Monthly Archives: July 2020

Keeping the Main Thing the Main Thing

Do you ever lose focus? Do you ever get lost in the weeds? Do you ever watch the new shiny object while you are missing everything else around you? I do – frequently. Last week was one of those “frequently” times. We had just returned from the first visit with our Mississippi family since early March. I had gotten out of my daily Bible readings and prayer. You know the drill.

When I finally sat down on the tailgate of the truck to pray, I just said, “Lord, I’ve lost my way. I need Your help. You see, I’ve watched too much news and am obsessed with politics and the pandemic.” “Politics” and “Pandemic,” now, there’s a bad combination from any point of view.

Before long, my mind was drawn to a traditional immigrant folk song, “When I First Came to this Land,” and I wondered why? See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWPKw1wtkhc The first verse reads,

When I first came to this land, I was not a wealthy man, but I got myself a shack, and I did what I could. And I called that shack ‘break my back.’ But the land was rich and good and I did what I could.

It’s simple, basic, and it harkens back to the time – an admittedly hard time – when the protagonist’s focus was on the “Main Thing,” a shack, a cow, a wife – a son. I wondered if that sort of simplicity was possible today. Then, God led me to a scripture, Philippians 4:4-8. NIV.

Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice! Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. [And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. 

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

Shortly after my reading and praying a bit, my messages “dinged.” It was pastor Ben McDavid with a video devotional on Isaiah Chapter 6. As you will remember, in Chapter 6, the prophet, Isaiah sees the throne room of God and is overawed. Pastor Ben’s devotional was concise but meaningful and uplifting. It was simple and to the point. Isaiah sees God and in the words of the hymn, “the things of earth grow strangely dim.” See: https://www.facebook.com/fumcmontgomery/videos/2974275866032693

“That’s it,” God said. “Just focus on Me, and all this other stuff will be as grass that withers and dies. I AM the ‘Main Thing.” To highlight His point, God reminded me of an experience that He gave me about a decade ago.

On a mission trip to Northern India in 2010 or 2011, a small team of volunteer missionaries, a member of which I was privileged to be, were ministering in a refugee camp for Tibetans fleeing the Chinese Communists.

In the city where we were staying, Raj Pur, there was in that camp, the home of a refugee from just over the northern border in Tibet. As we were ministering in that home, there were 30-40 Tibetans packed into the living room. They were sitting and standing on top of each other. That is, except for a man lying on a cot. He appeared to be ill. 

As the pastor with us read the Bible and led a short devotion, my attention was continually drawn to the man on the cot. When the pastor concluded, as we were about to leave, I asked the local interpreter, a local indigenous pastor if I might pray for the sick man. The pastor agreed and told me that the sick man had sores all over his back. 

Having no clue as to what the illness was, I nevertheless, laid my left hand on the man’s back, raised my right hand to Heaven, and began to pray for the man’s healing. During my prayer, God sent me a vision or a thought, or an impression – however, you want to define it – visually showing me what was taking place in the spiritual realm.

In my spirit, I could see God seated on his “throne,” a huge ruby-colored cushion with golden fringe. His legs crossed under Him in what I supposed was a “lotus pose” – for those of you, like me, who practice yoga. On a cushion to His right and left, were two “beings” that I was impressed to believe were the Son on His right and the Holy Spirit on His left. The three were dressed in traditional Indian garb that would have been worn during the period of the Maharajas. God, the Father, wore a large turban. Their throne room was more beautiful than I could imagine at the time. 

As I continued to pray, I was completely caught up in the vision to the point that I was unaware that I was speaking. I saw as it were, a crimson-red stream began to issue forth from the Father’s throne, flowing through the blackness of space in a tight, rope-like fashion, winding its way through the myriad of galaxies.

The flow streamed, crimson – red, until it poured through the roof, the ceiling, into the room, and onto the floor. I saw and felt it enter my body. The healing stream passed through me, out my left hand, and into the sick man. I could see its aura around the man.

After a time, I knew the process was over. After my “AMEN,” I opened my physical eyes and saw all the people in the room trying to form a line toward me for me to pray for each. There were so many people that we, the team of minister volunteers, divided them up and each of us prayed for a portion individually until we had prayed for all. They spoke no English, and we spoke neither Tibetan nor Hindi, but God figured it all out – I suppose.

