What to do about suffering

download-1

Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed,

    for his compassions never fail.

They are new every morning;

    great is your faithfulness.

I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion;

    therefore I will wait for him.” (Lamentations. 3:22-24)

 

For no one is cast off

    by the Lord forever.

Though he brings grief, he will show compassion,

    so great is his unfailing love.

For he does not willingly bring affliction

    or grief to anyone.  (Lamentations 3:31-33)

Lamentations is a book of suffering. It is a collection of poems of lament over the destruction of Jerusalem and the children of Israel being led into captivity by the Babylonians — something God allowed to happen because of their disobedience in going after other gods. It was God’s last resort. Repeatedly He warned them and tried to get them to repent and turn back to Him, but nothing doing, so He finally had to use the Babylonians to punish them. You could say He got their attention, and the poems in this book are a chronicle of their suffering experience.

Continue reading

Posted in pandemic | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Death in the City

How solitary sits the lonely cityOIP-11

Once, once full of people

How like a widow she has now become

Once, once a great nation

She weeps bitterly in the night

Tears are constantly on her cheeks

Among her loves, there is no one to comfort

All of her friends have become her enemies

                  – from the song, “Death in the City” by John Fischer

These words are from a song I wrote in the fall of 1968; all the words have been taken directly from the Book of Lamentations in the Bible. I was inspired to write this after hearing Francis Schaeffer lecture for a week at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois, on material from that Old Testament book which became the content of his third book, published in 1969 titled, Death in the City.

Many of my classmates and I were gripped by Schaeffer’s lectures and the prophetic nature of his lament over the moral and spiritual death of America he proclaimed in the face of the countercultural upheaval of the sixties. The “death of God” movement and the theological abandonment of the word of God as truth left us as a generation adrift without a rudder. And in the cries of Lamentations, written after the fall of Israel and it’s being dragged into exile by the Babylonian Empire, Schaeffer found a voice for his own tears of compassion over a lost generation. I ran to my dorm room, after being moved by one of his talks, and wrote this song, taking all the words from the poetry in the biblical book of Lamentations.

I bring this up because, in preparing my newly-remastered album The Cold Cathedral that contains this song, I was caught by the immediate relevancy of these words to our current situation: “How solitary sits the lonely city, once full of people.”

How many scenes have you seen lately of a solitary, lonely city? How many empty streets? Even today, on the front page of the Los Angeles Times is a picture of a huge L.A. freeway interchange with maybe three cars visible. How like a widow we appear now, alone and abandoned in the world.

And there is much weeping in the night. 58,000 Americans have now died of complications related to COVID-19 and over a million have been infected. Many carry the virus without any symptoms, unknowingly infecting others. When this will end, no one knows.

We are suffering, but suffering is a part of life. It’s necessary. We all must go through it. The fact that Lamentations is in the Bible, as well as many similar passages in Psalms and the prophetic books, is telling us there is a sacred dignity to human suffering. It is a part of life, and a part of our relationship to God.

The children of Israel being carried into exile was part of the discipline of God. He had an agreement with them. He told them this would happen if they turned away from Him to other gods. He had to uphold His word and His justice, and yet He did not lose His compassion. Though many died, as a nation, He brought them through.

The writer of Hebrews says, “No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.” (Hebrews 12:11)

America is not Israel. We are not God’s chosen people. But the history of God and His dealings with the Jewish people is full of illustrations of how He deals with us as followers of Christ and as the body of Christ. We do not know why these things are happening. We are not in charge of what is happening in the world, but we are in charge of our response, as we humbly submit to God’s will, and to learning what our solitary cities are here to teach us.

Join me tomorrow as we continue this prophetic look into Lamentations.

JOIN US TONIGHT FOR OUR INTERNATIONAL BIBLE STUDY ON ZOOM

6:00 p.m. PDT CLICK HERE A FEW MINUTES EARLY TO JOIN

Posted in pandemic | Tagged , | 2 Comments

It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood

OIP-7

Have you noticed how your neighborhood is starting to look more and more like Mr. Rogers’? Are there more people out in your neighborhood? I generally hear more noise around my house. With people staying home, they’re finding things to do. Children are writing on the street with colored chalk. Two kids made a chain of small circles that they numbered down the street for about a half a block. When they got to around number 1,400, they stopped. A house behind us and one next door have ping pong tables up. I never heard that in 20 years. One neighbor has two college kids stuck at home. I see them often outside reading or doing schoolwork online. The whole dynamic of the neighborhood has changed. I thought it would get quieter, but the opposite has happened: it’s gotten noisier and busier. Not sure whether that’s the way it’s supposed to be, but that’s the way it is. You can only stay inside for so long, especially with the weather getting warmer every day.

