Brrr

It’s coming… our first real winter in over three years.  Today is -20-something with the wind; chilly enough to make me ask again…

WHY did we come home?!

Gridblog: Living in Death’s Light

Yeah, I’m late.  But since Steve wrote about Living in Light of Eternity, I figured a few days here or there makes precious little difference.

A few weeks back, my mind was on suffering.  I wasn’t really in the midst of any unusual struggles or pain; I just found myself considering the hurtful parts of life.  There’s no shortage of them: Disappointment with self or others or circumstances shows itself in a million ways.  Sometimes, “disappointment” is way too weak of a description.  Life can dish out some blatantly brutal realities that it would seem no person should ever have to go through.

The feeling that overwhelmed me was, “This can’t be for nothing.  There must be something crucial about our sufferings.”

I realize that that sounds vague, maybe nothing more than wishful.  But the feeling was intense, and it wouldn’t leave me alone… and it wouldn’t come into clearer focus.  The more I lived with it, the more I decided that what I was really getting at was the idea that our sufferings must count for something; they can’t simply be pain for the sense of pain.  Beneath, there must lie something more substantial.  I felt as though my holding to a worldview that involves a God at its centre demanded that at least this much make sense.

Now what I say next is not an attempt to answer unanswerable questions.  I am not digging around in very real and very hard life, hoping to find some catchy God-slogan.  Not even close.

We received news, along with many of you, that our friends (John & Jenn) had lost their baby boy.

And we tried to share in the shock.

And we tried to share in the tears.

Circumstances allowed us to attend the graveside service of Gordon Hector Wallace, and we were grateful.  As we stood in the frigid cemetary together, through the visiting afterwards, and over the next handful of days, this train (right or wrong) dominated my thoughts…

Our sufferings do matter.  And how God’s people live in the shadow of death and every other terrible thing is highly important.  A visit with a friend after the graveside service involved a tearful imagining that she and her husband might not survive if they had to walk John & Jenn’s road.  She simply wasn’t sure if they would pull through together.  Maybe she’s right.  Maybe not.  It’s immaterial.

But our sufferings are not; not to God and not to His establishing His reign on earth.

In one sense, there is no couple that deserved a healthy baby more than John & Jenn did.  God is highly pleased with the lives of these two children of His; I have no doubt.

In another sense, there are likely few couples with sufficient depth and grace to walk this road in a way that is truly beautiful and God-glorifying.  And in that sense, the segments of our roads that are walked hand-in-hand with death are of the utmost importance.  This is where much of the world walks.  Jesus Christ walked such roads in a way that beauty flowed and life was never far behind.  In fact, his fashion of living through the dark times is highly more impacting than his fashion of living through the heights.  That’s no knock on him; it’s just the nature of life.  The heavy moments hit harder, and our responses to such times are weightier expressions of who we are and what we hold to than the celebrations we hold on the mountain tops.

And it’s confirmation that there is more power and potential in our sufferings than our hurt usually allows us to see.   And that is a reality that we Resurrection-people are to live out.

And that is a reality that can only be lived out in the light of loss, injustice, fear, tragedy, confusion,… or death.

Back to the Mount

In preparation for an upcoming lesson, I just read Matthew 5-7. Yes, that’s the good ‘ole Sermon on the Mount, and yes, that’s the one you’ve heard a thousand times perhaps.

I decided to read it in The Message translation, which I’d never done before–BAM! IN-CREDIBLE!   Seriously, why do I not read this every single day?!?!

In The Message, chapter 7 ends like this:

When Jesus concluded his address, the crowd burst into applause. They had never heard teaching like this. It was apparent that he was living everything he was saying–quite a contrast to their religion teachers! This was the best teaching they had ever heard.

Reading it again for myself, I’m re-convinced…

We truly have never heard greater teaching than this!

Laying the Smack Down

Who’s doing that?

Eugene Peterson.  That’s who.

Here’s a few recently-read words…

The devil does some of his best work when he gets Christians to think of themselves as Christian laypersons.  In the ordinary use of our language, the term layperson virtually always means not-an-expert.  A layperson wouldn’t dream of walking into surgery, picking up a scalpel, and removing a diseased gall bladder from an anesthetized body on the table.  Nor if I were the body would I permit it!

We demand competence, expertise, and know-how in people in matters that really count.  We also require confirming evidence–certifications, diplomas, badges, uniforms, and endorsements.  When we are dealing with anything that matters, we want the best–which means we don’t want a layperson.

He goes on to talk about how some of this is simply a part of life here and now.  Information is simply growing so fast in so many fields… no one can  hope to know everything.  We must trust some realms of life to experts.

However, he goes on…

This is a perfect setup for the Devil.  If I can be convinced that layperson designates who I am and not just what I know or can do, then I am a wide-open market for experts who are ready to tell me how to live my life and, in some cases, even live it for me.  Because God is the core of who I am and what I do and there is far more to God than I can ever learn and deeper mysteries in the workings of God than I can ever figure out, I’m quite willing to employ an expert to take care of these matters for me.

And so I end up delegating the operations of my soul to the experts.  I no longer deal with God myself–I’m a layperson, after all.  I still, of course, engage in the usual range of God-related activities and retain a considerable vocabulary of God-referencing words and phrases to which the experts guide me.  I’m quite happy to be enlisted in God-projects and  often pleased to be recruited to play my part in contributing and helping the trained and certified professionals–but always with a self-deprecating awareness that pastors and professors are my superiors in these matters.

Following Jesus gives way to following Jesus-experts.  It isn’t long before I have acquired all the habits of a consumer in relation to God, letting someone else supply all the essential goods and services.  I’m a religious consumer, that’s true, but a  consumer all the same–a soul condition deeply marred by passivity.

Zing!

Eugene, why do you have go saying stuff like that?  You know: Stuff that cuts.  Stuff that’s sharp.  Stuff that’s true.

Why, man?!

Lost Tribe

In Yahoo’s News today… Lost Tribe of Indian Jews Migrate to Israel.

The truly bizarre thing is that I think we likely worshipped in the same room as some of these people back in 2002, when we went to India!