Food

October 8, 2020

We recently moved and now we are within a mile of two donut shops!  Two days ago I was at the memorial of a nurse whom I worked with in northern Kenya in a former famine relief camp.  There was a picture of her with her Irish wolfhound, huge, who sat next to me in the Land Rover my first day on the station, drooling on my parents’ first grandchild, as we returned a woman to her remote village.   So many memories.  The memorial closed with brownie and ice cream.  Two worlds, one without food and one with food that tempts me self indulge exist side by side in my mind.  I visualize the scale telling me I need to loose weight and I want to join friends celebrating.  I invariably will choose to eat and be distressed with myself afterwards.

         Jesus met a similar temptation shortly after his baptism.  He went into the wilderness and fasted for forty days.  Matthew 4: 3-4 tells us,

         “The tempter came and said to him, “If you are the Son of       God, command these stones to become loaves of bread.” But       he answered, “It is written, ‘One does not live by bread alone,   but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.’”

In the series of three temptations, Jesus is first approached in the arena of food.  He responded with Scripture, our theme this week.  We all have our weak spots when it comes to our appetites.  Perhaps it is not food but it is the desire to fulfill a different drive.  Pornography is popular now and easy with Internet.  Angry, snarky remarks seem to be part of our public debates.  I find it interesting that Jesus did not resort to historical precedent or scientific facts but responded with the clear truth from Scripture that what feeds our appetites should come from the God.  Scripture cut through the debatable to the eternal.

I don’t know your area of temptation to appease your desires today – food, shopping, sex, and gossip – but for sure those desires are there.  Perhaps it will help to pause and ask ourselves, do I need this to live the good life I want?  Am I consuming “bread” or promoting life?  Am I pleasing God or pleasing self?  To be tempted, to want, is not wrong but what we do with it reflects truth about the foundations of our hearts.  Lord, help me seek you first and your kingdom and trust that my wants will be fulfilled.  Blessings.


Inspired?

October 7, 2020

Inspiration.  I suspect we all sang, “Puff the Magic Dragon” in our youth and that song is still loved today.  Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul, ad Mary put to music the poem of Leonard Lipton who himself was inspired by a poem by Ogden Nash.  A little boy, Jackie Papers, has a pet dragon Puff and they frolic by the sea in an imaginary land of Honalee.  Jackie grows up and leaves the world of imagination and Puff crawls into his cave.  That song captured the imagination of a generation and the sense of loss of innocence as we age and take on the realities of life. 

         We read in 2 Timothy 3:16 that “All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness.”  Luther debated with Rome that Scripture is one of the foundations we stand on because it is inspired.  It stands the test of time, is consistent, is simple truth but it is also inspirational.  It speaks into my life differently each time I read as the truth permeates into my soul.  Sometimes I am comforted that Jesus is my Shepherd.  Other times I am convicted that I need not fear danger as he walks with me through the shadow of death.  Or perhaps I rejoice that there is a table prepared for me at the end of the journey as I have persevered.

         Luther’s belief in Scripture as core to righteousness also led to his work on translating the Bible into German so that there was not just an educated priestly class but the ordinary person could come to the Word.  Perhaps today I will hear some song, see some sunset, watch some movie that touches my heart and I travel down memory lane.  As we come to Scripture today as foundational, we come to words that are training us in righteousness.  Take time to read a passage and meditate on the historical depth, the truth encapsulated in it and ponder how it inspires you to be “your better self.”  Blessings.


cut to the core

October 6, 2020

Hebrews 4: 12 is one of the key verses used for support of Scripture Alone when desiring wisdom and truth.  I don’t know that Luther used it in seeking a debate with Rome but for many Christians it is central.

            “Indeed, the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-   edged sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit, joints from marrow; it is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”

As I ponder what is able to cut deeply into my soul, many examples come to mind.  Pictures can be so poignant that they drive people to their knees.  An example is the photo of the child running from napalm during Vietnam.  Biological warfare came under critique.  Martin Luther Jr’s speech, “I have a dream…” has been memorized by our children in school.  The Mona Lisa has inspired movies.  Many of us graduated high school to the hymn, “My eyes have seen the glory…” Many artistic expressions touch us deeply, driving our imagination, our aspirations and our conscience.

