The Long Perspective


“Remember the days of old, Consider the years of all generations. Ask your father, and he will inform you, Your elders, and they will tell you.”
Deuteronomy 32:7

My neighbor just put up a six foot high fence on our south property line. Now I don’t have anymore the long distance sight line in that direction. Our new neighbors are friendly and are apparently going to be a fine addition to the cul-de-sac. I have had some evil (truly evil) neighbors in the past. But these are a welcome addition.

I am not much for fences. I do appreciate their right to install the view-blocking structure, and don’t begrudge them their desire for privacy or any other reason for the construction. They were considerate enough to position the pretty side in my direction. And I won’t let this harm our friendship, I can cope with it. Its just that I personally don’t enjoy my view of the environment to be limited to twenty or forty feet. Neither do I think our cats care for the obstruction. They too like to be able to see for long distances.

I like the long perspective on things, life, the world, the universe, existence. When we moved to this house on a barrier island outside of Savannah there was no fence there. I was even able to watch the space shuttle launch from Cape Canaveral which lies 300 miles due south. It was twilight and I could stand on my patio and see for a number of seconds the brilliance of the escape vehicle’s exhaust as its trajectory out over the Atlantic developed. So the ability to see for long distances has its rewards.

I was also blessed when a cousin sent to my Dad over ten years ago a huge amount of genealogy data that detailed my family tree. Even though it only went back to the mid 1700s it was an eye opening revelation. It struck me how important it is to understand from where we came, in order to better understand where we are heading. This sadly is a lesson seemingly almost lost these days. Families seem to seldom share on a regular basis details and stories of extended family members. The result is that we hardly know our uncles and aunts and cousins anymore. The show “Who Do You Think You Are” is a recent and popular attempt to reawaken the spirit of the long family viewpoint. But the concept has a long way to go to make inroads on American culture. I tried to get my Mom, the only parent I have left, to write down as much as she can remember of her childhood and growing up and her family. Because once Mom is gone, and she’s 86 now, all that information is as good as lost forever. I gently remind her of this, and that she was a journalism major in college, so it should be a fun exercise for her. But sadly I don’t think it will ever happen.

I don’t think the fence indicates that I an claustrophobic, but I recognize that being able to see over long distances has a calming and pleasant effect on my psyche. I am also one of the rare individuals who enjoys driving through the flat countryside of Ohio. Where most people are bored out of their minds by the interminably flat landscape I see the history of the country spread out before me, the traces of indigenous peoples who populated and thrived in these areas over the centuries. I hate driving at night because you can’t see anything around you – it’s like driving with a bag over your head. It is extremely unpleasant!

This all leads me to see how important it is to understand the beginning of God’s working with His creation. Without the perspective of our true beginning we become like a traveler without compass or reference points. We walk in circles, or at best having no true idea where we are going, or destination being random and not of our own choosing. The reference points of history, particularly as detailed in the Old Testament, are vital data points to assist in defining the road ahead that lies in our best interest. Sure there are detours that look interesting, but which really are only distractions influencing us to abandon the better road. And we all take these detours on occasion. Some never find their way back. Others are more fortunate – they return to the guidebook to reorient themselves to the goal.

This is what Moses tells God’s people over and over again. The road before you has more than enough to hold your interest and enjoyment. Don’t get sidetracked by the distractions that can only end up getting you so lost that you perish. Keep in mind from whence you came, and how you have made it this far, and don’t take your eyes of the promise of life.

class=”scripture”>for the gate is wide, and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter by it. For the gate is small, and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are those who find it. Matthew 7:13-14

These are the two options as Moses continually reminds his people before they conquer Canaan. Life or destruction. They are the same for us. Choose life!

