Another chance to connect to the Vine and drink deeply from His life-giving waters.
Like, really messing it up.
It's been three straight weeks since I opened my Bible to just read it. To just read it because I want to.
No wonder I'm so bone-weary. No wonder I'm barely holding my head up. No wonder I can't seem to see the bigger picture. And, yeah, the fact that I'm in Chronicles is no excuse.
And fundraisers, and talks, and Sunday school, and friends, it's all just been getting me down.
And how does one keep going when life is crowded with the little details? How does one start seeing the forest again when the trees are filling their vision?
And Luther, he says it out there, standing in front of that white metal cross, a branch from a bush in his hand, the birds singing overhead.
Jesus, He's the Vine. And we, well, we're the branches.
And the only way the branches can stay alive, can keep growing, can keep producing, is by staying connected to the Vine.
By accepting the Life-giving water the Vine provides us. By drinking it deep, till it fills us to overflowing. Till it flows out of us and into the world.
And the only place we can go, to connect to the Vine, to drink His water, is His Word.
His Bible.
And it's not enough to just admire His creation.
It's not enough to say He exists.
It's not enough to say we are sinners.
We must be living in Him.
We must be completely centred in Him - in His love.
We must drink from His water daily - read His Word. Pursue His heart. Study His wisdom. Live His love.
And there's this guilt in me. This guilt because I haven't been reading. I haven't been drinking.
Instead I've been chasing after the sweet drinks of this world - you know the ones. The ones that make you feel better, for a time, but end off worse than before. And it's true, water satisfies in a way nothing else can?
And I know I've mucked up. I've mucked up big time.
And I'm writing my talk, cause I'm going to be speaking to the kids about Gideon. I'm going to be telling them how God used Him. And I write it there, in my notes. Just five words. Small, insignificant.
But those five words, well, they hit me hard:
Israel mucks up, God saves.Might as well say "I muck up, God saves".
I muck up.
Again, and again, and again. And then again and again and again.
But each time, God's grace covers me.
Each time, God's grace draws me back.
Because as long as I draw breath, God's grace can give me life again.
And, yeah, I've got my own little Judges' cycle going - every time I muck up, God saves me. And I just muck up again.
And sometimes I wonder if this is the last time. If I can't be saved again. If that's time God's finally through with me.
But each morning, I wake up, I draw breath, and I know, God's giving me another chance at life. Another chance to depend upon Him fully. Another chance to let His grace cove my sins. Another chance to God take control.
Another chance to connect to the Vine and drink deeply from His life-giving waters.
Tuesday, 27 May 2014
Like a Little Child...
It's been one of those weeks.
Ok, it's been two.
Two of those weeks where I've felt a little bit like a little girl again. A little girl dressed up in my granny's heels and old dresses (yeah... Mum doesn't go in for that stuff) tripping around the hall and down the stairs pretending to be all grown up and sophisticated, but really being a bit of a mess. Not to mention a health hazard (the number of times Mum told me not to go down the stairs in too big heels and I still did it... sorry Mum).
But anyway.
I think you know what I mean. Unless you're a guy. Did guys do that? Where their dad's clothes and pretend to be grown up?
Sorry, I'm rambling. This is what happens when you're up at midnight after a couple of hard weeks. You ramble. Best of luck to people trying to find the wisdom in here. It's like looking for a nugget of gold. There may only be a fleck of dust or two.
Sorry, focus, Laura, focus.
So, I've been feeling like that.
Like I'm still just a kid pretending to be grown up. Pretending to know what I'm doing, only to be in serious danger of breaking something because I'm walking down stairs in too-big shoes. Only this time, there was no Mum telling me it was dangerous because that's what I am now, right? An adult.
And sure people say I'm only on my Ls in life and not to expect to get it all right, but they sure treat me like I know exactly what I'm doing, or should be doing. But maybe that was just me.
Me desperately trying to be perfect, because, I'll be honest, I'm still not entirely sure what it is people see in me that is worth anything. And the whole thing was getting exhausting - to the point of having a mini break down Sunday morning.