         The writer of Hebrews states that Scripture not only is sharper that

any two edged sword, piercing our reality but it also “judges the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”  King David in the Old Testament, growing old, stays home from battle with his troops, and is enchanted by a young women bathing on her rooftop.  Visual stimulation.  He has her come and they enjoy the evening.  Physical involvement.  She becomes pregnant giving proof to the affair and David has her husband in the army placed in a compromising position so he dies in battle.  David marries Bathsheba.  Problem solved, or is it?  David’s prophet Nathan comes with a story and a message from God.  “You are the man!  This is what the Lord, the God of Israels says… (2 Samuel 12)” Why did that truth cut so deeply into David and drive him to repentance?

         Perhaps one aspect of Scripture, besides that it is consistent in its thematic message through history and writers, is that it reveals a God who sees us to the core and who does not candy coat truth.  It is so easy to convince ourselves that judgments are bias because of affection and political views but Scripture is not Republican or Democrat, not infavor of the rich over the poor, nor written by people that have something to gain from our involvement.  Scripture is inspired by a God who sees.

         So perhaps our reflection today as we ponder the foundations for our decision making is to reflect on what touches us to the core judging the thoughts and intentions of our hearts?  I doubt it is science.  I doubt it is comes from the arts.  The spoken word enters our ears, passes the heart, and touches the soul.  We have a God who lives, who sees, and who cares enough to speak to us honestly through Scripture.  Are we listening today?


What is your Foundation?

October 5, 2020

October has arrived as I see friends on Face Book in coats, I observe the Fall events being advertised in stores – Halloween candy tempts me everywhere!, and I remember key spiritual holidays – Reformation, All Saints Day, thanksgiving, and Christmas are coming!  October is the month when we Lutherans celebrate Reformation, Oct. 31, 1517 when Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the church door in Wittenburg, GR.   A whole rethinking of basic Christian tenants were thrown into public forums by the reformers and the invention of the printing press.  Many of our modern beliefs are be traced back to that time in history.  Are the presidential debates no different than Luther’s desire to engage “the system” in open discussion around basic tenants.  Luther is famous because his points of discussion were not economy, foreign affairs, climate and health but were called the Four Solas ie the Four “Alones”.  Faith should be based on Scripture alone, faith alone, grace alone, and Christ alone.  These will be the themes for our four weeks of reflection this month.

         What is the standard we gauge our beliefs by?  If science says it is so, does that define reality?  Global warming is claimed by many to be a scientific fact and hence the foundation for our environmental policy.  Sola Scriptura, Scripture alone, became the cry of the reformation.  Debates should not be based on “experts’” claims but must be based on accepted biblical writings.  Thus today we will think about Romans 15:4,

                  For whatever was written in former days was written for our     instruction, so that by steadfastness and by the encouragement of the          scriptures we might have hope.

I chose this verse because it ties together James’ encouragement that in the face of difficult times we count it joy because trials develop perseverance, steadfastness, and lead to maturity.  Paul, in Romans, shares a similar idea.  Scripture provides a foundation we can refer to that is consistent, reliable, and we believe inspired by God.  Our tendency is to takes our woes to friends we know will agree with us but scripture claims a historical depth and consistency that draws us to God’s wisdom..  Scripture encourage us and give us hope.  Certainly we need that today.

         So what scriptures encourage you?  Many love Psalm 23 that reminds us that “The Lord is my shepherd…”  This month the Deaconesses are sharing confirmation and consecration verses that have encouraged us through our journey.  One way to find a verse for the challenge of the moment is to use a concordance at the back of your Bible and look up a word e.g. fear, trust, love…  Today it is possible with technology to go to a website like Biblegateway.com and just type in your word and they instantaneously pull up verses.   I love Isaiah 41:10 “Do not fear….”   Scripture was written for our instruction, to develop steadfastness, and lead us to hope!  May it form a solid foundation in your life and thinking.


Sunday October 4, 2020 Pentecost 17

October 3, 2020

First Reading: Isaiah 5:1-7

1Let me sing for my beloved
  my love-song concerning his vineyard:
 My beloved had a vineyard on a very fertile hill.
2He dug it and cleared it of stones, and planted it with choice vines;
 he built a watchtower in the midst of it, and hewed out a wine vat in it;
 he expected it to yield grapes, but it yielded wild grapes.

