Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Don't Worry, Seek God's Kingdom

"Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you."

Before Jesus spoke these famous words, there was a discussion about how God takes care of all the needs of the natural world as well as those in our lives. There is no need for us to worry about having the food and clothing that we need, when our heavenly Father already knows our needs before we know them. He anticipates those needs and makes arrangements for those needs before we are even aware of them.                                                            

God also knows there is a pandemic at play in the world around us. He was not taken by surprise by this virus that has spread around the world. He knew it was about to happen before China even had become aware that something bad might be happening. God knows how many will die from this virus worldwide. He knows how many will get it and survive. He knows it all. We can worry all we like, but our worrying won't change one thing about it. What will be will be. Not because God has foreordained people to die from the Coronavirus, but because we humans are constantly making decisions that impact not only our lives but also the lives of those around us. God is not surprised by our decisions, but neither does he makes us do what he wills unless we agree to abide by his will. He does, however, know whatever changes will take place because we chose to do one thing and not another. He knows who will be affected if we wear a mask as well as who will be affected if we don't, but he doesn't make us do one thing or another.                         
This is where free will and social responsibility intertwine. We get to choose, but our choices will have consequences and we will have to answer for those consequences one day.  If this virus teaches us nothing else, it should teach us how much our actions impact those around us, even if we don't find out until later. People might not drop dead on the street instantly if we don't wear a mask, but someone you interact with may pass it on to you. You may never know you were carrying it and obliviously pass it on to someone else who has a mild case that passes as nothing more than a cold, which isn't enough to make them think that they have Covid-19, so they go to work at a restaurant that has delivery only. Everyone wears a mask at work and washes their hands frequently. Only when this man with the virus is alone in the restroom, he takes off his mask while he's washing his hands, just to get some fresh air and cool off a minute. Only he suddenly sneezes without warning just before a coworker enters the bathroom, and while those droplets are still dancing across the space between them, this coworker drops his mask too just to cool off for a minute and he inhales the virus via the droplets infected with Covid. He doesn't know anything about the sneeze or his co-worker's mild cold. He thinks that since he got negative test results yesterday, he is clear and won't be any danger to his grandmother, who has been invited to his father's 60th birthday party tomorrow. He attends this birthday party and hugs his grandmother, whom he loves dearly and has gone months without seeing her in person, because she has been self-isolating just in case.  Next thing he knows, his grandmother is in the hospital and has died of Covid-19. He certainly didn't mean to kill his grandmother, but since he tested positively recently at work and his father with diabetes is also in the hospital fighting for his life, he realizes that something happened that connects him to his grandmother and his father's illnesses, even though he doesn't know why or how.                                                                                                         
This young man is puzzled how all of this transpired, yet our heavenly Father knows and understands everything. He knows that even the most innocent of actions can result in death and suffering because nothing ever happens in a vacuum. All of our actions have consequences, positive or negative. Even those actions that are not deliberate. The young man didn't murder his grandmother. She died as a result of someone else's careless actions. Someone infected with Covid-19 transmitted it to someone else because neither of them were wearing masks. Ultimately the virus reaches a vulnerable member of our population and she dies suddenly. The family is both surprised and grief stricken, yet God is not surprised because this faithful believer is welcomed by all her loved ones who have passed before her. All the worry surrounding the grandmother is wasted energy. The prayers weren't wasted because those praying drew closer to heaven by those prayers, just as they will draw closer to heaven and the family will draw closer to each other in their shared grief. This is part of the cycle of life. Eventually, the person who has been spreading the disease becomes painfully aware of the suffering all around him. Several members of his family die, several more get very sick and are impacted negatively for months. Finally, he tests and turns up with antibodies, even though he has no recollection of ever being sick.                                                        

Someone else's free will choice had repercussions in the lives of many people. Their free will choice has intertwined with social responsibility and changed the lives of many. Nothing we do is done in a vacuum. Some things we do have very few repercussions in other people's lives. Others have far-reaching consequences that reverberate throughout our home town, our families, and even our country. At few times in our history has this truth been made more real and more dire, and yet people will continue to shun masks, much as some continue to shun condoms when having sex, even though they have a sexually transmitted disease. These people view their personal freedoms as more important than the well being of those they infect.
 
