Showing posts with label Rejoice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rejoice. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

The four-corners rejoice

God, mark us with grace and blessing! Smile! The whole country will see how you work, all the godless nations see how you save. God! Let people thank and enjoy you. Let all people thank and enjoy you. Let all far-flung people become happy and shout their happiness because you judge them fair and square, you tend the far-flung peoples. God! Let people thank and enjoy you. Let all people thank and enjoy you. Earth, display your exuberance! You mark us with blessing, O God, our God. You mark us with blessing, O God. Earth’s four corners—honor him! (Psalm 67)

We all bear some "marks" in our lives. Some will have a tattoo on the shoulder - of Mickey Mouse or a hibiscus flower. Others might have a birthmark on their back, the shape of Texas or oblong like a hot dog. Others might have a scar or two - from a recent surgery or bike ride that went wrong. There are all kinds of "marks" we bear, aren't there? Some are of our choosing, while others are clearly there because of nothing we did ourselves. There are two "marks" in our lives which are both a result of our "choosing" and someone else's "doing". These are the marks of God's grace and blessing upon our lives!
As I re-read this Psalm today, I noticed how many times David repeated the words "thank and enjoy you" as he described how the hearts of the people should be toward their faithful God. Some of us are grateful for the tremendous deliverance from life-dominating addictions which held us in their grip for long periods - the mark and blessing of God. Others may be extremely grateful for the child of blessing God allowed to come after long years of trying, waiting, and living with hopeful expectation. Regardless of the "reasons" for our gratefulness, there is something consistently evident "behind" our gratefulness - God's blessings!

God's work in our lives is to save us should cause us to be thankful. His intervention in our lives is what has kept us safe. He has chosen to not only  "mark us" with his salvation - but also with his protection. Scripture declares over and over - God is our shelter, our strong tower, our protector, and our fortress. If you have ever tried to shelter yourself from the attacks of another, you might just have experienced a little bit of frustration by just how inadequate your own "protective devices" have been. God's action on our behalf is to save - first from our own destructive self-willed sinful state, then from those things and people who will keep us from enjoying this position of grace. God's actions involve judgment - fair, truthful, and deliberate. Yet, his judgment is never without mercy. For example, when Lot and his family were caught up in living in an ungodly place - the regions of Sodom and Gomorrah - God sent a messenger to offer the opportunity for grace, long before he sent his judgment upon the city. When Nineveh was on the verge of judgment, God prepared a messenger - Jonah. It took Jonah a while to get with God's plan, but in the end, an entire city was changed! God is "fair" - not in the sense we might evaluate fairness - but in consistency with his character. God cannot allow sin to go "unnoticed" - because he also has the character trait of grace. His holiness cannot commune with sin - therefore, sin must be judged. Yet, in his judgment the gift of grace is preeminent.

God "tends" his people. I think of this "tending" in a very similar way as I do when I think of the actions of my Dad when he'd garden. As he "tended" the garden, some weeds were plucked out, branches trimmed, dead leaves turned into the soil to give it back nourishment to continue to feed the growth around it, and water added so life could be preserved. He could turn the most alkaline and hard soil into the richest of gardens in a matter of weeks, just by tending it. God is much like my Dad (or Dad was probably much like my God! He might pluck a little here and there, turn a little "deadness" into life again, and give us plenty of "life-giving water" to keep us alive and prospering. In his "tending", he is constantly vigilant to bring forth growth - newness and freshness - never letting us grow stale, withering away without care. No wonder our psalmist encourages all the four-corners of the world to celebrate with exuberance! To thank God and enjoy him fully! Isn't it about time we did the same? Just askin!

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Rejoice ---- and again ----

There is not one blade of grass, there is no color in this world that is not intended to make us rejoice. (John Calvin) Too often we almost pass by tremendous things of beauty and never even consider they were put there for our enjoyment! I stop to watch the inch worm make his way from one leaf to another. I observe the slowness and tenacity of the small snail in the garden. I notice the fragility of the opening bud on the hibiscus bush knowing full-well it will be short-lived, but cast such a brightness into the garden. I watch as the leaves slowly descend to the ground on a hot summer's day. These were meant for our enjoyment, not just a casual glance now and again!

This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be happy today! (Psalm 118:24)

This morning I wish to ask a question: "What have you only casually observed this week?" This is a tough question to answer with all honesty, but I believe it is a necessary one! It could be the very thing you have 'casually observed' this week is yourself, or that person right across the room from you right now. I see us all fall into this trap from time to time - looking but not really seeing; hearing but not really listening; thinking but not really considering. If God made all things for us to enjoy - even the hairy spider trapped in between the window screen and glass - then why do we miss so much of it? It could be we are just to absorbed in other things to rejoice in their beauty and purpose! All things and people were created for a purpose - regardless of how 'ugly' they may appear!

We might miss what our psalmist is telling us if we aren't careful. His words are not just mere advice to us - they are a remedy to our not listening, considering, and seeing! We spend so much time focusing on 'getting happy' that we forget it isn't something we achieve - it is a result of us taking time to rejoice! Rejoice first - happiness will follow! Look at the 'order' in which he presents the topic: 'This day', 'Rejoice', and 'Be happy'. First we get the day into focus - we don't let it get away from us. We bring it into focus and then we rejoice in it! That very action of focusing and rejoicing will result in the best thing every - we get 'happy' in it. We may not look forward to everything ahead of us - like considering how to remove that hairy spider from the predicament he finds himself in - but when we take time to notice what he has made and then rejoice in it, we find well-springs of happiness that soon fill our souls.

Why is it our hair kind of stands on end and we get a little shiver up our back as we take notice of that hairy wolf spider trapped in the window? Maybe the response of our body is even a thing of beauty we should be rejoicing in - because God made us with those responses to danger as equally as he made us with those responses we observe with the things that bring us immediate delight! Even the 'ugly things' in life have a way of causing us to rejoice - for God created those warning responses to help keep us safe and secure. He reminds us there are always going to be 'ugly things' attempting to find an inroad into our life, but he also reminds us he has made a way for us to escape - making the rejoicing all that much better! So....rejoice! Just sayin!