I’ve
been reading The Fire of Delayed Answers by Bob Sorge, as part of an online discussion
group. It’s not a difficult book to read, but it can be a difficult book to
digest. As in, is the purpose of affliction to make us grow spiritually? Does
God allow (or bring) affliction to make us grow? If you look at the comments on
these posts here and the blogs of others ion the discussion group, you’ll find
a wide array of responses, including some people who’ve been offended.
I don’t have a good answer to those questions.
If I give an emphatic “Yes!” it sounds like an almost mechanical existence we
lead. If I give an emphatic “No way!” then I’m going to have to accept the fact
that a lot of things simply don’t have explanations. Bad stuff happens.
Sorge uses the example of Hezekiah, one of the
good kings of the southern kingdom of Judah. With the Assyrians besieging
Jerusalem, Hezekiah begs for, and is granted, God’s mercy. When God tells him
later that his sons would be taken away and made eunuchs by the king of
Babylon, Hezekiah’s response is the equivalent of “I’m good with that. At least
I’ll have peace in my last days.”
Apres moi, le deluge. Indeed.
This isn’t a question or issue confined to a
Biblical text of 2,500 years ago. What’s been on my mind lately is my
grandchildren, and their children, and how we are borrowing money to spend
today that they will have to pay back long after we’re gone.
There’s something wrong about this. Profoundly
wrong.
Congress is preparing to approve a
trillion-dollar spending bill. The mind boggles. One trillion dollars. We don’t have one trillion dollars waiting to
be spent. We have some fraction of that. We will have to borrow a large part of
that trillion dollars.
It doesn’t really matter what it’s being spent
on. Our great-grandchildren won’t care whether it was fighter jets or food
stamps. All they and their parents will know is that we impoverished them, that
we recklessly spent far beyond our means, and we didn’t care.
No matter how noble the cause, the ends don’t
justify the means. They never have. But we act worse than drunken sailors
because drunken sailors, at least, will eventually sober up.
Apres moi, le deluge.
Led by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve
been reading The Fire of Delayed Answers.
We’re finishing up chapter 9, “Desperate Dependence & Heart Enlargement.”
To see more posts, please visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
Photograph by James Hawkins via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
3 comments:
It's incredibly convicting. We may look at Hezekiah and think, "how could you be so callous?" and then you bring up a very pressing point that shows how callous we can be too. We don't know what to do or how to approach it. We may be angry, but we need to cry out for mercy like we have and do cry out for ourselves. Humbling and convicting, Glynn. Thank you.
our heart is probably
not much
bigger than our selves
but Love certainly is
My blog used to focus more on current events and why Christians should care and be aware, (and still post on that at times, but I mainly leave that stuff for my quarterly Newsletter) but God has been moving to a different direction.
Until God's people deal with the sin in their own lives and surrender to His will, they will never be able to effectively care about our society.
You're right, this problem isn't new. The answer in the OT was 2 chron 7:14 and that's still the answer today.
One thing that can help combat issues like you mentioned above is by educating people. Good job on tying this book with our current world.
God bless.
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