Wednesday, April 2, 2014

God's Anointed


Today we will look at Psalm 72, a Royal Psalm, and consider what it means to rule as God’s Anointed. Here the psalmist asks God to bless the king of Israel, to offer the king guidance and support. The psalm also reminds the king of his/her responsibilities with the promise of a continued presence. But even though these royal psalms sometimes take on a kind of “political propaganda” slant, they still remind us what God expects from God’s anointed.  Indeed, sometimes these psalms even remind us of what will happen if Israel (or any nation for that matter) does not follow the way of the Lord.  God will anoint a king to rule over Israel, but that king is answerable to God.  The king of Israel must fulfill God’s will for Israel.  The king of Israel must care about those issues that God cares about.  And if the king doesn’t—well, then the kingdom will fail.  Wise words, although presidents and kings may not like to hear them, for the Lord will have God’s justice.


1Give the king your justice, O God,
   and your righteousness
   to a king’s son.
2May he judge your people
   with righteousness,
   and your poor with justice.
3May the mountains yield
   prosperity for the people,
   and the hills,
   in righteousness.
4May he defend the cause of
   the poor of the people,
   give deliverance to the
   needy, and crush
   the oppressor

What are the things God wants to see from God’s anointed king?  From the nation of Israel?  What did you hear?

  • Justice
  • Righteousness
  • Concern for poor—justice again.
  • Mountains yield prosperity (or peace); hills righteousness
  • Defend cause of the poor
  • Deliver the needy
  • Crush the oppressor

Is it starting to sink in what this king, God’s anointed must be about?  Justice and caring for the little guy?  God has always held a special place in God’s heart for the poor, for the widow and the orphan; the Lord told the people not to oppress the alien, for they were once aliens.

And here’s the thing: the king must be concerned about such matters—about the poor, about justice, about making sure there is fairness and that no one is left without.  God’s anointed must ensure that no one is in need, that the blessings of God are shared with equity, with justice.  And if the nations of the world do not care for the most vulnerable, if they turn a blind eye to the needs of the poor and downcast, if they neglect the widow and the orphan, then they are answerable to God and God will step in to establish justice, even if God has to move against God’s own people.  Even Israel is not above the law of the Lord.  Even those nations who claim to be “God fearing,” if their practices are not in line with what God wants, they will fall.

In the book Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, author Paul Kennedy comments on the rise and fall of superpowers (Portugal, Netherlands, Great Britain) from 16th century to present day.  And his thesis is basically this: Every nation has just so much population, territory, and chemical resources to work with and to keep in balance, and if the nation militarily over-extends themselves, then the great power disappears.  It has happened to every superpower.  Whenever you get too swept up with military conquests and protecting your national interests, whenever you are motivated by greed and profit, then you are doomed to fail.

Although it is interesting to look at history, for although we often fail to learn from history and thus repeat it, there is an even more important source of guidance.  It’s the Word of God, and over and over again, God reminds us that if a nation is not concerned about justice and about caring for the least fortunate, if a nation gets wrapped up in itself, neglecting the widow and the poor and the orphan, it will fail.

Dr. Walter Brueggemann, from a lecture on the three prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, reminds us that superpowers like to think of themselves as the ultimate power in the universe.  It’s very easy to do.  Indeed, often nations even with the most noble and God-fearing intentions, with the rise of success and wealth and power, begin to think of themselves as outside the normal rules of justice and fairness.  This has happened many times throughout the history of Israel, and every time, God called them to accountability.

Although powers think of themselves as the ultimate power, they must remember—they must remember that God is the ultimate power.

Even the United States is not above the Lord’s justice, and we must never forget that, although, sadly, I must confess, I believe we already have.   

But let us put our trust in the Lord, for God is the one who is the ultimate power in the world and in our lives, who will see justice established and the poor taken care of.

The Lord is pouring God’s Spirit upon us, anointing us for God’s work: to establish justice and help the downtrodden, to work for a society that takes care of the least fortunate.

