Interpreting the Current Season

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There are two frequent biblical images that apply to the church in America today: exile and plague.  While we are not in exile from our native land, we are experiencing a form of exile.  And while the coronavirus pales in comparison to the Black Death, it is still a sickness that has swept the globe causing death and panic.
 
Naming our situation with these biblical images helps us to analyze it and begins to show us how to live faithfully in the present day.  For the next few weeks, I want to explore several lessons of exile and plague.  But today, to set the stage, I want to offer a brief overview of these images:
 
Exile and plague are the result of unfaithfulness to God and his commandments.  When the people of God are idolatrous and ignore the will of God, plagues and exile follow.  God is not the author of evil—the Bible is explicit on this point—yet he does at times remove his protecting hand and allow the natural fruit of sin to afflict his people when they are persisting in it.  The natural fruit of sin is exile and death (plague is a subcategory of death).  We see this in the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the garden.  Afflicted with mortality, they are driven from their true home.  Deuteronomy and the prophets are full of warnings to this effect: reject God and his commandments, and plague and exile will follow.
 
Yet God never allows plague and exile for the sake of destroying his people.  These two natural results of sin are always allowed by God so that his people would repent.  Every plague that afflicts Israel is an invitation to repentance; every period of exile is an invitation to repentance.  God’s desire is the flourishing of his people, yet there are times when their disobedience and idolatry must be stopped before it destroys them forever.  God allows exile and plague to call them back to himself.
 
The experience of plague is self-explanatory, and the fact that I am applying it to our current situation likely self-evident.  But it is probably necessary to state why the biblical image of exile fits the situation we are in.  Simply, one of the marks of exile is the inability to worship God in the way and place that he himself commanded.  We hear this in the Psalm 137, which was quoted last week.  “By the waters of Babylon, there we sat down and wept, when we remembered Zion.  On the willows there we hung up our lyres…How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land?”  The people of God were banished from the temple of God and forbidden the sacrifices that God himself instituted.  We too have been shut out of churches and kept from the worship that God himself instituted—the sacraments!  Sabbath is also intertwined with exile, and also applies to us.  Judah refused to listen to God in this regard, and so he drove them from the land so that the land could have its Sabbath!  The seventy years of exile fulfilled all the Sabbath days that the people failed to keep.  They had worked when they should have rested because they did not trust God and desired material prosperity more than obedience.  We too live in a culture that prizes material prosperity above obedience and struggles to trust that God will provide.  The church has effectively disregarded God’s command to honor the Sabbath.  Thus we too have been forced into a type of Sabbath as our economy has ground to a halt.
 
Before I close, I must state the obvious—I am not a prophet.  I do not know without doubt that God has allowed this period for these particular reasons.  I cannot state without hesitation that this period is his judgment, or even his discipline.  I also must acknowledge that there are righteous people in churches across America who have faithfully followed God.  Yet we will not be harmed by hearing the lessons of exile and plague, and should always be willing to hear the call to repentance.  You might also wonder why I am speaking simply of the church, as secular America has rejected God and his will in a far greater way than the church has.  I am addressing the church because repentance must begin with the household of God.  We cannot call our nation to repentance if we refuse to let God’s word examine us.  We would be negligent and unfaithful if we refused to ask, “God, what do you want us to hear in this time?”
 
We will explore over the next few weeks what is supposed to come out of a period of exile and plague.  Particularly, we will explore repentance, worship, and Sabbath.  I hope and pray that the church in America emerges from this time with a greater willingness to follow God and a greater desire to participate in the redemption of our land.

Steven+

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Is It Still Lent?