But I'm not here to dwell, at length, again, about my week. Especially not at midnight. Having just submitted an assignment. With a headache. And this is turning into a serious pity party, isn't it?
Well, anyway. I was at the pools earlier, doing some more prac hours for my swimming instructors course. One of my classes was Squids, which is a step up from Waterbabies (which, if the name didn't give it away, is the beginners swim class for babies). And two of these kids had only just come up from Waterbabies.
They had no idea what they were doing.
Their technique was sloppy.
They had floats on (like, multiple floats on).
But they spent the entire lesson grinning, laughing, splashing and just generally having fun.
And, well, loving their time in the water. The way I did as a kid.
And I get some kids who scream and scream and scream. And I get some kids who get irritated that they can't do something one of the other kids can (I had one kid cry because I refused to let him swim by himself - but seriously, he would have drowned).
But not these kids.
Despite the constant corrections and occasional not actually going anywhere in the water moments, these kids were having a ball.
I could help but chuckle over their antics, and their smiles were just plain infectious.
And I think God sent them to me purposefully (ok, I know He did). Because as I watched them not getting it right and laughing, I realized something.
It is actually ok not be perfect.
It's ok to not get it right.
It's ok to sometimes not go anywhere.
Just so long as I don't let the frustration of it take over my life.
So long as I appreciate what I do have. Just like those kids were appreciating their time in the water.
And, yeah, I probably will have days where I'm that kid who just cries because I'm not getting it right. Or days when I insist I can do it alone when everyone else is like "erm, no". Because, you know, I'm a stubborn, sinful woman like that.
But really, life is a gift from God. Why not enjoy it?
Ok, it's been two.
Two of those weeks where I've felt a little bit like a little girl again. A little girl dressed up in my granny's heels and old dresses (yeah... Mum doesn't go in for that stuff) tripping around the hall and down the stairs pretending to be all grown up and sophisticated, but really being a bit of a mess. Not to mention a health hazard (the number of times Mum told me not to go down the stairs in too big heels and I still did it... sorry Mum).
But anyway.
I think you know what I mean. Unless you're a guy. Did guys do that? Where their dad's clothes and pretend to be grown up?
Sorry, I'm rambling. This is what happens when you're up at midnight after a couple of hard weeks. You ramble. Best of luck to people trying to find the wisdom in here. It's like looking for a nugget of gold. There may only be a fleck of dust or two.
Sorry, focus, Laura, focus.
So, I've been feeling like that.
Like I'm still just a kid pretending to be grown up. Pretending to know what I'm doing, only to be in serious danger of breaking something because I'm walking down stairs in too-big shoes. Only this time, there was no Mum telling me it was dangerous because that's what I am now, right? An adult.
And sure people say I'm only on my Ls in life and not to expect to get it all right, but they sure treat me like I know exactly what I'm doing, or should be doing. But maybe that was just me.
Me desperately trying to be perfect, because, I'll be honest, I'm still not entirely sure what it is people see in me that is worth anything. And the whole thing was getting exhausting - to the point of having a mini break down Sunday morning.
But I'm not here to dwell, at length, again, about my week. Especially not at midnight. Having just submitted an assignment. With a headache. And this is turning into a serious pity party, isn't it?
Well, anyway. I was at the pools earlier, doing some more prac hours for my swimming instructors course. One of my classes was Squids, which is a step up from Waterbabies (which, if the name didn't give it away, is the beginners swim class for babies). And two of these kids had only just come up from Waterbabies.
They had no idea what they were doing.
Their technique was sloppy.
They had floats on (like, multiple floats on).
But they spent the entire lesson grinning, laughing, splashing and just generally having fun.
And, well, loving their time in the water. The way I did as a kid.
And I get some kids who scream and scream and scream. And I get some kids who get irritated that they can't do something one of the other kids can (I had one kid cry because I refused to let him swim by himself - but seriously, he would have drowned).