Continue reading

Posted in community, pandemic, relationships | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

God stops oceans

OIP-5

I was recently standing in a restaurant take-out line for lunch. You know the scene, I’m sure. You’re standing there with a surgical mask firmly in place over your nose and mouth, and Xs on the sidewalk that show you where to stand six feet apart. Then someone comes out the door with their order and everybody takes a step or two away from them as they pass. I’m suddenly feeling like we’re all magnets at the same pole (the negative one, I’m sure), and we’re all pushing each other away. Anything under six feet, we feel the push. It’s a global push-back and it’s not good for humanity. We understand it’s for everyone’s safety, but so much of this new social behavior feels like distrust. “Don’t get too close; you might have it … I might have it, for that matter.” And today’s paper bears the headline, “Distancing urged through summer.”

Continue reading

Posted in church, community, pandemic, relationships | Tagged | 7 Comments

Doing something about racism

6891732793_52858a350c_c

Racism is continuing it’s ugly manifestation in our society in the form of escalating anti-Asian rhetoric and violence over the coronavirus pandemic. Claims that the virus appears to have originated in China have caused it to it be dubbed the “Chinese virus” by some of our leaders and media, legitimizing the anger and throwing fuel on a fire already burning. In the last two weeks of March, there were over a thousand incidents of racism against Asian-Americans in this country many of them violent, including stabbings, throwing acid on people or deliberately coughing in their faces. The official name for fear and loathing toward people with origins from another country is xenophobia, and it has no place in the company of those who love God and all those who are created in His image, not to mention that it doesn’t have a place in America, a nation of immigrants.

Continue reading

Posted in racism | Tagged , | 8 Comments

‘It’s not about you’

IMG_0134

Ready for the market.

As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received. Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Ephesians 4:1-2

“What does it mean to be humble, gentle, patient and bearing with one another in love?” I posed the question to our online Zoom International Bible study last night. The first answer wasn’t what I was expecting; it was better. Bob said it meant thinking about others first. He was basically saying, “It’s not about you.” That’s where humility comes from: thinking first about others.

Continue reading

Posted in body life, community, freedom, pandemic | Tagged , | 12 Comments

Missing the crowds

OIP-1

I’m so excited. Marti and I have tickets to see Hershey Felder perform Monsieur Chopin tomorrow night at the local theater. Felder is an incredible talent who has created a number of one-man shows where he dons the clothes, the accent and the character of a classical piano composer and spends an evening with his audience talking about his loves and losses in life, interspersed with brilliant renderings of his most famous works. We’ll be basically spending the evening with a very talkative Chopin at the piano. So far, we’ve gotten to know Mozart this way, as well as Beethoven, Brahms, and Claude Debussy. And coming up after Monsieur Chopin is the Russian composer, Sergei Rachmaninoff. I’m really looking forward to that one.

Continue reading

Posted in Baseball, body life, church, community, pandemic, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

When we go

OIP

These are truly strange times. On one level things seem pretty normal. We work out of the house anyway, so we’re still doing what we always do. Yesterday the neighbor’s gardener came and trimmed some of their trees. Gas stations still pump gas, repair garages are full of cars they are working on. Street sweepers sweep, street maintenance crews dig holes and pour concrete. People walk their dogs, kids play in the streets, skateboarders skate. Neighbors talk over the fence. An occasional fire engine roars by, siren blaring.

Continue reading

Posted in Facing death, pandemic, walk by faith | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

You are a hero of the faith

Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before Him He endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. 

Consider Him who endured such opposition from sinners, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart. Hebrews 12:1-3

OIP-8Today we’re going to all receive a kick in the butt from what is in my book, the most motivational passage in scripture. If this doesn’t get you going, nothing will.

It begins with being surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. Think a massive stadium full of people (no viruses in heaven), and you are one of the players on the field. The cloud of witnesses the writer is referring to is everyone mentioned in the previous chapter when he lists over 20 people by name who accomplished great things by faith — from Abel, to Moses, to Rahab, and right on through to the whole nation of Israel crossing the Red Sea and all those marching around Jericho to conquer the city when the walls fell down, to the early martyrs — all ordinary people flawed and timid and struggling like you and me, but used by God to build the kingdom — these are the guys who are right now cheering you on. You can’t see them; they are in another dimension; but they are there. If you had your spiritual eyes opened, you would see them.

Continue reading

Posted in discipleship, walk by faith | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Fifteen miles of answered prayer

IMG_3277

Our daughter, Anne (everyone calls her Anney) is an E.R. doctor in a hospital on the west end of Honolulu. This particular hospital serves a high percentage of poor indigenous Hawaiians. She often says she works in a third-world country. She’s a character, and often has us in stitches just telling us about an ordinary day. “Drama Queen” has been suggested, but that makes her sound like a dumb blond, and though she may be blond, she is certainly not dumb. She is highly respected by her colleagues and other doctors are continually coming to her for advice. She has a gift. Her diagnoses, without even testing, are always spot-on.

Continue reading

Posted in Tragedy | Tagged , , | 10 Comments