As the Psalmist tells us in verse 12 of God’s anointed:

12For he delivers the needy
     when they call,
     the poor and those
     who have no helper.
13He has pity on the weak
     and the needy,
     and saves the lives
     of the needy.
14From oppression and violence
     he redeems their life;
     and precious is their
     blood in his sight.

God cares about justice, about equity, about helping folks who cry out for deliverance.  It is in God’s nature to bring salvation.  Let us trust in the Lord, our true sovereign.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas. Click here to visit Hope United's website.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Love of the Shepherd

The Lord is my shepherd.

From the very beginning, this Psalm creates a powerful image in our minds of a Lord who cares deeply for the sheep of God’s flock and the love of the shepherd.

The Lord is my shepherd.  All of us—we are the sheep, and God, of course, is the Shepherd.  It is God who leads us, who we must submit to, who we lovingly and graciously submit to.  God is our Lord, our Sovereign, our King; we owe our hearts to God and willingly give our lives over to God’s eternal care.

Really let this sink in—you being the sheep and God being the shepherd.  No wonder Jesus also used the metaphor of the Good Shepherd.  Our Lord leads you, cares for you, feeds you and takes care of you when you are sick or frightened or in trouble.  God protects you; the Lord fights for you when wolves come after you.  And if you get lost, your shepherd is going to come and save you.  Like a kid who gets lost in the supermarket—God is looking for you; God is going to find you and rescue you.  Let’s face it.  You need a shepherd; we all do.  We can’t make it without a loving shepherd.

                The Lord is my shepherd,
                I shall not want. 

I shall not want!  Amazing.  Just think about that for a moment—all the ramifications of that simply phrase:    I    shall    not     want.  What does it mean to not want?  Quite frankly, our society is driven by our wants and we are taught to go after what we want, whether it’s that new car or bigger house or the latest iPhone.  We want a good career; we want a comfortable retirement.  We want good health care and insurance in case we run in to problems.  We want our lives and the lives of our loved ones to be free of pain and suffering.  We want safety—this is a big one, especially since the news media and the politicians major in fear and terror.  Is it so wrong to want a safe space for our children?  We want our freedom as well as our rights protected.  We want it all!

And yet, here we have a psalm that reminds us: I shall not want.  The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.  To want is to be first concerned with self.  Wanting is all about a me-first attitude and lifestyle.  But to say we shall not want, that God is our shepherd—that is to say that we are giving our lives over to our Lord.  We will leave it to God; we will trust our Lord.  To not want is to put God first in your life; to not want is to put another’s needs before your own.  How hard that is!


He makes me lie down in green pastures;
He leads me beside still waters;
He restores my soul.

Again we have the images of a caring shepherd, who feeds and nurtures, who provides an abundance—green pastures.  There is peace and rest—real rest to be found in following this shepherd.  You can be restored; you can be rejuvenated; you can find out what it means to be alive again, a purpose to your existence.

He leads me in paths of righteousness
For his name’s sake.

God will lead us on the right path, my friends.  God’s way is the right way.  We might not always see it, but we know God cares about us.  God does not want to see us suffer because of our sins or walk a path that leads to destruction and death.  The Lord wants the best for you and me, wants us to make the right decisions.  God wants us to have a good life, a rich life, a blessed life.  And if we follow God’s way, we will.

Even though I walk through the
Valley of the shadow of death,
I fear no evil;
For you are with me;
Your rod and your staff—
They comfort me.
 
Even when you are in trouble, even when things look really bad, when you need God the most—the Lord is right there.  You can trust in the Creator—God is dependable.  You don’t need to fear—God will see you through.  And that fear—remember what I was saying how fear is so rampant today?  Put your trust in God.  God is the one that’s going to see us through.

You prepare a table before me
In the presence of my enemies;
You anoint my head with oil;
My cup overflows.

God has got your back.  Even when you are surrounded, when you are pressed in, when fear and grief and pain and despair are all around you, when all seems dark, God is right there.  God still provides.  How many of us can think of a time in our lives when we couldn’t have made it with God?  We know this to be true—this is who God is.  God will send the Holy Spirit; we are being anointed with God’s power; we are being set aside for God’s work.  And God is so good.

