“Let There Be  Peace on Earth”

December 10, 2022

The theme of the second week of Advent is PEACE.  We looked at George Bailey struggling with different events in his life that challenged his peace and how he resolved them.  We laid those next to the journey of Biblical Joseph, husband of pregnant Mary, and the tensions he lived with in the midst of the political challenges of his time.  I was surprised that this song was actually written in 1955 by Jill Jackson who was said to have been suicidal.  She tried to commit suicide in 1944 but was unsuccessful.  She had a “moment of truth” where she realized, “I knew for the first time unconditional love – which God is.  You are totally loved, totally accepted, just the way you are in that moment.  I was not allowed to die, and something happened to me, which is very difficult to explain.  I had an eternal moment of truth, in which I knew I was loved, and I knew I was here for a purpose.”  She later wrote the song with her husband and the song has been embraced around the world as voicing the longing in hearts for peace.  Peace, though, is more than the cessation of conflict and wars among nations.  It is the cessation of conflict with God and self.

     The articles I read did not associate this song with a religious tradition as it appeals to people of all religions. But as a Christian, at this time of the year, I always reflect on the peace I have found as I have grown in my faith journey through relationship with God through Christ, nurtured by Scripture, fellowship, music, prayer, nature, authors  and friends.  May you be blessed with growing peace on your journey and Lord, have mercy on the many innocent victims caught in our world conflicts.


Peace in the Midst of Problems: Keep the Positive in Sight

December 9, 2022

        “Clarence:  Your brother, Harry Bailey, broke through the ice and was drowned at the age of nine.

        George:  That’s a lie! Harry Bailey went to war! He got the Congressional Medal of Honor! He saved the lives of every man on that transport.

        Clarence:  Every man on that transport, died! Harry wasn’t there to save them, because you weren’t there to save Harry. You see, George, you’ve really had a wonderful life. Don’t you see what a mistake it would be to throw it away?”

George Bailey is given the gift by angel second class, Clarence Oddbody of seeing what life would have been like had he never been born.  Even in the depths of depression in the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life”, and considering suicide, George battles with the good that did result because of his life versus the despair the future is threatening.

Biblical Joseph in the Christmas story must have struggled as he hears that a census has been declared while Mary is greatly pregnant.  Then there is no “inn” as she is about to deliver.  He might have thought, “The hits just keep coming.”  Some days are like that.  

George fights the lie with the truth that his brother’s life was meaningful because of him.  Truth helps us fight despair and puts the present in perspective so we find peace.  Focusing on a God who is able to defeat the Romans, provide housing, help us be victorious in battle, and face what ever giant is threatening us helps us hang in there.  Sometimes we forget though and that is where the body of Christ is important to remind us that we are forgiven, that we are valuable, and that God is working for our good.

Maybe you are feeling down now and need to review the events that is discouraging you and put them in perspective. Identify the good that is in them.  Or perhaps you are the friend that needs to affirm someone today who is discouraged.  The encourager and the one being encouraged are both important to God and to others.  Blessings as you seek to keep the positive in sight.


Peace in the Midst of Problems: Invest in the Possible

December 8, 2022

George Bailey and Mary in “It’s a Wonderful Life” have their first baby, a boy, Pete.  George watches as all his hometown friends travel the world complements of WW2.  George’s dream of seeing the world still cannot be accomplished even compliments of the military.  George is deaf in one ear from saving his brother as young kids when Harry slid into a hole in the ice.  The movie does not show George lamenting his plight but throwing all his strength into helping with war efforts at home, supporting his friends.  His brother becomes a pilot war hero and the other men in his life are part of historical landmarks.  George brags about Harry and friends! 

         Joseph in the Bible story is not the chosen carrier of baby Jesus but takes a background role.  He does not become the head of the Church like Peter nor hollowed like Mary.  Joseph invests in the possible, though possibly not the most glamorous.  He protects Mary and takes her to Bethlehem and then Egypt and back to Nazareth.  He is no longer mentioned in Biblical accounts but he is the father figure who raised Jesus in his younger years.  That is not something to be sneezed at.

         I suspect some of us feel like minor characters supporting someone else’s lead performance.  It is not easy to play second fiddle.  Soooo close to important but not quite, or so the Evil One will try to convince us to think.  Comparison-itis is such a rabbit hole that we so easily slide down at Christmas as friends share what they bought their kids and grandkids.  We become grasshoppers in our own eyes.  Finding peace in the midst of problems seems to me to depend on finding peace with our role, our talents, and our tasks in life and doing them faithfully as we are able. 

