Sunday, February 2, 2025

2-2-2025

Good Morning All,

       Psalm 40:2; “He drew me up from the pit of destruction, out of the miry bog, and set my feet upon a rock, making my steps secure.”

    I was watching a movie the other night.  It was a war movie in which one scene was shot during a rain-soaked period of time.  Everything was wet and slippery.  The mud was everywhere, and walking was tough, and driving was even more difficult.  The enemy was about to attack so they tried to move all the equipment.  Of course, as the enemy is coming, one of the jeeps gets stuck and it takes a heroic effort to save the day.  

    It seems that rescuing the hero at the last minute is a common theme in many movies.  Sometimes the villain dies while the hero gets saved.  The scene is frequent, and the result is often the same.  This seems to occur because in many ways; we recognize that we need to be rescued in our own lives.

    Man has long known that he was in desperate shape.  We see this from his earliest fears.  We recognize it by our earliest refusal to care about others.  Our only thought was to self-survival and no thought to others, hence Cain and Abel.  This is partially why we tend to show hatred to others; it is the fear that we need to be rescued and that there isn’t enough help to go around.  It is this need to be rescued that causes us to build walls around ourselves to protect ourselves and to feel a little bit secure.  We separate ourselves from others in an attempt to feel safe and secure in a slippery pit.

    Martin Luther King once commented, “People often hate each other because they fear each other, they fear each other because they don’t each other, they don’t know each other because they cannot communicate, they cannot communicate because they are separated.” This seems to be an accurate description of our human existence.  We fear so we hate.

    There is no way for us to solve this crisis.  On our own, we can only fail.  We soon see that relying on our own skills, our own power, on our own self sense of right and wrong; we soon fall into the pit of destruction.  That slippery slope just leads down, pulling us into the quagmire of total despair.  Our hope is lost, the light is gone and we sink slowly out of sight.

    Yet God, in his mercy, pulls us from the miry bogs.  He brings us from the pit of complete despair.  God pulls us out through the blood of Jesus.  He sets our feet upon a rock.  So, we can face the world with confidence and hope.  There is nothing that the world can throw at us that God cannot or will not pull us through.  The trials of this life are just that, trials.  Through them we can see God’s hand protecting us and giving to us the blessed certainty of life eternal.         

Dear Father, you pull us from the pit and give us the certainty of hope.  Within you is our salvation.  Keep us safe within your arms and guard us with your tender mercy.  Keep us aware that all things work for good for those whom you love according to your purposes.  Bless us with your peace.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

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