After the prayers, the people thanked us profusely, so our interpreter said. As we had prayed for over two hours, we had to alter our schedule and take a chai break to discuss what we had just experienced. None of us had such a remarkable experience before. 

Sometime after we returned to the States, I thought of a poem that I had started in 1978 shortly after our daughter, Amy was born. In 1978, the subject of the poem was Amy, set as an Indian princess. However, I could never finish it, nor even progress past the first verse. In 2011, God repurposed the poem to show me not my daughter, but the “Main Thing” – Himself. As finally completed, the poem is a representation of what I saw, felt, and experienced that day in that Tibetan refugee village in Northern India.

I suspect that this vision was not unlike the experience that Isaiah had and recorded in Isaiah Chapter 6. Perhaps Isaiah saw God as Isaiah would have expected to see a great King. That, too, was what I saw, except that the location was Northern India instead of Judah, and the time was – well, who knows. 

I offer you this vision of what Isaiah and I saw.

The Purwat[1] of Rajpur[2]

By John R. Wible. Begun in 1978,[3] completed in September-October, 2011

In Rajpur, the Purwat with majesty did sit, Exalted high upon the Ruby throne,

Whose dais filled the great Hall there, at least the most of it, With each and every kind of precious stone.

Beside the Purwat there stood the Khybear[4] to left, And to the right, the Ivory Dumar,[5]

Who opened mighty floodgates wide, From whence proceeded hence, The River of the Purwat’s great pow’r.

The pow’r to make and make again, At His majestic call,

And echo same from One to One, Gush forth like liquid Ruby from the Hall.

The pow’r to make and make again, How can this thing be so?

How can such might be latent lie, Within the Ruby flow?

And who is touched by the liquid flame, To be changed to flesh from stone?

“Oh, is it I,” one dares to ask, “Who can such glory own?”

The question shocks the spirit man, And to the soul gives pause,

“Nay, who am I to ask of such, And based upon what cause?”

At once, the Khybear dains to speak, Give voice His trifurcated tongue,

The sound of such I cannot bear, Nor with the Three be among.

And even though the Khybear, He, His face and feet I hear,

Felled on my face I find myself, A ‘quivering with fear.

Gives back the shout, the Dumar does, And three times louder than before,

“Pow’r of pow’r and might of might,” Echoes from wall to crown to floor.

“It is done,” the speaker speaks. “The River’s flow ne’er stopped,”

And washed me o’er from face to toe, Until my body sopped.

“Woe is me, I am undone, A man of hollow lip,

That ope’ of aweful ocean tide, Until the Ruby sip.”

The taste of curried gall, it is, More bitter than be borne,

Hollowed by the years of me, Until my teeth, they’ve torn.

O’er once and twice and thrice again, The taste each crevice fills,

And all the vacuum vanishes, ’til soon my soul it thrills.

“Oh, strange and unfamiliar taste, This chutney of the soul,

Can You my weakness wash away? And make, remake me whole?”

“It can, It can,” the Purwat, Proclaimed, now drink it all.

Oh, take it in, its savor seek, Salvation mixed with gall.”

And then I realized my lips, Well full with new-found floods,

Which sprang from them each time I spoke? The Royal Ruby Blood.

“Now, make and make and make again,” I hear the Khybear bleat,

“And give to all, do all I say.” And then He took His seat.

But yet the Dumar grew in form, E’en larger than before.

And with each iteration’s growth, Less visible each pore.

And in a wild and winsome way, I wot that He the Ruby had become,

That filled my lips; He bade me speak, ‘til the Purwat be known. 

The sky rolled in and covered up,  The vision I had seen,

The Purwat, upon His throne The Khybear had entered in.

And became as e’er before, With Purwat be one

The Dumar, too, in some strange way, The threefold person now done.

And so, i’twas, and so shalt be, As from the time before.

The Purwat exalted high, Above this human floor.

And I am filled to overflow, On Ruby-hu-ed sips,

And nevermore will speak to man, With hollow, haughty lips.

*   *  *

So let it be written, so let it be done.


