Good
Morning All,
2
Corinthians 4:7: “But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the
surpassing power belongs to God and not to us.”
My wife and I received an outdoor propane fire pit for Christmas from
our children this past year. A couple of
weeks ago, on a nice warm Sunday, my oldest son offered to put it together for
his mother. I would have gotten to it
eventually but, you know. I didn’t get
to watch the construction; I wasn’t back from the church at the time. Yet my wife could hardly contain her laughter
when she told the tale.
It seems that our 2, almost 3, year old grandson offered to “help” his
dad “fix it”. Soon the little screws and
nuts and bolts were spread around the patio.
Every so often he would stand in front of dad to get a better look or
have the screwdriver that dad needed.
All in all, it added some time to the construction, but we both told my
son; it is only beginning.
When my sons were about that age and then older, they liked to “help” as
well. I remember telling my wife that I
could get our livestock chores done in about an hour; it took an hour and a
half when I was “helped.” I remember
looking for wrenches, hammers, screwdrivers, saws nails, boards, screws, bolts
and just about anything that wasn’t tied down that one, two or three little
boys could carry. They would always want
to help and we usually let them unless it was unsafe for them. They were allowed and encouraged to help because
it formed a bond of love between them and the parents and grandparents that
they were spending time with and now, the next generation is bonding as well.
This
is part of why our verse plays out the way it does. We have the treasure (God’s saving Gospel
message) but we have it in our frail human nature and condition. This is one of the mysteries of faith; why
does God let us humans mess it up so often?
We humans tend to squabble, waste time, lack total compassion and often
just really mess it up. It would go
smoother if God just “zapped” the ones who would believe and then be done with
it but that is not how he does it. God
uses created things to bring about healing in this broken world. He uses water and bread and wine for our
sacramental nourishment and he uses other humans to provide the physical warmth
and touch. He uses human voices to speak
to us at times; he uses human arms to comfort us when we are hurting; he uses
humans to reach humans.
He uses you and me to be his witnesses, to be the agents of change for
him. He does this to draw you and me
closer to him and closer to each other.
He uses us, the imperfect creatures that we are, to spread the kingdom
of God throughout the broken world. He
uses us, encourages us and brings us to love him through our service to
him. It is all part of the plan.
Father,
in your hands we rest safely. Move us by
your mighty Spirit to spread your message of salvation and hope. Move us to have compassion on our brothers
and sisters who are in need of your mercy.
Guide us to be your hands and voices in this world of pain and silence. In the precious name of Jesus we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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