Monday, August 29, 2011
Blessed because...
"...and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you." Genesis 12:3
Blessed because...
By Rev. William Dohle
How often have you heard the word "blessed" used by others?
At dinner during thanksgiving, "Lord, we are so blessed..."
At a son or daughter's graduation or wedding: "Our family has just been so blessed!"
In conversation with others at church: "I just can't complain. We've just been so blessed!"
We usually think of blessings in terms of material things. To be blessed is to want for nothing, to have a nice home and a good car and a little spending money to travel for vacation. To be blessed is to need for nothing and be able to want for anything. "Blessed" is a material condition. A state of life being filled with good things. People we love. Family we cherish. It is about what we have...
But what if it has nothing to do with what we have... but what we give? What if blessing is about our positive influence in others' life instead of being graced with material things? What if blessings can only be seen from the outside, by others who say "They are such a blessing!" instead of inside?
I think that is what God is getting at here when God says: "I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you."
Abram is blessed, not because he has so much stuff! Not because he has the biggest boat, the coolest toys, the nicest computer, the largest home, or the perfect family. Not at all! In fact, though Abram himself will enjoy physical comforts, Abram's descendants who inherit this promise are going to find themselves poor slaves in a foreign land soon. No, God is speaking not about material comforts but about the positive influence his people will have on the world!
Abram's literal descendants will go on to...
...Lead their people out of Israel.
...Reclaim the land promised by God.
...Hear the Torah, God's way, and follow it.
One day they will...
...Write wisdom to be read around the world.
...Proclaim God's Word to distant lands.
...And give birth to the Messiah, the Son of God.
God has a lot of blessing to bestow. And he intends to use Abram for that purpose.
And we too, children of Abraham through faith, have a job to do here as well. For here, right now, God is wanting to bless the world through us. We are blessed...to be a blessing. And it has to do with more than physical things...
True... We are blessed with resources...ONLY so we can bless others with the same.
But we have also been blessed with other things...
We are blessed with forgiveness...
...so we can forgive.
We have been blessed with peace...
...so we can share that peace with others.
We have been blessed with joy...
...so we can share that joy with others.
The next time you catch yourself thinking you're blessed simply looking at the material, stop and peer around you. The world is waiting at your doorstep. Who could call you a blessing in their lives today?
God of Abraham, bless us as you blessed him. As you promised him and his family blessings, so too bless us that we might become the same to others. Amen.
Monday, August 22, 2011
If Only...
"The Lord said, 'If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them.'" Genesis 11:6
If Only...
By Rev. William Dohle
If only... how often have I heard those two words together.
Sometimes they're spoken in sorrow...
"If only I had said I loved him..."
Sometimes in longing...
"If only we had more time..."
Sometimes they're spoken to solve a problem...
"If only we had more workers..."
Or to justify one action or another...
"If only the economy were better..."
Always these words are spoken in the context of regret and under the assumption that, solving this problem, everything would be right. In the church I've heard them like this...
"If only we had more members..."
"If only we had more money..."
"If only we had a different pastor..."
Then... then... then...what??
Then... of course... everything would be better, life would be great, and our problems would fade away.
Unfortunately the "if onlys" never work. Probably because they warp time, making us see the future through the past. Making us regret the past while remaining in the future. Never really seeing that what we have in the present matters!
This all has been common...since the beginning. Since the start when the people cried out together... "If only we build this tower...then we'll reach to the heavens, make a name for ourselves, and not be scattered over the earth."
The people try. They build and build and build... but God intervenes. Seeing their work and their potential he says: "If only they remain united...then nothing will be impossible for them."
What the people fail to see here is their strength. So focused on the future, on the big tower that'll take them to heaven, the never see how their present unity can accomplish anything! They fail to see that the present is fleeting and what they took for granted before will soon be taken away.
God confuses their languages. And their big dream to reach the heavens and gain a name for themselves becomes, just that, a big dream. Nothing more.
We too can fall into their danger, thinking that "if only" this or that happened...then we'll make a name for ourselves, be united, have a great church, live a happy life, finally feel whole, be happily married, do God's work here, and so on.
What we forget in the "if only's" is that God is here ALREADY working the kingdom of God from within us. There is no "if only" there is only now. Now...God is calling us to work. Now... God is gathering his harvest. Now...the kingdom of God is growing. Now!
Look around you. The people sitting across from you at work, intersecting you on the streets, and playing baseball with your children are there for a reason. Your meeting is no accident. They are your mission field. They are your work.
Paul writes: "For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do."(Ephesians 2:10) If God prepared good works in advance for you to do, than God has put those people in your life (and in your way) for a reason! There's a reason you're sitting in that cubicle next to that individual talking on that day about that topic. Your good work with them has been planned beforehand by God. We needn't wait for some tower to be built or some mission to finally take shape. We need only to look around us and see the harvest of God waiting to be gathered right here...now!
Ever Present God, you call us out of the future, back into the present. Help us remember the true gift you've given us is now. Help us to take hold of that time, to use it as you'd have us, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Monday, August 15, 2011
Ordinary Signs of Extraordinary Promises
"This the the sign of the covenant I am making between me and the earth. Whenever I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life." Genesis 9:13-15
Ordinary Signs of Extraordinary Promises
By Rev. William Dohle
I love summer! Really... I do.
I love the sound of the cacadas singing in the trees. I love the frogs croaking along the riverbank. I love the peacefulness you get when you sit down next to a lake, a fishing pole in your hand, just being there with nothing else to do. I just love it!
Nature means something because, for me, I find it pointing to God. When I look out at nature, I see God's fingerprints all over the place. I hear the birds chirping in the trees and I remember...
"Sing to the Lord a new song..."
