It’s Your Fault

•June 3, 2013 • 2 Comments

I’m sure we’ve all at one time or another been unfairly blamed for something that has gone wrong with someone else.

Distant Shores Media/Sweet Publishing [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons

1 Kings 17:17-24

Elijah Brings a Boy Back to Life

17 Several days later, the son of the woman who owned the house got sick, and he kept getting worse, until finally he died.

18 The woman shouted at Elijah, “What have I done to you? I thought you were God’s prophet. Did you come here to cause the death of my son as a reminder that I’ve sinned against God?”

19 “Bring me your son,” Elijah said. Then he took the boy from her arms and carried him upstairs to the room where he was staying. Elijah laid the boy on his bed 20 and prayed, “Lord God, why did you do such a terrible thing to this woman? She’s letting me stay here, and now you’ve let her son die.” 21 Elijah stretched himself out over the boy three times, while praying, “Lord God, bring this boy back to life!”

22 The Lord answered Elijah’s prayer, and the boy started breathing again. 23 Elijah picked him up and carried him downstairs. He gave the boy to his mother and said, “Look, your son is alive.”

24 “You are God’s prophet!” the woman replied. “Now I know that you really do speak for the Lord.”

This passage gives us an interesting journey into Old Testament beliefs about the cause and effects of death.

Elijah was staying with this widow in Zarephath, had indeed saved her and her son from certain starvation, yet when her son becomes ill and dies, she blames Elijah.

Of course we are familiar with searching for a reason for illness.  If we are unwell, we go to the doctors and expect them to tell us what is wrong, why we feel so poorly – and what they are going to do about it.  We are used to medical science being able to explain our ills, and become very uncomfortable if the answer is a genuine, ‘we don’t know why’.  So perhaps we can understand this woman looking for a reason for why her son has become ill – if not agree with the conclusion she reaches.

She concludes that her son’s illness is to remind her, if not punish her for her sin.  That may seem like an antiquated belief to us, but is it any different to the question we often hear,

What have I done to deserve this?

The implication being that there is a cause and effect of illness.  Well of course there is, but it is more to do with bacteria, genetics and pathology – not related to the good or otherwise we have done in life.  People getting ill and dying is a fact of life – totally unconnected to their morality.  They have done nothing to deserve it.

Elijah proves to her that this is not the case.  He prays, the son starts breathing again and is restored to his mother.

The collection of stories in these chapters are about Elijah being proven to be God’s prophet and being able to do God’s work – not any theology of sickness and death, and that is how we must treat them.

Is the death of a child any prove or consequence of a mothers sin?  Emphatically not.

Does God speak in and through his people? Certainly yes.

Thank you Lord
that illness and disease
are not punishment
or judgement,
that that is not the kind of God you are.

Thank you
that you are a God of love and faithfulness.

Thank you
that though others may seek to blame us
or you
that is not the case.

Thank you,
that in all our questions,
our misunderstandings,
our failure to grasp your ways,
you continue to speak
and to work,
in us
and through us

I’m Not Good Enough

•May 30, 2013 • Leave a Comment

“They’re a very deserving case”

The implication being that there is something worthy, something of a reward for behaviour or to justify special or particular treatment.

But who decides who is worthy, who is good enough, who is deserving?

Luke 7:1-10

Jesus Heals an Army Officer’s Servant

After Jesus had finished teaching the people, he went to Capernaum. In that town an army officer’s servant was sick and about to die. The officer liked this servant very much. And when he heard about Jesus, he sent some Jewish leaders to ask him to come and heal the servant.

The leaders went to Jesus and begged him to do something. They said, “This man deserves your help! He loves our nation and even built us a meeting place.” So Jesus went with them.

When Jesus wasn’t far from the house, the officer sent some friends to tell him, “Lord, don’t go to any trouble for me! I am not good enough for you to come into my house. And I am certainly not worthy to come to you. Just say the word, and my servant will get well. I have officers who give orders to me, and I have soldiers who take orders from me. I can say to one of them, ‘Go!’ and he goes. I can say to another, ‘Come!’ and he comes. I can say to my servant, ‘Do this!’ and he will do it.”

When Jesus heard this, he was so surprised that he turned and said to the crowd following him, “In all of Israel I’ve never found anyone with this much faith!”