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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An Israel Without God


“You shall therefore love the LORD your God, and always keep His charge, His statutes, His ordinances, and His commandments. Know this day that I am not speaking with your sons who have not known and who have not seen the discipline of the LORD your God–His greatness, His mighty hand and His outstretched arm, and His signs and His works which He did in the midst of Egypt to Pharaoh the king of Egypt and to all his land; and what He did to Egypt’s army, to its horses and its chariots, when He made the water of the Red Sea to engulf them while they were pursuing you, and the LORD completely destroyed them; and what He did to you in the wilderness until you came to this place; and what He did to Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, the son of Reuben, when the earth opened its mouth and swallowed them, their households, their tents, and every living thing that followed them, among all Israel– but your own eyes have seen all the great work of the LORD which He did.”
Deuteronomy 11:1-7

Even today these words would be a tremendous comfort for the Israel that to this moment continues to dwell in the Promised Land. But nowhere do I today hear or read statements from the state of Israel that live with or rely on the Lord, the God of their history; they seem to struggle in their existence solely by their own tenacious strength. The above quote is made by Moses as the new nation of Israel prepares to enter the land to conquer and possess. This pre-possession pep talk is replete with the promises of great things if they obey, and conversely the promises of dreadful curses if they fall away. And as we all know the new nation rose to tremendous heights in power and fame as their greatest kings, David and Solomon empowered them to realize their dreams as God’s people, but so quickly discarded their glory to wallow in the same filth that caused the original inhabitants of the land to be exterminated. God gave them everything they asked for, they tossed it all aside, they were wiped off the land as He promised, they were exiled for 70 years, they returned to the land as God promised, enjoyed another time of prosperity, and again threw it all away after rejecting another of God’s promises, the revelation of His Messiah, resulting again in the total annihilation of the nation and the Temple, this time by the Roman Empire.

Leap forward a couple thousand years, after the miracle of rebirth – so to speak – of the Jews returning to the land, a modern day conquest of Canaan after World War II, only this time without the Lord visibly and prominently at their head. Yes, most definitely, the Lord has not completely rejected His people. Yes, for certain, He still considers them a people of His choosing. To this very day, and into the future, the Lord will not abandon completely the people of Israel. But what do we make of this modern day Israel? They dwell in the land, but the Temple remains unbuilt, and indeed its property is possessed by their pagan cousins and enemies from Ishmael. There is no sacrificial service so how are the sins of the people and the nation atoned? The nation has gone to war with her neighbors early and often and continues to live daily under threats, torments and aggression on all sides. But where is her call to the God who brought them up from Egypt by His great and powerful arm? Where is this nation’s spiritual badge of freedom under the banner of the Lord her God, the God of her history? Why do we not hear her call upon her personal God who made her great as vividly recounted in her Scriptures?

The answer lies in the inescapable fact that, in spite of their wailing at the remaining wall of the old Temple, she still has abandoned her Lord and Savior, just as she has so often in the past. She still dwells apart from the only One who can protect her and comfort her and establish her in the glory she deserves as the chosen people of God. Her decision two-thousand years ago to crucify her King, her Savior, her continual refusal to this day to recognizes her only Redeemer, prevents her full restoration and the only resolution to the tension in the Middle East that will bring to the region the conflagration that is inevitable.

She is and always remains God’s chosen race, and must be viewed now and forever in this manner. And in this regard, that God has not abandoned His people, but will let His will be fully accomplished for her and the rest of His creation, all God’s people, the remnant called the Church, must love her, and wish her well, and do what can be done to protect her. This is what keeps her friend, the United States of America, from breaking its promises to her of aid and support. God has promised a blessing on all who support His people, (Gen. 12:3) so we stand with this current nation of Israel, in spite of that sad fact that she continues to live without her God and Savior. But we are encouraged and delighted that there are those Jews who come to know their Messiah, Jesus Christ, in the blessing of Joel chapter 2,

Thus you will know that I am in the midst of Israel, And that I am the LORD your God, And there is no other; And My people will never be put to shame. It will come about after this That I will pour out My Spirit on all mankind; And your sons and daughters will prophesy, Your old men will dream dreams, Your young men will see visions. Even on the male and female servants I will pour out My Spirit in those days. I will display wonders in the sky and on the earth, Blood, fire and columns of smoke. The sun will be turned into darkness And the moon into blood Before the great and awesome day of the LORD comes. And it will come about that whoever calls on the name of the LORD Will be delivered; For on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem There will be those who escape, As the LORD has said, Even among the survivors whom the LORD calls.

and those of us who have been grafted into the family of Abraham by the blood of the Lamb (Romans 11:17, 19, 23, 24) await alongside these “completed Jews” for the unfolding of the last days, however and whenever they arrive.

Even so come Lord Jesus!

