Sunday, September 21, 2014

The Fox and the Commander

“Greetings, Commander!” Frederick told the reclining man leaning against the big round boulder at the top of the hill.

“Hello, Freddy,” the man replied to the fox who had just hailed him. The reddish brown creature  flicked his bushy brush of a tail from side to side and curled up contentedly in the shade of a neighboring crag of stone, close enough to the knoll’s edge that he could gaze down on the scene his humanoid friend was watching with interest.

“You are still here, I see,” Frederick said lazily, glad to be out of the noonday sunshine. He had been in pursuit of an all-too-skinny quail cock who proved too fast for him. Later he would track the troublesome bird to his nest and obtain supper for himself and his family, whose tummies would be growling by then, no doubt. “Are the nomads still at it down below?” he asked.

“You know very well they are!” the man chided. “Since they set up their camp a week ago, you’ve been doing your best to pilfer whatever straying chicks you could from them, sneaking about and striking from the shadows.” He clucked his tongue good-naturedly. “If you don’t cut that out, I may decide to un-shade the sentries’ eyes and let them send an arrow in your direction!”

“All right, all right...I admit it,” the fox said with very little remorse. “But you can’t blame me for trying to snag an easy meal once in a while, can you? These tribes of yours might be your special favorites...though, for the life of me, I can’t imagine why...but you might spare an effortless morsel now and then for those of us who have to chase our dinner.”

“Oh, you poor, poor fox-ling! You have it so hard, don’t you, poor Freddy?”

“And sarcasm hardly befits you, Commander, sir!” the fox huffed half-heartedly. He squinted toward the rows of tents down on the plain below them, where women and children were awaiting the return of their menfolk. “But you are right...I watched the army set out earlier with all their strange stuff. To tell you the truth, sir, they didn’t really look very dangerous. Rumors have been circulating that they’ve defeated nation after nation, king after king, tribe after tribe. But you certainly couldn’t prove it by looking at them.”

“Frederick, what have I always told you about judging a scroll by its cover? Oh, their army is strong, alright. But it is a strength that doesn’t always show on the surface. You’ve seen rattlesnakes before. They don’t look very frightening on the outside, do they? But if one of them bites you, you’d be one sorry little fox-ling!”

“So, are you telling me that this nomad army is going to bite and poison their enemies to death, O mighty warrior?” Frederick snickered.

“Not exactly. But this hidden strength I’m talking about will win them the victory all the same. Did you see the fellow who’s giving them their marching orders?”

“Uh...you mean the one with the short beard and the fancy helmet? Always fingering his sword?”

“Right. Well, right after they set up their camp, I arranged a meeting with him and gave him the battle plan that will get them into the enemy’s stronghold. I assured him that if they obey my instructions exactly, then defeating the city would be like shooting ducks in a barrel!”

“Okay...so this daily march around the walls of the town is part of the plan, is it?”

“Yes. Once around the city each day for six days, carrying the ark and blowing the trumpets.”

“Oh. That explains all the noise. And the noise explains why all the birds I’ve been chasing have been so fidgety all week long...”

“Let’s not start on that again, Freddy...”

“Sorry. Anyway, how do you figure that marching and carrying the chest and blowing the horns is going to win any battles?”

“I told you. Doing this for six days will build up this inner strength I mentioned. Usually this strength can only be built up by giving people instructions to follow that are hard for them to understand.”

“Well, okay...those orders you gave them certainly qualify as hard to fathom! Now, after the six days, what will happen? The enemies will just give up and open the gates and surrender?”

“No, the city-dwellers will probably just laugh at them and throw things...”

“So, when do the nomads use all this inner strength they’re building up?”

“On the seventh day.”

“Ooohhh...what happens then? More marching, I suppose?”

“Yes, quite a bit more. On the seventh day they will circle the city seven times. Then all the people in the army will give a mighty shout!”

“...And?”

