Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Oh, Good Grief! It's Supreme Courtship!






   I am grieving this morning, but probably not in the way you would expect.  First, the back story:
   Ever since Valentine’s Day, up until last week, my first-born was engaged to be married.  Then less than five days out, his bride bolted in the wee hours of the morning.
   
   I am pleased with the support we have received. Hardly anyone, (I heard only one instance,) sank to the platitude of “maybe it was better this way.”  It was not better this way, and even Pollyanna would have to agree to that.  So I am not grieving any feelings of being adrift and alone.

   I had earnestly prayed for family members’ travel schedules and safety. All that was answered phenomenally.  Graduations and final exams were worked around, even military orders changed to fit the date!  And we had a reunion after all, so I am not grieving a missed family time.

   The now-cancelled wedding day came as cloudless as could ever be hoped for, with the most comfortable mix of warm temperature and low humidity. James Lowell could have written his poem about it—
     And what is so rare as a day in June?
     Then, if ever, come perfect days;
     Then Heaven tries earth if it be in tune,
     And over it softly her warm ear lays;
     Whether we look, or whether we listen,
     We hear life murmur, or see it glisten.
— except that, unlike Lowell's native New England, in the Deep South, those days arrive in May. The odds are drastically against having another such flawless day so perfectly placed. While that may be lamentable, it does not sink to the level of grief.

   Nor am I grieving over the reason for calling it off—at least, not over the vague and incongruous reasons that were given. But don't take my word for it; I will allow you, my readers, to judge. Here are the quotes:  "started to have concerns," and "a few lifestyle conflicts," which "forced" her to realize "neither he nor I would be happy long term." All the while, she maintains she still loves him and he is what she always prayed for.  How's that for clear and precise articulation? It is pretty hard to grieve when you're left clueless by an explanation that presumes to forecast how others will feel.   

   I was delighted that their first full day together as man and wife, a Sunday, was to be Pentecost. What a fabulous beginning that would have been!  Pentecost was the day that the Church, the ecclesia, received its power—a wonderfully emblematic day to begin a new life. But while that was a sentimental loss, it did not descend to a level of deep grief either.

   As I said, my source of grief will probably be unexpected by many of my readers. It is the SCOTUS. The acronym stands for Supreme Court of the United States. As I write, the arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges to change the definition of marriage have been heard, but the decision that will rule on whether same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry has not yet been handed down.
   For the past few months, one of the things I have been deeply grateful for was the thought that this one marriage license, at least, would be issued while marriage still meant something of value legally. The Creator of man and woman ordained marriage as a covenant. Conventional 'wisdom' predicts that the SCOTUS will make gay marriage the law of the land. This will devalue the meaning of the marriage license from supporting a covenant between a man and a woman to merely certifying a contract between two humans. I am grieving this loss: That my children are unlikely to get married in a society that values marriage.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

National Day of Prayer



    Last year, we joined the noon prayer service at the county court house. This year, I’m just not feeling it. For a while now, it has felt rather hypocritical to pray, “God Bless America,” but at least last year we could lay aside our pride and beg for mercy. Since the 2014 elections last fall, there has been a hardening of the leadership that has changed the spiritual texture of the nation to the point that even cries for mercy aren’t heart-felt.

    The theme verse for the National Day of Prayer, 2015, is found in 1 Kings 8:28. “Yet have regard to the prayer of your servant and to his plea, O LORD my God, listening to the cry and to the prayer that your servant prays before you this day.  Fine, Well & Good, but it doesn’t define what the servants are pleading for. And quite frankly, if you’re praying for the wrong stuff, you are wasting your time. My proof: James 4:3, “You ask and do not receive, because you ask amiss, to spend it on your passions.”

    Perhaps a timelier theme verse was scribed by Isaiah. “Woe to those who enact evil statutes and to those who constantly record unjust decisions, so as to deprive the needy of justice and rob My people of their rights.” 10:1-2.

    It takes some boldness to pray an imprecatory prayer, but I am there. Imprecatory prayers are the kind where one is calling down fire from heaven. It is spiritually playing with fire, so there is a corresponding chance of getting burned. It is asking God to switch from Grace-giver mode to His Avenger mode; the catch is that He passes through you on the way to the target, so it takes both wisdom and cleanliness in Christ to survive it intact.  King David wrote several imprecatory psalms, and he was able to pull that off because his motives were right with the Lord.

    Wars. Terrorism. Increasing earthquakes. Blood moons occurring in a tetrad on Jewish feast days. Avian flu that has already claimed 5 million turkeys that could have been in line for the Thanksgiving Day table. The boding of the Shemitah year. Leadership that has no fear of God. — We will never outgrow or lose the need for the “God bless Blinky, my goldfish” prayers that we said as kids, but we do need to add to the faith and courage of our prayer arsenal for the times ahead.

    If you pray for our country on this National Day of Prayer, make it count.