         Joseph was God’s chosen husband for Mary and he did his role in spite of the social censure it incurred.  George Bailey was not able to go to war but he served faithfully on the home front.  Lord, help us live humbly and faithfully doing all you ask of us daily. 


Peace in the Midst of Problems

December 7, 2022

Even though I walk through the darkest valley,
    I fear no evil;
for you are with me;
    your rod and your staff—
    they comfort me (Psalm 23:4)

         We have been following the sequence of events in the life of George Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life.”  George postpones his dreams of traveling the world to run his father’s business and loan company when the father suddenly dies.  He postpones going to college so his brother can.  He does marry Mary but he sees his friends being successful.  We pondered George being offered a job by his archrival Mr. Potter yesterday and how he resists the temptation that again dangles before him his dream of traveling the world.  George goes home to Mary in a grumpy mood and asks her, “Why did you marry a guy like me?  You could have had any guy in town!”  Mary responds, “I didn’t want any guy.  I wanted my baby to look like you.”  George suddenly grasps the announcement, “Mary, are you on the nest?!!!”  Discouragement has turned to hope and peace as George realizes love has brought forth new life and a new future.

         Sometimes in the midst of discouraging times, we can find the strength to carry on when friends affirm, offer new perspectives of the potential of a situation, and walk with us.  My daughter was offered a job that she did not feel fit her talents but agreed to the interview.  They did offer the job and she declined.  They came back, “Write your own job description because we believe you are the person we want.”  Wow.  Joseph has envisioned what life will be like with Mary in the Biblical report.  He did not plan on the pregnancy nor a trip to Bethlehem.  But in the midst of the struggles to live, a child is born that outshines the problems.

         We all are walking in the midst of challenges but as we travel with others we can be sources of affirmation and be the eyes that help another see the potential of trying times.  We find peace in problems with the help of encouragers that see God at work and help us see it too.  Let’s be encouragers in the birthing process of Christmas this year.  Blessings.


PEACE in the Midst of Problems

December 6, 2022

“Take delight in the Lord,

and he will give you the desires of your heart. (Psalm 37:4)

         In “It’s a Wonderful Life” George Bailey is presented with a job offer by his arch-rival Mr. Potter.  Mr. Potter, the wealthiest man in Bedford Falls, is informed that George’s affordable housing offered by his building and loan company is cutting into Potter’s profit.   George is drawing people away from his high rents.  Mr. Potter calls George in and offers him a job, a three year contract at a comfortable salary that could provide a nice home and clothes for his wife, trips to New York and possibly even Europe.  George is flabbergasted and flattered and begs for a day to think it over.  Potter evades George’s question about what happens to the building and loan business and George starts to shake hands but then realizes he would be betraying his values.  George could have his dream of travel and luxury but at a price.  He turns Potter down.

         Mr. Potter flattered George to try to manipulate him under his control but George saw through him.  King Herod in the Christmas story meets the wise men and sends them to find the new king and report back so he can go and worship too.  It was a lie.  Herod sent soldiers to kill the babies of Bethlehem.  We have a saying, “Flattery will get you nowhere.”  When we realize someone is complementing us disproportionately for their selfish gain, like Mr. Potter or Herod, we have to stop and think. 

         We might ask ourselves today what our Achilles heel is that we find ourselves vulnerable to.  What dream might we have that tempts us to over extend ourselves?  We are tempted to promise beyond our ability to pay.  For some of us it is our desire to be loved.  Perhaps the promise of financial gain or fame catches our eye.  Proverbs 37:4 warns us to set our hearts on pleasing God.  During the Christmas season we are very vulnerable to spending too much to bless people and we are vulnerable to exhaustion from doing too much.  May we trust God to give us the desires of our heart.  Peace is found in appreciating what we have or receive and not comparing it to what we might have wanted.  Blessings as you navigate this season!


“PEACE in the midst of problems”

December 5, 2022

”Praise the Lord, my soul,

all  my inmost being, praise his holy name. 

Praise the Lord, my soul

and forget not all his benefits.”  Psalm 1031-2

         In “It’s a Wonderful Life,” George Bailey and Mary do get married.  They use their honeymoon money to save the building and loan company from an apparent bank run and start their honeymoon in the drafty old house they had made wishes on years before.  The next scene shows George and Mary helping Mr. and Mrs. Martini move into their own home in Bailey Park.  George’s old friend Sam Wainwright and his wife are passing through town in their fancy car, on their way to vacation in Florida.  Sam reminds Mary that he offered George to join him in plastics but George stuck with the loan company.  Sam drives off and George returns to work but kicks the door of his old car shut.  The viewer knows that George’s choices have had a price.  Mary is slowly fixing up the old house and George is slowly helping others have a better life but it might have been otherwise.

