Bargaining With God

•July 22, 2013 • 2 Comments

Various tv programmes have shown us that haggling is the way to go.  Get a bargain, see what a discount you can get.  On some of the tasks set by Lord Sugar on The Apprentice, it is obligatory to get a reduction in some form or another, or the purchase is not valid.

But what about bargaining with God?  Have you ever indulged in that?  Many of us have.  Abraham does so here – not for himself, but for the people of Sodom.

Gli abitanti di Sodoma provocano l’ira divina
The inhabitants of Sodom provoke the wrath of God

20 The Lord said, “Abraham, I have heard that the people of Sodom and Gomorrah are doing all kinds of evil things. 21 Now I am going down to see for myself if those people really are that bad. If they aren’t, I want to know about it.”

22 The men turned and started toward Sodom. But the Lord stayed with Abraham, 23 who asked, “Lord, when you destroy the evil people, are you also going to destroy those who are good? 24 Wouldn’t you spare the city if there are only fifty good people in it? 25 You surely wouldn’t let them be killed when you destroy the evil ones. You are the judge of all the earth, and you do what is right.”

26 The Lord replied, “If I find fifty good people in Sodom, I will save the city to keep them from being killed.”

27 Abraham answered, “I am nothing more than the dust of the earth. Please forgive me, Lord, for daring to speak to you like this. 28 But suppose there are only forty-five good people in Sodom. Would you still wipe out the whole city?”

“If I find forty-five good people,” the Lord replied, “I won’t destroy the city.”

29 “Suppose there are just forty good people?” Abraham asked.

“Even for them,” the Lord replied, “I won’t destroy the city.”

30 Abraham said, “Please don’t be angry, Lord, if I ask you what you will do if there are only thirty good people in the city.”

“If I find thirty,” the Lord replied, “I still won’t destroy it.”

31 Then Abraham said, “I don’t have any right to ask you, Lord, but what would you do if you find only twenty?”

“Because of them, I won’t destroy the city,” was the Lord’s answer.

32 Finally, Abraham said, “Please don’t get angry, Lord, if I speak just once more. Suppose you find only ten good people there.”

“For the sake of ten good people,” the Lord told him, “I still won’t destroy the city.”

The very phrase name of the town, Sodom and its co-accused Gomorrah, has become synonymous with sin and bad living.  But Abraham is concerned for the good who will be destroyed along with the bad.  He wants to save them – and with them the whole city.

God himself can’t believe how badly they are behaving.  He is off to find out the truth, and is perfectly willing to negotiate with Abraham over the number of good people required to save the whole city.  He doesn’t want to see the people destroyed any more than Abraham does, but there comes a point when enough is enough.

Abraham is willing to plead for the people before God.  Is that something we are willing to do?  To intercede on behalf of others – however bad they seem?  That God will see the good and not the bad?  Do we look at how people behave and shake our heads in righteous indignation and superiority?  Or do we pray, passionately and daringly?  Or do we think there is no hope?  Do we care enough to argue with God?

Because we learn from this passage that God is not longing to destroy.  He isn’t waiting for people to slip up to get his opportunity to zap them, because it serves them right.  No God is truly a God of compassion, who really would prefer not to do that.  (Though he is also a God of justice and a some point there is a price to be paid for continual, wilful disobedience and evil)  God wants evil to stop, because he doesn’t want lives to be broken.

The sad fact of it is, as we read on, God could not find even ten good people – and the city was destroyed

This isn’t about drawing lines between good and bad, in which we sit smugly on the “good” side.  This is about pleading for our communities – of which we are a part.

Is there enough goodness in our town to save it?  Are we doing what we can to make it so? Because God too longs for that to be the case.  That our communities are filled with goodness – and that is the responsibility of us all.

Lord,
I want to pray,
to plead,
to cry to you

for the places where things are going so wrong.

Not from self-righteousness,
not from a place of feeling my life is so right,
not from any triumphalism

but from
love,
hope
and assurance of your grace.

I pray for the places my life is wrong.
For the things I do
that make the lives of others more difficult,
for when I know if you look at my life
there is not enough goodness in it.

Restore us Lord,
we pray.
Restore my life,
this community,
each nation
– your world

That when you look,
there will be goodness to see

And may I allow you to let it begin in me

Doing or Being?