Surely goodness and mercy shall
Follow me all the days of my life,
And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas. Click here to visit Hope United's website.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The Groaning of Our Hearts


As we continue our journey through the Psalms this Lent, I felt moved to talk about the Lament Psalms.  I often tell people, if you don’t think God understands how you feel, then read through the book of Psalms.  You’ll get every emotion, from joyous elation to feelings of utter despair and helplessness.  Almost half of the Psalms are considered lament, either in part or in whole.  When modern hymn books and even our worship tends to be upbeat and praise-filled, the Hebrew praise book has some real downers!  Perhaps, we need these laments to better express our true feelings?  And perhaps we need these laments to better know God? 

Psalm 22 is perhaps the most desperate lament, for it begins with an expression of utter abandonment by God.  No wonder, Jesus quotes this Psalm when he is dying upon the cross.  The words still haunt me.


My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
            Why are you so far from helping me,
            from the words of my groaning?
O my God, I cry by day, but you
            do not answer;
            and by night, but find no rest. 
                          (Psalm 22:1-2, NRSV)


I remember watching Jesus of Nazareth as a kid and hearing Jesus say those words.  I wasn’t sure what “forsaken,” meant, but it certainly sounded like abandonment.  I didn’t want to believe it.  How could Jesus feel that way?

When I was still at Eden Seminary, in my class on Biblical Theology, our professor, Clint McCann, took us to the Holocaust Museum in St. Louis with a survivor to lead us.  We then had to write a reflection on the experience, commenting about why this could all take place with a loving God.  The fancy term for this is theodicy, and it is something I still wrestle with.  We want a God that makes it not so; that magically makes the evil go away.  Indeed, we wish for a God who doesn’t let evil happen in the first place.

Here are the words I wrote after my visit:

After visiting the museum, even these desperate words from the ancient psalmist cannot describe the all-encompassing anguish, hunger, pain, and death experienced by the victims of the holocaust.  Where is the God of justice, the God of mercy?  Has God truly abandoned Her people?  And what do we think of God when such an atrocity has happened?

When I look at the pictures of the people suffering, I try to look deep into their faces, into their eyes, perhaps even into their very souls.  Sometimes I see fear, sometimes I see a kind of sternness, which could only come from living within that hell for so long; yet, the most common image is one of deep perplexity.  For those living within this hell, their very image of God is questioned, and as the writer of the psalm indicates, they wonder why their God has abandoned them.

As I walk through the museum and listen to the speaker’s voice as she gives personal accounts of her experience, I too wonder about God.  Where is God?  Has God truly forsaken these people?  For many of us, our thoughts of God tend to envision an all powerful God, able to extend a saving hand to those in need.  But then why does God not intervene?  Does God choose not to intervene?  I cannot take this position because it envisions a God that does not conform to my central beliefs about the qualities of God: loving, compassionate, merciful.  I also cannot believe in a God that administers “tough love,” somehow teaching the people some kind of wisdom from suffering, nor can God be “testing” the people.  But at the same time, the God I know is merciful and compassionate and loving, so God must be helping somehow, or at least doing something (even reacting) about the problem.

First of all, I think God is forced to work through human beings.  Everything is tied to our relationships with God.  We are a communal people, capable of much love and compassion, but also capable of incredible evil.  Yet, I honor God’s creation of human beings, made in the image of God.  Now that means to me that even with all our faults and sinful ways, human beings are, in a sense, made perfect, capable of perfect relationships.  Within this model, the “fall” becomes a turning away from God, a breaking of relationship, showing that we screw up.  But at the same time, I think that this ultimately gives human beings (and God) more integrity.  It makes the times we “get it right” that much more powerful and meaningful.  Knowing we have a tendency to turn away from God, God continues to be faithful, welcoming us back.  In addition, it can be difficult working through a good relationship, for change can take a long time.  Because the power is shared, one is not always sure of the outcome.

