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Thursday, March 20, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 3-20-14

    Praise the Lord for the first day of Spring here in the Northern Hemisphere.  It is almost like summer in Orissa, India, the temperatures running in the 90's.  One of our friends, Sue, from England just returned back to England after spending several weeks in Orissa.  She was born in Orissa to  a medical Missionary family.  Sue posted pictures of the first mango crops of the season.  Here in New York I saw a a flock of joyful and jubilant Robins in the parsonage grounds.  I gazed and gazed at them... my soul was full of joy, and I echoed the words of John Keats, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever".

    The Lord blessed us with a wonderful Wednesday gathering  for fellowship and and testimony.  Several came forward to be prayed for.  It was an Holy Evening.  One of the powerful Scriptures that was shared with me during my teen years was  from my uncle, who is gone to be with the Lord.  It is found in 2 Corinthians 4.  The apostle Paul wrote 2 Corinthians after surviving more than a few "train wrecks" in his life and ministry.  It's one of the least familiar of Paul's letters, but it speaks to the harsh realities of life and about the unbreakable faith that sustains us through difficult and dangerous times.  We don't know the particulars, but in chapter 12 Paul catalogues some of the difficulties he has encountered during his ministry: he had been in prison, flogged, stoned, shipwrecked, robbed, starved, and abandoned.  For all of these reasons, Paul was qualified to speak on the subject of hardship.

    Paul began chapter 4, verse 7 by claiming, "we have this treasure in jars of clay." In this context, "we" includes not only Paul and his associates, but also, by extension, everyone who bears the name of Christ.  The treasure he's talking about is the Gospel, not just the message of the life and death and resurrection of Jesus, but also the power behind the message—the very life of God available through faith in Christ.  Instead of "jars of clay," some translations read "clay pots" or "earthenware vessels."  Clay pottery was the most common material for cookware, dishes, washbasins, and storage in the first century.  Clay pots kept liquid cool and slowed the evaporation process.  Clay was easy to obtain and work with.  If a pot broke, you could make or buy another cheaply and easily.  Sometimes people stored their valuables in jars of clay, assuming that nobody would think of looking in something so ordinary to find anything of value. 

    How are we Christians like jars of clay?  First of all, clay pots were quite ordinary. They were everywhere, especially in the homes of peasants and common people. Wealthy people used more exotic materials, such as ivory, marble, glass, or fine wood, but regular people used clay pots.  Paul created this great juxtaposition: God has taken this great treasure, the life of Christ, and placed it in people like you and me, who are as common and fragile as clay pots.  God stores his treasure in fragile containers—like us—to display his life-giving power.  The harder life gets, the more conspicuous the treasure becomes.  Paul said, "We are hard-pressed on every side, but not crushed."  We might say  that Paul was stressed out,  Paul was hard pressed, but he didn't give in.  "We're perplexed, but not in despair," he continued.  In other words, we're confused, bewildered, and mixed up.  Sometimes we are so overwhelmed by the complexities of life or by some difficult decision that we become completely immobilized?  Paul, however, was perplexed, but he didn't give up.  He went on, "We are persecuted, but not abandoned, struck down, but not destroyed".  Paul and his partners were struck down, stressed out, picked on, and knocked down, but they always got back up again.  The world does it's worst to us, but we as Christian are still standing, not because of who we are—we're just a bunch of clay pots—but because of the life-giving power God placed within us.  That power is never as conspicuous as when we're going through hard times.

    Paul's unusual resume reminds us that God never promised immunity from the hurts and hardships of life.  If anything, following Christ makes things more complicated and leaves us more vulnerable to hostility and heartache.  The most obvious evidence of the presence of God in our lives is not that we escape hardship, but that we overcome hardship.  When we feel hard pressed, perplexed, picked on, or knocked down, it doesn't necessarily mean we are doing something wrong.  On the contrary, it probably means we are right where we are supposed to be.  God doesn't take pleasure in our hardship, nor does he afflict us with pain simply to see how we will handle it.  Still, every time we get knocked around without breaking we show the world we have something special inside us—the life of Christ. 

  In Christ,

   Brown

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