At no time in history is it more important for us to weigh personal freedoms against social responsibility. In a day when food shortages are very real for the financially vulnerable, we have to consider our actions closely. if we have not been negatively impacted by the pandemic in the area of finances, we need to look around us and see the needs in our community around us. There are people in this rich country who are worried about food and drink and health care. We need to see how we can help. Those who need help  need to be open to receiving it from neighbors and even strangers because all help is ultimately from our Father in heaven, who knows before we do what we need. Our job is to cease worrying about it and start seeking God's kingdom first, discerning what we can do to meet the needs of others during this time of Coronavirus.              
                                                                                                                             
"25 Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? 26 Look at the birds of the air: They do not sow or reap or gather into barns—and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? 27 Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life? 28 And why do you worry about clothes? Consider how the lilies of the field grow: They do not labor or spin. 29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his glory was adorned like one of these. 30 If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? 31 Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 32 For the Gentiles strive after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33 But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Today has enough trouble of its own." (Matthew 6:25-34)                             

So while it may be difficult not to worry, try focusing instead on ways you can relieve the suffering of others. Relieving the suffering of others is always a way to follow God's righteousness. It's a way to couple free will with social responsibility. Just remember to wear a mask and maybe a face shield too. And for heaven's sake, wash your hands and the rest of your body while you're at it. Oh, and you might want to refrain from removing the speck in your brother's eye as well as the log in your own because, you know, that whole need to keep your hands away from your face, as well as someone else's face.  

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Synonymous with Love

Christianity should be synonymous with love. After all, Christian means Christ-like. Who, more than Jesus Christ, embodies the message of God's love for humanity? In John 3:16, Jesus proclaims the words so often quoted: "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten son, that whosoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life."

Because God loved the world, He gave us Jesus. As followers of Jesus, we should be like Him and embody God's love for humanity. More often than should be, Christianity is synonymous with judgment or exclusivity or hatred or a "holier than thou" mindset. These things are antonyms rather than synonyms of love. This must change, and it must change now lest the Church fail in the calling to share the good news about God's love as evidenced by sending Jesus to us.

How can a message telling people that they are going to hell  be good news? I don't recall Jesus ever telling his disciples to tell people they were going to hell. Please send me chapter and verse if I simply missed this during the hundred or so times I've read the Gospels. While we are at it, it would behoove us not only to share the good news to a suffering world, but to live the good news of God's love by reaching out to those who need to experience it most.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

The Beloved Gospel

I have been immersing myself lately in the Gospel of John. I didn't plan to do it. It just started happening. It's like deciding to go out for a walk and finding that no matter how hard you try, you cannot make yourself stay on your prescribed path. That is how it has been with the Gospel of John. I might start out dipping into another passage of the Bible, but I keep winding up back in John. I have to wonder if Jesus had the same problem.  No matter how how much he loved the other disciples and spent time with them,  did he repeatedly find that he ended up hanging out with John? Was his loving nature so absorbing that Jesus enjoyed his association with John more than the others? Is this how the gospel writer gained the moniker "the disciple whom Jesus loved?" Surely Jesus loved all his disciples. So why did John refer to himself as "the beloved disciple?" Perhaps we will not know that until we reach the other side. In the meantime, I will just enjoy immersing myself in the Gospel of John, which I have taken to referring to as the "gospel of love."

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Jesus Wept

The shortest verse in the Bible (John 11:35) fills me with hope. You see, I'm a weeper, and I'm glad to know that Jesus was a weeper too. Perhaps it is merely hormonal. Perhaps it is that as I enter the crone stage of my life, I have learned that the most important things in life revolve around love and connection to others. Perhaps it is because my compassion tank got bigger as my life experiences have gotten more difficult at times. I have experienced times of great sorrow and great pain, which at times has led to deep loneliness. But even those times of deep loneliness eventually turned to an awareness of a great Presence. That Presence wasn't talking. Not even in a still small voice. That Presence was simply there, bearing witness to my suffering. The Presence wasn't trying to hide the pain, discomfort, or despair. The Presence was simply there with every shallow breath, every sharp intake of pain, every excruciating moment of loss. There was no pretense that suffering was easy or "for the best."

