Today’s Scripture Reading (December
31, 2019): Amos 2
Today
we close the door on 2019. It seems that every year, in the mind of some, the
year past is a candidate for the worst year ever award. Maybe that is because
it is easy for the negative things to outshine the positives. 2019 will likely
be remembered for its scandals. The impeachment trial of President Donald Trump
will top that list, but also Rudy Giuliani and Ukraine, the Bidens and the
aforementioned Ukraine, and the tour of a sixteen-year-old student named Greta
Thunberg and her defense of the Environment. Thunberg seemed to bring a divide
among us with her straightforward defense of the environment and her call for
immediate action. Often we seem to forget the activist is only sixteen and
probably deserves more of our respect than our disdain.
But it
was also the year that AC/DC’s lead singer, Brian Johnson, and his wife sold a
property for $335,000 and donated the money to a Local Children’s Foundation.
It was the year that Northview Church in Indiana (all the Christian Church
wants is money) paid off the medical debt for almost 6,000 families in the area
to the tune of $7.8 Million. And the year that Dwayne Johnson sang the “Moana”
song to a three-year-old boy fighting cancer. The positive stories of 2019
probably outweigh the negative ones, and yet we all seem to get to this point
in the year and rush to turn the page to 2020 in the hope that it will be
better. And 2020 might be a better year, but that result will probably depend
on what we decide to do with the New Year.
Amos speaking the words of God to Israel
reminds them of the good that God had done in their past. Yes, there is plenty
of negative that Amos speaks of to the Northern Kingdom, but he wants them to
remember the good that God had done in their midst. The God of the Temple in
Jerusalem was the one who brought them up out of Egypt. And it was this God who
had led through the forty years in the wilderness. The people seemed to have
forgotten the good and focused on the bad. And the reality is that when we
focus on the negative, bad behavior is often the result.
2020
will hold both the good and the bad, but maybe we can endeavor in this New Year
to let the good sit with us a while longer than we have in the past. Maybe in
2020, we can do what Paul encouraged us to do. “Finally,
brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right,
whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is
excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things” (Philippians 4:8).
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading: Amos
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