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Friday, August 22, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 8/22/14

    Praise the Lord for this new day.  Praise the Lord  for the American Missionary doctor Dr. Kent Brantly, who had  contracted Ebola disease while serving in West Africa.  He was flown back to the States where received medical care in Atlanta.  He is healed and released.  In his statement he gave thanks to the Lord  and to His faithfulness.  Jesus reigns.  We will gather tomorrow, Saturday August 23, for a time of celebration at 5:30 PM at the Union Center United Methodist Church Fellowship Hall, which will again be transformed in to a banquet hall.  In a world marred by sadness and sorrow we are taking time to celebrate the goodness and the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. The menu will include all  sorts foods and desserts followed by special musical presentation by our friends Dave Berry and Aric Phinney.
 

    I have been blessed by the writings of some Scottish theologians like Donald Bailey, his brother John Bailey, and hymn writers like Horatius Bonar.  Another Scottish Theologian who has been blessing to me is Thomas Boston.  Thomas Boston was a great writer and great theologian.  He was a faithful pastor of a rural parish in Scotland for 25 years.  I have written about him in one my blogs some time ago.  I repeat my self here today because I am inspired and encouraged by Thomas Boston's perseverance through suffering.  Thomas Boston was a melancholy man, prone to seasons of discouragement in the Christian life.  He was often in poor health, even though he never missed his turn in the pulpit.  His wife suffered from chronic illness of the body and, most likely, the mind, but perhaps the couple's greatest trial was the death of their children: they lost six of their ten babies.
    One loss was especially tragic.  Boston had already lost a son named Ebenezer, which in the Bible means "Hitherto hath the Lord helped us" (1 Samuel 7:12). When his wife gave birth to another son, he considered naming the new child Ebenezer as well.  Yet the minister hesitated.  Naming the boy Ebenezer would be a testimony of hope in the faithfulness of God.  But what if this child died, too, and the family had to bury another Ebenezer?  That would be a loss too bitter to bear. By faith Boston decided to name his son Ebenezer.  The child was sickly and, despite the urgent prayers of his parents, he never recovered.  As the grieving father wrote in his Memoirs, "It pleased the Lord that he also was removed from me."
    After suffering such a heavy loss, many people would be tempted to accuse God of wrongdoing, or to abandon their faith, or at least to drop out of ministry for a while.  Thomas Boston, however did not quit.  He believed in the goodness as well as in the sovereignty of God.  For this reason, rather than turning away from the Lord in times of trial, he turned towards the Lord for help and comfort.  Boston's perseverance through suffering is worthy not only of our admiration, but also of our imitation.  One way to learn from his example is to read his classic sermon on the sovereignty of God, which is one of the last things he prepared for publication before he died.  Boston called his sermon "The Crook in the Lot."  It was based on the command and the question that we read in Ecclesiastes 7:13: "Consider the work of God: who can make straight what he has made crooked?"

    Of course, the answer to this question is, "no one".  We do not have the ability to overrule the Almighty.

    When "the Preacher" from Ecclesiastes spoke of something "crooked," he was not referring to something that is morally out of line, as if God could ever be the author of evil. Instead, he was talking about some trouble or difficulty in life which we wish we could change, but ultimately cannot alter.  It happens to all of us.  We struggle with the physical limitations of our bodies.  We suffer the breakdown of personal or family relationships.  We have something that we wish we did not have, or do not have something that we wish we did.  According to Ecclesiastes, God has given each of us a different situation in life.  To quote again from Thomas Boston:
"In that train or course of events, some fall out cross to us, and against the grain; and these make the crook in our lot.  While we are here, there will be cross events, as well as agreeable ones, in our lot and condition. Sometimes things are softly and agreeably gliding on; but, by and by, there is some incident which alters that course, grates us, and pains us …. Every body's lot in this world has some crook in it …. There is no perfection here, no lot out of heaven without a crook.
    He was telling us that, whether things seem crooked or straight, we need to see our situation in terms of the sovereignty of God.  Trusting in the sovereign goodness of God helps us know how to respond to all the joys and trials of life.  Whether we are having a good day or a bad day, there is always a way for us to glorify God.  "The Preacher" said, "In the day of prosperity be joyful, and in the day of adversity consider: God has made the one as well as the other, so that man may not find out anything that will be after him" (7:14).
    The Book of Ecclesiastes puts today and every day under the sovereignty of God.  Some days are full of prosperity, when the sun is shining, the birds are singing, and all is right with the world.  To be joyful is to find our fundamental satisfaction in God, and then to receive every blessing in life as a gift of his grace.
    Not every day is like that, of course.  Some days are full of adversity rather than prosperity, when it seems that the sun is not shining, the birds are not singing, and nothing seems right with the world. "The Preacher" further stated that it is impossible for us to know what will happen in the future.  Given what he said at the beginning of verse 14, we might assume that the righteous people are the ones that prosper, while the wicked always suffer adversity.  Yet sometimes exactly the opposite occurs, causing the righteous to suffer adversity, while the ungodly prosper.  It is impossible for us to predict what will happen in coming days.  As "the Preacher "says, "man may not find out anything that will be after him" (7:14). We have no way of knowing whether the coming days will bring us greater prosperity or more adversity.
    Living with this kind of uncertainty need not cause us anxiety or despair; rather, it should teach us to leave our future in the hands of Almighty God.  Most of us would prefer to control our own destiny, but we should, rather, entrust our lives to the loving care of our sovereign God.  If we do this, we will be well prepared for both the good days and the bad days. In his comments on this verse, Martin Luther gave the following pastoral advice: "Enjoy the things that are present in such a way that you do not base your confidence on them, as though they were going to last forever … but reserve part of our heart for God, so that with it we can bear the day of adversity."  We are invited to praise God for all our prosperity and trust God through every adversity.
 In Christ,
 Brown

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