I see the wind moving through the trees and I remember...
"...the Spirit of God moved over the face of the waters."
I see the storm approach from the west and I'm moved to feel...
"Praise the Lord from the earth...lightning and hail, snow and clouds, stormy winds that do his bidding."
All creation can become a sign, pointing to God!
But ever wonder what God thinks? Ever wonder what God feels when He looks upon creation? What are His thoughts? What does nature make God do?
In this well-known section from Genesis, we hear God's thoughts. And they are surprising...
When God looks at the rainbow in the sky...God remembers!
Creation itself, a rainbow in the sky between the clouds, reminds God of his promise. It reminds God that He has promised never to send a flood that will destroy all life. It reminds God that there is to be an end to the storms. That day might follow afterward. And that hope lives on.
This is a powerful powerful reminder.
In the midst of Katrina...God remembers...hope must live on.
In the middle of the storms that destroyed Joplin...God remembers...hope must live on.
And from the darkness of every storm...God remembers...hope must endure.
God's remembrance is our hope for, as we wait through whatever storms that come upon our lives. Be they storms of disease, storms of sin, or literal storms of rain and snow, we know there is a rainbow to come. Our God has not forgotten us and will not abandon us. Creation itself assures us this is true.
Heavenly Father, you have put your bow in the clouds to remind yourself of your promise to us. Give us signs in all of nature that we may remember all that you have done, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Original Repentance
"But God remembered Noah and all the wild animals and the livestock that were with him in the ark..."
Original Repentance
By Rev. William Dohle
"I'm sorry...! I'm sorry daddy..."
My daughter cried this with tears streaming down her face the other day as she faced being grounded for hitting her brother.
"But Daddy... I said I was sorry!" she cries from her bedroom as she sits on her bed, grounded.
I don't know where that originated from. Where the whole notion of "being sorry" came from. I could say that it's genetic. My family likes to say they're sorry. I know she's heard these words from me. I could say it's just a part of who we are. But when did we first start saying "I'm sorry..." and when did we first start feeling regret over what we did.
You might be surprised where regret originates from in Scripture. It's not found in any human being. Adam doesn't ever say he's sorry. Nor does Eve. Nor does Cain or any other human being. Surprisingly the first one to say they are sorry... is God!
"God saw that human evil was out of control. People thought evil, imagined evil—evil, evil, evil from morning to night. God was sorry that he had made the human race in the first place; it broke his heart. God said, "I'll get rid of my ruined creation, make a clean sweep: people, animals, snakes and bugs, birds—the works. I'm sorry I made them."(Genesis 6:5-7; The Message)
God is the first one to say he's sorry. Sorry for making human beings. Sorry for creation and all the pain its caused him. Sorry to have caused all this mess.
God is sorry for creating such potential for evil and the drive to do nothing but bad. God is sorry for the pain of Abel after Cain's killed him and sorry for the hurt that this caused. God is sorry for the broken families that have emerged on the earth and for all the hurt and pain. God is sorry...
And so God does something about it. He decides to wipe the slate clean and begin anew. He's found Noah and his family, who are faithful, and decides to make the whole thing over again with him.
Of course sin still remains and the world isn't fixed. But that doesn't matter...cause something has changed for God after this whole big flood. God changes his mind about the whole thing. Instead of being sorry for making his creation, God vows to protect it.
God smelled the sweet fragrance and thought to himself, "I'll never again curse the ground because of people. I know they have this bent toward evil from an early age, but I'll never again kill off everything living as I've just done. (Genesis 8:21; The Message).
God changes. God repents. God decides that he loves this creation too much to wipe it all out. Maybe its not as bad as he thought. God repents of what God has done...and so begins the cycle of repentance for the rest of us.
We too, as children of God, walk in God's paths. God repents...and we can too. God changes...and we can too. God has sworn to love, protect, care for, cherish, and nurture this creation. We can too!
God of Repentance, you have shown us how to change our minds and turn to good. Enable us on our journeys to see where we have stumbled, to turn to your good, to return to your presence, and to know the joy of living, through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Monday, August 1, 2011
Then the Lord said to Cain,"Where is your brother Abel?"
"I don't know," he replied. "Am I my brother's keeper?" Genesis 4:9
Our Brothers' Keepers
By Rev. William Dohle
This week my family and I traveled to Springfield, Illinois to visit the infamous Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. It was awesome! Both the museum and the library. The story of Lincoln's life literally came alive for us. It was as though President Lincoln himself was standing in our midst!
Though the Civil War is now over a hundred and fifty years in our past, the same events that shaped Lincoln's life are shaping life today. In Lincolns day the country was divided. The same is true today. In Lincoln's time everyone thought they were on the right side. The same is true today.
And though civil rights have moved forward, we are still preoccupied with the question Cain first asked of God.
"Am I my brother's keeper?"
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he is a black man?
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he is a gray confederate?
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he thinks, acts, and believes completely differently than I do?
That question ran through the civil war and it runs through our life today too.
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he's a Muslim?
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he lives alone?
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he voted democrat? Or republican? Or neither?
Am I my brother's keeper... even though he thinks, acts, and believes completely differently than I do?
The answer from God seems to be the same for us as it was for Cain. YES YOU ARE!! You are your brother's keeper! You should care about what happens to him. You should pray for him, care for him, and love him. You should be compassionate toward him, give of yourself to him, and lay down your life for him, if necessary.
Why? Well... that answer isn't given to Cain... but it's given to us. For we know that we keep our brothers because Christ keeps us. We love our sisters because Christ loves us. And we lay down our lives in service to them...because that's what God did for us.
Heavenly Father, you call us to love and care and pray for our brothers and sisters. Give us strength to put aside our differences and see ourselves as fellow human beings with all, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)