         Advent 2 focuses on PEACE.  George is learning to make peace with the choices he has made, not by focusing on what might have been but by staying focused on the blessings of the present. When Sam arrived in town and greeted George from across the street, George was helping Mr. Martini move from his old place under Potter into his new home.  Mary, wisely says under her breath, “ignore him, George.”  Mary hands Mrs. Martini a loaf of bread praying that the new home never knows hunger, salt that the home may always have flavor, and George gives a bottle of wine for joy.  George’s dream of building homes that bless people is beginning to come true although not as he had dreamed as a youth and George is finding peace in the present.

         If you could choose a symbol to represent sufficiency and not hunger, what would you choose?  What do you think of for giving flavor to life?  Can you think of a moment of joy that blessed your life?  Focusing on the blessings of what has been and not what might have been is part of the secret of find peace.  Lord, Help us focus on our blessings and not our “might-have-beens.”


Advent 2, December 4, 2022 PEACE

December 4, 2022

First Reading: Isaiah 11:1-10

1A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse,
  and a branch shall grow out of his roots.
2The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him,
  the spirit of wisdom and understanding,
  the spirit of counsel and might,
  the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.
3His delight shall be in the fear of the Lord.
He shall not judge by what his eyes see,
  or decide by what his ears hear;
4but with righteousness he shall judge the poor,
  and decide with equity for the meek of the earth;
 he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth,
  and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked.
5Righteousness shall be the belt around his waist,
  and faithfulness the belt around his loins.
6The wolf shall live with the lamb,
  the leopard shall lie down with the kid,
 the calf and the lion and the fatling together,
  and a little child shall lead them.
7The cow and the bear shall graze,
  their young shall lie down together;
  and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.
8The nursing child shall play over the hole of the asp,
  and the weaned child shall put its hand on the adder’s den.
9They will not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain;
 for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord
  as the waters cover the sea.
10On that day the root of Jesse shall stand as a signal to the peoples; the nations shall inquire of him, and his dwelling shall be glorious.

Psalm: Psalm 72:1-7, 18-19

1Give the king your justice, O God,
  and your righteousness to the king’s son;
2that he may rule your people righteously
  and the poor with justice;
3that the mountains may bring prosperity to the people,
  and the hills, in righteousness.
4Let him defend the needy among the people,
  rescue the poor, and crush the oppressor.
5May he live as long as the sun and moon endure,
  from one generation to another.
6Let him come down like rain upon the mown field,
  like showers that water the earth.
7In his time may the righteous flourish;
  and let there be an abundance of peace till the moon shall be no more.
18Blessed are you, Lord God, the God of Israel;
  you alone do wondrous deeds!
19And blessed be your glorious name forever,
  and may all the earth be filled with your glory. Amen. Amen.

Second Reading: Romans 15:4-13

4Whatever 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. 5May the God of steadfastness and encouragement grant you to live in harmony with one another, in accordance with Christ Jesus, 6so that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
7Welcome one another, therefore, just as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God. 8For I tell you that Christ has become a servant of the circumcised on behalf of the truth of God in order that he might confirm the promises given to the patriarchs, 9and in order that the Gentiles might glorify God for his mercy. As it is written,
 “Therefore I will confess you among the Gentiles,
  and sing praises to your name”; 10and again he says,
 “Rejoice, O Gentiles, with his people”; 11and again,
 “Praise the Lord, all you Gentiles, and let all the peoples praise him”;
12and again Isaiah says,  “The root of Jesse shall come, the one who rises          to rule the Gentiles; in him the Gentiles shall hope.”
13May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Gospel: Matthew 1: 18-19

18 Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit. 19 Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly.

Children’s Sermon:  “Belling the Cat” by Aesop

Let’s come back to one of my favorite Aesop Fables.  Let’s listen for how the mice found PEACE, our Advent 2 theme.

“The Mice once called a meeting to decide on a plan to free themselves of their enemy, the Cat. At least they wished to find some way of knowing when she was coming, so they might have time to run away. Indeed, something had to be done, for they lived in such constant fear of her claws that they hardly dared stir from their dens by night or day.