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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A Glimpse of a New Eden


“Hear, O Israel! You are crossing over the Jordan today to go in to dispossess nations greater and mightier than you, great cities fortified to heaven, a people great and tall, the sons of the Anakim, whom you know and of whom you have heard it said, ‘Who can stand before the sons of Anak?’ Know therefore today that it is the LORD your God who is crossing over before you as a consuming fire. He will destroy them and He will subdue them before you, so that you may drive them out and destroy them quickly, just as the LORD has spoken to you.
Deuteronomy 9:1-3

Some of the most beautiful words God speaks to His people are found in Deuteronomy from chapter 7 through chapter 12. Moses prepares the people of Israel before crossing the Jordan into the Promised Land. And he prepares them by refreshing their memory of how God has rescued them from slavery in Egypt, displayed wonderful miracles in and out of that land, has guided them with lovingkindness in giving them food, water and protection, and preventing their clothes from wearing out these forty years. And this in spite of their stiff necked ways and disobedience and rebellion throughout the journey! But ever faithful He has brought them to the banks of the Jordan to fulfill His promises to them and their fathers.

The beauty that lies in these chapters is the great detail in which God expresses the blessings promised to them if only they follow all the words of His commandments. He basically promises them a second Eden, in that there will be no sickness, they will be fruitful, they will have plenty of food, their wives will not miscarry and neither will their cattle. Their enemies will flee from them on every side, they won’t have to build cities, and plant fields and vineyards. All those things will be there for the taking, there will be great riches that they won’t have to earn, just waiting for them. All they had to do is be obedient. Which is something they had great trouble with since they left Egypt.

With promises like these, and with a greatly detailed description of the curses that awaited them if they rebel, how indeed could they fail to enter the land and enjoy such abundant gifts and grace? They merely had to obey the Lord their God, whose awesome power and glory they witnessed and experienced on a daily basis for forty years. With such an example, how could they fail? Wouldn’t it be great for us today to hear in such an audible manner how God will lead us into this kind of grand, safe and secure paradise? It all seems a slam dunk as they assemble at the river listening to this pep-talk of Moses.

It should be mentioned that for all the glorious and uplifting talk of how overwhelmingly blessed God was going to make His people, it would first start with an equally awesome and phenomenal judgement on the existing nations currently dwelling in Canaan. And make no mistake, this repossession of the land not going to be pretty. God Himself was going to exterminate the current residents of the land. Israel was ordered to make no covenant with any of the inhabitants. The life of every man, woman and child was to be extinguished.

“When the LORD your God brings you into the land where you are entering to possess it, and clears away many nations before you, the Hittites and the Girgashites and the Amorites and the Canaanites and the Perizzites and the Hivites and the Jebusites, seven nations greater and stronger than you, and when the LORD your God delivers them before you and you defeat them, then you shall utterly destroy them. You shall make no covenant with them and show no favor to them.” “You shall consume all the peoples whom the LORD your God will deliver to you; your eye shall not pity them, nor shall you serve their gods, for that would be a snare to you.” Deuteronomy 7:1,2,16

“Know therefore today that it is the LORD your God who is crossing over before you as a consuming fire. He will destroy them and He will subdue them before you, so that you may drive them out and destroy them quickly, just as the LORD has spoken to you. Do not say in your heart when the LORD your God has driven them out before you, ‘Because of my righteousness the LORD has brought me in to possess this land,’ but it is because of the wickedness of these nations that the LORD is dispossessing them before you.” Deuteronomy 9:3,4

To prepare for the new life in Canaan the land was to be purged by blood. The existing peoples were to be exterminated because all the disgusting evil that they practiced had run its course and it was time for their judgement, and that judgement was to be severe, there was to be no quarter offered. Otherwise if people were allowed to remain the contamination of their society would infect Israel and the resulting disease would soon cost the life of God’s conquering people. (Deut. 7:4)

Without having the perspective of God’s point of view, without understanding just how awfully His creatures have profaned all His gifts, just how degraded the nations of the earth have desecrated themselves, we would cringe at the barbarity of these instructions. But it is easy to forget how just how awful rebellion against God truly is. Like Lot in dwelling in Sodom amidst the profanity of their society, living in, participating with, embracing a pagan world will numb our conscience to the holiness and righteousness of our great God. And how great is His love for us and His desire for our return to the fabulous fellowship He made possible through Christ. But being used to years of doing our own thing, focusing on our own lives, wants, needs, and desires, caring less for His way of looking at life and creation, we shrink in horror at the judgement that is inevitable of all that stands in His stead. That is until our eyes are truly opened to see from His eyes. Then it all makes sense. “For you are a holy people to the LORD your God; the LORD your God has chosen you to be a people for His own possession out of all the peoples who are on the face of the earth.” (Deut. 7:6) We need to open our eyes and see that He has chosen us, and live more in that grace and less in the world.

