Thursday, September 24, 2009
Time
In this age of technological advances, scientific research and innumerable methods of communication, time is the final frontier.
No, space is no longer the final frontier, not really. Pop culture is actually quite an accurate indicator of this progression. Thirty or forty years ago, we had the original Star Trek and Battlestar Galactica on TV, Star Wars in theatres and a real-life man on the moon.
These days, it's shows like Lost, Heroes and a new series I watched earlier tonight, Flash Forward. This newest entry is based on the notion that everyone in the world blacked out at the same time, for the same amount of time and during that time experienced glimpses of the future.
You see, time is the one thing none of us can get a handle on. No matter how much science, how much intellect or even spiritualism we apply, time is beyond us. We can't stop it from marching on into the future and we can't change what has already happened in the past.
The Bible offers us little more on the subject. It actually confirms time's elusiveness:
Isaiah 46:10: I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come. I say: My purpose will stand, and I will do all that I please.
Ecclesiastes 3:11: He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.
Matthew 24:36: No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.
All we are offered is the knowledge of who it is that controls time as stated simply in Revelation 22:13: I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End.
And if we remember that truth in the present, we can live without being bound to our past, as in Psalm 103:12: as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.
And we can also face the future, certain of who will still be there.
Friday, September 11, 2009
One phone call away
There is a current song out by a fellow named Matt Kearney. The opening verse of "Closer to Love" begins like this:
She got the call today, one out of the grey
And when the smoke cleared, it took her breath away
She said she didn’t believe it could happen to me
i guess we’re all one phone call from our knees
Man, those words hit me every time.
Just this week, I've seen a high school sports official be carted off a field on a stretcher, I've talked to a high school freshman just five chemotherapy treatments away from remission and I've read about a local teenager being struck and killed by a car.
I can promise you that not a single one of them thought something like that could happen to them. And when something like that happens to you, and it will, you'll hit your knees, but how well will you know the one you bow before? Will it be the honest, earnest words you would speak to a friend, or will it be the desperate, raving pleas for help you'd make to just about anyone still upright?
The answer could make the difference -- not necessarily in the outcome or answer to your prayers -- between losing a piece of your heart and mind or losing your soul.
She got the call today, one out of the grey
And when the smoke cleared, it took her breath away
She said she didn’t believe it could happen to me
i guess we’re all one phone call from our knees
Man, those words hit me every time.
Just this week, I've seen a high school sports official be carted off a field on a stretcher, I've talked to a high school freshman just five chemotherapy treatments away from remission and I've read about a local teenager being struck and killed by a car.
I can promise you that not a single one of them thought something like that could happen to them. And when something like that happens to you, and it will, you'll hit your knees, but how well will you know the one you bow before? Will it be the honest, earnest words you would speak to a friend, or will it be the desperate, raving pleas for help you'd make to just about anyone still upright?
The answer could make the difference -- not necessarily in the outcome or answer to your prayers -- between losing a piece of your heart and mind or losing your soul.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Comfortably numb
So I heard a radio commercial today for a dentist. But not just any dentist. No, this one was special.
Not only could he fix your teeth, but he will sedate you so that all your dental work can be down in one sitting and without feeling a thing.
Near the end he says, "You wouldn't think of having your tonsils or appendix removed without sedation, so why not your teeth?"
Call me cynical, but this is emblematic of our society, of ourselves. We are eager to wrap ourselves in anything that prevents us from feeling.
Think about your life. The heating/air conditioning keep us from the cold/heat outside, not to mention having to chop wood for the fireplace. We watch TV or read books as a means of escape. Some of our greatest societal ills are the result of trying not to feel anything, or at least only what feels good: Alcohol, drugs or even caffeine, anyone?
And maybe most hypocritically, we insulate ourselves in the church. We have our feel-good songs, our once or twice a week visits for positive reinforcement and more. But we rarely allow ourselves to feel the pain, the hurt and the disappointment from those outside those walls. And the second we do, we run back inside our air-conditioned houses to listen to our Jesus Loves Me music and rest in our easy chair.
It makes me think maybe classic rockers Pink Floyd were on the right track 30 years ago with their song, "Comfortably Numb."
There is no pain you are receding
A distant ship, smoke on the horizon.
You are only coming through in waves.
Your lips move but I can't hear what you're saying.
When I was a child
I caught a fleeting glimpse
Out of the corner of my eye.
I turned to look but it was gone
I cannot put my finger on it now
The child is grown,
The dream is gone.
I have become comfortably numb.
Not only could he fix your teeth, but he will sedate you so that all your dental work can be down in one sitting and without feeling a thing.
Near the end he says, "You wouldn't think of having your tonsils or appendix removed without sedation, so why not your teeth?"
Call me cynical, but this is emblematic of our society, of ourselves. We are eager to wrap ourselves in anything that prevents us from feeling.
Think about your life. The heating/air conditioning keep us from the cold/heat outside, not to mention having to chop wood for the fireplace. We watch TV or read books as a means of escape. Some of our greatest societal ills are the result of trying not to feel anything, or at least only what feels good: Alcohol, drugs or even caffeine, anyone?
And maybe most hypocritically, we insulate ourselves in the church. We have our feel-good songs, our once or twice a week visits for positive reinforcement and more. But we rarely allow ourselves to feel the pain, the hurt and the disappointment from those outside those walls. And the second we do, we run back inside our air-conditioned houses to listen to our Jesus Loves Me music and rest in our easy chair.
It makes me think maybe classic rockers Pink Floyd were on the right track 30 years ago with their song, "Comfortably Numb."
There is no pain you are receding
A distant ship, smoke on the horizon.
You are only coming through in waves.
Your lips move but I can't hear what you're saying.
When I was a child
I caught a fleeting glimpse
Out of the corner of my eye.
I turned to look but it was gone
I cannot put my finger on it now
The child is grown,
The dream is gone.
I have become comfortably numb.
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Feline theology
Cats, I think, are by definition strange. Mine is no different.
He chases bugs, chews strings, meows at the wall, plays dead better than any dog ever could and is given to occasionally doing sprints from end to end of the house.
What that teaches us about God, I'm not sure, other than He must have a sense of humor.
But the other thing about my cat is this. Sometimes he is stand-offish and indifferent, even disappears. Other times he is my best buddy, laying on my lap or rubbing his head on my leg.
It is in those times that I feel a bond, a closeness that allows me to forgive all his other antics -- even if I just squirted him with the water bottle.
And I think it's not so different in our relationship with God. At times were are indifferent to His presence, uninterested in his intrusion.
But when we spend some time with Him, sharing a bond that began when we were created in His image, He loves it. It's then we can feel the gentle caress of His love, the one that says no matter how far you roam and how many times I must discipline you for your sins, You are mine.
Now that just makes me want to purr.
He chases bugs, chews strings, meows at the wall, plays dead better than any dog ever could and is given to occasionally doing sprints from end to end of the house.
What that teaches us about God, I'm not sure, other than He must have a sense of humor.
But the other thing about my cat is this. Sometimes he is stand-offish and indifferent, even disappears. Other times he is my best buddy, laying on my lap or rubbing his head on my leg.
It is in those times that I feel a bond, a closeness that allows me to forgive all his other antics -- even if I just squirted him with the water bottle.
And I think it's not so different in our relationship with God. At times were are indifferent to His presence, uninterested in his intrusion.
But when we spend some time with Him, sharing a bond that began when we were created in His image, He loves it. It's then we can feel the gentle caress of His love, the one that says no matter how far you roam and how many times I must discipline you for your sins, You are mine.
Now that just makes me want to purr.
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