“This is the Lentest Lent I’ve ever Lented.”
— —Anonymous, 2020
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This weekend, our Lenten anticipation overflowed into Easter celebration. Then, we woke up Monday morning in the same old quarantine. Many of us know people who are sick, and we’re told the worst is still to come. We miss each other. We miss gathering together to worship. If you feel stuck in some sort of Lenten Groundhog Day, you’re not alone. I want to leave you with two thoughts:

1)  The church calendar has room for this feeling. Since Christmas we have walked together through the life and death of Christ. Now we celebrate his Resurrection, and in a few weeks we will remember his Ascension. Then at Pentecost we will re-live together the Spirit’s coming to the church. Between Pentecost and Advent, the calendar brings us into the life of this Spirit-filled church—filled with the hope of the resurrected Christ, waiting for his second Advent and the final victory over sin and death. We have to wait with hope, because death and darkness—though defeated—are still here.

2)  This is not the first time God’s people have been barred from their places of worship. Exiled Israel felt this deeply: “How shall we sing the LORD’s song in a foreign land?” (Psalm 137:4). We are grateful that we can gather online, but we also grieve that we cannot wear our name tags, pass the Peace, and receive the bread and wine together. It’s good to miss those things! Grief and gratitude are not always enemies. We ought to cultivate them both, gratefully receiving what God gives as we long for this separation to end. 

Our last Easter Vigil reading was God’s promise to exiled Israel in Zephaniah 3:20: “At that time I will bring you in, at the time when I gather you together; for I will make you renowned and praised among all the peoples of the earth.” Take some time this week to meditate on Zeph. 3:14-20. Let yourself long to worship God with his people as you learn to rest in his presence and promises now. 

We will gather together again. We know this is true, because Christ has died, Christ is risen, and Christ will come again. Alleluia, alleluia!

I can’t wait to sing with you all.

-Justin

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Prayer

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The most obvious change in the church because of the global outbreak of coronavirus has been the explosion of internet-based services.  Christians are becoming experts at various software platforms, and churches are gathering online in never before seen numbers.  We are thankful for the ability to meet online, but for most of us, this is a “second-best” option.  After the crisis passes, people will return to their pews, and churches to some sort of normal.
 
Yet there has been another change in the church, one that I hope won’t disappear along with the fear of COVID-19.  I am referring to the other explosion in the church—the explosion of prayer.  Everywhere I look, I see churches meeting online specifically to pray for each other and their communities.  Incarnation is doing this, but so are many other churches.  The crisis of coronavirus has been the circumstance for an eruption of prayer, and this happened without any sort of coordination or planning.  Churches just started doing it and realized afterwards that others were doing the same.
 
There is, of course, the chance that the mere novelty of praying together online wears off, and people stop praying in the purposeful way that we have seen so far.  This is not just a possibility; indeed, it is likely that the new pattern of praying together several times a week will be dropped by many before it becomes a lasting habit, in the same way that resolutions to be more faithful in personal devotions only last a few weeks for most of us.  Like other churches, Incarnation is being given an opportunity to grow in our prayer life together, and I hope that these patterns get entrenched as habits before we tire of them.
 
In order to make this pattern a lasting habit, we need to think carefully about how often we should continue to pray together.  Most of us don’t have time to meet Sunday morning, Wednesday (or Friday) morning for Bible study, and Tuesday and Thursday night for Compline (not to mention small groups!) every week.  But with the right decisions and some wise thinking, the church can make it easier for these patterns to become habits. 
 
But strategic decisions by the church are not enough.  The people of God (i.e., you and me!) must personally make this new practice a lasting priority.  If we continue to pray together, even when we don’t feel like it, we will be participating in the growth of the kingdom of God.  Coronavirus has given the church a chance to remember its calling and grow in its willingness to participate in the mission of God.  The most basic way we do this is by continuing to pray together for the redemption of the world.
 
I have been praying for us all that we would step forward in our willingness to follow and pursue Jesus.  No amount of good planning can overcome our distraction and disinterest.  The church’s attention has been grabbed, and we are being called to find our rest in God alone and offer ourselves as living sacrifices.  If we, as a people, plunge forward into the heart of God—trusting in him, finding our delight in him, longing for his presence—we will see the glory of the One who loves us.  I hope for all of us that we would long for the presence of the Lord, follow him in all things, and find our delight in him.  Please join me in this prayer and this pursuit!

-Steven