Speaking on Behalf of…

•October 2, 2012 • Leave a Comment

One of the great debates of a corporate Twitter account, or anything speaking representing a group of people, is

Who speaks on our behalf?

Who is the one person charged with saying what that group wants to say?  Who decides what press releases are given, or what an opinion is on a matter?  Whose thoughts are we really getting?

Hebrews 1:1-4

1 Long ago in many ways and at many times God’s prophets spoke his message to our ancestors. But now at last, God sent his Son to bring his message to us. God created the universe by his Son, and everything will someday belong to the Son. God’s Son has all the brightness of God’s own glory and is like him in every way. By his own mighty word, he holds the universe together.

After the Son had washed away our sins, he sat down at the right side of the glorious God in heaven. He had become much greater than the angels, and the name he was given is far greater than any of theirs.

God had been speaking through prophets.  But that message wasn’t getting through.  People weren’t getting it.

Perhaps they thought that the message the prophets were bringing was their own opinion, maybe they weren’t sure of motives, or couldn’t see past personalities?

So what does God do?  He sends his son.  Surely people will believe a family member, and will get the message.  Jesus is speaking as God himself, and not just talking, but living it out as well, it is a fully rounded message.

We can trust what Jesus says, what he has to show us and teach us.  It is “on message”, what God longs for us to hear and understand?

Will we hear it?  And will we take it as gospel?

Lord,

I long to hear your voice.

Help me to recognise it

in the crowd of voices;

help me to recognise your truth

– and to act on it

What Have I Done to Deserve This?

•October 1, 2012 • 1 Comment

It’s the age-old question,

Why do bad things happen to good people?

It was a fundamental tenet of Old Testament belief, that if some tragedy befell you, you must have done something wrong, almost something to deserve it.

We don’t always move far from that understanding today.  If something terrible happens we ask, “what have they done to deserve it?”  We believe there has to be cause and effect.  “What have I done to deserve it?”

But the story of Job goes a long way to prove that is not the case.  Illness and suffering are not God’s punishment for something we have personally done wrong.

Job1:1, 2:1-10

1  Many years ago, a man named Job lived in the land of Uz. He was a truly good person, who respected God and refused to do evil.

Job Loses His Health

2 When the angels gathered around the Lord again, Satan was there with them, and the Lord asked, “Satan, where have you been?”

Satan replied, “I have been going all over the earth.”

Then the Lord asked, “What do you think of my servant Job? No one on earth is like him—he is a truly good person, who respects me and refuses to do evil. And he hasn’t changed, even though you persuaded me to destroy him for no reason.”

Satan answered, “There’s no pain like your own. People will do anything to stay alive. Try striking Job’s own body with pain, and he will curse you to your face.”

“All right!” the Lord replied. “Make Job suffer as much as you want, but just don’t kill him.” Satan left and caused painful sores to break out all over Job’s body—from head to toe.

Then Job sat on the ash-heap to show his sorrow. And while he was scraping his sores with a broken piece of pottery, his wife asked, “Why do you still trust God? Why don’t you curse him and die?”

10 Job replied, “Don’t talk like a fool! If we accept blessings from God, we must accept trouble as well.” In all that happened, Job never once said anything against God.

Job was apparently unique among the people among his generation.  He was the only one who had done nothing wrong at all, he was a truly good person.  So his suffering was NOT because he had done something wrong.

So we’ve dealt with that one, but is this passage suggesting that Job’s illness was some kind of test?  To see how faithful he was?  To see when he would give in and curse God?  It certainly seems that God allows Satan to throw his worst at him.

So does God allow suffering then?  Is that even worse?

I think the reality is that there is suffering in the world.  Nowhere in this passage does it suggest that God made the suffering, but it is there, and he certainly doesn’t appear that he is stopping it happening to Job – however good he is.  So doesn’t God care about us suffering?

I think God cares very much.  Suffering must break his heart.  But suffering is a consequence of what humans have done in the world.  There is a cause and effect – but not always a personal one, often innocents pay for the mistakes of others.

Should God stop suffering?  Well to do that he would have to take away our free will and then we would be automatons – is that what we want?  To have no possibility to choose – good or bad; to not be able to respond to anything?

So part of the answer to, “Why should bad things happen to good people”, is “why not?”.  If there are bad things happening in the world why shouldn’t they effect any one of us.  What makes me special that I should be immune from all things difficult?  Being a christian is not a talisman against all ill.  If there are rubbish things happening out there, they will effect us too.  I am precious to God – but no more or less so than anyone else.   Job was sorry he was suffering, but not despairing, and he refused to blame God.

So where does that leave us?

  • suffering is not allowed or not dependent on how good you are.
  • suffering is a fact of the world as it is now, faith is no barrier

And the fact of it is, as Job says,

If we accept blessings from God, we must accept trouble as well.

That’s where I think I’m at anyway.  What do you think?

Lord,

none of us want to suffer,

we pray for those who do.

Thank you that whatever we are facing

in the reality of our life in this world,

that your love and faithfulness abound

and you continue to hold us

Why Blog?

•September 30, 2012 • 3 Comments

So there’s been much made over the weekend about “top bloggers ” For example here. Whether this has been set off by the Christian New Media Awards or not, I don’t know. It can be a little disappointing  to not be included – or worse still, not even noticed, but that then begs the question of what are you blogging  for anyway. Is it to be popular? To feel important? To big ourselves  up? It is lovely to receive recognition. Who doesn’t like that? 

But for  me blogging is preaching. Not telling everyone what they should be doing, but exploring God’s word and what it means for us in our lives today. So without trying to sound pious and up myself, blogging is about God – and it’s about me. About thinking my way round a bible passage (for that’s what I’ve decided to generally  base my blogs on), and also very much about keeping myself sane. Because a preacher is what I am, and if I can’t physically preach, I do it this way.

So blogging isn’t about numbers or glory -well perhaps a little bit 😉