Looking at our own relationships, one knows that when the person that you love is experiencing a pain, even when you are trying to help, you can’t help but empathize for your beloved.  Because you are still present with them, in a sense you also suffer.  In our case, the suffering is never quite as bad; yet, when I think of how much God loves us, I can only imagine that God experiences equal or even worse suffering.

I have a tendency to personify God, especially when it comes to suffering.  Because God cares for us so much and will not abandon us, I often place God within the horrible situation as fully human.  In this way, God experiences the terrible hunger of not eating food for weeks, God smells the burning flesh in the air, God feels the loss of dignity, and God suffers with the people.  One of the images I carry with me from the holocaust museum is the image of the rows of dead bodies, where the corpses are so malnourished that it looks as though the skin has been stretched taut over bones.  For me, God is right there.

I’m not sure if thinking of God literally being present with the people is a way of rationalizing the suffering human beings endure, but I do know that God works through suffering and vulnerability.  Fundamental to my faith is the belief that Jesus died on a cross.  Fully human, yet fully divine, Jesus suffered, which means God suffered.

But whenever we talk about the cross, we cannot forget the resurrection.  There is life after death.  At the end of the tour, we learn about the survivors and their great accomplishments.  Although so many voices were silenced, a few were saved, and those voices went on to tell incredible stories.  Those voices continue to cry out to the rest of the world, telling the story so that God’s will for justice and peace may one day be realized, so that those who follow will remember the evil we are capable of and try to stop it from happening again.

Psalm 22 does not end with verse 2.  Although the psalmist cries out to God, and feels abandoned, the writer knows that God has a history of listening to the oppressed.

For he did not despise or abhor the affliction of the afflicted;
            he did not hide his face from me, but heard when I cried to him. (vs 24)

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas.  Click here to visit Hope United’s website.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Words of Life


We continue our Lenten journey through the Psalms, that wonderful book of poetry and song, full of glorious praises and adorations, soul-wrenching laments, and heart-felt prayers.  Today, we look at Psalm 1, which introduces this great collection by speaking of the wisdom of following God’s Word.  These are Words of Life.

Happy are those
    who do not follow the advice of the wicked,
or take the path that sinners tread,
    or sit in the seat of scoffers;
but their delight is in the law of the Lord,
    and on his law they meditate day and night.
They are like trees
    planted by streams of water,
which yield their fruit in its season,
    and their leaves do not wither.
In all that they do, they prosper.
The wicked are not so,
    but are like chaff that the wind drives away.
Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,
    nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous;
for the Lord watches over the way of the righteous,
    but the way of the wicked will perish.
                    -Psalm 1 (NRSV)

“Happy are those … whose delight is in the Word of the Lord, and on his Word they mediate day and night.”

This introductory Psalm outlines two ways to live: one that leads to life, and one that leads to death.

First off, Biblically speaking, being “happy” is closely associated with being “blessed.”  And where our happiness is tied to our present circumstances, being blessed is everlasting, rooted in the presence and promises of our Lord.  So what does it mean to be blessed?  Well, the psalmist begins by saying that you won’t be blessed if you follow the wrong path.  Sin is a path that leads to despair and destruction and death.

Rather, one is to find delight in God’s Law, the Torah, the instruction of God on how to live a life of faith, a life of righteousness.  God’s Word is the instruction for life, and it lets you stand with the righteous.  I love how Eugene Peterson puts it in The Message, “Instead you thrill to God’s Word, you chew on Scripture day and night.

What does it mean to “chew on” Scripture?  To take it seriously, to have it as a companion on a journey, a guide book.  Are some passages sweet to the taste while others are sour?  Do some go down easily while others take time to gnaw on, like a tough piece of meat?

The Psalmist’s point is that we must have God’s Word as a constant companion, a friend, a confidant, a teacher, a mentor who challenges us to be more than we are.

There is Life for those who follow the Word.

And Death, for those who do not.

Which road will you take?

