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Re: Spring Cleaning! 

By: joe-taylor in FFFT | Recommend this post (1)
Mon, 18 Feb 13 3:17 PM | 41 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Food For Further Thought
Msg. 50284 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 50269 by joe-taylor)

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Leader


"And David said to God, 'Was it not I who gave the command to count the people? It is I who have sinned and done very wickedly. But these sheep, what have they done? Let your hand, I pray, O Lord my God, be against me and against my father"s house; but do not let your people be plagued!'" 1 Chronicles 21:17


David's really swcrewed up. He's ordered a census of the people, and it's made God mad. God sent a pestilence on the people that killed 70,000 of them. An angel was dispatched to destroy Jerusalem itself. Now, finally, it occured to David that the fault may be with him and that he ought to own it. He asks for mercy for his people. He takes responsibility. God will later tell David how to atone for what he's done, and David will do it. The place where he does it will become the site of the Jerusalem Temple, still one of the holiest pieces of ground in the world.

Today is President's Day, when we remember and honor the best in American leadership. Certainly American presidents, like Israelite kings, make decisions that have major impacts on their citizens. Sometimes one of those decisions or a series of them, leads to widespread suffering for the people. And I cannot help but wonder: how many American leaders have apologized for the mistakes that have cause others to suffer?

Or never mind presidents. How many leaders in general do that? How often have you done that? The Bible says that even the best leaders screw up, sometimes royally. But an apology, and atonement, a seeking to make it right? That can create holiness right in the midst of the worst the world can dish out.


Lord, if I have been the cause of anyone's suffering, show it to me. And make me strong enough to apologize, then set it right. Amen


Quinn G. Caldwell is Pastor and Teacher at Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC, in Syracuse, New York.


To say that "God exists" is the greatest understatement ever made across space and time.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: Spring Cleaning!
By: joe-taylor
in FFFT
Sun, 17 Feb 13 4:00 PM
Msg. 50269 of 65535

A Tithe of Time


"You shall take some of the first of all the fruit from the ground, which you harvest for the land that the Lord your God is giving you, and you shall put it in a basket and go to the place that the Lord your God will choose as a dwelling for his name." Deuteronomy 26: 2


"In many cultures," writes author Frederick Beuchner, "there is an ancient custom of giving a tenth of each year's income to some holy use. For Christians, to observe the forty days of Lent is to do the same thing with roughly a tenth of each years days.

Just as the writer of Deuteronomy told the people to offer God the first fruits of their harvest, Lent asks us to set aside the first fruits of our time. Deuteronomy also reminds us what to do with that time--namely, to remember. When the Israelites set their baskets before the priest, they also proclaimed how God had cared for their ancestors, heard their cries, fed them in the wilderness, and brought them into freedom. Then together with the Levite and alien, they were to "enjoy all the bounty the Lord your God has given to you and your house."

"Enjoying all the bounty" doesn't fit our usual image of Lent's sackcloth and ashes nor Jesus 40 days of fasting in the wilderness. But in his own "tithe of time," Jesus discovered that the one who had cared for his ancestors in their wilderness would be with him in his.

Tithe your time this Lent to remember how that same One has also been with you. Perhaps like Jesus and his ancestors, you'll discover the true bounty of your own life, even in the wilderness times.


Thank you, God, for Lent's "tithe of time." Help me to take time these forty days to know your bountiful love in my life and for this world. Amen.


Talitha Arnold is Senior Minister of the United Church of Santa Fe (UCC), Santa Fe, New Mexico.


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