Good Morning All,
Micah
4:6; “In that day, declares the Lord, I will assemble the lame and
gather those who have been driven away and those whom I have
afflicted;”
I
remember watching a movie about the Civil War a few years ago. I do not
remember the name or even the general plot line. I just remember one scene in
the movie where they showed a bucolic scene of sunlight dancing through the
leaves of the trees filled with birds and there was a hedge lined road with a
rabbit hopping along the road. Then came the line of soldiers, but not the
regular army, these were the maimed, the wounded, those who had lost an arm or
a leg or were blind and were heading home from the war. The contrast of the
beauty of the day and the scenery was shattered by the tattered bodies trying
to go home.
In many ways, this image can haunt us often.
When you watch the news, you see the bodies of blown-up soldiers returning home.
You see communities destroyed by fire or storm. You see unimaginable events,
indescribable pain, and hopeless remorse. We see the lame and those who have
been driven away.
Many times, we are those who are lame or
driven away. The cares of this world, the pain of broken relationships, the
fear of tomorrow, can cause us to feel like we have had limbs ripped from us. There
is something that is missing in our lives, and we feel the effect of it every day.
Sometimes these events can have the effect
on us where we look aimlessly into the distance, not at anything in particular,
but with that vacant, lost look of someone who has lost everything. We have the look of someone who has no hope. You
see that look often. There is that picture of an Okie farm wife from the Great
Depression that really sums up the pain of an entire generation with that
vacant hopelessness. That look is on
many people’s faces today as well.
The problem is that too often we look for
hope, for truth, for comfort, for our sense of security in all the wrong places
and just like the soldier who steps on a landmine; we are blown back, blown
away and blown apart. Our sin destroys us to our very core down to our very
being. We are lost; left to limp our way back to what we think, and hope is
home.
Into this mess, God comes with his words of
comfort, his words of promise, and his words of hope. God comes to rescue you and
me from all that the world has done to us, from all that we have done to
ourselves. Jesus came to proclaim the good news of reconciliation. Jesus came
to proclaim the good news of forgiveness of sins. Jesus came to pay the debt
that you and I cannot.
Through our Baptism, God calls us, the
lame, the blind, those who were driven away, back into his family. We are
called back to live in his saving grace under his watchful eye, safe in his
loving arms. In that day we are
assembled in His grace waiting for the final day when we will be ultimately
assembled before the throne of heavenly glory.
Dear Father of all
grace, your mercies are new to us every day. Heal us, your wounded and broken
people with your wondrous love. Give us hope and give us courage to withstand
the devil’s attacks and keep us safely in your arms. In Jesus’ precious name we
pray, amen
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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