Hearing the Music

Love and War

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Over the past nine days the world has held it's breath as Russia invades Ukraine. Last week we were reminded that God is intimately involved in this world, even in such tragedies as the war in Ukraine. What can we do? We can pray, and we have, through Zoom prayer sessions, gatherings at Christ Church, and within our own spaces. We must continue to pray. Yet I can’t shake the feeling there is more we can be doing as followers of Jesus. What might that be?

Perhaps we can take our lead from David in one of my favorite psalms, Psalm 51, the psalm that David pens when Nathan the prophet went to him and confronted his sin against Bathsheba. It reveals David’s heart, a man after God’s own heart yet still broken and as quick to sin as any of the rest of us. He writes, “Have mercy on me O God, according to your steadfast love, according to your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions... For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Against you, you only have I sinned and done what is evil in your sight.” David is quick to acknowledge brokenness and sin in his own life. Later in his life, David pens another one of my favorites, Psalm 139, praying, “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” David is fully aware of his ability to sin and cause hurt, yet he is also quick to press into the Lord and rely on Him in these times.

What does this all have to do with war and suffering? How does checking my heart and reminding myself that I am capable of sin toward others count toward responding to this crisis? I would posit that one aspect leading to war is broken relationships. It’s a distrust of others and a lack of compassion and care for those placed in our lives, just one house over or in another country. It’s getting caught up in our own plan, like David, and failing to see the consequences until the dust settles. It is a failure to see others with value, dignity and worth as our Creator does. In essence, it’s a loss of the imago dei truth; that people are made in the image of God. This truth causes us to love because we see people as lovely. It moves us to compassion because we all have experienced a divine compassion. When we look outside at the devastation going on around us we can respond by looking inward, like David, and cry out to God with, “forgive me for the ways I have sinned against you, and others.”

Over the next four weeks Christ Church is going to focus on healthy relationships, offering a 10am Sunday class called Loving Each Other Well. Love, truth, mercy and grace need to be at the center of our relationships. There must be a willingness to die to oneself, to sacrifice for the sake of others, and to operate in this world with the foundational truth of imago dei. As we hold Christ at the center of our global issues we must also hold Christ at the heart of our personal and communal issues. By looking to Jesus as the Author and Perfecter of our faith, we hope to glean something that aids us in our relationships with one another.

 

Photo by Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona on Unsplash

Posted by Addison Hawkins

How Long, O Lord?

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I confess I had to think through my weekly greeting this morning. As you know, Thursday we woke to the the news that Russia invaded Ukraine. Is it really a "Happy Friday"? I stuck with the greeting because we know that while the nations rage and peoples plot in vain, our God still rules and reigns from his throne! It is this fact that enables us to cry out with the psalmist: "How long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? How long must I take counsel in my soul and have sorrow in my heart all the day? How long shall my enemy be exalted over me?" (Psalm 13:1–2).

The psalmist David was a man of war and certainly knew in times of war to cry out to his God. Dr. Tom Gibbs, President of Covenant Seminary, reflects on these heart cries in scripture: "That such questions appear in Scripture reminds us that God not only understands our plight but validates the inscrutability of our suffering. More than that, however, God intends our questions to stir our faith and lead us to more dependent prayer. As we do, we discover that there is always a subtext to the profound suffering and evil experienced in this world. That subtext, of course, is God’s sovereign, gracious, and redemptive purpose centered on our perfect King, Jesus Christ, and the victory of the cross. Despite injustice, wars, or the evil of kings, thankfully, a deeper wisdom guides this world."

These truths, these reflections, certainly stir the heart. But I also know many are asking, "What can we do practically?". For starters, we continue with our rhythms of worship. This week we are focusing on Global Missions and Dr. Thurman Williams will be with us to open the Word and open our hearts to God's global work. As we sing and pray in union with Christ, we plant a flag of faith to the glory of God.

In addition, I want to commend a couple of initiatives that the PCA has put together:

Ukraine MTW Team Zoom Call - Doug & Masha Shepherd are Mission to the World (MTW) team leaders in Lviv, Ukraine, where they serve along with other alumni. They are hosting an open Zoom call at 3pm EST this Sunday to talk about the current situation and how you can pray. This is a good opportunity to hear directly from missionaries involved.

Ukraine Disaster Relief - learn more by visiting this MTW created webpage with regular updates from their Ukraine team where you can also give directly to the disaster relief plans they are quickly having to develop.

Let me close by again quoting Dr. Gibbs: "None of us can say what will occur in Ukraine or the world in the days ahead, but we can be confident in the character of our God who hears the prayers of his children and will finally extinguish the presence of evil."

 

Photo by Simeon Jacobson on Unsplash

Honesty

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Flashback to the ‘70’s. Little Andrew is seated in the kitchen, eating cereal (BooBerry), getting ready for school. On in the background is news radio, WOOD AM, keeping us up to date with traffic, weather, and news. Also playing this morning is the newest hit by Billy Joel, you know the guy married to Christie Brinkley! “Honesty, is such a lonely word. Everyone is so untrue. Honesty is hardly ever heard, and mostly what I need from you.”

Things haven’t changed a whole lot, at least not for the better. We live in a time when we are starved for for truth and integrity. From politics to our personal relationships we wonder who we can trust? Whose “Yes is Yes” and whose “No is No”? 

In another example ‘the more things change the more things stay the same’, Jesus takes up this very issue of integrity in our next stop in the Sermon for Life. Matthew 5:33-37 is once again heart excavation, this time with truth-telling in view. And like with anger or adultery, Jesus is inviting us to start with the person that we often have the most difficult time being honest with, ourselves. This heart excavation is hard work, but we stick at it because of the promise that we started with, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” (Matt 5:3).

 

Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash

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