I suspect in the midst of his agony on the cross, Jesus felt the acuteness of his suffering. We are told in Matthew 27 that he expressed this feeling of abandonment when he uttered the words, "Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?" This is translated by the gospel writer to mean, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" A short time later, Jesus cried out and "yielded up his spirit." In other words, he let go of his physical being and died. I would like to believe that in those tense moments when those nearby were debating the meaning of his words, Jesus became once again aware of that great Presence, and that is what allowed him to relax into the arms of the awaiting angels, who had come to deliver his spirit to God. I know in my heart that the Presence is always there. I may not always feel it at first, but if I reach out to God, I am always met. Not by a loud, booming voice; sometimes not even a still, small voice. But I am always met nonetheless, by a Presence that lets me know that my suffering doesn't happen in a vacuum. God is always there, bearing witness to the great pain and joys of my life, even when it doesn't feel like it.

What Can I Do for God?

Decades ago, a young politician with big ideas gave a speech. Not everyone appreciated his ideas, but he became one of the most beloved Presidents of the United States. In his inaugural address, John F Kennedy encouraged the citizens of his country, "Ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country." It's natural for us to want to know what's in it for us.  The higher path is to ask what we can do to help others. To look not for the self-seeking answer, but to look for the answer that brings hope to someone else. As in the national view this is true, so in the spiritual world. Ask not what your God can do for you--ask what you you can do for God. While you have nothing God doesn't have, you have gifts God can use to help others. I'm going to start today, asking what I can do each day for God to encourage others and watching for clues that let me know where God wants me to be and what God needs me to do.

Thursday, July 14, 2016

John 3:16 The Whosever Believes Gospel

"For God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life."

With those words, the net of salvation was thrown wide. Any church whose net is cast narrower than this is not teaching the "Whosoever Believes" gospel. John 3:16 does not say whoever believes, except the Catholics or the Presbyterians or the Methodists or the Episcopalians. It does not say whosoever believes, except alcoholics or gossips or swindlers. It doesn't even say whoever believes, except the gays and the lesbians or bisexuals or transgendered people. There is no qualifier beyond those who believe in the Son. No qualifiers. It does not say that you have to be tithing or singing like an angel or being a missionary. There are absolutely no qualifiers in what is one of the most often quoted passages of scripture. It doesn't even say that you have to believe in the Son and in the teachings of the apostles who cast their nets narrowly. It says, "whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but shall have ever lasting life."

So why do so many churches preach a Whosoever Believes EXCEPT gospel? The word gospel means good news. But what is so good about this gospel of exclusion or selectivism? Each church excludes different individuals or groups, but any church who excludes people God includes is not following the John 3:16 directive, which was uttered by Jesus Himself. Don't you think it would be better if we established our church policies in response to Jesus' take on God's love instead of on man's? I don't care how much a "man or woman of God" a given church leader is, even an apostle. No one understands the depths of God's love like God's son. Who are we to argue with him over his version of the gospel?

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Jesus Would Be So Busted!

I don't particularly wish to start my blog on a negative note, so please let's just consider this a clarion call to action. I just read an article I stumbled upon about a 90-year-old man and two pastors who were arrested in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for feeding the homeless. Yes, you heard it correctly. They were feeding those who cannot afford to put a roof over their heads. Now if I stretch my brain as far as it will go, I might be able to wrap it around the concept of there being no money in the government to provide them with some sort of housing and food, but making it illegal for citizens with a sense of moral decency to feed the poor with a "public feeding?" That is outrageous. There is no world where this should happen, much less in a so-called "free nation." Two guesses as to where Jesus would spend much of his time, if He were wandering the earth today and happened to have a teaching session scheduled in Florida.

http://www.local10.com/news/police-charge-90yearold-man-2-pastors-with-feeding-the-homeless/29510268


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