Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Culture (Page 6 of 9)

Does Anyone Else Miss Refried Beans?

Visions form in my head every time I drive by. On the way to the post office I pass my favorite restaurant, closed during this corona crisis. A Mexican place, they cook up the best refried beans. I eat them in some fashion every time I go. Those beans appear in my daydreams, along with green chiles and a host of other delicacies.

These are days of fasting, forced upon us. All of us are missing parts of our lives we enjoy and I admit, take for granted. For me, no March Madness, no Cardinal baseball, no travel (trips cancelled to Vietnam, to Oklahoma City to see our kids, and to El Salvador), no movie theaters, no refried beans.

With the losses come surprises. Tons more open time. Time to think. Time to read. Time to pray. Time to listen to what God might be saying. Time to listen to what my wife might be saying.

I find myself walking throughout the day. Several times a day, often for a few minutes, other times an hour or so. I’m working from home, so I leave out my front door. My job is secure at this point, and I’m grateful. I’m worried for friends and neighbors whose finances are precarious due to shutdowns and layoffs.

In Hebrews 11 Paul introduces us to a great cloud of witnesses, who lived, and died, with faith in the Lord. At one point Paul writes that they “were made strong out of weakness.” Today we face weakness. Forced apart, no cure but time and social distancing, fear inching closer, we understand we are weak. Which is actually a good place with the Lord.

Believers throughout history faced plagues with faith in God and a commitment to care for their neighbors. Ordinary men and women, they felt weak, helpless, and afraid of death. Still, they quietly helped others, and neighbors noticed how these godly people practiced and lived their faith. We live in a similar time, and I hope to help others in a similar way. We’ll see how it goes. No matter what, a great cloud of witnesses cheers us on.

And when this time ends, I’ll celebrate with a plate full of beans.

God Whispers Through Viruses

Elijah, exhausted after fleeing the evil Jezebel, laid in a cave when the Lord came and spoke to him. Elijah was asked to stand and wait for the Lord to pass by. First, a great wind, like a tornado, tore the mountains and broke the rocks into pieces, but “the Lord was not in the wind.” Next, an earthquake, but “the Lord was not in the earthquake.” After the earthquake a fire, “but the Lord was not in the fire.”

Finally, came the sound of a low whisper. Some interpret these words not as meaning a whisper, but rather referring to silence. This was the Lord speaking, not in lightning or thunder, but in the quiet. Elijah heard and understood (1 Kings 19).

I wonder, if in this moment, the Lord is communicating through the relentless spread of a coronavirus? In our modern world of flash and clanging and spin and technology and pride, wouldn’t it be like the Lord to confront us with something so basic?

A virus, the simplest of biological organisms, confounding epidemiologists and humbling world leaders, has brought our lives to a standstill. A global pandemic, creating the necessary conditions to hear the Lord, surrounds us.

As we face a nagging sense of desperation, as our fears keep us awake at night, as we worry about a pathogen that we cannot stop from spreading, could it be that God is whispering to us in our beds?

As we’ve canceled our trip to Disney, and we are afraid to pass in the park, and we’ve gone grocery shopping only to experience empty shelves for the first time in our lives, might the Lord be murmuring to us in our organic produce aisles?

When a disease haunts our streets, one that we cannot pop a pill for or a receive a shot to stop, when we are agitated by headlines day after day, when social media voices bore endlessly into our psyches, might God be gently upending our tidy suburbs?

CS Lewis wrote: “Pain insists upon being attended to. God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our consciences, but shouts in our pains. It is his megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”

In this viral situation, fear is an amplifier. God looks for you and I to walk out our front door and wait for Him. Allow the quiet of these days, and the fears of your heart, to give you space to truly listen for the Lord.

One final thought. We’re commanded to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul and strength. And, love your neighbor as yourself.” These are good days to practice both.

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

Patrick Of The Virus

Saint Patrick’s Day, normally a time of revelry and celebration, feels dampened this year. Perhaps the current mood allows for a bit of reflection. Patrick became one of the greatest missionaries the Christian faith has ever known. Here’s a brief biography:

on an island far to the north, Irish raiders kidnapped a young English boy named Patricius and held him as a slave for several years. While he eventually made his escape and returned to England, something started to shift in his heart. The Lord, through visions, began to pull him once again to Ireland, this time to return as a missionary to his former captors. He sailed back to preach the gospel to the pagan Irish and eventually became Saint Patrick of Ireland, the first documented missionary outside the bounds of the Roman Empire. Patrick preached the gospel as far as he could go, “to the point beyond which there is no one,” to the western edge of Ireland. Only the sea remained…

GO: Following Jesus to the Ends of the Earth

Patrick, transmitter of a virus. One cannot miss the the parallels between the proliferation of COVID-19 and the work of Patrick of Ireland. Patrick spread a virus all through Ireland, the gospel of Jesus Christ.

The next few weeks those of us who follow in Patrick’s footsteps should work to slow the spread of one virus, while advancing the cause of another. We slow one by washing our hands, practicing social distancing, forgoing regular worship services and acting on the directives of health experts.

We advance the other by taking groceries to neighbors afraid to leave their homes, checking on elderly friends and family, nursing the sick, washing our hands yet again, leaving toilet paper for others, and reminding ourselves and our communities of the hope we have in Jesus Christ.

One virus, as painful and chaotic as it is proving to be, will pass. The other creates a deep, eternal hope and will never fade. That’s welcome news in the midst of challenging times, good news that Patrick of the Virus proclaimed from the green hilltops of Ireland, and good news that our actions in this time of crisis proclaim today.

The Calling of Saint Matthew

The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio (1599-1600)

Jesus saw a man named Matthew at his seat in the custom house, and said to him, “Follow me”, and Matthew rose and followed Him.

Matthew 9:9

Jesus spears Matthew with a beam of light as he enters the room, brightness flooding a dark place of fraudulently obtained money and collusion. The beacon illumines Matthew’s face as he quizzically points to his chest as if to ask, “You’re calling me? Seriously?”

I’ve been looking all winter at a print of this painting I hung by my desk after experiencing the original in Rome. Standing in the dim light, gazing up at the huge canvas, my heart stirred hearing how Carravaggio’s work motivated my friend Brian, one of Agape’s (Cru) national directors in Italy, to follow the Lord’s call to that country. Many, many people have stood in that same spot and found inspiration in Carravaggio’s representation of Matthew’s calling since it was first hung in the church San Luigi dei Francesi in 1600.

So much to notice. Jesus’s hand pointing to Matthew, just like the hand of God reaching out to Adam in the Sistine Chapel. Jesus’s bare feet, contrasted with the stylish clothes worn by the tax collectors. The young man with his head down, focused on the money in front of him, oblivious to the divine light.

Jesus called Matthew. Matthew was not worthy. None of us would have picked him. Yet Matthew helped found the Christian faith, penned the gospel bearing his name and died as a martyr for his devotion to Jesus.

Jesus called us. We were not worthy. Yet Jesus picked us. That beam of light pierced us at some point, and we pointed to our chests and said, “Who, me?” Let’s ask the Lord for a bit of the courage and faith of Matthew, and build on the legacy of this tax collector and sinner turned evangelist and saint.

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