ACTING BEFORE THE GOLDEN BOWL IS BROKEN
Wednesday, January 06, 2016
Ecclesiastes [GW] 12:1-14 Remember your Creator when you are young, before the days of trouble
come and the years catch up with you. They will make you say, "I have
found no pleasure in them." Remember your Creator before the sun, the
light, the moon, and the stars turn dark, and the clouds come back with rain. Remember
your Creator when those who guard the house tremble, strong men are stooped
over, the women at the mill stop grinding because there are so few of them, and
those who look out of the windows see a dim light. Remember your Creator when
the doors to the street are closed, the sound of the mill is muffled, you are
startled at the sound of a bird, and those who sing songs become quiet. Remember
your Creator when someone is afraid of heights and of dangers along the road,
the almond tree blossoms, the grasshopper drags itself along, and the caper
bush has no fruit. Mortals go to their eternal rest, and mourners go out in the
streets. Remember your Creator before the silver cord is snapped, the golden
bowl is broken, the pitcher is smashed near the spring, and the water wheel is
broken at the cistern. Then the dust of mortals goes back to the ground as it
was before, and the breath of life goes back to God who gave it. "Absolutely
pointless!" says the spokesman. "Everything is pointless!" Besides
being wise, the spokesman also taught the people what he knew. He very
carefully thought about it, studied it, and arranged it in many proverbs. The
spokesman tried to find just the right words. He wrote the words of truth very
carefully. Words from wise people are like spurs. Their collected sayings are
like nails that have been driven in firmly. They come from one shepherd. Be
warned, my children, against anything more than these. People never stop
writing books. Too much studying will wear out your body. After having heard it
all, this is the conclusion: Fear God, and keep his commands, because this
applies to everyone. God will certainly judge everything that is done. This
includes every secret thing, whether it is good or bad.
Life includes
problems, some writ in our past, presently active, others yet to come. Was this
not so for God Incarnate, the recently celebrated babe that became the cruelly Crucified
Savior? Should we expect a different Gethsemane that He?
Family life involves discomforting diverse point-of-view
when it comes to solving problems. And it is very easy to fall prey to letting
emotions dominate and thereby subjectively react in kind or just as bad – to shut
eyes and ears, close mind, harden heart, and/or be non-confrontational. Emotional
stress should not, must not dominate our thinking, for ours is the utmost
purpose. We are called to serve Him all our days in all our ways, a task that
cannot be accomplished apart from combined vertical and horizontal love: “… when the Pharisees heard that he had
silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together. And one of them, a lawyer,
asked him a question to test him. "Teacher, which is the great commandment
in the Law?" And he said to him, "You shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all
your mind.This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as
yourself.On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets."
“ (ESV Mt.22:34-40)
The Apostle Paul’s
life embodied this point well; History as a destroyer. He afterward often dealt
with destroyers within families and
churches. His life involved much persecution with future death by execution. Peopled
hues on his canvas, but by submissive determination none framed his life
picture.
I pray this be so
in my life and yours in subjection to our Lord . . . never forgetting that once
the silver cord snaps, the golden bowl breaks, the old pitcher is shattered
before the fountain of youth, our spokes support no longer . . . the
opportunity for godly resolution to obtain things of everlasting value will
cease. EBB4
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