To further make his point, the psalmist talks about the benefits of following God’s commandments by using the metaphor of a tree, planted by a river.  What a beautiful illustration.  You see if you follow the Word, you are sustained and watered and fed.  In essence, you are nurtured and cared for; you have what you need, and do not lack anything.  But not only that, your life will prosper; you will bear fruit.  And finally, a tree has deep roots that anchor it into the ground.  Following the Bible, or Word of God, gives you a stable foundation, one you can depend on and will help you stand when the storms come into your life.

Contrast that with those who refuse to follow God’s commandments. They are like chaff in the wind. They have no roots, nothing to sustain them, no connection with the source of life. They wither and they die.

Not only can we trust in God’s Word, but this instruction—it restores, nurtures, and sustains life. They are Words for Life.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas. Click here to visit Hope United’s website.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

From Ashes to Life


Today is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, a season of reflection and prayer as we walk with Jesus towards the cross and eventual resurrection.  During this season of Lent, I will endeavor to post each Wednesday a reflection on a psalm.

Psalm 51 is attributed to David, when the prophet Nathan confronted him after he had laid with Bathsheba.  It is a story we know well, reminding us that even the mighty King David, a man after God’s own heart, was not infallible, not above temptation, and not above sin.  Click here to read all of Psalm 51.

As this is Ash Wednesday, we are reminded of our own mortality, our own sinfulness, our own need for mercy.  From dust we came, to dust we will return, for this body is an empty shell, a mere vessel which carries a piece of the divine.  And it is the body—our earthly desires, that often get us into so much trouble, distracting us from what is right and good, knocking us off the path of righteousness.

           Have mercy on me, O God,
               according to your steadfast love;
           According to your abundant mercy
               blot out my transgressions.
 
         Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity,
              and cleanse me from my sin.
         For I know my transgressions,
              and my sin is ever before me.
           Against you, you alone, have I sinned,
              and done what is evil in your sight,
                                 Psalm 51:1-4 (NRSV)

Alex Gondola, in Come as You Are, tells of the funeral of Charlemagne, one of the greatest Christian rulers during the early Middle Ages.  After his death a mighty funeral procession left his castle for the cathedral at Aix.  When the royal casket arrived, with a lot of pomp and circumstance, it was met by the local bishop, who barred the cathedral door.
“Who comes?” the Bishop asked, as was the custom.
“Charlemagne, Lord and King of the Holy Roman Empire,” proclaimed the Emperor’s proud herald.
“Him I know not,” the Bishop replied. “Who comes?”
The herald, a bit shaken, replied, “Charles the Great, a good and honest man of the earth.”
“Him I know not,” the Bishop said again. “Who comes?”
The herald, now completely crushed, responded, “Charles, a lowly sinner, who begs the gift of Christ.”
To which the Bishop, Christ’s representative, responded, “Enter! Receive Christ’s gift of life!”
The point, of course, is that in God’s eyes, we’re all equally in need.  Charlemagne, Mother Teresa, you and me.  None of us will ever be “good enough” to force entrance into the presence of God.


As the psalmist tells us, we know that our sin is ever before us.  We have all done what is evil in the sight of God.  Indeed, we are sinful beings, and all stand in need of the gift of grace.  And what a gift grace is—to receive forgiveness, to be redeemed and find mercy, to be restored and find new life—it is nothing short of a miracle.