But not these kids.
Despite the constant corrections and occasional not actually going anywhere in the water moments, these kids were having a ball.
I could help but chuckle over their antics, and their smiles were just plain infectious.
And I think God sent them to me purposefully (ok, I know He did). Because as I watched them not getting it right and laughing, I realized something.
It is actually ok not be perfect.
It's ok to not get it right.
It's ok to sometimes not go anywhere.
Just so long as I don't let the frustration of it take over my life.
So long as I appreciate what I do have. Just like those kids were appreciating their time in the water.
And, yeah, I probably will have days where I'm that kid who just cries because I'm not getting it right. Or days when I insist I can do it alone when everyone else is like "erm, no". Because, you know, I'm a stubborn, sinful woman like that.
But really, life is a gift from God. Why not enjoy it?
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
The Fear of the Lord
These words open the book of Proverbs and are repeated throughout it. All the wisdom in Proverbs is useless if you don't fear the Lord.The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom...
And I wonder, in this post Christ, pre Judgment Day era if we've lost sight of a true and proper fear of the Lord. If we're so busy focusing on the pretty, loving, let the children come image that we like, that we're comfortable with, that we've forgotten that He is scary.
That we forget this is the same God who flooded the world.
Who caused entire nations to shake in fear and plead for an intercessor.
Who caused prophets to cower in fear.
Who caused John the Apostle to fall on his face.
And let me tell you something. Our God, yeah, He's a scary God.
He's the God whose purity would fry our impurity.
He's the God who made everything with His voice.
Yeah. Stars, galaxies, planets, asteroids, moons, nebulas, gas giants, red dwarfs, white dwarfs, trees, grass, water, lions, elephants, dolphins, mountains, valleys, rivers, streams, sunsets, wind, rainforests, desserts, birds, EVERYTHING. MADE. WITH. HIS. VOICE.
This is the God who has promised destruction for all those who have sinned (so basically, everyone) because sin is treason against the King of Everything and adultery (cheating on) against the One person to whom we owe our love, and destruction is the only just response.
And I was reading Zephaniah 1 the other day, at let me tell you, Judgment Day, it's scary.
Terrifying.
Our God is a scary God.
A terrifying God.
And not in the knee-knock, voice tremble way. I'm talking the hair raising, gut-wrenching, heart-stopping, fall-to-your-face-and-shake-something-fierce way. I'm talking in the hide beneath your covers and crawl underground and hope that He, somehow, misses you.
And I think this is something we need to remember.
Because, yes, we, as Christians, are safe from His wrath. But the price for our safety was extraordinarily high.
His justice had to punish someone, so He took it on Himself. He punished Himself instead of us.
And know there is a circle of His blood that will protect us - if we stand in it.
If we trust in it.
And we need to cling to the promise, to stand in His blood, to rely on the Cross if we are to be safe from Him.
And we can't ever, should never, forget that He is terrifying.
Because if we forget, we undervalue His love.
We undervalue our position as His children.
We undervalue the seriousness of our sin.
We become careless. And we insult Him by continuing to sin.
Our God may be the sacrificial Lamb, but He is also the ruling lion.
And "He's not a tame lion." (Beaver, The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe).
So let's put a healthy dose of fear back into our worship of God. Let's start appreciating the fact that we can approach Him. Let's start treating our sin as the serious disease that it is. Let's start acting with the knowledge that God is scary.
Monday, 19 May 2014
Because All Life Is Sacred
Five years ago, I met a little girl named Zoe.
Zoe was, miraculously, 2 years old.
I say miraculously because when she was still in the womb, the doctors told her parents that she wouldn't be born alive. They even urged them (the parents) to abort her. Her parents refused to do that.
At the end of the pregnancy, Zoe was born. And stunned everyone by being alive. By having a heartbeat, by being able to breathe.
The doctors swore she wouldn't have long to live - the implication was that they should have aborted and saved themselves the pain.