[1] Purwat (pronounced Poor-a-what), is a combination word of my own making. The word, given to me in the vision, is a combination of two ancient words from two ancient languages, Hindi and Khmer. In the Rig Veda, the ancient Hindu writings, “pur” is referred to more than 30 times and means “city, castle or fortress.” “Wat” is from the ancient Khmer language of Cambodia and means “temple.” In ancient times before Christ, in fact, before recorded history, peoples of Indian descent inhabited modern Cambodia such that it was known by British and French scholars as “Farther India.” “Purwat” then, is the title that was given to me for Jehovah God, the triune “Temple City” by extension, and the City that is a holy temple.

[2] Rajpur, a small town in Uttarakhan State in Northern India, is an ancient princely state on the banks of the River Mahisagar in Western India. It is perhaps in this reference that I first heard the name some 33 years ago. The term, “Raj” means “might” or “power” in Hindi, thus Rajpur would mean the City of Power.

[3] I began this poem in 1978 shortly after Amy was born. I was could never get past the first verse, and I wondered why. It is now clear that God began a vision for me in 1978 but did not complete the vision for some 33 years. The poem is the verbalization of a vision I received in Northern India during a prayer session in a Tibetan refugee village. Upon reflection, it is basically the same vision that the prophet, Isaiah saw and recorded in Isaiah 6, q.v. In the vision, I saw the Triune God in Heaven dressed in 17th Century Indian garb. God the Father was seated on a huge Ruby coloured pillow in a full lotus position. To His right and left were God the Son (Khybear) and God the Holy Spirit (Dumar.) From the throne emanated a ruby coloured river that descended from Heaven to the room in which I stood praying over a man who had abscesses on his back. The ruby flow covered the floor and came to my feet. Then it came through my body and exited out my hand which was on the sick man. The flow was God’s healing power. It was a double gift. A gift of healing to the man and a gift of God’s permitting me to be the instrumentality of that healing.

[4] Khybear (pronounced Khyber,) is a contrived word using the Khyber region of India to the Northwest of Rajpur (the right) and Bear for “Chi Bear,” Amy’s first stuffed animal.

[5] Dumar (Dumar Kachar in Madhya Pradesh, to the Southeast of Rajpur,) is the second place name used. (Left.) Dumar was Amy’s second animal. Dumar is also one of the “scheduled casts” of Madhya Pradesh.

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“Eternal Father, Stron to Save”

Written in 1860, Englishman William Whiting’s “Eternal Father, Strong to Save,” known in the United States as the “Navy Hymn,” and in Great Britain and many Commonwealth nations, the “Royal Navy Hymn,” ranks high on my “Top Ten List” of favorites.  The melancholy, prayerful, and somber yet chilling nature of the lyrics, matches the close harmonies of the tune, John B. Dyke’s “Melita.” 

Together, they capture both the vast and dark expanse of the deep sea and the cavernous plaintiff cries of the mourners lamenting the condition of lost shipmates who now sleep beneath the depths. The piece is rightly performed at naval funerals in many countries. 

Funerals. The proper time for lament. Perhaps, in our society, the only appropriate time for lament, or so suggests Glenn Pemberton in Hurting with God: Learning to Lament with the Psalms. Maybe, he’s right, at least for most people. But, “lament” does not equate with complaint or depression. Lament, according to Professor Pemberton, is a God-given form of deeply felt prayer. It gives expression to honesty – and ultimately, to release.

In a previous post, “The ‘Wright’ Guidance,” I exposed the reader to the ideas of Bishop N. T. Wright, writing in God and the Pandemic: A Christian Reflection on the Coronavirus and its Aftermath, Zondervan, 2020.  Bishop Wright suggests that the world’s current state of affairs calls for a time of lament, lament as we find in about 40% of the Psalms.  

I’ve been trying that, but I have discovered that I do not lament well. It seems that it’s just not in my nature or training. It is my preference to always search for the bright side and to disdain much moping about. 

As I retraced the course of that discovery, an image came to my mind’s eye and a song in my mind’s ear – The Navy Hymn, Eternal Father, Strong to Save. May I suggest that you listen to the following track as you read below.. https://youtu.be/h7nswbxC2jo

Through the soulish glass of that organ of inner vision, plain as day, I beheld a faceless figure swimming silently and effortlessly upon the surface of a cerulean sea. 

And, lo, in the background, yet a ways off in the distance, the cobalt-coloured shape of a ship, broke in half, slowly and quietly sank. 

O, the swimming figure could not see the ship because he swam away from it, away from the sun that, in its accustomed course, streaked forth the first rays of eventide, backlighting the broken boat in its crimson-hued decline.