“That’s it. Then, the army gets to go on in and capture the city and destroy it.”

“Uh...did I miss something?”

“What do you mean, Freddy?”

“What do you mean, ‘what do you mean?’? The wall, man! There’s a big, thick, tall, impenetrable wall around the city!”

“No, no, no, my little friend. The wall won’t be there any more. The power I told you about will just obliterate it.”

“What? No battering rams?”

“No.”

“No black powder?”

“Uh-uh.”

“No earthquakes or tornadoes?”

“Nope. Just their faith, Frederick. Faith will give them the victory.”

“I...I...can’t believe it!”

“Believe me, Freddy, they do. They believe it. That’s why they are marching...why they’re following all my instructions, word for word.

“And when anyone believes me enough to obey me completely, there is nothing their faith cannot accomplish.

“Walls turn into piles of ash...

“Waters divide in two and dry up...

“Giants are killed with a stone and a sling...

“Tens of thousands are slain by a handful of men...

“And,” the man said with a knowing glint in his eye, “little foxes are allowed to catch up with quick quails!”

“Okay, I can take a hint,” Frederick said, springing up. He trotted down the hill with one backward glance. “But I’ll be back tomorrow...day seven, right? I wouldn’t miss this for the world!”


(1,057 words)

Saturday, September 20, 2014

A Man Upstairs

There is a man upstairs...
a man who labored with sweat and strain--
agonized through a hell of pain
long years for his family.

There is a man, I know, up there...
one who said farewell to ease--
tasked himself like Hercules
for sisters and for brothers,
for weakened, wayward mothers
and the fathers who abused
their blessings, lost...confused.

There is a godly man upstairs.
I know his name--not yet his face...
He’s earned his rest--none more,
but he’s working still;
he’ll build until
my home is all prepared...
for once my heart had dared
to trust this workman’s skill,
I knew his work, in me, he’d fulfill.

There is a man like me up there
who could have saved himself
from slave’s humiliation, loss
of privilege and the bitter cross...
But no reward awaited him
downstairs--here where dragons roam
and drudgery finds its wretched home,
where his very kin berated him
and a felon’s treatment fated him
and a father to Hades traded him...

There is a re-born man upstairs...
one whose work could not be cursed
or ever undone or reversed,
but ever counts for me,
when all of mine, disqualified,
lies burned to ash...all swept aside.
This workman took a throne
upstairs where he, second to none,
works all things for my good,
hears my complaints and writes in blood
the notes that buy me free
and pledges me the golden key
to enter in and live with him...upstairs.





Sunday, September 14, 2014

The Work God's Doing

The Work God Is Doing

I live in a very busy world. If I assume that our country, for example, has around 5% unemployment, that means that 95 percent of all the folks around me are gainfully employed and engaged in some kind of mental and/or physical labor for a sizable portion of their lives. This, combined with the other activity we engage in like housework, yard work, chauffeuring people to and fro, working out at the gym, sports and music practices, etc., I’d have to say that busy-ness is a definite constant in most of our lives.

But are most of us really enjoying this frenetic factor of over-occupation that we face every day of our week? Do we truly enter into these activities, this busy-ness, with a feeling of purpose and pleasure and joyful accomplishment? Am I ultimately satisfied with my vocation, my calling in life? Or do I see my jobs and duties as a dreaded drudgery?

Today I am considering the work performed by the absolutely BUSIEST Being in all the universe: God.

Think that building your deck or planning your last picnic was hard? God planned and designed and built an entire cosmos (earth, heaven, galaxies, the water cycle, subatomic particles, electro-magnetism, elephants, walruses and weasels all included) in a period of six days (see Genesis 1). Of course, He rested on day 7, but purely as an example for workaholic human beings who need to slow down a bit each week for worship and contemplation.

The Bible suggests that all three Persons of the Trinity, or Godhead, were involved in the creation of all that is. Paul’s New Testament letter to the Colossians tells us: “[Christ] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible...all things were created through him and for him” (Col. 1:15-16). The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit were all involved in the work.