There is a line in the Psalm when the writer says to God, “Against you, you alone, have I sinned.”  It’s not that we don’t sin against each other.  David certainly sinned against Uriah, Bathsheba’s husband, first by committing adultery and then by arranging his death.  Sin causes pain and grief and suffering; relationships are wounded and torn apart, trust is lost.  Sin can cause a kind of darkness to fall upon us, and sin can destroy lives.  Certainly, we sin against each other.  But what the psalmist is trying to say is that all sin—all sin is an affront to God.  Every time someone sins, it pains God; it hurts him.  Another way to look at it is that sin puts up a barrier between us mortals and the divine.  When we sin, we are disconnected from God; it severs the relationship, making us alone.  It is not God who does this, but ourselves, for sin always has consequences.
But God doesn’t want us to be alone.  Certainly, God does not want us to sin, but at the same time God is so willing to take us back, to restore the relationship, to forgive us and grant us mercy, to restore our lives and make in us a new creation.  It is the passion and resurrection of Christ played out in us over and over again, as we die to sin and are raised to new life through the glorious redemption offered through Jesus Christ.
Now, it is true that sometimes grace can come into our lives when we least expect it, when we certainly don’t deserve it, when we might not even be looking for it.  God is God after all.  But most of the time, pretty much all of the time, we first have to get ready to receive the gift of grace.  What I’m talking about is repentance.
We must repent of our sins.  It’s more than just saying you’re sorry. You have to mean it, and more than that, you have to do something about it. To repent is turn around, to make a 180 degree U turn, acknowledge your sin, make amends, and then start on a new path in the light.
I’m not going to lie to you.  Repentance is hard.  Sometimes our pride get in the way—know one likes to admit mistakes, that they’ve screwed up, that they have done something or not done something that has really hurt someone.  And then, sometimes acknowledging the sin isn’t what’s hard—we’ve all said we were sorry and didn’t really mean it.  We must make good on our promise to change.

The psalmist knows what God is after—a clean heart, a truthful spirit, a life oriented towards God.  Thus, we must purge the nastiness in our hearts.  We have to confess it, acknowledge it and get it out there.  We have to deal with the consequences of our actions, make reparations if needed, and be willing to open ourselves up to God—to be made new.


10Create in me a clean heart, O God,
and put a new and right spirit within me.
11Do not cast me away from your presence,
and do not take your holy spirit from me.
12Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
and sustain in me a willing spirit.

But it doesn’t end there. Not only does the psalmist plead for forgiveness and ask for a clean heart—to be restored to new life, but also the psalmist pledges to live a changed life.  He will teach others the same; he will worship and praise and serve.  He will devote his life to the service of God, giving over his heart with a willingness to follow the Lord wherever that will take him.  The sacrifice that is acceptable to God is a broken spirit, a broken and contrite heart.  This is not a broken heart like when your girlfriend dumps you, but a heart that is yielding, a heart that is malleable, like clay in the potter’s hands, an open and humble vessel, ready to be filled.
           You see, my friends, to be forgiven is to be changed, to be transformed, to be redeemed.  In other words, when God comes into your life, your life will never again be the same.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas.  Click here to visit Hope United’s website.

Friday, January 24, 2014

Taking the Word Seriously

“But take [God’s Word] seriously, show the way for others, and you will find honor in the kingdom.” –Matthew 5:19b (The Message)

I love the bible. I really do, and I find such knowledge, such wisdom, such guidance for right-living.

Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path. –Psalm 119:105 (NRSV)

But the problem is that the bible can also be used as a sledgehammer, to bully people, to offer hard judgments while not realizing their own sin. Didn’t God tell us not to judge?

Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. For with the judgment you make you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do you see the speck in your neighbor’s eye, but do not notice the log in your own eye? Or how can you say to your neighbor, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ while the log is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye.” –Matthew 7:1-5 (NRSV)

Indeed, anyone who uses the bible as a weapon is nothing more than a Pharisee.

I wanted to talk about the bible because I’ve been preaching on the Sermon on the Mount, found in the Gospel of Matthew, chapters 5-7, where Jesus gives us a vision for the Kingdom of God and a guide for living right by God. The Jewish audience of Matthew would have gotten the point—this Sermon on the Mount is just as authoritative and important as when Moses gave the Torah (or God’s Law) to the Israelites.

Last week, I talked about salt and light, that we are to live that “Salty Life,” to let our light shine before others. But I was not able to talk about the next few verses:

Don’t suppose for a minute that I have come to demolish the Scriptures—either God’s Law or the Prophets. I’m not here to demolish but to complete. I am going to put it all together, pull it all together in a vast panorama. God’s Law is more real and lasting than the stars in the sky and the ground at your feet. Long after stars burn out and earth wears out, God’s Law will be alive and working. Trivialize even the smallest item in God’s Law and you will only have trivialized yourself. But take it seriously, show the way for others, and you will find honor in the kingdom. Unless you do far better than the Pharisees in the matters of right living, you won’t know the first thing about entering the kingdom.” –Matthew 5:17-20 (The Message)

But take it seriously.

