In the fog

The thick mist hung in the air reducing visibility to a few yards. The fog obscured the landscape making my morning drive to work anything but usual. In fact, as I drove down the interstate I had to take a second and make sure that I was in fact in the right place. Because the fog changed the view of my surroundings, I couldn’t see my normal points of reference. The path was the same one that I travel every work day, and yet, the inclement weather made it seem different. My perception of what I should be seeing and what I could see were not one in the same; I didn’t know whether or not the road I was traveling was the right one.

I think the same thing that happened on my morning commute happens in life. Clouds settle around us and we don’t know whether the path we are walking is the right one. We can’t see up ahead and our normal vantage is obscured. Our points of reference – the good feelings that we get when we know we are walking in God’s plan – are nowhere to be found. We don’t remember changing directions and yet the road appears unfamiliar. Our guideposts are hidden from view.

This morning, I wasn’t sure I was on the right freeway until I saw the exit signs along the road. They were counting down in the same order that they do every morning. Even though the path felt different, the familiar points of exit told me that it was the right one. In life its the same way. God’s commandments are our road signs. And even when it feels unfamiliar, when we follow them, we can be confident that we are heading the right way.

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Welcome to the World

It was an unfortunate case of reading too quickly. I read what I thought the sermon title was instead of what was actually printed. I quickly realized my error though when the message began and the sermon was about the importance of taking God’s Word like it was the Word of God. Oops – “Welcome to the Word” is was my mind should have registered. Chalk it up to a hasty assumption – I thought the sermon was going to be about our place in the world. It’s only one letter different but it definitely changed the tenor of things.

“Coincidently” I had already been thinking a lot about our place in the world – perhaps the reason for my accidental misinterpretation. Reading a book called “Not On Our Watch” I learned about the mass atrocities that are being perpetrated in Darfur. I had heard a lot about the situation in Sudan but had mistakenly believed that the peace treaty signed in 2006 had brought to bear the weight of the international community and that remedies were being put into place. What I hadn’t realized was that Darfur was specifically left out of the treaties. Suspicious of any cause that garners the attention of celebrities, I hadn’t paid much attention to the details of the arrangement which is perhaps why I had neglected to pay attention to the continue cycle of violence, sexual assault, and mass atrocities that are being suffered by the people of Darfur. Fueled by ethnic tensions and backed by government support, thousands of been subject to unspeakable crimes and even more have been displaced as a result of the ongoing violence. Ignorance is bliss, and my previous ignorance was definitely more peaceable than the compelling knowledge that I now must contend with. Its probably why I don’t like to watch the news – too much responsibility comes with knowledge.

However no longer protected by the thin veil of ignorance I’m left to struggle with what I can do in situations that far outweigh my abilities. The truth is I haven’t quite figured out the best way to participate in a solution. What I do know, however, is that as a Christian, my concern has to be for the people who are suffering. Jesus never commanded to love only if the result of that love would solve problems. We are instructed to think of others ahead of ourselves and when His children suffer, regardless of where they are in the world, our heart should break right alongside His. Our place in the world is to be the extension of His compassion. It may not solve international crises but its impact on singular lives can not be underestimated. Its easier to stay in our bubble, but being a Christian isn’t supposed to be easy, and the value of a human life is far outweighs the cost of our comfort. It’s our job to join in; to do our part to show others Jesus’ love. Without us, His truth remains a mystery. Without it, evil wins.

Welcome to the world. It needs you.

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