3And now, inhabitants of Jerusalem and people of Judah,
 judge between me and my vineyard.
4What more was there to do for my vineyard that I have not done in it?
 When I expected it to yield grapes, why did it yield wild grapes?

5And now I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard.
 I will remove its hedge, and it shall be devoured;
 I will break down its wall, and it shall be trampled down.
6I will make it a waste; it shall not be pruned or hoed,
  and it shall be overgrown with briers and thorns;
 I will also command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it.

7For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the house of Israel,
 and the people of Judah are his pleasant planting;
 he expected justice, but saw bloodshed; righteousness,
  but heard a cry!

Psalm: Psalm 80:7-15

7Restore us, O God of hosts;
  let your face shine upon us, and we shall be saved.
8You have brought a vine out of Egypt;
  you cast out the nations and planted it.
9You cleared the ground for it;
  it took root and filled the land.
10The mountains were covered by its shadow
  and the towering cedar trees by its boughs. 
11You stretched out its tendrils to the sea
  and its branches to the river.
12Why have you broken down its wall,
  so that all who pass by pluck off its grapes?
13The wild boar of the forest has ravaged it,
  and the beasts of the field have grazed upon it.
14Turn now, O God of hosts,
  look down from heaven;
15behold and tend this vine;
  preserve what your right hand has planted.

Second Reading: Philippians 3:4b-14

 [Paul writes:] 4bIf anyone else has reason to be confident in the flesh, I have more: 5circumcised on the eighth day, a member of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born of Hebrews; as to the law, a Pharisee; 6as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as to righteousness under the law, blameless.
  7Yet whatever gains I had, these I have come to regard as loss because of Christ. 8More than that, I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ 9and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but one that comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God based on faith. 10I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by becoming like him in his death, 11if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead.
  12Not that I have already obtained this or have already reached the goal; but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. 13Beloved, I do not consider that I have made it my own; but this one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, 14I press on toward the goal for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.

Gospel: Matthew 21:33-46

 [Jesus said to the people:] 33“Listen to another parable. There was a landowner who planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug a wine press in it, and built a watchtower. Then he leased it to tenants and went to another country. 34When the harvest time had come, he sent his slaves to the tenants to collect his produce. 35But the tenants seized his slaves and beat one, killed another, and stoned another. 36Again he sent other slaves, more than the first; and they treated them in the same way. 37Finally he sent his son to them, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’ 38But when the tenants saw the son, they said to themselves, ‘This is the heir; come, let us kill him and get his inheritance.’ 39So they seized him, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed him. 40Now when the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he do to those tenants?” 41They said to him, “He will put those wretches to a miserable death, and lease the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the produce at the harvest time.”
  42Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the scriptures:
 ‘The stone that the builders rejected
  has become the cornerstone;
 this was the Lord’s doing,
  and it is amazing in our eyes’?
43Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of the kingdom. 44The one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces; and it will crush anyone on whom it falls.”
  45When the chief priests and the Pharisees heard his parables, they realized that he was speaking about them. 46They wanted to arrest him, but they feared the crowds, because they regarded him as a prophet.

CHILDREN’S SERMON:  Today I want to tell you the story behind a favorite hymn of mine, My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less.  Edward Mote, 1797-1874, the author, is one of the few hymn writers who was not a theologian, a pastor.  He was raised by parents running a pub in England and trained to be a cabinetmaker.  At age 15 he became a Christian but it was not until age 55 that he became a pastor, already having a successful career.  In his 21 year career as a pastor, he wrote 100 hymns but this was his most favorite.  He a dream driving this creation. 

         He shared,  “One morning it came into my mind as I went to labour, to write an hymn on the ‘Gracious Experience of a Christian.’ As he went up to work he figured out the chorus,
                  On Christ the solid Rock I stand,
                  All other ground is sinking sand.

“The next Sunday [Mote] visited the home of some fellow church members where the wife was very ill. The husband informed Mote that it was their custom on the Lord’s Day to sing a hymn, read the Bible, and pray together. Mote produced the new hymn from his pocket, and they sang together for the first time.”
         Pr. Mote had a story he wanted to tell inspired by the parable about the security of building a house on rock, as opposed to sand and that hymn, set to a simple foot-stomping tune, formed a hymn of faith that over the generations has proved useful and comforting to many in their daily spiritual journey.

