.

Since I recognize that I'm not the first human being to follow Jesus, I highly value the voice of God that is found in the Scriptures (2 Timothy 3:16), and in the testimonies and traditions of those who have gone before us (Hebrews 12:1). I also believe that creation itself is a testament that God has written and that somehow Jesus is the author and source of life for the universe (John 1, Colossians 1:17). So I seek God's voice through exploring and studying His creation as well.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Help-Portrait

Help-Portrait is a pretty cool organization. Here is what they did last year.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Habakkuk

Living by faith is a bewildering venture. We rarely know what's coming next, and not many things turn out the way we anticipate. It is natural to assume that since I am God's chosen and beloved, I will get favorable treatment from the God who favors me so Extravagantly. It is not unreasonable to expect that from the time that I become his follower, I will be exempt from dead ends, muddy detours, and cruel treatment from the travelers I meet daily who are walking the other direction. That God-followers don't get preferential treatment in life always comes as a surprise. But it's also a surprise to find that there a few men and women within the Bible who show up alongside us at such moments.

The prophet Habakkuk is one of them, and a most welcome companion he is. Most prophets, most of the time, speak God's Word to us. They are preachers calling us to listen to God's word of judgement and salvation, confrontation and comfort. They face us with God as he is, not as we imagine him to be. Most prophets are in-your-face assertive, not given to tact, not diplomatic, as they insist we pay attention to God. But Habakkuk speaks our word to God. He gives voice to our bewilderment, articulates our puzzled attempts to make sense of things, faces God with our disappointment with God. He insists that God pay attention to us, and he insists with a prophet's characteristic no-nonsense bluntness

The circumstance that aroused Habakkuk took place in the seventh century B.C. The prophet realized that God was going to use the godless military machine of Babylon to brings God's judgement on God's own people--using a godless nation to punish a godly nation! It didn't make sense, and Habakkuk was quick and bold to say so. He dared to voice his feelings that God didn't his own God business. Not a day has passed since then that one of us hasn't picked up and repeated Habakkuk's bafflement: "God you don't seem to make sense!"

But this prophet companion who stands at our side does something even more important: He waits and he listens. It is in his wait and listening--which then turns into his praying--that he found himself inhabiting the large world of God's sovereignty. Only there did he eventually realizing that the believing-in-God life, the steady trusting-in-God life, is the full life, the only real life. Habakkuk started out exactly where we started out with our puzzled complaints and God-accusations, but he didn't stay there. He ended up in a world, along with us, where every detail in our lives of love for God is worked into something good.