Day 34

I love the vision of a new heaven and a new earth (Revelation 21:1-6).  We have done a superior job of messing up the old heaven and the old earth.  It is almost beyond repair.  At least a sixth of the world’s population has no access to safe drinking water.   God didn’t do that, we did.  Climate change is happening at an increasing pace caused at least in part by human acts of  deforestation and burning of fossil fuels.  Who needs to smoke cigarettes when you can get lung cancer just by breathing?  And there is a clear link between the suffering of the environment and the suffering of the poor.  The poor always suffer first and they suffer most.

John’s vision is not original.  Isaiah first envisioned the coming of a new heaven and earth (Isaiah 65:17ff).  It is a powerful vision of justice, equity, public safety, health from infancy to old age, fulfilling work (yes, work can be fulfilling!), and clean drinking water (FREE, too!).  The vision even extends to the rest of creation–the animals, the land.  WOW!  And the best part:  God dwells among us.  Which means that the vision won’t fizzle out after a few weeks.

I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait until God’s new creation becomes a full reality.  And in the meantime, I’m going to live toward the vision.  Since it’s coming, I want to be ready.

Day 33

One of my favorite hymns is “It Is Well With My Soul”.  When peace like a river attendeth my way; when sorrows like sea billows roll.  Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say, “It is well, it is well, with my soul.”

While I was reading Isaiah 60:17b-22, I found myself drawn to the strange description of life without the sun and moon.  Nothing seems more predictable than the rhythm of daytime and nighttime.  The sun comes up, the sun goes down.  No surprises there.  Nothing to rattle my nerves or cause a seismic shift in my plans. I like the uninterrupted pattern.  I know what to expect.  But that is not what well-being (peace/shalom) looks like.  Peace is not found in the rhythm of predictable regularity, but the gift of God’s presence.  Well-being is fully experienced when the Lord is our everlasting light–when we revolve around God with our eyes fixed upon God.

Life is life–full of joys and sorrows, frustrations and fulfillment, uncertainties and hope, struggle and rest, demanding obligations and refreshing surprises.  Even so, it is well with my soul.  God is the source of my well-being.

Day 32

I turned on the television this morning and the lead story was about a woman believed to have been abducted in rural Tennessee after a home invasion.  This is the world I live in–a world where no place is safe, where harm is ‘normal’, where the ones with the guns control the outcomes.

And then I read today’s Scripture (Isaiah 11:6-10).   Lions with lambs, leopards with goats, bears with cows, children with cobras.  THIS is a world I know nothing about.  Don’t get me wrong, it sounds amazing and wonderful, but it is also totally alien to my experience.  Imagine a world where predator and prey do not fear one another; where generational enemies live as friends; where there is no harm or destruction; where power is not abused.  This is certainly a new age–a glorious vision of Sabbath rest and shalom–made real  through the knowledge of the Lord and the Root of Jesse.

I’m glad I read this passage.  It is a reminder that what I see on television every day is not the way it will always be.  The new day of peace which dawned that first Easter morning will come into fullness.  One day.  Imagine.

Day 31

The movie Miss Congeniality with Sandra Bullock is a parody of beauty pageants–oops, I mean “womens’ scholarship programs”.  Of course, every contestant’s answer to the competition’s final question is: “world peace” (no matter what the question is).  Cue the laughter.

But world peace is no joke for Isaiah, who envisions a day when conflicts will be arbitrated and disputes will be settled without resorting to swords, spears, bombs, tanks, missiles, WMDs and drones (Isaiah 2:2-5).  Instead of turning to weapons of war, nations turn to the Word to learn a new way–a ‘just’ way which makes war so obsolete that they cease to manufacture weapons and close their military schools.

But Isaiah isn’t naive.  Even in the last days, there are conflicts and disputes.  Nations have issues with other nations that need to be arbitrated.  God’s shalom is not the absence of conflicts.  God’s shalom is the presence of resolutions to conflict that preserve the safety and dignity of all and do not require taking up arms.   God’s way results in win-win.  War is always lose-lose.  For too long, we have learned our conflict resolution strategies from West Point, Annapolis and the School of the Americas.  In these last days, we need to go to the Mountain for some retraining before we destroy ourselves.

Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord.

Day 30

We live in a world of division; where everyone is categorized (and pigeonholed) by their differences.: gender, ethnicity, language, orientation, race, status.  And difference often leads to suspicion, fear, exclusion, hatred and violence.  I find it fascinating that we deal with essentially the same divisions as the early church over 2000 years ago (Colossians 3:11).  “But the apostle Paul makes a bold statement:  HERE, there is no division.  HERE, Christ is all and is in all.  Christ is the great uniter.  Christ is the great equalizer.  But where is ‘here’?

I believe the question is answered by one of Paul’s followup statements:  “Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts since as members of one body you were called to peace.”  (Col. 3:15)  HERE is where the peace of Christ–shalom–guides all decisions about the ‘ordering’ of our social relationships.  And since Christ is ‘in all’ and we are ‘members of one body’,  an ordering that excludes is ‘dis-order’ –the very antithesis of shalom.

It is so easy to fall back into categorization of one another.  We are called to live by a new ‘rule’–a different ethic.  Only when we are ”ruled” by the peace of Christ can we begin to watch the walls fall down and a new ‘ordering’ take shape among us.

Shalom, my friends.