Quietly, barely perceptible, the sun was setting. Quieter, barely visible, the ship was sinking. Quieter still, the foreground figure was floating. 

“But, was it truly that quiet?” I mused as it seemed that in my mind’s ear, I could hear the mellifluous melody of the Navy Hymn.

Eternal Father, strong to save, Whose arm doth bind the restless wave, Who bids the mighty ocean deep Its own appointed limits keep; O hear us when we cry to Thee, For those in peril on the sea. – William Whiting. 

Obliviously, the swimming figure heard not the tender tones – because, in his head, he was humming a happy song. Nay, the figure heard not the creaking of the midships’ breaking upon the horizon, nor heard yet the burgeoning “boom” of her blowing boilers.

And, incomprehensibly, he apprehended not the last breath’s expiration from the sailors recently billeted aboard but now consigned to an ocean’s gloomy grave. 

Insensible, the form regarded not the deaf, dumb, and blind thrashing about of the lost loved ones ‘neath the star-spangled shape so far astern. 

Nay comprehended he not yet the subsurface stream of shipmen carelessly carried by the irresistible current from the craft to himward. 

And, ultimately, perceived he not that sea of souls ‘neath his very own graceful glide – bent, bowed, broken – lying lifeless, levitating, merely meters below the character’s crawl. 

Say, “How?” if you will. Say, “How?” if you can. Know not he of the sailors sinking fathoms below. 

Tell me, “What doth he think, if think he doth do?” Doth he not ken, no eyebrow raise?”

“Carest he not that they perish, perish upon his watch?” 

***

What’s that, you say? Whisper again. Nay, keep it not hid’ for others must hear. “That ship was not his – and neither her crew – nor was this his time.” 

Out of mind’s eye, away from mind’s ear. Cntrl+alt+delete. Whoosh! Vanished. Be ye gone. 

‘Tis a sad tale, but truthful, too often it seems. That we so merrily float o’er the misery of the world. If that is not my world if these are not my people. If this is not my time. But, sadder to say that this very hour, that is myworld, these are my people, and this is my time. 

Grieve then, lament, though that’s not your gift. Grab hold and ne’er let go. I be the person, that is the place, and this is the time for plights to be known, to be felt, to be heard, to be grasped, to be lamented. 

“Others, Lord, yes others, let this my motto be.” Down on the knee, bend it for sure. Shed a tear, two, or three. Gush forth, O heart, nor aught hold back.  The time is now, the place is here – the person is me.

“How long, O, Lord, how long?” Perhaps, He will reply. 

So let it be written, so let it be done.

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“Eternal Father, Strong to Save”

Written in 1860, Englishman William Whiting’s “Eternal Father, Strong to Save,” known in the United States as the “Navy Hymn,” and in Great Britain and many Commonwealth nations, the “Royal Navy Hymn,” ranks high on my “Top Ten List” of favorites.  The melancholy, prayerful, and somber yet chilling nature of the lyrics, matches the close harmonies of the tune, John B. Dyke’s “Melita.”  Together, they capture both the vast and dark expanse of the deep sea and the cavernous plaintiff cries of the mourners lamenting the condition of lost shipmates who now sleep beneath the depths. The piece is rightly performed at naval funerals in many countries. 

Funerals. The proper time for lament. Perhaps, in our society, the only appropriate time for lament, or so suggests Glenn Pemberton in Hurting with God: Learning to Lament with the Psalms. Maybe, he’s right, at least for most people. But, “lament” does not equate with complaint or depression. Lament, according to Professor Pemberton, is a God-given form of deeply felt prayer. It gives expression to honesty – and ultimately, to release.

In a previous post, “The ‘Wright’ Guidance,” I exposed the reader to the ideas of Bishop N. T. Wright, writing in God and the Pandemic: A Christian Reflection on the Coronavirus and its Aftermath, Zondervan, 2020.  Bishop Wright suggests that the world’s current state of affairs calls for a time of lament, lament as we find in about 40% of the Psalms.  

I’ve been trying that, but I have discovered that I do not lament well. It seems that it’s just not in my nature or training. It is my preference to always search for the bright side and to disdain much moping about. As I retraced the course of that discovery, an image came to my mind’s eye and a song in my mind’s ear – The Navy Hymn, Eternal Father, Strong to Save. May I suggest that you listen to the following track as you read below.. https://youtu.be/h7nswbxC2jo

Through the soulish glass of that organ of inner vision, plain as day, I beheld a faceless figure swimming silently and effortlessly upon the surface of a cerulean sea. 

