Monday, June 24, 2024

Psalm Meditation 1254 ¶Proper 8 ¶June 30, 2024 ¶Psalm 120 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+120&version=NRSVUE (NRSVUE) ¶The second verse is interestingly ambiguous. Is the deliverance from the psalmist’s lying lips and deceitful tongue or from those of another? Either one is going to need the power of God for deliverance. Our own lips can become so comfortable with lies that they begin to sound like the truth to us. We deceive ourselves by repeating the lies over and over until we lose touch with what is true and what is fabricated. We have less control over the lies of others. We cannot know if those lies are intentional or misperceptions from those spreading the lies. As others come to believe what is being said, damage is done to all involved. ¶If only there were a way to tell truth from falsehood easily. If our noses grew like Pinocchio's, or our tongues burst into flames with the first untruth that came tripping off of them, we could hold ourselves and each other accountable for the falsehoods we spread to and about ourselves and those around us. Since that doesn’t happen we have to guard our own tongues and hold each other accountable for what we say, and how we say it. Even some truth is better kept to ourselves to avoid unnecessary damage to the people who impact our lives. ¶Meshech and Kedar are the farthest reaches of known civilization for the psalmist. When we are caught up in a system of lies and deceit we become separated from the people who mean a lot to us. When we seek to make peace without coming to terms with the lies we have told and had told about us we continue to break each other into pieces. It is only when we allow ourselves to join together in the presence of God that we can find release from lying lips that will bring us to a life of peace. ¶June 24, 2024 ¶LCM

Monday, June 17, 2024

Psalm Meditation 1253 ¶Proper 7 ¶June 23, 2024 ¶Psalm 113 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+113&version=NRSVUE (NRSVUE) ¶Those of us who have some privilege are of the opinion that we are here because God has put us here because we have done something to deserve it. The poor are poor because they have done something to deserve the punishment of poverty. It is a comforting way of looking at the world, however it is probably not accurate. Poverty, having no resources beyond necessity, seems to be the way we come into the world as well as the way we leave. The Bible is pretty clear that having more than enough is more dangerous to our souls than having too little. ¶The way of the world is to keep getting more and more stuff, and then to hold on to it, just in case. We don’t need to share with others because we each have what we have earned and deserve. We protect what we own, even as we yearn and strive for more. Ideally, we want, not just more but, more than anyone we know. Helping others in any way is seen as a sign of weakness, and makes us a target for every money, property, resource grubbing person around us. ¶The way of God and the people of God is to share our good fortune with others who have deep needs. We share with others out of gratitude for all with which God has blessed us. According to the Bible, the reason we have more than we need, is to share with those whose need is greater than ours. Any hoarding of resources is probably as sinful as stealing from those around us. It is God’s desire for each of us to raise the poor from the dust, to give them equal standing with us, even if it means having less ourselves. ¶June 17, 2024 ¶LCM

Monday, June 10, 2024

Psalm Meditation 1252 ¶Proper 6 ¶June 16, 2024 ¶Psalm 106 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+106&version=NRSVUE (NRSVUE) ¶Some of the psalms, and this is one of them, serve to remind us that God loves us continually and steadfastly. God’s love is not given to us only when we are good and right, God loves us all the time. During the exodus from Egypt, God did not walk away from the people the first time they disobeyed or questioned God’s motives in bringing folks out into the desert. God stuck with this foolish and stiff necked people from generation to generation, despite their wandering away from God on a regular basis. ¶This also applies to us. We have grown so used to believing that what God wants from us is for us to follow all the rules. At the very least, we believe that God wants everyone else to follow the rules that we have chosen as important. Each time we call someone to account for breaking one of God’s rules, others can find us guilty of another of those rules. I am sure that I have judged someone harshly for breaking a rule that I keep meticulously while breaking another one that is of the same importance. ¶“Both we and our ancestors have sinned; we have committed iniquity, have done wickedly.“ It is one of those, ‘everyone is doing it, so it must be okay’ situations, and is certainly deeply human practice. Perhaps the psalmist is reminding us that we can be a little less quick to judge others by our own standards, rejoice that God loves us no matter what, and attempt to keep a closer eye on our own actions than on those of others. When we point ourselves toward serving and loving God we can be open to the love of God at work in us, as well as God at work in the lives of those around us. ¶June 10, 2024 ¶LCM

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Psalm Meditation 1251 ¶Proper 5 ¶June 9, 2024 ¶Psalm 135 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=psalm+135&version=NRSVUE (NRSVUE) ¶In the biblical era, every nation had at least one deity that was solely concerned with that particular people. Most of the groups had multiple deities whose portfolios were confined to a few concerns. Israel’s God was seen as a singular being who was in charge of all the concerns of the people of Israel. The Israelites were okay with other nations having their own divinities, however, they had a relationship with YHWH, who was concerned for all that went on in the nation, and was concerned about any who challenged this chosen people. ¶While it was okay for other nations to have deities for every purpose, it was also seen as okay for Israel to make fun of those people and the deities they worshipped. The psalmist claims that those others are nothing but idols made of stone, wood or precious metals. They couldn’t hear or see, so they could not possibly respond to the needs of the nation who called on them. This was not a one sided venture, every nation made fun of the deities worshipped by every other nation. ¶Through the years and centuries the deities of the world have crossed national boundaries. I believe that there is only one deity, who is so beyond our ability to comprehend that we can but claim bits and pieces of that one to meet our needs. That one God enfolds each of us, with our belief and behavior system into a single loving embrace. I could be wrong, and I am, mostly, okay with that. I will continue to hold to my belief that our God, whom we call YHWH, steadfastly loves each one of us because it is the nature of God to do that. ¶June 4, 2024 ¶LCM