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Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 5.27.14

    Yesterday was Memorial Day.  It is celebrated in America the Beautiful with solemnity and gratitude. The Lord blessed us with a brilliant day.  It was very warm, sunny and gorgeous.  I talked our grandchildren who live in Boston.  They were going to historic Walden Pond near Boston for a swim.  We also had a call from Sunita, from Cyprus, Greece.  The Lord has blessed their time there.  Andy and Sunita had both gone snorkling in the Mediterranean.  Liltte Gabe said Grandpa.  Jess and Tom, and Laureen spent the weekend with us.  We had a mega barbeque.  It was a perfect day for celebration and remembrance.  I visited two  World War 2 veterans yesterday.  The first Man is 91 years old.  He and his beloved and beautiful wife will celebrate their 70th year wedding anniversary on the July 14.  The second man I visited will celebrate with his wife  from his college days their 68th wedding anniversary this week.  It is all praise and Thanksgiving.    Praise the Lord for a great Nation called America and for all the blessings the Lord has bestowed on us.  Praise the Lord for the Liberties we share.  Praise the Lord for the brave men and women who have given their ultimate sacrifice.  Praise the Lord for Memorial Day.  We do remember.  Lord help us always to remember with great gratitude. 

    In the later years of his life, the great 19th century American philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson suffered from an increasingly faulty memory.  When things would slip his mind, he complained of his "naughty memory," as he called it.  Sometimes Emerson would forget the names of different objects.  In order to speak of them, he would refer to them in a round-about way.  For instance, when he could not think of the word "plow," he would call it "the implement that cultivates the soil."  More important was the fact that he could not remember the names of people who were quite familiar to him.  At the funeral of his friend, the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Emerson commented to another person, "That gentleman has a sweet, beautiful soul, but I have entirely forgotten his name."  

    The loss of memory is a sad thing.  It cuts us off from days gone by.  It strips away the treasured residue of past experience.  It erases our personal history and leaves us unaccountably blank pages.  Sometimes we are forgetful because we neglect that which has gone before us and become inattentive to those who have preceded us.

    A quick scan of the Biblical documents make apparent the importance that is placed upon remembering.  Throughout the scriptures we find references to monuments, memorial feasts, and ritually repeated stories, all of which serve to reinforce the sacred memory of the people of God.  In various ways the great saving acts of God were rehearsed and re-presented so that the people would not forget what God had done for their sake.

    Joshua 4:1-9 stands an example of this.  The Biblical narrative which leads up to this text tells the story of the Israelites' long-awaited entry into the promised land. After forty years of wilderness wandering the people finally reached their destination.  The swollen Jordan River blocked their way into the land but that did not stop them.  When the priests who were carrying the ark of the covenant began to place their feet in the river, the water ceased flowing and the people crossed over on dry ground, just as their ancesters had when they escaped the Egyptians. When they all finished passing over the Jordan, the leader of Israel, Joshua, had a simple monument built to commemorate the wondrous event.  This served to remind the people that their progress -- indeed, their very existence -- was in the hands of the living God.  The Passover feast which the Lord  instituted served a similar purpose; it was to remind the people that it was God and not they themselves who brought about their liberation from slavery in Egypt.

    The call to remember resounds throughout Scripture.  Remember that God called your father Abraham in his old age and promised him many children. Remember that you were in bondage in a foreign land and were freed by divine power.  Remember that God brought Israel to greatness, though she was weak. Remember the commands of the Lord.  The Psalmist summed up the message well when he wrote: "Remember the wonderful works that God has done God's great deed and the judgments the Lord utter, O offspring of Abraham God's servant." (Psalms 105:5)

    When the Israelites forgot the past they fell into thanklessness and unbelief.  It is unlikely that we will do any better.  In the secular world today many believe that  they can make our own way without God.  Under the blindness of pride it is altogether too easy to trust in our own wisdom and power rather than relying upon the guidance and might of our Lord and Savior.  In our wrong-headed self-confidence we lose our way.  It is, therefore, crucial that we remember.

    On  Memorial Day it is proper to think of the past and of those who have gone from this world.  For Christians this is not merely an exercise in looking behind and dwelling on what has been, for we believe that more wondrous things are yet to come for those people of faith who have already died.  We live in light of the resurrection and we believe that death will not be the end.

    Some time ago I read a fascinating story about  Clarence Jordan.  In 1969, Clarence Jordan, the author of the "Cotton Patch Gospel", died of a heart attack.  Jordan was the founder of Koinonia Farms, an inter-racial community and innovative ministry in rural Georgia.  Upon his death Jordan was buried in a plain cedar box on a hillside on his farm.  Millard Fuller, the founder of Habitat for Humanity, officiated at the funeral.  Just after the casket was lowered into the ground and the grave was filled, an unexpected thing happened.  Fuller's two-year-old daughter stepped up to the grave and began to sing the only song the little girl knew.

    "Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday, dear Clarence, Happy birthday to you."

    How strange and yet how truly appropriate to have this little song sung at a funeral, for when a Christian dies, it is a birthday of a sorts because death is not an ending but a new beginning.  For this reason, when we think of our dead, let us do so with a hopeful memory for an amazing future still awaits them, and the rest of us as well.

 In Christ,

    Brown

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