And, lo, in the background, yet a ways off in the distance, the cobalt-coloured shape of a ship, broke in half, slowly and quietly sank. 

O, the swimming figure could not see the ship because he swam away from it, away from the sun that, in its accustomed course, streaked forth the first rays of eventide, backlighting the broken boat in its crimson-hued decline.

Quietly, barely perceptible, the sun was setting. Quieter, barely visible, the ship was sinking. Quieter still, the foreground figure was floating. 

“But, was it truly that quiet?” I mused as it seemed that in my mind’s ear, I could hear the mellifluous melody of the Navy Hymn.

Eternal Father, strong to save,

Whose arm doth bind the restless wave,

Who bids the mighty ocean deep

Its own appointed limits keep;

O hear us when we cry to Thee

For those in peril on the sea. – William Whiting. 

Obliviously, the swimming figure heard not the tender tones – because, in his head, he was humming a happy song. Nay, the figure heard not the creaking of the midships’ breaking upon the horizon, nor heard yet the burgeoning “boom” of her blowing boilers.

And, incomprehensibly, he apprehended not the last breath’s expiration from the sailors recently billeted aboard but now consigned to an ocean’s gloomy grave. 

Insensible, the form regarded not the deaf, dumb, and blind thrashing about of the lost loved ones ‘neath the star-spangled shape so far astern. 

Nay comprehended he not yet the subsurface stream of shipmen carelessly carried by the irresistible current from the craft to himward. 

And, ultimately, perceived he not that sea of souls ‘neath his very own graceful glide – bent, bowed, broken – lying lifeless, levitating, merely meters below the character’s crawl. 

Say, “How?” if you will. Say, “How?” if you can. Know not he of the sailors sinking fathoms below. 

Tell me, “What doth he think, if think he doth do?” Doth he not ken, no eyebrow raise?”

“Carest he not that they perish, perish upon his watch?” 

***

What’s that, you say? Whisper again. Nay, keep it not hid’ for others must hear. “That ship was not his – and neither her crew – nor was this his time.” +

Out of mind’s eye, away from mind’s ear. Cntrl+alt+delete. Whoosh! Vanished. Be ye gone. 

‘Tia a sad tale, but truthful, too often it seems. That we so merrily float o’er the misery of the world. If that is not my world if these are not my people. If this is not my time. But, sadder to say that this very hour, that is myworld, these are my people, and this is my time. 

Grieve then, lament, though that’s not your gift. Grab hold and ne’er let go. I be the person, that is the place, and this is the time for plights to be known, to be felt, to be heard, to be grasped, to be lamented. 

“Others, Lord, yes others, let this my motto be.” Down on the knee, bend it for sure. Shed a tear, two, or three. Gush forth, O heart, nor aught hold back.  The time is now, the place is here – the person is me.

“How long, O, Lord, how long?” Perhaps, He will reply. So let it be written, so let it be done.

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The “Wright” Guidance

In his new book, God and the Pandemic,[1] Anglican Professor Emeritus, The Rt. Reverend N. T. Wright, gives us some reassuring guidance in the present pandemic. I concur with Bishop Wright, and I submit that we can apply this guidance to the other two prongs of the fork upon which we, our nation, and the world are currently being skewered: cultural upheaval and economic collapse. I submit Bishop Wright’s paraphrased, edited, and truncated guidance for your consideration.[2]

One should interpret the entire Bible through the lens of Jesus. Old Testament prophesies about repentance and national judgment are all “subsumed” in Jesus.[3] Of course, “God is God” and as such, nothing can limit how He chooses to work. But, as a general rule, there can be no new call to repentance, judgment, or salvation other than the life, ministry, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus as written in the Bible and proclaimed by the Church. He is the last and greatest sign. There have always been wars, plagues, famines, and the like as well as all manner of evil done by people directly or indirectly since the earliest recorded history. The Bible tells us, and history corroborates, that these events will occur again and again.

Thus, it should not be said that the current distress is a new call from God for us “get right with God” or is a new, though well-deserved, indictment of national sin. Neither is it an indication that the end is near. Jesus, Himself, was the last and final Word on those subjects.

