Bringing Heaven to Earth…

“‘Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven…

Matthew 6:9-10

This is, of course, a passage which has given us the most well-known prayer on earth- The Lord’s Prayer. We learn it as children, and we retain it our entire lives. It is, in fact, so ingrained in us, recited in a rote manner, that we may miss the richness of the prayer.

The sentence, “your Kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” sounds like a nice pleasantry that can become a bit of a catchphrase. Actually, it is the hardest thing we are called to do. We are actually being called to bring a bit of heaven down to earth by the actions we choose to do. Jesus was the embodiment of “heaven to earth”, and we are called to live that legacy out by making earth look a bit more like heaven.

Yes, we have a very long way to go on that, and no, we will never accomplish it in our tenure here. However, we have been called to not simply wait for the day we can go to heaven and all will be peace and joy. We are called to bring a measure of heaven’s peace and joy to earth. We do that by loving other people, encouraging them, helping them, grieving with them, and all other human connections that aid one another on this life’s journey.

So, the next time you recite the Lord’s Prayer, remember that he always intended for us to make earth a bit more like heaven.

Prayer: “‘Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven…

After Great Pain…

After great pain, a formal feeling comes –

The Nerves sit ceremonious, like Tombs –

The stiff Heart questions ‘was it He, that bore,’

And ‘Yesterday, or Centuries before’?                                                                                                     Emily Dickinson

“God blesses those who are poor and realize their need for him,
    for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs. God blesses those who mourn,
    for they will be comforted
                                                                           Matthew 5:3-4

I am really not into poetry. I do not understand it well, and I prefer prose as my expressive medium. Yet that first stanza of Emily Dickinson’s classic poem has always stayed with me. I remember some times after physical pain that, when the pain subsided, there was a feeling that I could not, and still really cannot, describe. It was like feeling relief, but more than that, it was the sense of feeling nothing.

This I believe, in a way, is how we react to certain traumatic events. That pause, that reprieve, allows us to shove the pain far away in our minds. We do not want to revisit it, so we file it away and try to convince ourselves that it may not have happened.

We see this in trauma work regularly. Dickinson’s line – And ‘Yesterday, or Centuries before’? calls to mind a sense of timelessness. Time gets lost after trauma, at least for a while, while the mind tries to heal.

I began thinking of this as we encounter our various world crises. The COVID-19 scourge, for example, stubbornly refuses to leave us. It was, indeed, clearly a life-shaping event, and it is also one we share with the whole world. When this crisis finally subsides- and it will- how will we make sense of it?

Will we, as the world has collectively done after some crises, somehow forget the enormity of it as it fades into the background and as other crises arise?

I trust that after this crisis gradually fades, we will have learned some very important lessons about our collective responsibility for one another. I hope that we will be better prepared for another worldwide pandemic, when one inevitably arises again.

Life will again be “normal”, but in our quest for normal, I hope that we will have learned from the past, and that we put into place safeguards for the future.

Prayer: Lord help us to learn from the pain we are enduring, to redeem it for good for future generations, Amen.

Back to the Basics

“What is the price of five sparrows—two copper coins? Yet God does not forget a single one of them. And the very hairs on your head are all numbered. So don’t be afraid; you are more valuable to God than a whole flock of sparrows                                                                        Luke 12:6-7

I considered several different topics for today’s blog, and I ended up, for one reason or another, rejecting them. After I had written them, they just did not seem to hit the mark. That happens sometimes, right? So, I decided to just look up the verse of the day on my Bible app, and it was Luke 12:6-7. You can’t go wrong with good old Luke, probably my favorite Gospel writer. Luke gives such a good summation of Jesus’ teachings.

 In this passage, the comfort that is expressed is so clearly obvious, yet easy to pass over sometimes. Jesus asserts that God does not forget a single sparrow. Not one! Then he states that God has numbered the very hairs on our head. (Admittedly, easier for God to do with some of us, but I digress.) He cares so much about our needs and welfare that he knows us that intimately.

We need this reminder from time to time when things around us are so altered and abnormal. Many of the landmarks that we previously used to navigate our regular routines and plans have been changed, or altered by the pandemic, political unrest, or cultural changes we cannot readily accept.

Maybe some of those landmarks were inadequate to begin with. Perhaps this is the time to rethink what those landmarks should be. Holding on to the truths that Jesus taught are good ways to feel the sense of direction that we need. Just the basics- God loves us and values us, even in the midst of the chaos we may be experiencing.

This disruption can serve as a way to find new navigation tools that really work. If we feel secure in the understanding of the most basic truths of God’s love for us, we can ultimately make sense of our changed environment and be better for it in the long run.

Prayer: Father, thank you for the simple truths which provide such comfort to us, Amen.

