Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Manna

It occurs to me that there is a lesson to be learned from Manna.

I think most of us are familiar with the story: When the Children of Israel came up out of Egypt through the wilderness, God gave them Manna to eat. God told them that, Sunday through Thursday, they should only gather enough for one day, but on Friday, they should gather enough for two days. The Bible tells us that some of the Israelites tried to gather more than one days worth on the days that they were only supposed to gather one days worth, and some people went out on the Sabbath day and tried to gather manna (they may have even been the same people). The Bible tells us that the people that listened to God had no lack, nor any extra. Sort of like Goldilocks with Baby Bear’s stuff: It was just right.

I don’t claim to know if the people that tried to bring in extra were greedy, or lazy, or just
had a hard time figuring out what they really needed. I can remember as a kid, my mother watching me serve my own plate and warning me that my eyes were bigger than my stomach. She was usually right; it took me a while to be able to gauge how much food would actually fill my belly, especially when I felt unusually hungry. I know some people will try to pack more food into their stomachs than what they can reasonably hold. I also know that some people are so afraid of running out of something that they will hoard it. Some people are also just plain lazy. It’s easy for me to imagine some poor Israelite thinking that life is just so rough: “Here I am, stuck in this desert with millions of other people, not a stick of antiperspirant amongst all of us, and now I have to go out and gather this manna stuff six days a week. You know, if I just gather a little extra, then I may be able to work it so that I only have to go out three days a week…” In any case, it didn’t work. Anybody that tried to put some of it away overnight found that had gone bad in the morning, except on Friday night. I would imagine that was probably confusing to a lot of people. “If I save some on Monday night, then on Tuesday morning it has gone bad, but if I save some on Friday night, then on Saturday morning it’s just as fresh as it was Friday morning.” Of course, the proper way to look at it is, “Gee, as long as I do what God said to do, then He takes care of me.”

I guess that’s why Jesus told us to take no thought for tomorrow. Don’t misunderstand me, I don’t think He meant that we don’t have to do laundry (although my sister has an interesting story about some laundry and a jigsaw puzzle), but more the fact that things will happen tomorrow that we have no control over. If we spend today worrying about the things that might happen tomorrow, we won’t get done today the things that we need to get done today, which will really only make tomorrow that much worse. Solomon once wrote about a man that wouldn’t leave his house, using the excuse that there might be a lion in the street. Most of the things that we worry about are at least more realistic than that, but we need to trust God to get us through those things, rather than work ourselves up over things that we can’t change anyway. Yes, you should pray about those things, and if you don’t feel that the issue is resolved, then pray some more, but let God handle those things. Don’t be the child that asks its father to fix something that it has broken, and then refuse to let go so that the Father can fix it.


Monday, November 10, 2008

Asleep in the Ship

Something that has always bothered me about the story of Jonah: In Jonah 1:5, it says that Jonah fell asleep in the bottom of the ship. During a storm. The text indicates that God sent the storm specifically because of Jonah. So here he is, on a ship, running from God, and God sends a storm after him, and he falls asleep. The other men on the ship woke him up, and wanted him to pray to his God. It seems that he almost missed the point.

There is another story in the Gospels about a man sleeping in a ship during a storm: In Matthew 8 (and Mark 4), it says that Jesus and the disciples were crossing the sea in a ship, and a storm hit, but Jesus was asleep. The disciples woke him up, in much the same way that Jonah was awakened, and asked him, “Don’t you care that we’re all going to die?” (my paraphrase). Jesus rebuked them for their lack of faith, and then he rebuked the wind and the waves, and the storm cleared up. Then the disciples marvelled, saying, “What manner of man is this, that even the wind and the waves obey Him?”

The thing that has always bothered me about the story in Matthew, if the disciples didn’t think Jesus could calm the storm, then why did they bother to wake Him up? Of course, maybe they felt like the men in the book of Jonah, they just wanted Jesus to pray to His God, that God would save them. Either way, it seems obvious that they clearly didn’t understand who He was, yet.

Of course, Jesus wasn’t worried. He knew that He was doing God’s will, and He knew that God wasn’t through with Him yet. He knew that His fleshly existence wasn’t going to end by drowning. Jonah had no such assurance, though. Jonah was completely aware that he wasn’t doing God’s will, and at least a part of him was hoping that God was through with him. Perhaps Jonah was just so accustomed to being in God’s will, and under God’s protection, that it didn’t even occur to him that he might die in the sea. Even that, though, seemed to bother him less than the idea that his misdeeds might cause others to die. He told the men of the ship to throw him overboard (apparently not quite brave enough to throw himself into the sea), and once they did that, the storm cleared up.

Jesus once said that He was going to give us the sign of the prophet Jonah. Of course, He went on to talk about Jonah being in the belly of the whale for 3 days and nights, and said that He would be in the heart of the earth for the same time period. Apparently, there was more to the sign than just that, though. Both Jesus and Jonah were able to calm storms, and were willing to sacrifice themselves for the sake of other people.

I think that it is significant, though, that Jesus rebuked the disciples for fearing the storm. He called it a lack of faith. Previously, in Matthew 6:25-34, He talked about the lilies of the field, they toil not, neither do they spin, and tomorrow, they are cast into the fire, but Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed as one of these. He told the disciples then that they shouldn’t be worried about temporal things, what they should eat, or what they should wear. Does this mean don’t buy groceries, or do laundry? Of course not. It does mean that we don’t need to worry about those things, because God knows what we need before we are even aware of it. I suspect that if we just stopped buying groceries, then God would just let us starve. It does mean that He’s going to make sure that we get what we need. Notice I said ‘need.’ That doesn’t necessarily mean that He will give you money to buy food; He may simply open the door to a soup kitchen or charitable food pantry. He might even want you to fast more often (of course, if you aren’t fasting now, than any fasting would be fasting more often). The important thing is not to worry about, just trust God to take care of it. Again, in Matthew 10, Jesus tells us that God is aware of it every time a sparrow falls to the ground, and that we should not be afraid, because we are of more value than many sparrows.

It doesn’t mean that life will always be easy, but it does mean that we have a promise that He will always hold us, at least as long as we continue to want to be held.