So, after the seventh day, did the Trinity merely stop working and take a permanent siesta, leaving the newly created universe to operate and run down like a cumbersome clock? Uh...no. Paul goes on to write about Christ that: “he is before all things, and in him all things hold  together” (verse 17). Think of it like the little Dutch boy with his finger stuck in the hole in the dike. If he were to remove his finger from that hole, the sea would cause the entire dike to collapse and the town would be destroyed. God the Son--the Lord Jesus Christ--is the very person we can thank for not only creating all that is, but for sustaining all that is (including our very selves) by the force of his powerful will and word.

This work of sustaining the very fabric of the cosmos is a work that is never over and God is engaged in it at all times. If by some whim he were to take a nap or a vacation, there would be no universe left when he got back on the job! God is the one who thought up the laws of motion and gravity and magnetism that keep planets and stars and molecules from flying apart...He got everything together and set them on their courses. He determines that they will continue to stay together and for how long. And, when it pleases Him, He will say the word and just as easily those things will pass away. “They will perish, but you remain; they will all wear out like a garment. Like clothing you will change them and they will be discarded” (Psalm 102:26).

So, knowing that God’s work is so awesome and powerful, knowing that nothing can ever thwart Him (Job 42:2), what kind of relationship should I desire to have with this very busy supreme Being who controls and sustains all things? Hopefully, I ought to seek a relationship of love, trust and obedience. But, if He is so great, and I’m so tiny and insignificant, how can my hope be realized? Many religions in the world teach that the best I can hope for is to cower in fear of my creator and just do my best to try and please him for the outside chance that he might at last accept me into his presence after I exit this life.

The testimony of the Bible, though, is so much better news than that! The gospel, the “good news” of Christianity, is that God Himself took the initiative to reach out to ungrateful creatures like me who actually did our best to ignore, reject and, in fact, despise our good and wise Creator. God the Son, the second Person of the Godhead Himself, took on a human nature just like mine, lived a life on this very planet during which He perfectly obeyed His Father’s moral demands, offered his life up as a substitution for sinners on Calvary’s cross, suffered the wrath of God my own guilt and rebellion had earned, died on that cross and was buried, rose triumphantly from the tomb in a glorified physical body, and returned to God the Father’s right hand in heaven. What a glorious work of love that was!

And did Jesus Christ end His work after He ascended to heaven? By no means! There is an activity of God called Providence that gets very little press in our day. Paul describes it in the book of Romans: “And God causes all things to work for the good of those who love Him, those who are called according to His purpose” (Rom. 8:28). It’s amazing, but true...those who love God and have found forgiveness through the Lord Jesus Christ--trusting in Him and His work alone to save them--receive this stunning promise that ALL things are being controlled by our Lord and Savior so as to lead ultimately to our good, our blessing. And it is His purpose--His good pleasure--to do this!

Philippians 1:6 tells me that God, “who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.” When God begins to save a soul by His grace, He never leaves the job half done (as I so often do), or fails to complete it. He always sees it through. God is the consummate Workman. And even now, as I am learning to walk in His holy ways more and more each day of my Christian life, “it is God who is at work in [me] to will and to do according to His good pleasure” (Philippians 2:13).

The physical and spiritual work God is engaged in moment by moment, day by day, year by year, century by century, is awesome to contemplate and ought to inspire our hearts to greater and greater heights of praise, devotion, affection and obedience. He is never inactive, yet He is ever purposeful and joyful in His work. And the most amazing thing of all is that our Lord invites you and me, sinners He chooses to redeem and glorify, to enter into His work along with Him! Like a little child learning to drive a tractor while sitting on his daddy’s lap, I am called to “work out [my] own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12), and to “go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15).

Now that’s a kind of busy-ness that a forgiven rebel like me can find ultimate pleasure in...how about you?