Seasons

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens: a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to build, …                                                                Ecclesiastes 3

As I sit on my patio writing this blog, I am soaking in the beauty of summer. The pond is clear and babbling with a gentle waterfall. My resident frogs hop warily on the lily pads, waiting for evening dinners of moths and any other unlucky critters that fly near the lights. Flowers surround the pond and the trees in the background sway gently in a warm evening breeze.

Then I think about the brevity of summer. Yes, this is wonderful, but it will pass all too soon. Indeed, our lives will be passing as well. Such is the circle of life.

I recall a breakfast many years ago with my mentor who was twenty years my senior. At one point he said, “You know, I have about four hundred or five hundred more Saturdays left, maybe less.”

This took me aback as he said it so dispassionately and matter-of-factly. He had calculated that maybe he had 8, or maybe 10 years left in his life. He had decided to treasure each of those Saturdays. It was not a morbid thought for him and he did not intend it to be for me. He was simply acknowledging that his time was growing relatively short.

Seasons come and go, and the older we get, the faster they go. Actually, there is a scientific reason that time does seem to go faster as we age, but that is a blog for another time.

The point is, we are subject to changing seasons. I love summer, and my family would attest to the fact that it is very hard to keep me indoors during the Spring and Summer (Autumn as well for that matter!) I have decided to soak in as much as each season has to offer. Enjoying each season as it comes helps us to live in the moment and not rue the passage of time.

So, enjoy this wonderful season. Soak in the beauty of flowers, long evenings, and all the Vitamin D that the sun has to offer!

Prayer: Lord, you have made this earth a scientific marvel of change and beauty!

Salt & Light?

 But someone will say, “You have faith; I have deeds. ”Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds.                                                                            James 2:18

“You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot. “You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. …                                               Matthew 5:13-16

The early church made itself known by two things- how they loved one another, and how they loved the culture they were in. Christians often picked up abandoned infants who had been left by parents to die on the street. Infanticide was not completely frowned upon by the Roman culture. Christians showed their love by rescuing these abandoned infants.

As decades and centuries passed, Christians showed their love of the culture by establishing institutions for the most desperate and marginalized parts of society. Schools, hospitals, “poor houses”, and inns for weary travelers were established in the name of Christ. Indeed, the early church was distinguished by the fact that wherever Christian communities were established, they made that community better for them having been there.

Christians have a rich legacy in the world for having established civilizing institutions, based upon their understanding that love is best expressed in actions, not mere belief. Many of those institutions survive today. So many schools, hospitals, and relief organizations have their origins in Christian benevolence.

Yet today, many people do not see this legacy. They take for granted the works of generations past. Why? Because often times, in the current world, the Church is no longer acting like the Church.  People often see the Church, and Christians, as judgmental critics of current world events.

This space is too small to develop this theme like it should be discussed. In future blogs, I will be discussing this a bit more. My incredible daughter has also talked with me about us both addressing this issue further by jointly writing about it. We are considering this idea, so stay tuned!

Prayer: Lord, give us the wisdom and courage to be able to love those around us well, Amen

“Deceitful Heart…

“But blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord,
    whose confidence is in him.
 They will be like a tree planted by the water
    that sends out its roots by the stream.
It does not fear when heat comes;
    its leaves are always green.
It has no worries in a year of drought
    and never fails to bear fruit.”

 The heart is deceitful above all things
    and beyond cure.
    Who can understand it?

Jeremiah 17:7-9

The last line of this passage is one that always struck me as an indictment of our state of sin- that is, separation from God in some way. I saw it as our foolish mind, always trying to get our own way.   

In recent reading however, I wonder if it is not an expression of our own anxiety and the irrational thoughts that come from it. I have discussed anxiety as that self-defeating part of us that is always around, trying to defeat us. Isn’t this passage a description of that?

The writer is saying, with the context just before the statement about a deceitful heart, that those who have confidence in the Lord are like a tree planted near a stream. The tree does not need to worry about drought because it has a deep source of refreshing water.

Our deceitful heart (anxiety), tries to make us forget about that source of water that runs deep beside us. Anxiety always reminds us that we are inadequate, ready to fall apart, and hopeless. That is what anxiety does.

I very clearly know that anxiety is a deceiver, and that just because one has anxiety, it is by no means a statement that they lack faith! Rather, I suggest that anxiety can temporarily blind us about what true resources are available to us. It overstates the danger and minimizes the rescue.

So, when you are beset by your anxious heart, as we all are at times, remember the deep refreshment that runs close by.

Prayer: Lord, help us to remember in times of stress and worry that you have provided water, even in the desert, Amen

You Feed Them…

Late in the afternoon his disciples came to him and said, “Tell the people to go away to the nearby villages and farms and buy themselves some food, for there is nothing to eat here in this desolate spot, and it is getting late.”

 But Jesus said, “You feed them.”                                                                            Mark 6:35-37

I always liked this passage about Jesus feeding the 5000. There are a lot of elements to it, and of course the one we resonate to is the miracle of stretching five loaves of bread and two fish to feed that crowd until they were full. Yes, that was pretty major!