 

Day 29

Observation: People are violent.  Parallel realization: dead people can’t be violent.  Interesting corollary:  resurrected people can choose violence or nonviolence (though only nonviolence makes sense given their new state of existence).  (Colossians 3:1-10 and Romans 6:2-4)

Second observation:  We are resurrected people as followers of the resurrected Christ.  As resurrected people, we are part of the new creation and the image of God in which we were first made (Genesis 1)  is being renewed in us through knowledge of Christ. Violence is no longer a ‘given’.  Daily, we can ‘put into practice’ the ways of the ‘new self’ and refuse to resurrect our old violent way of life.  We have a choice.  Free at last! Free at last!

So, why do I struggle so much with violence?  Maybe it’s because I forget to remind myself that I’m alive–I mean really alive.

Day 28

Spoiler Alert!  I’m preaching on Romans 12:14, 17-21 tomorrow (4/10), so you might want to just wait to hear the sermon and not read this entry.  But if you aren’t located near 3551 W. Diversey Ave. in Chicago, you’re welcome to continue.

We’re so used to thinking that revenge is the appropriate response when we have been wronged.  Movies glorify it (Kill Bill, Kill Bill 2, Kill Bill 3–BTW, how many times must Bill die?), we teach it to our children (if he hits you, flatten him!), and we equate it with “getting justice”–an interesting use of the ‘J” word.  But Paul–and Jesus in Matthew 6–gives us another option: a counteraction that prevents the situation from deteriorating into more violence and bloodshed and pushes both parties toward peace. “Bless….  feed…. Give a cup of cold water….”

That’s crazy talk–or so we think.  It won’t work (we assume) so we don’t try it.   It would seem that if we bless, feed and water the one who has wronged us that (s)he has won and gotten everything (s)he wanted in the first place.  So, it would seem, BUT….

Paul’s reference to “if your enemy is hungry, give him something to eat, etc” is a direct quote of Proverbs 25:21-22.  Paul omits the last line of Prov. 25:22: “And the Lord will reward you.”   God blesses those who refuse to return violence for violence.  God’s blessing is about experiencing “shalom’–becoming whole and living in fullness.  When I carry out revenge, a part of my humanity dies.  When I respond with a curse for a curse, my soul atrophies.  I will never experience the abundant  life in Christ if I insist on taking up the actions that lead to death and destruction.

Bless, feed, water….  Maybe we should try it.

Day 27

In the virtual relationship Facebook world in which we live, the word ‘friend’ doesn’t mean much.  It has lost it’s depth.  I ‘friend’ my co-worker’s second-cousin’s dog-walker whom I’ve never met.  So when we read “friendship with the world” in James 4:1-10, it seems innocuous.  What’s so wrong with friendship?  It’s doesn’t really mean anything anyway.

So, I’d like to propose an alternative wording to help us get inside James’ concern:  “Don’t you know that having sex with the world destroys fidelity with God?”  (James 4:4)  Of course, sex can be as shallow and empty as Facebook ‘friending’, but in it’s highest form, the act of sex is about intimate connection and an expression of the intertwining of two lives–not just two bodies.  Sex expresses our desire for full participation in the life of our partner.

James says (in essence) that when we unite ourselves to a world system that uses violence, coercion and domination to fulfill its goals, we embrace the very same practices.  We become full participants in the ways of the world.  And when we embrace violence, coercion and domination, we reject God’s way.  We reject relationship with God.

If we want intimate connection with God, we have to humbly evaluate and acknowledge our participation in destructive systems of ‘the world’, reject those systems and unite ourselves to God.  And God promises to lift up (embrace) those who do.

Day 26

Smack talk.  Tongue lashings.  Verbal abuse.  Violence is frequently found inside our mouths.  Who needs fists when the tongue can be just as effective?  And since there’s no blood, we don’t consider “curse words” violent at all.  James would beg to differ (James 3:6-9).  He uses strong language to describe verbal violence–evil, corrupt, deadly, poisonous, destructive, from hell.

We all grew up with the “sticks and stones may break my bones” myth.  We all have been on the receiving end of words that deeply wound and break our spirits.  Words DO hurt.  And words linger in our psyches, effecting our self-image.  “Curse words” draw boundaries for our lives and we struggle to become free.  Even a comment as innocent as “you’re not very good at math” binds us for life.

We know the destructive power of curses.  So, why would we use them on others?  Good question.  But once a hellish fire is started, a heavenly fire extinguisher is required.  We need Holy Spirit control.

Day 25

I’ve never done a thorough study of the dynamics that occur when two people first meet, but I can tell you from firsthand experience that there is a rapid assessment and evaluation based upon appearance, demeanor and social context that will either result in pursuit of a relationship or a polite, “well, it was nice meeting you”.   In large part, pursuit of the relationship is based on whether I believe that my life will somehow be improved or enhanced by this new contact.  The pursuit is based on self-interest.  What can this person do for me?  What networks will I can access to?  Rejection is also based on self-interest.  What will this person demand of me and my time?  What will happen to my status if I am in this relationship?

The assessment and evaluation also occurs in group settings.  Which is where the church comes into the picture.  We ask the same questions in the plural:  What can this person do for us?  Will this person bring resources to us or take resources from us?  Will this person advance our mission and enhance our image in the community?  And James nails it (James 2:1-4).  Money (or the appearance of money) gets attention because most churches need it.

But James also reminds us that showing favoritism is incompatible with our faith in Jesus Christ, who became poor, who had no place to lay his head and who spent most of his time with people who were “poor in the eyes of the world”–those God chose to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom (James 2:5)

We reveal who we are by the relationships we pursue.