03/15/2009
Sunday
class: Proverbs 29:25 "Fear of man will prove
to be a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is kept safe."
Scripture reading: #637
Vespers @ 5 p.m.: A new six session class starts!
"How to enable people to 'sacredness'." This
is excellent for parenting/grandparenting or helping adults to grow the width
of their life, regardless of its length.
·
Class 1: Developing High Expectations
·
Class 2: Providing Positive Motivation
·
Class 3: Determined Love - Accepting Them As They Are
·
Class 4: Giving Hope 'For The Better'
·
Class 5: Overlooking Mistakes and Failures
·
Class 6: Comforting When They Are Hurt or Alienated
Wednesday @ 7 p.m.: page 143 “Desire of the
Everlasting Hills”
I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
the Creator of heaven and earth,
and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord:
Who
was conceived of the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried.
He
descended into hell.
The
third day He arose again from the dead.
He
ascended into heaven
and sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty,
whence He shall come to judge the living and the dead.
I
believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy *catholic church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting.
Amen.
Finding equity - 3rd
period (Ezekiel) 597-570 bc
Ezekiel 47.21 "You are to
distribute this land among yourselves according to the tribes of Israel.
22. You are to allot it as an
inheritance for yourselves and for the aliens who have settled among you and
who have children.
You are to consider them as native-born
Israelites; along with you they are to be allotted an inheritance among the
tribes of Israel. 23. In whatever tribe the alien settles, there you are to
give him his inheritance," declares the Sovereign Lord.
I think
that somehow I have always known that love was decision, a mental assent, a commitment of
purpose, a determination. I think that discovering the difference
between love and romance came somewhat later, perhaps in my early adulthood,
before meeting the beautiful redhead who was to become my wife and the love of
my life. I was still struggling with determining the difference between emotions
of romance and love when I first expressed my feelings and intentions to the
redhead…I’m sure that she will never forget my stumbling around trying to find
the words adequate to express my soul and devotion.
Over
the decades my primary struggle has not been so much the determination to love,
to gentleness, to kindness toward those for whom I have the greatest affection,
but rather the great
difficulty to love, to be gentle, to be kind to those for whom I have no
affection.
That is the struggle to which God has
called each of us – to love, to be gentle, to be kind to those for whom we have
no affection.
It is
by this that we reflect the breadth of the inheritance we have as His adopted
heirs. We are, indeed, “heirs and joint heirs with Jesus Christ” adopted, in
the words of the Apostle Paul, even though we had no rights or claim to the
inheritance through our own birth or efforts.
Since
we are only who we are by Grace and adoption, we are required to extend it with
love, with gentleness, with kindness, to those who are aliens among us…as
though they were “native born.”
Since
without Jesus we have no equity or parity or particular standing in our claims
for mercy before God, we must extend the same gracious equity, parity, and
standing to those aliens who find themselves among us in our allotment in life.
Mr.
Warren Buffet has commented on the great luxury we enjoy by having “won the
birth lottery.” We can take no personal claim or responsibility for that ‘luck
of the draw.’ Neither can we condemn those who, by no personal fault or
responsibility were born in another place in desperation.
God
said prophetically through Ezekiel, some 600 years before Christ, that as we
move into our inheritance we must consider those - who come without benefit,
having been born in another place, to another people, as though they were
“native born.” They are to share in the benefits with equality and without
prejudice as though they are our brothers and sisters.
May I,
as gently as I possibly can, encourage you to determine to love, to be gentle
and kind to those whom we consider to be aliens among us, without regard to
their ability to speak as we speak or to live as we live?