Many plans were discussed, but none of them was thought good enough. At last a very young Mouse got up and said:  “I have a plan that seems very simple, but I know it will be successful.  All we have to do is to hang a bell about the Cat’s neck. When we hear the bell ringing we will know immediately that our enemy is coming.”

All the Mice were much surprised that they had not thought of such a plan before. But in the midst of the rejoicing over their good fortune, an old Mouse arose and said:  “I will say that the plan of the young Mouse is very good. But let me ask one question: Who will bell the Cat?”

Let us pray:  Lord may the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in your sight, my Rock, my Redeemer, my source of Peace.

SERMON

         Last week in Advent 1 we laid the foundation of prophecy that gives us HOPE as we face the future.  The Gospel of Matthew opens Advent with the stories of God’s faithfulness to the generations of faulty people in Jesus’ genealogy and God’s faithfulness working through them and the kings that were leading the growing Jewish nation.  We felt the tension that despite a wonderful God predicting a wonderful future not just for Abraham but for all people, something has gone wrong.  The Jews are now living under Roman occupation. We have hope, though, in the face of hard times because God is faithful to bring about his prophecies.

         We are tracking the Biblical Christmas story told by Matthew with the popular movie “It’s a Wonderful Life” so that we can bring the Biblical reality into the Baby-boomer reality we live in.  George Bailey’s life when reviewed by Clarence Oddbody, Angel Second Class, who is going to be sent to help George, looks promising.  “I like that face,” says Clarence as he sees the choices George has made to bring him to the problem he is facing.  George Bailey has tried to live a life of integrity in Bedford Falls, helping the poor and caring for his family but something has gone wrong.  Money is missing and the bank examiner is at his door.

         In Advent 2 we come to the moment of problem that both Joseph and George Bailey face.  How do we find PEACE in the midst of life’s traumas that challenge our resources?  Matthew zeroes in on Joseph and the dilemma he faces.  Mary, his promised wife returns from a trip to visit her aunt Elizabeth of Zachariah and Joseph realizes she is pregnant.  Houston, we have a problem.  Joseph must decide what to do about a pregnant fiancée and George Bailey must decide what to do about missing money.  How will they find PEACE?

“…before…”

         Joseph, engaged to Mary, along with George Bailey, and perhaps ourselves have stepped into traumas “before…”.  Before what?  The gap between prophecy and perfection will often involve facing problems.   We have a dream about how life might be going to unfold but then something happens.  It is so easy for problems to sabotage prophecy and cloud our thinking.  We get T-boned by life.  The dream is out there and we can almost touch it but then Coved happens.  We about have the money for a down-payment on the next phase in our life plan but illness enters.  The pre-college test scores arrive and the weight of family expectations will not be met.  Joseph has organized all the cultural hurtles to marry Mary but she is pregnant.  Let me just say that Joseph has put all his dreams for his future with Mary. God too has put his plans on Mary.  The problem is not the dream.  The problem is the detours that happen to get to the dream.

     The detours in life often throw us into choices about alternatives like trying to figure out which turn to take when working a maze.  We know the exit we want but how to get there.  George Bailey knows he does not have a booming loan business but he thinks he is solvent.  When his uncle confesses that $8,000 has been misplaced, George panics.  The bank examiner is there and it is Christmas Eve.  Joseph also must decide what to do with a pregnant fiancée.  Both men consider alternatives when unexpected problems block the way forward.

“…planned…”

         George madly searches the office for the misplaced money.  He grabs his uncle by the collar and shakes him.  He runs to Mr. Potter, his arch-rival, and bargains for a loan.  He yells at his children and kicks the furniture.  He goes to the bar and drinks.  Then he drives while drunk!  Oh my, a distraught man!  But let’s be honest, we have done all of those tactics.  We have scapegoated a loved one because we are upset about something else.  We may have turned to alcohol or drugs or TV or shopping, anything that relieves the fear.  I won’t ask if you’ve grabbed someone and given the person a good shake.  George does all these things and then when George offers Mr. Potter his $15,000 life insurance policy as collateral for a loan, Mr. Potter suggests George is worth more “dead than alive,” George caves and agrees with the enemy.  The thought of suicide has been planted in his mind.  He stands on the bridge ready to jump.