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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Conversation in Heaven

Please forgive the republishing of the following:

When the apostles went to Heaven, they discovered it not to be what they originally imagined. True, Heaven was a place of joy and perfect holiness, an ethereal pleasant place, the ultimate abode of all spiritual beings. But there were many things they never expected; for example, shortly after their arrival, they discovered that Heaven had a massive system of rivers, streams, and lakes. Also, they saw that Jesus knew how to swim. But the strangeness and bizarre reality of Heaven was what startled the apostles the most. At the bottom of every water route were the clouds and birds of the next heavenly level.

Perhaps the strangest of all was the library and its keeper, the angel Raziel. Luke rediscovered the eccentricity of this angel when he left his mansion and checked the mail. From there, he pulled out a letter signed by Raziel.

As you might know, the mystery-seekers on Earth (known in their language as scientists) continue to search for the elusive subatomic particle which they named the Higgs Boson or the ‘God particle.’ The Higgs Boson God particle is what gives mass to the numerous other particles and atoms invisible to human sight. The mystery-seekers search for this invisible microscopic speck of a microbe by using a tunnel that stretches for seventeen miles or twenty-seven kilometers from France to Switzerland. The scientists named the tunnel the Large Hadron Collider.
“To celebrate their search for the Higgs Boson God particle, the library of Heaven will have a God particle theme with decorations and events. All things have received the approval of He Whose godliness suffuses His very atoms. While the mystery-seekers quest for the origin of mass and matter, visitors to the library can observe their quest through viewing screens imported just for the occasion. The scientists titled the Higgs Boson the ‘God particle’ because in the beginning, the God particle enabled objects to have mass and weight, thereby leading to the origin of all creation.

“An explosive firework show will commence the God particle theme to celebrate the adamite atom that filled the universe at the Big Bang.

“In the beginning was the God particle.

“Which brought creation and existence out of nothingness.

“The last event will be a very special mass to honor the author of mass. I have the pleasure of announcing that He Whose godliness suffuses His very atoms will be present during the mass, so I hope the library will experience a massive attendance. I anticipate seeing everyone there.

– Raziel haMalakh”

Luke raised his gaze toward the sky and wondered what eccentricity filled the library for this occasion. Placing the invitation into one of his pockets, he decided to stroll through the glowing streets and came to a hill overlooking a sports field where some particularly fierce warrior angels enjoyed tackling their opponents. Safe from the activity, Peter lounged underneath a tree on the hill and watched the game.

Luke pulled out the letter. “Peter, have you received this invitation from Raziel about the most recent thing in the library? About what is called a ‘God particle’?”

Peter shrugged. From his disconcerted stare, he would rather not think about it.

“Well, at least, Raziel received Jesus’s approval for everything. Maybe it will not be as bizarre as we might suppose.”

“I tried asking Jesus about the particle and the library.”

Luke waited a moment for Peter to continue, but Peter was silent. “Yes, and?”

“And He laughed. Then, He laughed some more. Then, I think He wanted me to leave because He laughed even more.”

“Hm.”

Paul walked over to greet them and asked what they were discussing. When they answered about Raziel’s latest invitation, he replied, “What invitation?” Paul rarely checked his mail in Heaven.

Luke handed him the letter. “Raziel’s new God particle theme.”

“Oh, just as well that I no longer check my mail. I have no wish for that angel to disturb me again. Each new theme becomes more bizarre than the last. Poor Thomas has not returned to the library ever since Raziel hosted that X-ray party more than a century ago now.”

Luke sympathized with Thomas. “If Raziel had merely shown the pictures caused by the X-rays, then everything would have been fine. I thought those pictures interesting. No one needed to see what caused the pictures. Instead, he decided to have the rays floating everywhere and bumping into everyone.”