Since eternity past, God is still sovereign over the cosmos, but He expresses that sovereignty differently in the Church Age (New Testament times,) up to and including the present. The finished work of Jesus makes this so.

God now expresses His sovereignty through His church. He has delegated to the church the privilege of cooperating with Him in bringing His Kingdom to come to people. With that privilege comes the responsibility of the Church and the people of the Church, as the Nike® advertisement admonishes to just do it!

The church is called to unite, to pray, to serve, and to lead by word and by example. In times of gladness, we pray prayers of rejoicing, and we rejoice with people over God’s goodness. However, in hard times like these, we are called to express prayers of lament as did the Psalmist. Only in lament for the misery that we and particularly for that of others, can we truly know their pain and honestly grieve with them as Jesus did over the death of Lazarus and the impending fall of Jerusalem.

In our lament, we ask not “why” for, “Who can know the mind of God?” It is folly and presumption to try to figure out why God does what He does. Rather, in our lament, we ask “what,” “how,” and “who?”

During these times, we lament. The Psalms are full of lament. Perhaps, they were written for “such a time as this.” Esther 4:4. Let us find those Psalms of lament and pray them back to God. Psalm 34 is a good place to start. Let us ask Him to allow us to experience the suffering of the people He loves. Only in that way can we love as God loves. We must be prepared to give Him the sacrifice of our own lament, pain, and love.

Some count about fifty Psalms of or that contain, lament. Included among these are Psalms of personal lament. Examples: Psalms 3-5, 9-10, 13-14, 22, 25, 39, 41 42-43, 54-57, 69-71, 77, 86, 88, and 140-142. Examples of communal lament include: Psalms 12, 44, 58, 60, 74, 79, 80, 83, and 85.

After the time of lament, we turn our prayer to the questions of “what,” “how,” and “to whom.”

  1. What does God want the church and me, personally, to do about what is taking place?
  2. How can I join in with God to bring His kingdom to hurting people? And,
  3. Who are the people to whom God is calling the church, and me, personally, to minister?

Waiting comes next. Waiting, in this context, is active rather than passive. We wait for God’s answer, searching the scripture, searching in the things that are taking place around us, and searching for what other congregations are doing to minister.

After the praying, we come to the doing. We must “boldly go,” in the words of Star Trek. God will guide. God will provide, and God will protect. That is not to say that we may not lose our health or our very lives in this work. The pages of church history are full of the names of martyrs who gave their lives in wars, violence, and plagues. Having said that, J. Vernon McGee has said,” all of God’s men [and women] are immortal until God is through with them.” This is not to say that God may not have had other ideas of when He was “through with us” than what we might have thought.

Lastly, we should go out into the world “wise as serpents but innocent as doves.” Matthew 10:16. God did not call us to act foolishly or to take unwarranted risks. Each one of us is at a separate place of risk. Neither should we place others at risk by our presumed “heroism.” It might be said that “God don’t need no more cowboys.” We have a duty to love those others whom we serve and those to whom we come home at the end of the day. Part of the expression of that love is to carefully consider the risk that might ride with us. In this particular case, as good citizens, we must obey civil and Church authorities in their guidance as to our behavior unless such guidance clearly runs counter to the whole of scripture.

I pray that the words of Bishop Wright, and some of mine, help bring some understanding and comfort to you in these tough times.

[1] Wright, N. T, God and the Pandemic: A Christian Reflection on the Coronavirus and Its Aftermath. Zondervan, 2020. For a fuller understanding, please read the entire book. For balance, I submit another excellent, if in some regards, contrary, work, The Reverend Doctor John S. Piper, Coronavirus and Christ. Crossway, 2020. The latter book was brought to my attention by my friend, The Reverend C.J. Falcione.

[2] As I read over this work, it seems that I hear the voices of The Reverend Alan Cross and the Reverend Doctor Henry Blackaby, my “go to sources” for quotes and inspiration.

[3] I use the word, “subsumed” to avoid any misunderstanding that either Bishop Wright or I are opining on the “supersession” controversy.

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“I’ve Got This”

This week has been a downer for me. I let the triumvirate of troubles get between God and me: plague, prejudice, and pride. I slothed through Bible readings, slumbered through church online, and skipped out of prayer times; taken together, a sure-fire formula for “down-in-the-mouthedness.” Besides that, the weather has been gray and rainy, not to mention the Sahara sandstorm that has painted the sky a milky – white. I presume that the “murder hornets” are not far behind, (a line from Pastor Jay Cooper’s sermon of 6/28/2020.) All in all, it would appear that we are only “one pestilence short of an apocalypse.”

