Saturday, December 19, 2015

SEVEN MORE DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

BY STEVE DUNN





Reading: Luke 2.1-7

I walked into Walmart Saturday morning to be greeted by their Christmas Countdown sign which read; 7 MORE DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS.  They were wrong.  It was 6 days!  It was early in the morning but someone was not on the ball.  The shelves were filled--jammed, in fact, clearly having been refilled the night before.  Walmart was obviously hoping Christmas did not arrive too soon. They still had tons of merchandise to sell before Christmas Eve evening arrived and even Walmart would be closed. 

I suspect Mary and Joseph, making that compulsory journey to Bethlehem were also hoping that Christmas did not arrive too soon.  Having a baby on the back of a donkey on a rugged road, or nestled in a rock cropping next to that desert  road were not ideal either.

How many of us have such busy lives that one of our more frequent refrains is, "If I just had a alittle more time"?  How many of us are so disorganized that time slips away from us as we occupy it with running in circles instead of getting anywhere useful?

It is important always to remember that ultimately God is in control of Time--He is its Lord.  Time is a ;precious commodity, precious particularly because God gives us time for His purposes under Heaven not for our desires.  So important, in fact, that Paul reminds, "Redeem the time."(Ephesians 5.16-18)

Christmas will arrive now in six days--ready or not. Are you ready?

Christmas also reminds that there is a second arrival of the Christ,  A time when time will be  no more.  Are you ready for that time, as well?


© 2015 by Stephen L. Dunn.  You have permission to reprint this provided it is unchanged, proper authorship is cited, it is in a publication not for sale, and a link is provided to this site or to www.drstevedunn.com. For all other uses, contact Steve at sdunnpastor@gmail.com 
 




Thursday, December 10, 2015

A WELL FULL OF JOY

BY STEVE DUNN

Reading: Isaiah 12:2-6

     As I drove to work today I have used a seeing eye dog--or a seeing eye "something" to go in front of my Toyota.  The fog was so dense that I barely see 20 feet in front of me and 30 feet beyond me was a total mystery.  Even my memory of the road was not sufficient to give me confidence to drive above snail speed and I was fooled more than once, making me even more apprehensive.

     Fear and apprehension are good words to describe the world how we live in the world today. From Isis to food contamination to winter storms to identity theft hackers, it is very easy to live with the sense that disaster could destroy us in a heart beat.

    Arriving at the office, I began my quiet time and my devotional guide took me to Isaiah 12.2-6.

'God is my salvation;
    I will trust and not be afraid.
The Lord, the Lord himself, is my strength and my defense[a];
    he has become my salvation.”
With joy you will draw water
    from the wells of salvation.
In that day you will say:
“Give praise to the Lord, proclaim his name;
    make known among the nations what he has done,
    and proclaim that his name is exalted.
Sing to the Lord, for he has done glorious things;
    let this be known to all the world.
Shout aloud and sing for joy, people of Zion,
    for great is the Holy One of Israel among you.”

     The words that captured me today were in 3 and 4: “he has become my salvation. With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation.” It reminds of the lyrics to a contemporary song, “If grace is an ocean we’re all sinking.” People live with a sense of loss, a fear of having their resources diminished.  This brings depression and it is also brings selfishness—an inward focus instead of a Godward one.  If we truly understand what our salvation means and what it affords, should not our response instead be one of joy

     This Advent, when you begin to feel yourself sinking--turn again to Isaiah's source of strength.

Monday, December 7, 2015

UNLIKELY PLACES AND UNLIKELY PEOPLE

BY STEVE DUNN



"'But you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the rulers of Judah; for out of you will come a ruler who will shepherd my people Israel.'" - Micah 5.2

I was making a quick shopping trip after church. Dianne and I were working on our Christmas decorating and we needed some small items.  We slipped into Michael's, the craft store, to pick up what we needed.  We found what we needed quickly and then headed to the checkout line.  The clerk was not nondescript. She had a quasi Goth look, with some well-placed rings about her nose and mouth.  But her perkiness belied the often sullen approach that other Gothic folks take towards people who were dressed more suitably for a fine restaurant and old enough to be her grandparents.

"How are you today?" she asked, genuinely interested.  She laughingly engaged us in a friendly conversation that created some encouraging and pleasant exchanges. And then she concluded the conversation with some words that many big-time retailers have banished. "Have a merry Christmas."

I walked to the parking lot very much surprised and definitely uplifted.

Did you ever have such an experience? Something or someone that you might ordinarily overlook surprises you with a side of them that you normally would have looked for elsewhere? And that surprise was a blessing?

Bethlehem was just such a place in the political and social landscape of Judea but Micah prophesied it would b the birthplace of the Savior all humankind. 

In the economy of God, His greatest of work is done by the least of these.

Perhaps this Advent, instead of looking for the glitter, the glamour and the spectacular to celebrate this Good News, you need to turn your eyes towards unlikely people and places and see just what God will send.



(C) 2015 by Stephen L Dunn