Paul added, “Every time the scientists discover some new well-organized process or law, Raziel redesigns the library with a heavenly analogy or satire such as that generalized theory of relativity.”

Peter placed his fingers gingerly on his forehead, already feeling headaches from the memory. Luke and Paul shuddered and winced. That particular theme was thoroughly weird even according to angel standards.

Luke offered his two friends some hope: “Jesus approved of the decorations and events, so maybe the theme will not be as strange as we fear.”

“Oh? What did He say about it?”

Peter exclaimed, “Nothing! He said nothing! He laughed and did not stop laughing.”

Paul frowned curiously and read the invitation. Then, he showed the picture on the invitation to Luke. The picture consisted of two scientists drinking champagne in front of a computer. “One of those machines – a television or a camera.”

“Yes.”

“So, the scientists need special technology to see something so microscopic that they need faith to acknowledge its existence – the scientists need special technology to watch something so microscopic travel through a twenty-seven kilometer tunnel?”

Luke looked at Peter. “That certainly sounds like God’s sense of humor.”

Paul resumed reading the invitation. “And the God particle is supposed to be what gives mass, and a mass will be given at the end…”

Luke wondered, “Do you think Jesus will deliver the library mass? He is God, after all. Fitting with the theme.”

Paul replied, “But Raziel organized everything. The angel could easily have selected Galileo. But, yes, very fitting with the theme to have Jesus conduct the library mass.”

“Maybe we should ask Jesus. I will definitely attend if He speaks there.”

Peter concluded, “Jesus will not answer if He laughs every time we mention it. I think we should speak with His Father about that laughter.”‘

—————-
Copied from a blog on the Christian Post, written by Kae Am, December 30, 2011, Story: Higgs Boson God Particle

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Raising Cain


Now the man had relations with his wife Eve, and she conceived and gave birth to Cain, and she said, “I have gotten a manchild with the help of the LORD.
Again, she gave birth to his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of flocks, but Cain was a tiller of the ground.
Genesis 4:1, 2

Not much is told about this First Family. Cain is Eve’s first child. Parents have such high hopes for their first born, and Cain turned out to be a major disappointment. We are left to our imagination to fill in the gaps of his upbringing, but we do know the kind of person he was.

Cain murdered his younger brother Abel. I’ve not thought much about why. The description in Genesis chapter 4 depicts two offerings to the Lord from their respective occupations. God accepted Abel’s, Cain’s is rejected. It might be perceived that the difference was in the offerings themselves. But a careful reading of the verses shows otherwise. I don’t necessarily mean when Cain got angry, though that is certainly telling. But in Cain’s response to God when asked his brother’s whereabouts we find a disturbing attitude.

God asked Cain where Abel was. And his reply “I do not know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” reveals all the disdain, disrespect and contempt that Cain held for God. If you were asked by the President of the United States where your brother was would you respond so rudely? In the old days of cast society as in olde England, if a servant was asked something of the lord of the manor he would address him as “your Lordship.” If a king asked his subject a question the reply would include “your majesty,” or there could be quite an unpleasant repercussion. But to reply to God when asked the location of Cain’s brother in a most uncivil, contemptuous manner such as “how should I know” belies the low level of Cain’s relationship to God. It seems a relationship that could not have been more strained.

We aren’t told just why Cain had come to this point in his walk with God. Was it in the genes, or family upbringing? Heredity or environment? Or was it the pressures of society? Surely after the Curse life was difficult at best. We can imagine that with such a disposition to be able to kill one’s own brother that Cain might not have been a cheerful presence around the house. But we aren’t told how he got to this state of grace. We are told that God tried to help Cain understand the danger he was in. “If you do well, will not your countenance be lifted up? And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door; and its desire is for you, but you must master it.” Cain chose to reject His advice and continue in his descent to disgrace. Even his response to God’s final judgement of banishment Cain was still wallowing in his self-centered ways, crying that his “punishment is too great to bear!” No remorse, no prayer for forgiveness, no appeal for restoration. And in his choice he accepts the worst that can happen. Complete isolation from God.

Why wouldn’t he let God help him? How he get to the point of such hatred for God I can’t comprehend. But its good to know God’s grace was still offered even in the face of this animosity, just as it has been continually offered from that time even to this day. And I’m glad that some are still finding it and are accepting it and that God never gives up on us.

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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