The days slipped by, and, to the amazement of everyone, they turned into months. And the months into years.
You see, when still in the womb, Zoe's skull did not seal over properly and most of her brain was eaten away. When she was born, she had only the tiniest portion of a brain. Enough to keep a heartbeat going. Enough to keep her lungs moving. Enough that she could hear. But not much else.
Zoe was unable to respond, seemed unable to even understand what was going on around her. The average 2 year old can talk and walk. Can run and play. They can communicate disgust. They can communicate love. They can communicate joy. They can communicate pain. Zoe still lay in her pram and watched the world go by around her. Much like a newborn.
Many would say that Zoe would be too great a burden to care for. Many might think the parents should have aborted her. Some might think she should even have been euthanized as at birth.
After all, what kind of life can a child with only the smallest of brains have?
I don't know, but I can tell you that as I looked at Zoe that day. Looked her eyes that seemed too big, and the forehead that sloped back, I didn't see a child who would be a burden. I saw a child who needed love and protection.
I saw a child who was owed the chance to have a shot at life, purely because she was alive.
I saw a child deserved to taste chocolate, even if she couldn't fully process it, purely because she was a human being.
I saw a child who deserved to be hugged by her parents and told that they loved her, even if she couldn't understand it, purely because she was their daughter.
I saw a child who deserved to be told that she was beautiful and wonderful and breathtaking, purely because she was made by the Master Artist, and the Master Artist never gets it wrong.
I saw a child whose life deserved to be celebrated and cherished, because all life is a Gift, a Sacred Gift from the One who is the source of all things.
I'm telling you about Zoe today because we spoke about euthanasia in ethics today. And every time euthanasia or abortion is brought up, I think about Zoe.
I think about that little girl in her pram.
And I wonder: who are we to decide if someone should live or die? Even if that someone is ourselves.
Who are we to decide if someone's life is going to be, or currently is, too painful too continue?
Who are we to decide if someone's life is never going to get any better, so we might as well end it?
Who are we to decide that death is better that life in instances of pain and suffering?
And how can we determine the value of a life on the basis of how much someone is suffering?
How can we determine the value of life on the basis of how much of a burden someone is?
How can we determine the value of a life of how smart they are? How mobile? How creative? How "normal"?
The Bible tells us that we are made in the image of God.
Out of all of creation, we, the humans, are made in the image of the Creator.
We are the ones He fashioned with His hands
We are the ones given the rule of the earth.
We are the ones He died to save.
We are the ones who can call Him "Abba - Daddy".
And who are we to judge if someone else should die? We are the Created, just like them.
So, I don't know about you, but I will never condone abortion or euthanasia. Because each and every "lost cause" could be a Zoe, and they all deserved that chance.
But I will also never condemn those who have had an abortion, will have an abortion, encourage abortion or euthanasia. Because, just as it's not our place to judge if someone should live or die, it is not our place to judge if someone is damned or saved.
Zoe was, miraculously, 2 years old.
I say miraculously because when she was still in the womb, the doctors told her parents that she wouldn't be born alive. They even urged them (the parents) to abort her. Her parents refused to do that.
At the end of the pregnancy, Zoe was born. And stunned everyone by being alive. By having a heartbeat, by being able to breathe.
The doctors swore she wouldn't have long to live - the implication was that they should have aborted and saved themselves the pain.
The days slipped by, and, to the amazement of everyone, they turned into months. And the months into years.
You see, when still in the womb, Zoe's skull did not seal over properly and most of her brain was eaten away. When she was born, she had only the tiniest portion of a brain. Enough to keep a heartbeat going. Enough to keep her lungs moving. Enough that she could hear. But not much else.
Zoe was unable to respond, seemed unable to even understand what was going on around her. The average 2 year old can talk and walk. Can run and play. They can communicate disgust. They can communicate love. They can communicate joy. They can communicate pain. Zoe still lay in her pram and watched the world go by around her. Much like a newborn.