•July 18, 2013 • 9 Comments

It’s always the same! You always leave me to do everything…

Luke 10:38-42

Martha and Mary

38 The Lord and his disciples were traveling along and came to a village. When they got there, a woman named Martha welcomed him into her home. 39 She had a sister named Mary, who sat down in front of the Lord and was listening to what he said. 40 Martha was worried about all that had to be done. Finally, she went to Jesus and said, “Lord, doesn’t it bother you that my sister has left me to do all the work by myself? Tell her to come and help me!”

41 The Lord answered, “Martha, Martha! You are worried and upset about so many things, 42 but only one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen what is best, and it will not be taken away from her.”

It’s always the same.

You always leave me to do everything.

Fetch, carry, get a meal on the table.

Don’t you think I might like to sit and listen just for once?  To have the time to stop and think.  But there’s so much to do, and you’re not helping.

“But is that really important?” Jesus asked.  “Do you think I’ve come here to be fed?”

“Lovely as your meals are, I’ve come to spend time with you.  Stop.  Take time to listen to me.  To share with me.  Hear what I have to say.  Receive what I have to give.

Stop.  Pause.  Rest.  Listen.”

And I did.  And I gained a whole new perspective.  I was refreshed, not stressed by his visit.

Come to Jesus.

Rest.

Don’t worry about all that needs to be done.

Spend time in his presence.

Let him feed you…

Sharing the Family Likeness

•July 17, 2013 • Leave a Comment

Oooh doesn’t he look just like his mum/dad/Great Uncle Arthur?

The oft heard exclamation when a new baby is born.  The desire to see the family likeness, the genes being passed down through the generations.

Colossians 1:15-28

15 Christ is exactly like God,
    who cannot be seen.
He is the first-born Son,
    superior to all creation.
16 Everything was created by him,
everything in heaven
    and on earth,
everything seen and unseen,
including all forces
    and powers,
and all rulers
    and authorities.
All things were created
    by God’s Son,
and everything was made
    for him.

17 God’s Son was before all else,
and by him everything
    is held together.
18 He is the head of his body,
    which is the church.
He is the very beginning,
the first to be raised
    from death,
so that he would be
    above all others.

19 God himself was pleased
    to live fully in his Son.
20 And God was pleased
    for him to make peace
by sacrificing his blood
    on the cross,
so that all beings in heaven
    and on earth
would be brought back to God.

21 You used to be far from God. Your thoughts made you his enemies, and you did evil things. 22 But his Son became a human and died. So God made peace with you, and now he lets you stand in his presence as people who are holy and faultless and innocent. 23 But you must stay deeply rooted and firm in your faith. You must not give up the hope you received when you heard the good news. It was preached to everyone on earth, and I myself have become a servant of this message.

Paul’s Service to the Church

24 I am glad that I can suffer for you. I am pleased also that in my own body I can continue the suffering of Christ for his body, the church. 25 God’s plan was to make me a servant of his church and to send me to preach his complete message to you. 26 For ages and ages this message was kept secret from everyone, but now it has been explained to God’s people. 27 God did this because he wanted you Gentiles to understand his wonderful and glorious mystery. And the mystery is that Christ lives in you, and he is your hope of sharing in God’s glory.

28 We announce the message about Christ, and we use all our wisdom to warn and teach everyone, so that all of Christ’s followers will grow and become mature.

Jesus.  The first-born son of God.  Not carrying a family likeness, a passing similarity – but exactly as God.  God living in a human form.  Christ is not just any old person, he is all that God was and is.

To quote the second verse of ‘See, amid the winter’s snow”,

Lo, within a manger lies
He who built the starry skies,
He who, throned in height sublime,
Sits amid the cherubim!

There at creation, working with God; he came as God to lead the church; by dying on the cross he brings us peace – all actions living as God in this world to show us what is, and bringing us back to him.

We, as human beings were far from God.  We weren’t at his right hand, we didn’t follow his ways – Jesus came to stand in our place – God fully human.  He stood in our place, so that we can stand in his.  By ourselves we can never stand in God’s presence; Jesus gives us his place so that we can.  And so God looks not on us and our failings – but on Jesus and his love and life.  We are not innocent, but Jesus is and he lets us stand there – forgiven, free, at peace.

That is what Jesus offers.  Are we willing to take it?  To step up and stand in his place – the place he gives to us.

Christ lives in you. He is your hope.  In him you share in all of Christ’s glory.

It’s ours if we choose to accept it.

Lord,
I stand before you
not in my own strength,
not by my own worthiness;
but because Jesus stands in my place
and allows me to stand in his.

Thank you for forgiveness,
for love,
for Jesus