Has your life gone the way
you thought it would or the way you planned?
I would venture to say that most of us’ answer is “no.” Rather than a version of life on a steady
ascent to goodness and perfection, most of us have dealt with twists and turns,
peaks and valleys. We have had our good
times and we have had our “not so good” times.
Looking back on those moments, what was the cause, particularly for the
“not so good” times? Have there been
moments when you thought life was unfair?
Whom did you blame? Did you
blamed God?
We all know that the human
body with all of its complexities is still a frail and imperfect system. It is susceptible to ailment, aging, and
disease. It is a temporal vessel for our
mind and spirit. We all come to the
moment when we shed our skin and bones for eternity. Like our bodies, we also know that relationships
are fragile. It can be hard to hold
together a life-long commitment to a friend or partner. Some relationships fall apart because of
conflict, distance, or for other reasons.
What happens when an important relationship falls apart? What happens when your health suddenly
fails? Whom do you blame? Did you blame God?
Long after David and
Solomon, the kingdom that was once united split back into the kingdom of the
north known as Israel and the kingdom of the south called Judah. Nearly all of the kings of Israel did what
was evil in God’s sight and the people followed along. Judah had a mix of both good and bad
kings. Still the people did what was
evil in God’s sight. Mainly, their sin
was turning from the God of their ancestors to worship foreign idols. Because of this, Israel was destroyed and the
people taken into captivity and exile.
Judah held out a little longer but eventually the Babylonians were too
much for them. Some of the Judeans fled
to Egypt for safety. Some stayed on the
land and continued to work it. The
Babylonians deported the remainder forcing them to live in exile. Naturally, the people wandered if this was
God’s punishment or if God had abandoned them.
Actually, it was not that God had left the people; it was a matter of
the people having left their first love - the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Never the less, God spoke to the people
through the prophets, one of them being Jeremiah. Through Jeremiah, God called the people to
repentance. God said that if the people
would pray, God would hear them; if they sought God, they would find God. All because God had a vision and that vision
was to restore the people.
Our Bishop, Bob Farr
recently said that God is not done yet.
The Missouri Annual Conference and our United Methodist Churches may not
look like it did a few years ago, but God is doing something new. I agree because St. John’s does not look like
it did a few years ago. However, that
does not mean that God has left us or that we have left God. Like all organisms and organizations, all of
them go through changes. This just
happens to be one iteration of many for our community. As long as we continue to seek after God,
pray, and join in where God is at work, we will continue to be a thriving
community of faith. God has a vision for
us and I invite you to join me as we seek to live into it.
I invite you to take time
and read each of the scriptures above followed by reflection on the questions
below. Recognize the opportunity for us
to continue to live into God’s vision for our faith community. Lastly, I pray that God bless the reading of
God’s Word and the meditations of your heart.