Many would say that Zoe would be too great a burden to care for. Many might think the parents should have aborted her. Some might think she should even have been euthanized as at birth.
After all, what kind of life can a child with only the smallest of brains have?
I don't know, but I can tell you that as I looked at Zoe that day. Looked her eyes that seemed too big, and the forehead that sloped back, I didn't see a child who would be a burden. I saw a child who needed love and protection.
I saw a child who was owed the chance to have a shot at life, purely because she was alive.
I saw a child deserved to taste chocolate, even if she couldn't fully process it, purely because she was a human being.
I saw a child who deserved to be hugged by her parents and told that they loved her, even if she couldn't understand it, purely because she was their daughter.
I saw a child who deserved to be told that she was beautiful and wonderful and breathtaking, purely because she was made by the Master Artist, and the Master Artist never gets it wrong.
I saw a child whose life deserved to be celebrated and cherished, because all life is a Gift, a Sacred Gift from the One who is the source of all things.
I'm telling you about Zoe today because we spoke about euthanasia in ethics today. And every time euthanasia or abortion is brought up, I think about Zoe.
I think about that little girl in her pram.
And I wonder: who are we to decide if someone should live or die? Even if that someone is ourselves.
Who are we to decide if someone's life is going to be, or currently is, too painful too continue?
Who are we to decide if someone's life is never going to get any better, so we might as well end it?
Who are we to decide that death is better that life in instances of pain and suffering?
And how can we determine the value of a life on the basis of how much someone is suffering?
How can we determine the value of life on the basis of how much of a burden someone is?
How can we determine the value of a life of how smart they are? How mobile? How creative? How "normal"?
The Bible tells us that we are made in the image of God.
Out of all of creation, we, the humans, are made in the image of the Creator.
We are the ones He fashioned with His hands
We are the ones given the rule of the earth.
We are the ones He died to save.
We are the ones who can call Him "Abba - Daddy".
And who are we to judge if someone else should die? We are the Created, just like them.
So, I don't know about you, but I will never condone abortion or euthanasia. Because each and every "lost cause" could be a Zoe, and they all deserved that chance.
But I will also never condemn those who have had an abortion, will have an abortion, encourage abortion or euthanasia. Because, just as it's not our place to judge if someone should live or die, it is not our place to judge if someone is damned or saved.
Sunday, 20 April 2014
Good Friday Reflections
Yeah, Ok. I know it's the day after. But, better late than never, right? Anyway, I spent my Good Friday in airports and on airplanes, so I did a lot of reading and thinking. As one does when in an airport with nothing else to do.
I was reading through 2 Samuel when I came across verse 14 of chapter 14:
Still, I couldn't help but notice the verse. It hit me that the words were (well, are) even truer than the speaker realized. Especially the last bit.
Yesterday, as I was writing this, was Good Friday.
A day on which we remember exactly how far God was willing to go, just what He was willing to do, in order to bring us back after we had separated ourselves from Him.
I can remember asking once, as a child, why do we call Good Friday "good"? After all, the event was not a particularly happy one. The man was being crucified. Even as a child I knew that was good. Now I know it is positively gruesome, at best.
4
The answer I was given, the answer I now understand, and the answer I was reflecting on as I read those words written centuries before Jesus was ever born, was simple. It is mind blowing. It is life changing. It is logic defying.
We remember it, we celebrate it, because it was there that God took the punishment that is rightfully ours.
It was there that God died a traitor's death in place of the true traitors: us.
On Good Friday we remember the most remarkable, most extraordinary, most... I really can not think of a word big enough, event that has ever occurred in all of human history.
The impossible happened:
A bridge was made between God and Man. A bridge that spanned the chasm created by sin.
It was the way back. Back to God.
Back to the way the world should be.
It was momentous.
No wonder the apostles preferred death to denying it.
No wonder John Newton penned the words "amazing Grace how sweet the sound".
No wonder Horatio Spafford, mourning the loss of his daughters, penned the words "it is well with my soul".
This was a game changer.
