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Showing posts with label Kingdom of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kingdom of God. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Melancholy in the Middle

 

 


There’s a relentless sadness in my soul.  I wish I could shake it and be like some friends I know who seem to always express eternal optimism.  Their version of faith in God seems to protect them from sadness and discontent.  I am not there.  Wish I could belt out the worship songs like “Good, Good Father” with conviction.  But then the news of the world, the marriage break up of my neighbour, makes me choke back those words and wonder.  

 

Perhaps it’s just me.  If you’ve read my blogs you know I have an apostolic, prophetic bent.  It’s an orientation that requires me to manage my perspective ‘by faith’ to ensure I don’t descend into depression or cynicism. However, in truth I am pained by the gap between what is possible and what is, between the deep (potential) reach of the gospel into systems, neighbourhoods and relationships, and the limited impact we as an organized church seem to effect on society.  Perhaps my sadness comes because I am in the final phase of my career and have become jaded and cynical. Perhaps the pandemic has overwhelmed my outlook, making me incapable of sustained hope.  Perhaps I am dangerously close to not giving a damn anymore.  Let someone else; let another generation take up the angst and the action. 

Trying to maintain hope of God’s Kingdom promises amid the brokenness and pain of this world is a tough gig.  We all live in between goodness and brokenness, between hope and reality.  In the middle ground is sadness and melancholy. 

I remind myself that this emotion is NOT a sign of lack of trust in God.   Nor is it a negative character quality.  In fact, it’s an utterly human response to the gap between the promised abundant life of God’s Kingdom and the lived-in reality we face on earth.  If we choose not to feel this sadness, letting it grip our soul, we either retreat into a spiritual selfishness of Christian activity & forms of expression that cocoons us from the brokenness around, or we shift into high gear as activists, believing by our good efforts we can change the world, irrespective of any divine involvement.

Could it be that God is also sad, and that our sadness at the state of our world reflects His?  Could we perceive of a Creator who expresses this emotion, this unsettledness between hope and reality? Could it be that the melancholy in the middle that we experience is a sign of our being created in God’s image; a reflection of the divine in us?

One example of MANY expressions of Gods’ sadness comes via the prophet Jeremiah, who profoundly expressed the weeping heart of God. At one point God communicated through Jeremiah these sentiments: “Speak this word to them: ‘Let my eyes overflow with tears night and day without ceasing; for the virgin daughter, my people, has suffered a grievous wound, a crushing blow.’” (Jeremiah 14:17).  That’s divine sadness over the gap between hope and reality.  God also stays close to our own human sadness when He promises that He is “close to the broken-hearted.” (Psalm 34:18). How can God be close to someone who is broken-hearted and not feel their pain? Because our Creator feels pain.

This melancholy in the middle isn’t just an emotion.  It certainly isn’t a sign of weak faith.  It is the proof of the divine Spirit of God calling into your soul with the words “this shouldn’t be this way”.  Then, out of that sadness Christ speaks:  “There is a better Way.  Show that to the world”.

Harv

PS – For an inspiring story of someone who feels this sadness, yet steps into the gap between promise and reality, listen to Father Gregory Boyle here

Friday, September 17, 2021

You're not gonna change the world

Not everyone needs to read this, but you know who you are if you do. 

  • You think about the state of the world, often.  It bears down hard on your mind, heart and soul.
  • You cry out to God, to politicians, to your organization, to the court room of your mind for justice and equity, and change and peace. 
  • You often feel that "If only we could get this initiative up and running" or "If we just redesigned this process or system, we could upset the order of things and make a real difference".
  • You regularly ask "Why?" and "Why not?".

You want to change the WORLD. But you can't.  Hear me out. 


A world changing perspective can sometimes...

  • ...place too much emphasis on you and your vision.
  • ...remove you from the truth (and trust) that only God is sovereign to change the world.  Only He can bring his Kingdom to earth.  
  • ...cause a lot of grief in your own soul (anxiousness, driven-ness) because you believe the change depends on you.
  • ...can cause you to motivate by shame and guilt when people don't 'get with the program'.
  • ...turn you into an activist who makes claims on God, and for God that He doesn't subscribe to in order to advance your vision.  (God far too often ends up with a bad rap in the world, and it's not His fault. Tragically in the over-zealous effort to advance the Kingdom of God we can turn the world away from ever wanting what we put out there on offer)

Global and societal change rarely comes through any single individual or organizations' efforts. I can barely change my own eating habits, let alone my organization. How will my idea ever change the world?  Answer:  It won't and I can't.  The sooner I get to that conclusion and rest in another reality, the greater my impact can actually be.  

 

Ironically we will have more impact on the world when we let go of our sense of importance and power to change it and grab hold of this truth:

The Creator God is the only One with the power to transform this world into His Kingdom 

Unless we believe that God is actively at work in individuals and groups to do what He has set out to do, we will forever be wrapped up in our angst over what to do and how to do it.  What often happens is we (especially us dreamers), often miss the forest for the trees.  Our superpower may be as "Tomorrow-Man/Woman", but we miss the opportunity to live and act in today, to act locally, and to trust that the 'daily bread' Jesus taught us to ask for, is in the end all we really need.

So, take whatever He gives you in this day and embrace it: the person you meet, the opportunity you have, the thoughts and prayers that come across your mind.  Those acts are enough to change the world. 

God's wonderful Kingdom is happening. He is making it come into being, not you.  So each day be content and happy to take what He gives you and simply play your part.  

The world will change.