Whenever I encounter someone who questions my accepting of gays and lesbians and other views of the bible, I quickly realize I’m dealing with someone who takes the bible literally. And trying not to be like a Pharisee, judging others, I try to graciously thank them for their insights but then offer my perspective.

I once heard someone asked the great theologian, Reinhold Niebuhr, about the creation story of Adam and Eve … was it literally true?

And his answer was, “No. I think it’s more true than that.”

There is so much depth, such a rich ocean of knowledge and guidance one can receive from the Word—the analogies and metaphors, the prophetic witness, the soul and heart-wrenching laments of the psalms, the many, many stories of people of faith and their encounters with the divine. To limit the reading of the bible to only one perspective, not only ignores the culture and context, but it also often misses the truth that God is trying to speak in this time and place.

God is still speaking
.

Even our one of our forefathers, John Robinson, a pilgrim on the boat about to come to the new world for the first time, to build a new future, even after the great reformers, said, “God hath yet more light and truth to break forth from God’s Holy Word.

But take the bible seriously. Delve into its mysteries. Look at the historical context. Analyze the text itself, looking at different translations or better yet, the original language. Commentaries and study bibles can be helpful, but remember, they are also an interpretation. Also, please remember your own lens. We each carry our own bias and perspective that colors how we see the world and everything around us. We are products of our culture and environment and that all impacts how we read God’s Word.

And finally, it is not possible to read God’s Word without the Holy Spirit. You’ve got to pray about it and have the right, selfless, open attitude. You’ve got to give yourself over to God’s direction and guidance.

I find it helpful to read and study God’s Word in a group, so that one can hear another’s insights and perspective. Bible studies are great opportunities to study God’s Word.

Take the Word Seriously. Study it, sit with it, meditate upon it. Invoke the Spirit, and open yourself up to our Still Speaking God.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas. Click here to visit Hope United’s website.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Sacred Rest

Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest,” Jesus says. “Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

Gene Peterson in The Message puts it this way:

Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” -Matthew 11:28-30


Sacred Rest.

Sacred rest is about reconnecting with God, getting in touch again with the divine. Sacred rest is not just rest for the body; it’s rest for the soul, like coming home again after a long journey, about finding your place, your purpose again, about renewing not just your mind and body, but your spirit, your inner being, your soul.

God is so real, my friends, so close, wants so much to be close to us, connect with us, be a part of our lives, so much like the food that we eat to sustain ourselves, the drink that quenches our throats, the sleep we need to refresh us when we are tired, the air we need to breathe, the exercise we need to keep us in shape, the work we have to do that allows us to serve the Lord, the purpose we need that claims us as children of the Most High.

I want to offer two quotes by Augustine, who can be so poetic when it comes to the intimacy of the personal relationship Christ wants to have with us. Listen as he prays to God:
 

You have called, You have cried out, and You have pierced my deafness. You have radiated forth, and have shined out brightly, and you have dispelled my blindness. You have sent forth your fragrance, and I have breathed it in, and I long for You. I have tasted You, and I hunger and thirst for You.

God wants to be that close, my friends. And when you can trust enough to surrender to God’s love, it makes all the difference in your life, all the difference. Here’s another one:

In your mercy, Lord my God, tell me what you are to me. Say to my soul, “I am your salvation.” So speak that I may hear you. The ears of my heart are turned to you, Lord; open them and say to my soul, “I am your salvation.”


I pray my friends, that you may find a bit of that sacred rest, rest for your souls, that you may find ways to reconnect with God, to hear her voice, to answer her call. God is still speaking; may we come to know the Christ, really know him and the life he gives.

Ron Trimmer is pastor of Hope United, a new church in Georgetown, Texas. Click here to visit Hope United’s website.