And the question that should be asked every time is this:
Will you step onto this bridge?
Will you return to being in a relationship with God?
Because a bridge is useless if you don't use it, and there is no ferry provided for this chasm.
And if you are on the bridge, if you are back in relationship with God, are you letting it define your life?
Am I letting it define my life?
That was the big challenge for me.
Something so incredible, so personal, so... again, no word quite right, but you understand, don't you? Should not be a Sunday-and-Friday-thing. It should not be a Christmas-and-Easter-thing.
It should be an everything.
Because the truth is, we all die. It is the consequence of our sin.
Death is only natural when you've cut yourself off from life.
But God is not willing to just sweep away life.
Instead, He devised a way to bring us back.
It was drastic. It was insane. It was necessary.
And the challenge this Easter, both for me, personally, and from me to everyone else is this:
Will you take the way back? Will you return to the life-giving presence of God? Or will you continue to remain separate? Will you continue running yourself to destruction?
Happy Easter, everyone.
I was reading through 2 Samuel when I came across verse 14 of chapter 14:
All of us must die eventually. Our lives are like water spilled out on the ground, which cannot be gathered up again. But God does not just sweep life away. Instead, he devises ways to bring us back when we have been separated from him.Now, the speaker was a woman who had been instructed by David's military commander to challenge David about his refusal to allow Absalom home following Absalom's murder of Amnon. Absalom and Amnon being sons of David. Did you follow that?
Still, I couldn't help but notice the verse. It hit me that the words were (well, are) even truer than the speaker realized. Especially the last bit.
Yesterday, as I was writing this, was Good Friday.
A day on which we remember exactly how far God was willing to go, just what He was willing to do, in order to bring us back after we had separated ourselves from Him.
I can remember asking once, as a child, why do we call Good Friday "good"? After all, the event was not a particularly happy one. The man was being crucified. Even as a child I knew that was good. Now I know it is positively gruesome, at best.
4
The answer I was given, the answer I now understand, and the answer I was reflecting on as I read those words written centuries before Jesus was ever born, was simple. It is mind blowing. It is life changing. It is logic defying.
We remember it, we celebrate it, because it was there that God took the punishment that is rightfully ours.
It was there that God died a traitor's death in place of the true traitors: us.
On Good Friday we remember the most remarkable, most extraordinary, most... I really can not think of a word big enough, event that has ever occurred in all of human history.
The impossible happened:
A bridge was made between God and Man. A bridge that spanned the chasm created by sin.
It was the way back. Back to God.
Back to the way the world should be.
It was momentous.
No wonder the apostles preferred death to denying it.
No wonder John Newton penned the words "amazing Grace how sweet the sound".
No wonder Horatio Spafford, mourning the loss of his daughters, penned the words "it is well with my soul".
This was a game changer.
And the question that should be asked every time is this:
Will you step onto this bridge?
Will you return to being in a relationship with God?
Because a bridge is useless if you don't use it, and there is no ferry provided for this chasm.
And if you are on the bridge, if you are back in relationship with God, are you letting it define your life?
Am I letting it define my life?
That was the big challenge for me.
Something so incredible, so personal, so... again, no word quite right, but you understand, don't you? Should not be a Sunday-and-Friday-thing. It should not be a Christmas-and-Easter-thing.
It should be an everything.
Because the truth is, we all die. It is the consequence of our sin.
Death is only natural when you've cut yourself off from life.
But God is not willing to just sweep away life.
Instead, He devised a way to bring us back.
It was drastic. It was insane. It was necessary.
And the challenge this Easter, both for me, personally, and from me to everyone else is this:
Will you take the way back? Will you return to the life-giving presence of God? Or will you continue to remain separate? Will you continue running yourself to destruction?
Happy Easter, everyone.
Labels:
Bridge,
Crucified,
defining,
Easter,
forgiveness,
Good Friday,
Grace,
hope,
incredible,
Jesus,
Justice,
Mercy,
the Way back,
truth
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)