         Joseph likewise looks at his alternatives.  Under Jewish law he could have Mary stoned.  That kind of revenge would certainly make him appear innocent and salvage his reputation.  Joseph knows he is innocent of breaking the law but no one else does.  This problem is going to be played out in the court of public appeals before his hometown.  Ouch.  Mary is not guilty of sneaking a candy bar but is guilty of adultery.  The pregnancy is the talk of the town.  She is front line news.  My friends, we know this dynamic that is so much in our face today.  Before the trial, the news media has interviewed all possible experts and all possible angles and all sorts of explanations have weighed in on why the person is guilty.  We no longer live by “innocent until proven guilty” and Mary and Joseph lived in times like ours.  The pregnancy was proof enough of guilt of unfaithfulness.  The missing $8,000 for George’s company proved guilt before there was a trial.

         One choice is to shift the blame.  If Mary would cooperate, maybe Joseph could claim rape by a Roman soldier.  Movies like “The Nativity” have Mary’s parents asking her if it was a soldier.  She could have lied and kept the conception to herself but she does not.  George Bailey runs to Mr. Potter and confesses that he, George Bailey, misplaced the money.  Potter knows it was the uncle and George knows it was the uncle but George realizes he will be held responsible and must decide what to do.

         Another solution is that Joseph could quietly divorce Mary.  He would be vindicated, she would live a life in disgrace as a single mother and he could move on.  The solution satisfies the law mostly but does not satisfy grace.  George Bailey stands on the bridge and contemplates the suicide option.  Joseph goes to bed having decided to “dismiss Mary quietly.”

PEACE

         So often we live in this tension between law and grace and we just don’t know which way to turn.  How can we find peace? Peace is a word used in the Bible a lot but what does it look like in the life of Joseph or George Bailey and especially in our Baby-boomer reality?  Peace cannot just mean the absence of war for it seems like there is always war somewhere in our world.  A friend posted on FaceBook, “Peace . . . does not mean to be in a place where there is no noise, trouble or hard work. It means to be in the midst of those things and still be calm in your heart. – (unknown author)”  As Jesus heads to the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus shares with his disciples,   

         “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you         as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let          them be afraid. (John 14:27)”

If Jesus said it, it must be true.  Jesus gives us peace for today and worked eternal peace with God. So let’s look at our text and story.

         “Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace.”  Joseph being a righteous man tells us that Joseph tried to live his life in right relationship with God.  We are told in James that “Abraham believed God and it was credited to him as righteousness (James 2:23).”  Peace does mean that we are no longer enemies with God because of the cross but peace can now come as we live out our faith in our actions. 

         I would suggest that means we are able to live not in conflict with ourselves and our values but can live in harmony, security, and with an inner tranquility even when there is war without.  Jesus is my ultimate model as he stayed in control of himself through the whole crucifixion event.  Peace means we have an internal integrity that is not necessarily based on our own comfort and happiness but on the greater belief system that supports our life.  Jesus was one with God and so could walk through life at peace.

         Joseph had come to peace with God’s rule in his life and would not manipulate to gain Mary as his wife or fight to protect his reputation.  He would satisfy the law as gently as possible.  Do men cry?  I think he might of.  I do not believe that it was an easy decision for Joseph.  Some of us may wrestle with the problem of putting a spouse away because of infidelity but most of us wrestle with other moral problems.  To wrestle is not wrong.  It is human. 

         George Bailey did not wrestle with infidelity but he did wrestle with how to achieve financial integrity.  We do not see a man at peace.  We see a man struggling and desperate.  Interestingly we do see other moments in the movie when George struggles with complex issues and comes to peace.  As a youth, he does not deliver the wrong prescription but chooses to confront the pharmacist.  As a young man he chooses not to travel the world but take on leadership in his deceased father’s loan business.  He does struggle but decides to wed Mary.  He uses his honeymoon money to keep the loan company afloat during a bank run.   He turns down the offer to join Mr. Potter’s team and have a more comfortable life.  As George Bailey listens to that voice inside himself he always chooses a path that demonstrates integrity with what appears to be his core values.  When he comes to his moment of crisis over money, he flounders to find the right answer but his friends know George is not the normal man of peace and a chorus of prayers ascend to heaven.  Next week we will see how God steps in, not only to fulfill prophecy that gives HOPE and to resolve problems that result in PEACE but also to bring JOY into our lives.

         Our Advent 2 challenge this week is to rejoice at the PEACE we have with God because of the birth and life of that child born in Bethlehem.  We are challenged to live in PEACE with our world today as we seek to live with integrity our spiritual values during the stresses and pressures of the Christmas season.

“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you         as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid. (John 14:27)”

Let the people of God say, “Amen!”

