Wednesday, October
17, 2018
“Lord, remind me how brief my time on earth will be. Remind me that my days are numbered—how fleeting my life is. You have made my life no longer than the width of my hand. My entire lifetime is just a moment to you; at best, each of us is but a breath.” Interlude
We are merely moving shadows, and all our busy rushing ends in nothing. We heap up wealth, not knowing who will spend it. And so, Lord, where do I put my hope? My only hope is in you. Rescue me from my rebellion. Do not let fools mock me. I am silent before you; I won’t say a word, for my punishment is from you. But please stop striking me! I am exhausted by the blows from your hand. When you discipline us for our sins, you consume like a moth what is precious to us. Each of us is but a breath. Interlude
Hear my prayer, O Lord! Listen to my cries for help! Don’t ignore my tears. For I am your guest—a traveler passing through, as my ancestors were before me. Leave me alone so I can smile again before I am gone and exist no more. Psalm 39:4-13(NLT)
The lectionary list
of Scriptures for each day provides an Old Testament, Psalm, and New
Testament reading. Today the selections are
Job 32, which is steeped in the middle of Job’s misery. Then Psalm 39, David’s overwhelming grief in
the middle of consequences following his adulterous affair with Bathsheba, and
his murderous attempt to cover up his sin.
And, finally, Luke 16, the rich man who ignored the poor man and wound
up in Hell. To quote old Homer Rothrock: There ain’t much romance in any of it!
At the end of David’s prayer he
asks God for a little break in this tsunami of guilt washing over his
life. Just give me a little down-time
away from reality; let me play a little video game, or shoot a few hoops,
practice shoot at the range, find a new girlfriend or some kind of diversion so
I can forget my woes, smile a little, have a nice meal and go to bed. Lord, just one happy day before you take my
shadow off this planet!
At the beginning of this selection
David asks for a reminder of the brevity of life; by the end of the passage he
just wants to be left alone to forget all about it. We humans, created by the hand of God, are
truly complex and not at all consistent in the middle of grief. But we do follow in our forbearer’s
footsteps. Later David’s son, Solomon
would write the one word that describes his father’s deep sorrow – vanity[2]. And for good measure he would emphasize its
impact on humanity: all is vanity.
So, what good comes out of this
happy little reflection? Plenty…if we
will hear it…unlike King David, who just wanted a little nappy. The good news here is the answer for which David
longed, a reminder of how brief and empty life will be when all we chase is the
wind, with all its’ frantic and frivolous activity of self-absorption towards
which we humans are bent. God interrupts
our video game with a power outage, or breaks our basketball hoop just before
we make that incredible shot, or He dashes the next disastrous relationship
before it gets going, just to keep us grounded.
Why is pain so necessary? Why did God design life with shadows? Why does everything seem so empty at times, when
God speaks so powerfully about how wonderful it is to serve Him? Why does He do that? And the reality comes echoing back even
before we finish getting those words out:
God didn’t do that; we did!
And then, like David, like Job, like
Dives in Hell, we just want a break from thinking about it; just bring me a
little drop of cool water to drip on my parched tongue, a nap, a little
diversion from the truth. That’s what we
want; God rarely cooperates!
The Pastor Relations Committee
from the two churches I currently serve met with me before the first Sunday we
had together in 2012. The agenda for the
meeting included their sharing with me what they hoped to experience in
worship, part of which was to not have sugar-coated preaching. The gist of that hope is: you cannot understand or
rightfully-appreciate the Good News, until you rightly understand the Bad News.
I have so appreciated that
thought; it frees the preacher to proclaim the height, depth, and breadth of
sin, with all its’ consequences … and then announce the good news, that the
love, joy, and salvation of God are bigger than anything sin offers. David, Job, and Dives, the rich man who wound
up in Hell all found out in the hardest of ways that we need to be rescued from
our rebellion. There is a better way
than just choosing our own way; our only hope is in Christ Jesus.
For You Today
The next time your life seems like just a moving shadow, remember
that when light hits the room shadows have to hide. Better to live in the light, than to be a
moving shadow!
Go to VIDEO
[2] Read Ecclesiastes
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