10 The officer’s friends returned and found the servant well.

This passage raises so many, probably peripheral, questions in my mind:

  • did the officer only want to help his servant because he liked him?  If he hadn’t liked him, would he have cared to seek help from Jesus?
  • The man officer sent Jewish leaders to ask Jesus to come – and they clearly believed that Jesus could help – not the usual response recorded from them
  • there is mention of the man “deserving” Jesus help.  What if someone isn’t apparently deserving?

I’m just putting those questions out there as I ponder.

The officer felt he was not good enough for Jesus to come to him, or for him to come to Jesus – to even be in his presence.  Yet he knew that Jesus power was even greater than that he himself had over his soldiers.

To Jesus, this attitude showed the depth of the man’s faith.  All that was needed was for Jesus to give the word.

In point of fact, no word of healing from Jesus is recorded.  But the servant is restored to full health.

The lesson here is for those who feel that they are not good enough, not worthy, not deserving of Jesus and his presence.  The truth is whoever we are, whatever we have or haven’t done, whether we think we are deserving or not, whether other people think we are worthy or not – Jesus believes we are, and he comes to respond to our need.  We are not left floundering or despairing.

Making Trouble

•May 29, 2013 • 4 Comments

There are many ways of causing trouble, but ultimately they all lead to one thing – upset and hurt.

Paul is writing to the Galatians.  No sooner had they heard about Jesus and begun to follow him, than arguments were breaking out about what was and wasn’t a necessary part of the Christian life and faith.

Galatians 1:1-12

1-2 From the apostle Paul and from all the Lord’s followers with me.

I was chosen to be an apostle by Jesus Christ and by God the Father, who raised him from death. No mere human chose or appointed me to this work.

To the churches in Galatia.

I pray that God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ will be kind to you and will bless you with peace! Christ obeyed God our Father and gave himself as a sacrifice for our sins to rescue us from this evil world. God will be given glory forever and ever. Amen.

The Only True Message

I am shocked that you have so quickly turned from God, who chose you because of his wonderful kindness.You have believed another message, when there is really only one true message. But some people are causing you trouble and want to make you turn away from the good news about Christ. I pray that God will punish anyone who preaches anything different from our message to you! It doesn’t matter if that person is one of us or an angel from heaven. I have said it before, and I will say it again. I hope God will punish anyone who preaches anything different from what you have already believed.

10 I am not trying to please people. I want to please God. Do you think I am trying to please people? If I were doing that, I would not be a servant of Christ.

How Paul Became an Apostle

11 My friends, I want you to know that no one made up the message I preach. 12 It wasn’t given or taught to me by some mere human. My message came directly from Jesus Christ when he appeared to me.

Some were causing trouble.  Insisting there were “add-ons” to the gospel they had heard and received, altering what they thought they knew, trying to take them to a different place.

Now there is nothing wrong with healthy debate about what faith means and how it is lived out.  That is often how we learn and grow.  The problem comes when people start insisting on certain things, that are not core gospel principles, trying to force others to see and follow their point of view.  Of course there will always be matters of opinion on what constitutes the core gospel principles, but when Jesus was asked what was most important part of living God’s way, his reply was

36 “Teacher, what is the most important commandment in the Law?”

37 Jesus answered:

Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, and mind. 38 This is the first and most important commandment. 39 The second most important commandment is like this one. And it is, “Love others as much as you love yourself.” 40 All the Law of Moses and the Books of the Prophets are based on these two commandments. (Matthew 22:36-40)

Surely the basis of loving others is not causing trouble for them.  There is right and proper challenge, but there is also love and nurture.  And some things are more important than what I think.

In Romans, Paul says something very important,

The weak and the strong

14 Accept the one whose faith is weak, without quarrelling over disputable matters (Romans 14)

i.e., don’t cause trouble for others in their faith.

And so, I have to ask myself, are there things that I do or say that cause trouble for others?  Ways I behave?  Bold pronouncements that  make?  Judgements that are harsh, unfair or ill-informed?  Do I say things that would better be left unsaid?  Or not say things that I should?

Forgive me Lord
the times that I have said and done
stupid things,
harmful things,
words and deeds
that have hurt
and caused others to struggle
or even turned them away from you.

May I always remember love
– your love
to me
and to everyone.
may my actions
point people to you,
not turn them from you