SERMON

In today’s text Jesus uses a very common symbol for God’s people. We are God’s garden, his vineyard.  The Old Testament reading and the Psalm reinforce the parable and the truth that we are God’s design, God’s creation, God’s property.  God is the owner and we are expected to produce fruit.  There will be a day when rent is due, an accounting day, and the care-givers, presumably the priests and pastors will be called to account.  We can glean some basic truth from th image of the vineyard.

         Life is not random.  You notice God did not just buy some ole vineyard and decide to fix it up, renovate it.  God had a plan in mind. 

  • He put a fence of protection around the vineyard.  We would understand that to be the law.  The law is designed to protect us from murder, from slander, from disrespect and so much more.  But we perceive the law as something inhibiting us from doing our wants and fight with the law.
  • God put a winepress in his vineyard because his desire was that the vineyard flourish and produce grapes.  Death and destruction and illness are not part of his plan for our lives.  Suffering is not God’s plan for his people.
  • God also put a watchtower in his garden.  God did not leave the garden to grow according to its own ideas but the watchtower had people who guarded and warned the garden of danger.  

Our life has purpose, has protection, should be productive and has a warning system installed to tell us of danger.  The purpose of the vineyard is not its own pleasure.  Life is not meant to be lived randomly by the impulse of the moment.

         BUT…  But … something has gone wrong. Those taking care of the garden began to think the vineyard was theirs.  We begin to think our life is our own and we want to live it our way.  We do not want to answer to an owner who is distant and whom we cannot see.  The people in charge of the vineyard abuse servants, prophets, sent to warn of danger and even kill the son, a prediction of Christ’s death.  The religious system was not functioning as God had planned.  Life is corrupted by war, by poverty, by power systems…so many systemic problems that we are presently debating in our presidential debates.  Something is wrong and who can fix it best?  We know this conversation.  Our presidential debate focused on who can best fix the problems of America and give us the good life!

         Leadership will be held accountable.  Jesus tells this parable to say that caretakers will be held accountable.  The owner will not be defeated.  As unjust as life seems, there will be justice someday.  The priests and scribes realized Jesus was talking about them.  They do not repent and seek forgiveness but seek to find ways to arrest and eliminate Jesus.  It is true for us too.  Our choice is to repent under God, not depose him.  God has a plan, something is wrong, and there will be an accounting.  So how do we find hope?  Where is the hope in this parable? 

         Jesus continues with a second image of a “cornerstone. “ Jesus switches from the image of a vineyard to the image of a building.  Now if you are around my husband very long you will hear him share about Teddy Roosevelt laying the cornerstone of RVA, Rift  Valley Academy, his boarding school he attended through high school in Kenya. In 1909 Teddy Roosevelt, former president of the United States, went on a hunting safari in Kenya and while there laid a cornerstone on the main building being erected for missionary children to get an education.  That cornerstone is still there today.  Why is that cornerstone, or any cornerstone, important?  Webster’s dictionary gave me some clues.

A cornerstone is a stone uniting two masonry walls at an intersection.

Intersection.  RVA is where two worlds meet.  Children raised in Africa are socialized at RVA and hopefully prepared to go to college in the United States, or their home country. The cornerstone is an intersection, a place where two worlds smeet.  The church stands at the intersection of the holy and the secular.  God specifically meets us here and the church is where we train our children and new people in spiritual matters.  God’s vineyard is designed to be an intersection between the world and God.  When we live life by our own ideas and do not acknowledge God, we are building a house with one wall, no corners.  We are building on sand.  We refuse our purpose and we stand in rebellion to the vineyard owner, God.

A cornerstone is a stone representing the nominal starting place in the construction of a monumental building, usually carved with the date and laid with appropriate ceremonies.

RVA is connected to a known historical event and important person, President Theodore Roosevlet and 1909, ie RVA was “seen” and dated in history.  We memorialize the day when we come into relationship with God.  It’s a special day when we become “seen.”  One of our sacred ceremonies is baptism.  We believe God sends the Holy Spirit and public testimony is made of a relationship and a plan for the future.

