Thursday, December 29, 2022

Psalm Meditation 1176 ¶First Sunday After Christmas ¶January 1, 2023 ¶Psalm 42 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+42&version=NRSVUE (NRSV) ¶Sometimes we think we are hungry for something but we don’t quite know what it is. We are aware that our bodies are in need of something and we reach for a snack to meet the need. After eating one thing we realize that was not what we were craving, so we eat something else, and something else until we are stuffed to the gills, and we are still not satisfied. In these cases, the need was not for food, it was for water. Instead of slaking our thirst, we satisfy a non existent hunger. ¶We act in similar fashion in our spiritual lives. We are aware of an emptiness, while having no idea what that emptiness is. We try filling that space with money, with objects, with power. Each of those things satisfies for a moment, and then we crave more, and more, and more. We haven’t really filled our emptiness, we have covered it up. Sometimes we even convince ourselves that all of the stuff in our lives is what we wanted all along. We may not even know that we continue to have an emptiness. ¶The psalmist addresses the emptiness within and offers the exhortation to hope in God. Know that though there is an empty feeling now, God is ready, willing, and able to fill the void with a holy presence. Blaise Pascal, a French mathematician and religious philosopher, said, “There is a God-shaped emptiness in the heart of each one of us which cannot be satisfied by any created thing but only by God.” This psalm calls on God to slake the thirst, and satisfy the hunger by filling us with that which only God can fill us. ¶December 29, 2022 ¶LCM

Monday, December 19, 2022

Psalm Meditation 1175 ¶Christmas ¶December 25, 2022 ¶Psalm 35 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+35&version=NRSVUE (NRSV) ¶We don’t get involved in conflicts knowing that we are wrong and defending our point of view anyway. Even when we play devil’s advocate to someone else’s argument, it is because we believe another side has to be heard. So we know that the psalmist believes in the cause on this side of the armed conflict. Since I am right, that must mean that the folks who oppose me are wrong. Because that is the case, it is only fair for God to help me beat these others into submission. ¶Since we don’t go to battle of any kind knowing that we are wrong, it must be true of the folks on the other side as well. From our point of view, ‘those people’ are wrong to the point of being on the side of evil. It is also the case that ‘those people’ see us as wrong and evil. So, who is right? It depends on the perspective of those in the conflict. Our starting assumptions determine which direction we take our arguments. When ‘those people’ choose different priorities they will come to different conclusions. There will be enough truth on each side to convince us of the need to cross swords in the defense of our truth. ¶Rather than choosing the way of the psalmist, “My side is right and all the other sides are wrong.” we can choose the way of understanding. Listen to the opposing arguments and the assumptions behind them. We can still disagree even if we totally understand the opposing viewpoint. We can continue to defend our point of view without calling on God to destroy those who disagree. This would be especially handy if it turns out that we are the ones who are mostly in the wrong. “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you…” ¶December 19, 2022 ¶LCM

Monday, December 12, 2022

Psalm Meditation 1174 ¶Fourth Sunday of Advent ¶December 18, 2022 ¶Psalm 28 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+28&version=NRSVUE (NRSV) ¶There are people in this world who can comfort us by being present with us in a time of need. They don’t say anything, they don’t do anything, they are purely present. After having been in their presence, and pouring our hearts out to them we feel as if we have been given the best advice anyone could possibly give. What we needed was a sounding board, a person to bounce a thousand ideas off of to see which of those ideas made the most sense when said out loud. We could look back and think that they did not do anything when the truth is they did just what we needed them to do. They were present. ¶The psalmist is convinced that God has turned a deaf ear to the situation. There may have been an expectation of a flash of lightning and a clap of thunder that contained the answer to all the questions in the psalmist’s current situation. The conversation continues with the psalmist asking God to destroy all the folks at the heart of this batch of concerns. However, please leave me where I am while destroying all those wicked others. Once all those distracting sinners are out of the way God can pay the psalmist some much needed attention. ¶God trusts us more than we trust ourselves. Rather than giving us the answer we want to hear, or the one we know is right while still unpleasant, God gives us the time and space to listen to our own good sense to make a decision on our own. God knows that most of us have the good sense to make our own decisions. We have minds and hearts that can sort out the good from the bad, the wise from the simple, and the workable from the aspirational. We use our God given gifts to discover the answer we really wanted God to give us without all the effort on our part. God knows what we can do, and wants us to find that out too. “The Lord is my strength and my shield; in him my heart trusts; so I am helped, and my heart exults, and with my song I give thanks to him.” ¶December 12, 2022 ¶LCM

Monday, December 5, 2022

Psalm Meditation 1173 ¶Third Sunday of Advent ¶December 11, 2022 ¶Psalm 57 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+57&version=NRSVUE (NRSV) ¶There is nothing quite so comforting as a song rising in your heart to buoy your spirits, and make the mood lighter. However, there are times in which a song will not rise and a dark mood is made that much darker by the absence of music. Times of tragedy and grief, times of stress, and times of terror are a few of the moments in our lives that rob the music from us. In one particular case for me, I did not notice that I had been bereft of song until it suddenly returned one day. As music rose again I realized how much I had missed it. ¶The introduction to this psalm says it comes from a time in which David was fleeing from Saul. I imagine that David was drained by all the stresses and losses that accompanied falling out of Saul’s favor. In verse seven David is able to muster the wherewithal to say, “My heart is steadfast, O God; my heart is steadfast. I will sing and make melody.” He pushes himself to raise a song, and in it he finds comfort and the assurance that God is present in this, and every time of David’s life. It isn’t always that easy, which may explain why David is such a model of faithfulness. ¶As David recovers the ability to sing, the companion sense of thankfulness to God rises as well. In thankfulness David can rediscover a sense the steadfast love of God that moves so many of us from our bleak places to a deeper appreciation of the ways God loves and cares for us all the time. “For your steadfast love is as high as the heavens; your faithfulness extends to the clouds. Be exalted, O God, above the heavens. Let your glory be over all the earth. “ ¶December 5, 2022 ¶LCM