 


Choices: “Come Thou Long Expected Jesus”

December 3, 2022

This Charles Wesley hymn was first published in 1744.  The tune was composed by a Rowland H. Prichard, age 20 in about 1836.  It is sung here by Chris Tomlin, a modern singer.  We started with the genealogy in Matthew 1 and showed this week in our devotions that the guys from long ago who built lives on choices to trust God are not different from us or George Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life.”  God’s faithfulness in keeping his promises to work with us in the past builds HOPE for us to face the future.

Come, Thou long expected Jesus.  Born to set Thy people free;
From our fears and sins release us.  Let us find our rest in Thee.
Israel’s strength and consolation.  Hope of all the earth Thou art.
Dear desire of every nation.  Joy of every longing heart.

Born Thy people to deliver,  Born a child and yet a King,
Born to reign in us forever,  Now Thy gracious kingdom bring.
By Thine own eternal Spirit,  Rule in all our hearts alone;
By Thine all sufficient merit,  Raise us to Thy glorious throne.

By Thine all sufficient merit,  Raise us to Thy glorious throne.

I’ m adding on another new song I found this week that speaks to God’s faithfulness to us ordinary people.  We bow our head in thanks.


Choices: To demand my rights

December 2, 2022

George Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life” post-pones his dream of traveling the world.  His father’s sudden death forces him to choose between travel and heading up the family loan business.  He takes on leadership at the loan company and uses his saved money to enable his brother Harry to go to college.  Harry returns from college and steps off the train.  Will this be the moment when George’s hopes and dreams are met?  What about Mary, will they marry?  The story is unfolding.

         George faces another hurdle.  Harry steps off the train and introduces his new wife.  George freezes but gathers himself together and greets his new sister-in-law with open arms.  Then she tells George that her father has offered Harry a research job in his factory in a new emerging field.  The look on George’s face tells the story.  George must decide if he is going to demand his turn to go to college or will he defer to Harry’s future?  George must choose. Yup, here is one of my favorite poems by Robert Frost.  “Two roads diverged in the woods and I took the one less traveled by.”

         Dreams have a way of moving just over the next horizon as life unfolds.  “The hopes and dreams of all the years were met in thee tonight” is a line from “O Little Town of Bethlehem” written by Phillips Brooks three years after the end of the Civil War in 1868.  It expressed the HOPE that the Bethlehem story gave to a country torn apart by conflict and struggling to find its new normal. George Bailey had to find a new normal as he did not demand to go to college but encouraged his brother Harry’s opportunity.  Joseph and Mary must have wondered what God was doing when they were forced to give birth in a stable and then forced to change plans and flee to Egypt. 

      As a country we are struggling with aftermath of the impact of Coved and economic upheaval.  Let us focus on the God who does not abandon us in all the detours of life.  May we trust and not demand our way just because we can’t see around the corner.  There is HOPE on a detour for our guide knows the route to the best dream.  Blessings.


Choices: To take the “long shot”

December 1, 2022

“Long shots” are usually options with not so obvious outcomes, more chancy investments. If we will lock money in the bank for a long period then often we can get a higher interest rates.  I love the scene from “Lion King” where Timon looks out over Simba’s kingdom that Simba is choosing to fight for and says, “Looks like a real fixer-upper to me.”  Often life looks like a fixer-upper project. 

         Abraham in the Matthew genealogy came to a point of decision.  The land could not support the flocks of both nephew Lot and his own.  He gave Lot first choice – the lush valley or the more challenging hills and mountains.  Lot chose the lush valley and the sure gains and Abraham was left with the long shot – the mountains.  Likewise George Bailey has a suitcase in hand that is big enough to put the labels of all the exotic places he hopes to visit.  But as he is settling his father’s affairs, he hears the loan business will only continue if he forfeits his dreams and runs the company.  He must choose.   He can only see a tough road ahead of himself in Bedford Falls but he chooses the loan company, the long shot.

         The genealogy of Matthew gives HOPE as Matthew traces the history of people who trust the long shot.  God’s answer to prayer is not always apparent in our lives. It is almost impossible for us to wait til we are 100 years old for the fulfillment of promise.  Perhaps today you are tired of waiting for God to help you reach the impossible dream.  Christmas reminds us that God works in chaotic times like the Roman census.  God works in unexpected ways like through a baby in a manger.  God works beyond our horizons including wise men from afar and people we don’t even realize are in the picture.  God works in the long shots.  Christmas reminds us that God is working in our lives in unexpected ways.  Waiting is hard but as you make some of the tough choices facing you, may you find HOPE knowing that God is working for your good in the ”long shot.”  Blessings.