         Remember the movie a couple years back, Avatar, where the alien people met the other with the greeting of pointing at the person and saying, “I see you,” in the same way we say “hello.”  But the meaning was different.  It carried more the sense of being known to the core of your being. The connection with the famous president gives the sense that this school of now 500 students from all over Africa is not just any ole school but is a school “seen”, visible, important.  God lays his cornerstone on the garden of our lives of our church, of our families and we are not just another group but God sees us to our very core.

         The cornerstone marks the start of a building, of a project.  God puts his cornerstone on our lives because there is a plan and a purpose.  Baptism or perhaps conversion is not the end product but the beginning of a life long project.  We are not living randomly, tossed and turned by the fortunes of life.  It may feel that way during times of struggle and suffering but we must never forget we are seen, not by Teddy Roosevelt who is long dead, but by the God of the universe who cares about what happens to us.  He is working in our lives.

A cornerstone is something that is essential, indispensable, or basic.

I have heard the explanation that the cornerstone is that stone in the middle of an arch that holds the two sides in proper tension so the arch does not collapse. It’s what keeps the whole system in balance.  When our lives are out of balance, it is often because we have lost focus in our faith.  We have forgotten our cornerstone that keeps us balanced in all situations. 

         Jesus talks about how we stumble on the cornerstone.  We struggle with God’s ownership and claims of Christ on our lives.  As I have said many times, it is not easy to forgive, to share, to turn the other cheek, to go the extra mile.  It is not easy to repent, to admit our need for God.  Faith is not like Coca Cola, “Try it, you’ll like it.”  Faith is hard work but so is marriage and so are jobs.  Putting Jesus in the center of our lives, is a call to turn from self centered wants to God centered ways.  It fights against our human self centeredness and breaks us.  We call it repentance.  We fall on our knees seeking forgiveness.  As God’s vineyard, we will be broken even as the sod is broken up in Spring, rocks will be removed, fertilizer will be added.  That can only happen well if Christ is our cornerstone, essential and indispensable, basic to our lives

Lastly, a cornerstone is the chief foundation on which something is constructed or developed.

Do you remember singing the song, ”They Will Know We are Christians by Our Love” ?  When we call ourselves Christians we are declaring some basic truths upon which our lives are built, that are key, the cornerstone, of our decision making process.  We want to live like Christ and not like Caesar.  We want the kingdom of heaven to intersect with this world and change it to God’s values.  We want growth into a people that glorifies God.  Christ is essential, not a Sunday habit, but an element in our life that permeates our reality.

         I close today by bowing my head and sharing the words of: “On Christ the solid rock I stand.  All other ground is sinking sand.”

My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness

I dare not trust the sweetest frame
But wholly lean on Jesus’ name

On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand
All other ground is sinking sand.

When darkness veils his lovely face
I rest on His unchanging grace
In every high and stormy gale
My anchor holds within the veil.

On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand
All other ground is sinking sand.

His oath, his covenant, his blood
Supports me in the ‘whelming flood
When all around my soul gives way
He then is all my hope and stay

On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand

All other ground is sinking sand .


Silver Linings

October 3, 2020

We come to the end of James and find a string of advise.  Is there a thread that ties it all together?  His letter is about finding joy in trials as we persevere, keeping focused on God.  Perhaps we could title it, “finding the silver lining in a cloud.”  Our lives are like the mist of a cloud and how sad to spent it tossing to and fro like a wave because we do not turn to God for wisdom.  God is the giver of good.  He warns against favoritism, against gossip, against works without faith.  Wisdom is peaceful and not contentious.  Be patient, is certainly his advice.  So chapter 5, verse 13 he returns to his original thought of facing trials.  He asks, “Is any one of you in trouble?”

         The verses that follow seem to me to focus on the value of community.  God gives wisdom but we live in community.  Joy is to be shared by singing praises, by prayer, by calling elders in times of trouble, and by confession.  “The prayer of a righteous ma is powerful and effective.”   God works in and through community.  Even as faith without works is dead, trials without a supportive community are unbearable.

         James gives the example of Elijah, on of the major prophets, who lived at a time of great political turmoil as the queen was a Baal worshiper and the king was an unstable leader.  Elijah’s prayers are known for significant impact.  Perhaps we can spend sometime remembering those whose lives were great examples of faith and who deeply impacted our lives.   Community helps carry us through trials when often it is so hard to see clearly the hand of God working.  Helping each other when we go astray “covers a multitude of sins.”