This afternoon, God asked me if I were ready to leave the “pity-party.” I looked around me at the sad faces of my fellow party-goers holding plastic cups of cheap scotch and telling tales “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing” (Shakespeare, The Tempest) while the house band wailed a lethargic cover of “It’s the End of the World as We Know It.”

“Yeah,” I sighed, “I b’lieve I am.”

“OK,” He beamed in a most cheerful tone, “Let’s blow this joint.” Now, “the joint” is the driveway where I have set up a temporary office on the tailgate of the red Silverado with the two-tone upholstery. Of course, that was not the “joint” to which He referred. “The joint” we were about to “blow” was what Sherlock Holmes referred to as my “Mind-Palace.”

I leaned back on the tailgate and prayed my true feelings. I “bled” on Him a while, holding nothing back, sugar-coating nothing in a “thin candy shell” like an “M.” I confessed my sloth, slumber, and skipping, none of which surprised Him. After all, He is God.

Presently, a melody crept into the “Mind-Palace.” I don’t know how it got there, I thought I had it sealed pretty tightly. However, do know from where it came – or should I say, “from whom it came. “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is with-in me, bless His ho-ly name.” I knew it was the choral arrangement of a Psalm, but I must confess that I didn’t know which Psalm, I had to look it up. Psalm 103.

Bless the Lord, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits: Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases; Who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies; Who satisfieth thy mouth with good things; so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle’s.

The Lord executeth righteousness and judgment for all that are oppressed. He made known his ways unto Moses, his acts unto the children of Israel.

The Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and plenteous in mercy. He will not always chide: neither will he keep his anger forever. He hath not dealt with us after our sins; nor rewarded us according to our iniquities. For as the heaven is high above the earth, so great is his mercy toward them that fear him. As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.

Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him. For he knoweth our frame; he remembereth that we are dust. As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone, and the place thereof shall know it no more.

But the mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness unto children’s children; To such as keep his covenant, and to those that remember his commandments to do them.

The Lord hath prepared his throne in the heavens; and his kingdom ruleth over all.

Bless the Lord, ye his angels, that excel in strength, that do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of his word.

Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts; ye ministers of his, that do his pleasure.

Bless the Lord, all his works in all places of his dominion: bless the Lord, O my soul. Ps. 103 KJV.

In the Psalm, David invites the reader to praise God. After so, inviting, David enumerates a few of the reasons why we should do this. He has forgiven all of our sins and has healed all our diseases. He has given us good things to eat and has “executed righteousness and judgment” for all who are oppressed.

Whoa, stop the bus. That sounds great and everything, but I wondered if it were really true. In what sense has God done this? Aren’t these basically the societal ills about which I had moped around in the first place? Didn’t I hear that the virus numbers and death rates were on the rise in several states? Weren’t some people still out in the streets going about their business unhindered by masks or “social distancing” while others were out in the same streets protesting systemic injustice and inequality? Weren’t the rich still getting richer at the expense of the poor, sort of “Robin Hood in Reverse?” “Yeah,” I muttered under my breath so He wouldn’t hear, my mood darkening anew, “Where’s your Psalm now?”

About that time, my cellphone “dinged” a single melodic tone, indicating that a new Email had just dropped into my virtual mailbox. It was a news flash from the New York Times. “A Georgia grand jury has just handed down a nine-count indictment against the three white suspects held in the slaying of Ahmaud Arbery,” an unarmed 25-year-old African-American man, fatally shot near Brunswick in Glynn County, Georgia, while jogging.

“See,” God said. “I’ve got this, and you know what? I’ve got all the other stuff, too. You just keep on being faithful, doing what I’ve called you to do, trusting Me, and let me handle the world in My way and in My time. You’ll be a lot more productive – and joyful.”

And you guys know what? I b’lieve Him. Now, where was I? Oh, yeah, “Bless the Lord, O my soul and all that is within me. Bless His Ho-ly Name.”

So let it be written, so let it be done.

P. S. You might enjoy this little clip. https://youtu.be/d-ZVP4P4lXo

 

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