However, there are other themes here too. The one I am thinking about today is that Jesus told the disciples to feed the people. This is just after the disciples had, understandably, tried to get a manageable plan so that these hungry people could eat. They proposed that the people be sent away to purchase their own food.

 But Jesus had a lesson in mind for them. He wanted the disciples to begin to understand their responsibility toward those who would follow the message of Jesus. They were to serve those people, not send them off to forage for themselves. Jesus also did this to have an opportunity to let them know of the power that they had, even miraculous power, if they simply trusted the Master, and also used what was on hand to perform that miracle.

Jesus calls us to serve with what we have in our hand- our talents, strengths and abilities, employed for his service. As the old saying goes, “He doesn’t call the equipped, He equips the called”.

So, we are to employ whatever gifts or resources that we have to serve the Kingdom, and God will provide what we need as we move ahead in faith

Prayer: Lord, thank you for the plan that we are called to serve, and that you will provide, Amen

Depression

“People don’t fake depression, they fake being okay. Remember that. Be Kind.”

Robin Williams

Will the Lord walk off and leave us for good?
    Will he never smile again?
Is his love worn threadbare?
    Has his salvation promise burned out?
Has God forgotten his manners?
    Has he angrily stomped off and left us?
“Just my luck,” I said. “The High God retires
    just the moment I need him.”                                                                                                                                   Psalm 77:7-10

Words of wisdom from an American genius, Robin Williams. As many great comedic giants, Robin Williams apparently struggled mightily with depression. Interesting how many of the great comedy talents seemed to cover their darkness with comedy. That is how they cope.  

What better way to keep people away from the reality that they experienced- a reality that others did not sense and a reality that they wanted hidden. Make others laugh to accept them. How many people with depression want others on the outside of it?

After all, depression is a deeply personal experience. It is harder to explain than many want to venture to others. Further, for come cultural reasons, people would rather not share it because they may feel shame in doing so. Such is the pity of the lonely experience of deep depression.

I am heartened by the cultural shift toward more acceptance of mental illness. Yet, many who experience deep depression feel isolated, lonely, and completely misunderstood.

So, remember the words of Robin Williams. There are many people who deal with a dark monster called depression. Be kind.

Prayer: Lord, help us to be sensitive to those who are struggling with silent giants, Amen

Bargains

“As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts”                                                                                                                                                  Isaiah 55:9

Funny how we try to bargain with God sometimes. I am guessing that we all do it, and I know I do. When I really consider it though, I don’t really think that is how God works. That is how WE work.

There are a lot of variations on this, I’m sure, but basically, when we want or need something, or when we are scared, or when we think that someone we love is in trouble, we might try to make a bargain with God.

“God, if you can just do this one thing for me, I promise I will be more faithful”; or “I will never engage in that behavior again if you can just take care of me this time”, and etc. The famous “foxhole promises” are examples of this. Heaven knows, the soldiers who were in terrible danger in war would have every reason to make such requests. I certainly do not blame them one bit.

Yet I believe that God does not make bargains like that. God always wants the best for us, but his sovereign ways are often not known to us. The bargains we try to make with God are the ways that we can lower our anxiety by exerting some control in a situation that we really cannot control. It makes us feel better to make that deal with God, feeling that He will now take care of what we need.

Please do not misunderstand, I definitely believe in prayer. I have written in past blogs about the value of prayer. But let’s be clear, that we do not pray to change God’s mind. Prayer is to change our mind about the situation.

Can God do miracles? Yes, indeed. He does miracles every day, both seen and unseen. My point here is that our relationship to God is not one of bargains and deals. It is about knowing his love for us and his provision, even if it does not look like the deal we proposed to him.

Prayer: Lord, we trust your provision for us, even when we do not see it.

The Road from Selfish to Selfless

Therefore you shall be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect                                     Matthew 5:48

I think there is a tendency in all of us to be “either or”- that is, to see life as black or white, right or wrong etc. I think like all things in life, we are on a sort of continuum. We are on a path. We aren’t there yet, that is, we are not yet where we want to be in our goals, but we are on the path.  Jesus said “Be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect”. What could he mean by that? None of us are remotely close to perfect.

What I believe that he meant is that we are to be on the “perfect path”. We are to follow him. We are on the path of going from selfish to selfless. Are we there yet? Nope. Not until we are perfected in heaven. Yet we are called to be on that path.

I tell my clients that the path to redemption is being on the road from selfish to selfless. To the extent that we do more acts that are more selfless than selfish, we are healthier and happier. People in recovery are well aware that working the 12th Step, the “service step” is the way to maintain sober living. We all need to be working the “serving others” step over the “serving self” lifestyle.

We are in the process of redemption. We are not completed projects, but we are a work in progress. Jesus wants us to be on the path of redemption, not yet perfect, but on the right road. 

Prayer: Thank you Lord for the plan to perfection, which is following Jesus, Amen