         Trials test our faith and drive us to seek wisdom from God and comfort from community.  We sort out our values as our wants are challenged.  So many lines in James bring me comfort – God does not test us, all good gifts comes from God who does not change like shadows, God does not play favorites by wealth and rewards faith, wisdom is peace-loving, and prayer is powerful.  Our lives are in God’s hands so let us focus on living today trusting him. Blessings.


Job?

October 2, 2020

Who do you admire for perseverance in the face of suffering?  One of our more modern day “sheroes” is Joni Erickson Tada who broke her neck and became a quadriplegic at about age 16.  She has written, spoken, and put her journey into music.  I read about how she dealt with pain when I was a young adult.  Who do you admire?  James looks to the life of Job, a wealthy man in the Old Testament who lost everything, family, wealth, and even his friends turned on him.  James chooses Job because in the end of the book of Job, God appears and justifies Job and rewards him for clinging to his faith.  The book of Job is set in a larger context of a heavenly conversation, perhaps discussion, between God and Satan.  God allows Satan to bring trouble to Job to highlight Job’s faith.  Job claims he has done nothing wrong as his friends urge him to repent as they believe that all misfortune is the result of the person’s wrongs.  We learn that Job’s picture is bigger.  God does not usually appear to us and we are not always given the larger view but James points out that perseverance is key.  This is not to say we do not deserve some of our problems because of our bad choices and misplaced values but it is to say there is not always a direct correlation between trouble and sin.

         James’ conclusion is that we live a life of integrity.  Our words should speak truth.  If we say “no,” it should mean no and if we say “yes” it should mean yes.  In this season of political posturing, it is easy to point the finger to the TV and lament the state of affairs of our country, but I am challenged to take a moment and reflect on my life.  If I were to rate my level of perseverance on a scale of 1 to 10, 1 is low and 10 is high (even as I rate pain for the nurse), what number would I give myself?  I believe James would challenge us that our rating would also correlate to how well we are staying focused on God when confronted with trying situations.  Today, when you encounter frustrations, try to stop and reflect if you are being God-centered or self-centered.  God works outside the box and he has solutions as numerous as the leaves that are beginning to Fall!  Blessings.


Patience

October 1, 2020

Today is October 1, almost the end of 2020, and today we come to James 5, almost the end of his letter to encourage Christians “scatter among the nations.”  Yet again he reminds us that wealth is not an honest indicator of eternal success nor does it protect us from trials.  The rich and wealthy are victims of Corona, of hurricanes, and of car accidents.  Remember James’ opening, rejoice in trials and let the test develop perseverance, patience, work to develop and perfect you.  He returns now to that same theme.  Be patient.  His example, the farmer.

         Leaves are beginning to change colors, garden plots are being prepared for the winter, canning is coming to an end and now we hunker down for the cold.  Even as we trust that Spring will come, the Christian trusts that the Lord is coming to establish justice. What helps us wait and anticipate?

         Using the example of the farmer, I think of those jars of canning that speak to life and blessing.  What have we canned and stored in our hearts for the winter, memories of grievances and losses or memories of blessings?  One of the disciplines of the missionary lifestyle is writing letters to friends far away.  When I go through my address files and remember all the people who have blessed my life, I am always thankful.  When I see all the variety of colors of falling leaves, I remember that God has multiple ways to answer my prayers.  The produce of the past, predicts the blessings of the future … Thanksgiving is coming.

         Secondly when I think of Fall or Winter, I think of wind blowing the leaves, the sound of rustling leaves, the visit of friends for celebrations.  Perhaps it means more time inside doing crafts and listening to music.  Music helps me be patient.  When trials come, if I turn on music, I am always encouraged.

         Reading edifying literature like the Bible also encourages me.  I do not know what helps you to be patient but James is convinced that trials come to build us as we learn to be patient and wait for spring.  Perhaps it is time to take inventory of your resources for dealing with trials and your ways to find encouragement.  God is faithful and he is coming. V. 8 “the Lord’s coming is near.  Don’t grumble!”  Blessings.