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Friday, September 12, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 9/12/14

     Praise the Lord for this new day.  There will be musical presentation and celebration at Wesley United Methodist Church, 1000 Day Hollow Road, Endicott this evening at 7 PM.  Our Church will be participating at the Annual Apple Festival of Endicott on Saturday September 20, 2014.  This famous event will take place on the Historic Washington Avenue.  Our church will have a booth with various Apple baked goods, featuring homemade apple strudel -  they are the best.  Join us. 

    I have been reflecting on the death of our moms.  Thank you all so much for your love and kindness expressed  through cards, e.mails,  and personal expressions.  We have also heard  from around the corner and from around the globe.  My mom died on the August 31 at 11:30 PM.  She was buried within less than 24 hours. This is the cultural custom of where I was born and raised.  The final event of gathering and sharing was held on Thursday the September 11 (Indian time).  During the days of mourning the people are seized from their regular schedules.  The family where the death has visited will not cook any meals.  The relatives, neighbors, bring the meals.. Often these are meatless meals.  Durin the time mourning many and friends come to stay with the family.  This is the fellowship of mourning and suffering.  After the final day of mourning and celebration people get back to their daily work and daily routine.
    I havee been reflecting in these days on life, death, and resurrection.  I am reflectiong on the gift of hope we have in Jesus and because of Jesus.   It is written, "Christ in you the Hope of Glory".  Life, it seems, has a way of killing dreams.  You set out with high hopes—for your schooling, your career, your family, and your golden years.  You have plans, aspirations, and expectations, but things don't always turn out the way you expect.  Plans fall through.  People let you down.  You let yourself down.  Suddenly the life you're living isn't the life you dreamed of at all, or you find yourself in a place you never expected to be.
    Fantine, a young woman from Victor Hugo's novel Les Misérables, sings a powerful song (in the musical version) as she finds herself in a hopeless place.  A summer lover has left her alone with a child.  She finds work in a factory, but has to place her daughter, Cosette, in the keeping of some cruel and crooked innkeepers. When it is discovered that she has had a child out of wedlock, she's thrown out of the factory and into the streets.  She's forced to sell her hair, then her teeth, then her body, in order to pay for Cosette's care.  She's falsely accused of a crime, and placed under arrest, and, on top of all this, she's desperately ill.  Out of that dark place, she sings, "I dreamed a dream in days gone by … now life has killed the dream I dreamed."
    Though things may go awry and our plans suddenly change, we still have hope.  Hope is more than a word.  Hope is to the spirit what oxygen is to the body. Without it, we die.  When a team loses hope, the game is over.  When investors lose hope, the stock market tumbles.  When a patient loses hope, death is found crouching at the door.
    Viktor Frankl survived years in the Nazi concentration camps.  While there he noticed that many prisoners died just after Christmas. T hey were hoping they'd be free by then.  When they weren't, they gave up.  He learned that as long as prisoners had something to live for, a reason to press on, they could endure just about anything, but once they lost hope, they quickly died.  Dostoevsky said that "to live without hope is to cease to live."
    Jesus Christ is our hope.  He is our peace.  He is our salvation.  In Him we have all that we need for this life and for the life to come.  Hope is the confidence that our Risen Lord can and will do something good—in this life, and the life to come.  Our  story isn't over yet.  Our Lord  can and will meet us in life's experinces and situations.  He  is strong enough and wise enough to do something good, something meaningful, and something eternally significant.
    In this life, we can find joy, beauty, forgiveness, healing, purpose, restoration, and the reality of Jesus's presence in our lives every day. In the life to come, we can look forward to reunion with those we have lost, the restoration of all creation, and to eternal life with God and one another in worlds beyond our imagining.
    Victor Hugo wrote Les Misérables to expose what he called three great evils of his time—poverty, the exploitation of women and children, and spiritual darkness. He pulled no punches in his tale.  Fantine ends up dying of her illness, but somebody is there.  Jean Valjean takes Cosette into his protection; he raises her, and years later delivers her into the arms of a fine young man.  As Valjean dies at the end of a long and good life, Fantine's spirit returns to usher him into heaven. The musical ends in a great re-union of all the characters, singing about a new and better day.  "Will you join in our crusade, will you be strong and stand with me. There's a future about to start when tomorrow comes."  It's a song of hope.
    Victor Hugo believed in the Lord, and that gave him reason to believe that good would triumph over evil, that justice would be done, and that there was life and love beyond the grave.  For 200 years, his story has given the world hope, hope that is grounded in the existence of a good and gracious God.
    Life has a way of killing dreams, but Jesus has a way of bringing them, and us, back to life!
In Christ,
 Brown

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