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Friday, April 26, 2013

Brown's Daily Word 4-26-13


It is springtime in New York. It beautiful and brilliant everywhere you look. I wish you were here. Praise the Lord for the way He decorates the earth with His majesty and splendor. Praise the Lord for the garb of spring. The Spring flowers are in full bloom. Forsythias, daffodils, tulip trees, magnolias, and many and divers flowering trees are full and luxuriant. Only our Lord can make all things so beautiful. We have planted several fruit trees in the beautiful parsonage grounds. They are starting to blossom. I picked some wild mustard greens from the back fields and mixed them with other greens the other day, and had them for supper. My family forces me to go vegetarian and eat greens. Praise the Lord for His bountiful and beautiful blessings.
Those who live in the region join us for weekly TV ministry this eve at 7 PM on Time Warner Cable channel 4. We will be gathering for a special time of worship and witness tomorrow at 5:30 PM at the First United Methodist Church, 53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott. The worship service will be followed by a special Spring Banquet with some international cuisine. We have ample reasons to celebrate and give thanks at all times and in all seasons. May be Jesus be praised.
I have been looking at Luke 13 that records a healing miracle of the Lord Jesus. Jesus is preaching and teaching. There is a woman in the crowd who was afflicted. Jesus noticed this woman, who was bent over. We are told that she had been suffering from this infirmity for eighteen years. An "evil spirit" was responsible, one translation says. Another translator uses the words, "a spirit of weakness." I cannot imagine what it would be like to be unable to stand up straight for eighteen years.
Jesus saw the bent-over woman, but then He did something most of us would not do. He focused His attention on her. When you or I see somebody who is obviously handicapped, do just the opposite. We look away because we don't want to be impolite and stare. It is, of course, rude to keep staring at somebody who looks different. We even teach our children not to do that. Yet, the habit of quickly looking away is, in its own way, terribly hurtful. It devalues the one who is being looked-away-from feel not worthy of attention or value, almost as if invisible. While that is not our intention the result is the same.
Our Lord was teaching and, right in the middle of his lesson, He saw the bent-over woman, interrupted the lesson, and called her over to Himself. Our Lord said to her, "Woman, you are set free from your ailment." He then placed His hands on her and she stood up straight and began praising God.
The religious leaders were incensed, deeming this to be inappropriate. In current lingo we would say that they were "bent out of shape". After all, they argued, the problem is that this healing should not take place on the Sabbath because our Lord won't stand for it. Jesus brought refocused the incident saying, "You hypocrites! You give water to your work animals on the Sabbath. Ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage on the Sabbath day?"
Jesus called her "a daughter of Abraham", the only person in the whole Bible to be called by that name. Abraham, of course, was the great father of faith. He was the one who, many years before, received God's promise that a great nation would be created out of his descendants, a people through whom all the nations of the earth would be blessed. This woman, says Jesus, was a daughter of Abraham, and nothing less. As such, she should not be shunted aside, or given a label to keep her in her place. As a beloved child of Abraham she was part of God's great plan of salvation and blessing for the whole world.
Love just pours out of him, almost as if He can't help it. He can't help noticing the invisible ones, can't help loving them, can't help healing them. Jesus reached out to heal this poor woman without even being asked. He saw her! He looked past the obvious to see whatever spirit had been keeping her life bent. He saw the totality of her suffering: the humiliation of her ailment, the way it has set her apart into a prison of loneliness. He saw how other people looked away when she came into their line of vision. He saw the emotional as well as the physical pain she suffered. He saw the whole picture, and knew that she was too timid or too afraid or too hopeless to ask for healing.
In just the same way He sees the same things about each of us, and so He sees deep into our need, sometimes things we cannot even see ourselves. He sees that our anger at other people is so often really anger at ourselves, that we're often afraid to look inside ourselves because we know there's a lot of garbage there that we'd rather not deal with. He sees that the good front we sometimes put on when we're out in public, is often a cover-up for the hurts we have suffered over the years — the rejections, the disappointments, the betrayals, the failures, the losses, the fears. He sees the ugly inside us — ugly things others have done to us, ugly things we have done to ourselves, ugly things we have done to others, ugly things that were nobody's fault, but just happened.
He sees it all and, just as he did to the bent-over woman, he calls us over to Himself. He says to us, "Come here to me. Let me put my hands on you and heal you. Let me take all that is bent and crooked in your life and make it straight and strong. Let me wipe away all the ugliness inside you. You are a child of Abraham. You have been forgiven restored, renewed and forever loved."
In Christ,
Brown


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