Today’s Scripture Reading (March 1,
2017): Habakkuk 1
Today
is Ash Wednesday, or more commonly known as the day after Mardi Gras. Actually, Ash Wednesday was the reason for
Mardi Gras. If you are going to spend the next forty days contemplating your
mortality and giving up for things for Lent, shouldn’t you party hard and
indulge yourself on the day before the
self-sacrifice begins. I think originally
Mardi Gras was “eat as much chocolate as
you can day” – chocolate is one of our standard
Lent fasts,
which leads chocolatiers to be anti-Christian. But now the party is over (cue
the dramatic music); now your fast begins.
So
in the midst of your brand new fast, consider answering this question. When you
look at your world, what is it that is obvious to you? When you open your eyes,
what is it that you see? We have fallen into a trap where we believe that if we
see it, it is real. We have believed that eyewitness reports are the most reliable evidence. But they aren’t.
Our memory is tricky, and it likes to
play games. There has been a movement that has gained popularity in recent years
that says that the Bible has a literal obvious truth – one that we don’t have
to dig into or chase after. But even Jesus disagreed with that. When he was asked why he taught in parables, his answer
was basically that he wanted to frustrate
those that didn’t want to work for the truth (see Matthew 13).
Habakkuk
has an eyewitness account of his world. And his eyewitness account leads him
to ask this question – God, how long. And God’s answer contradicts everything
that Habakkuk believes that he sees. God tells him – even if you knew what was
happening – you wouldn’t believe it. Habakkuk – I am about to raise up your enemy, and he will sweep the world – and it
will be a good thing. Watch, Habakkuk, what I am about to do. Trust me Habakkuk; all this is that you see, is subservient to me.
I
have a theory about an alternate explanation of the origin of Halloween (Okay,
I know the real reason, Since All Saints Day is on November 1, isn’t there some
justice in having an All Devil’s Day the night before – it is the Mardi
Gras-Ash Wednesday thing all over again.) But in a world where we sometimes
believe that science will allow us to live forever – Halloween makes us
confront that we are mortal and one day we will die. Halloween is modern, and a
little less scary, replacement of Ash Wednesday. And it is just possible that
God has raised up this day that we consider to
be an enemy of him, to convince us of a
truth that we don’t want to hear.
The
truth that God needed Habakkuk to understand was that in prosperity Israel
missed what it was that they really
needed – him. And for us, until we embrace our own
mortality – we forget that our real need is still him. This life is short – but
eternity is long.
So,
Happy Ash Wednesday! Embrace this day as if it were from God. Just remember
that on this day you can’t collect candy unless you pay for it and it is not on
your “given up for Lent” list. Remember to consider
your own mortality, that fact that you do
not want to see. Death is in all of our futures. And just as was true with
Habakkuk, our real need is God.
Tomorrow’s Scripture
Reading: Habakkuk 2
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