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Re: Spring Cleaning! 

By: joe-taylor in FFFT | Recommend this post (1)
Sat, 09 Mar 13 4:27 PM | 57 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Food For Further Thought
Msg. 50693 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 50665 by joe-taylor)

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Bridle

"Do not be like a horse or a mule, without understanding, whose temper must be curbed with bit and bridle..." Psalm 32:9

There are times (usually in retrospect) when I long for somebody to stuff a bit in my mouth just to keep me from shooting it off in anger. Or for a bridle in a strong hand to slow me down so I don't run my dumb self off a cliff in a frenzy.

Once I rode through a Costa Rican jungle on the laziest, most sluggish horse ever. I'm no equestrian, so part of the issue was me. But everybody could see I had a problem horse. He went as slowly as he possibly could, stopping despite my protests to eat whatever he felt like and only starting up again after much persuasion. No matter where the rest of the group was headed, he would turn inexorably in the direction of his stall. Not once did he so much as trot for a couple of paces--until we were in sight of the barn, when he broke into a gallop and almost knocked me off as we passed through the gate.

At least as often as I'm angry or impulsive, I'm obdurate, plodding, just trying to follow the same well-worn path back to my trouth instead of doing the work I'm supposed to be doing.

Here's what the Psalmist knows: there's more than one kind of temper that needs curbing.

God, make me master of myself that I may rightly be the servant of others. Make me spirited, adventurous, entergetic--and under control. 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
Fri, 08 Mar 13 5:30 PM
Msg. 50665 of 65535

Transformation

"Now about eight days after these sayings Jesus took with him Peter and John and James, and went up on the mountain to pray. And while he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became dazzling white." Luke 9: 28-29

Moments of tranformation happen when and where we least expect them. I love the great hymn, "Dear Lord and Father of Mankind" because it is a plea for transformation, for a change of face, a change of clothing, for refreshment deeper than any makeover could ever produce. It is more like a makeunder than a makeover, asking for a drop rather than an accrual. "Drop thy still dews of quietness, till all our strivings cease, Take from our souls the strain and stress, and let our ordered lives confess the beauty of they peace."

The BBC declared this old hymn number 2 in popularity; it has also appeared in more than one movie and in at least one musical. It turned up in the Congressional hymnbook, rewritten by Garrett Holder in 1884. Charles Ives also borrowed it for work of his own. The hymn has many parents and many children, What intrigues me is that it was originally written by John Greenleaf Whittier, a Quaker poet, as part of a longer poem, "The Brewing of Soma." That poem was about intoxication, with an ancient drink known as Soma. The hymn has echoes of cocktail hour, of changing the chemistry, of a transformation that is more like intoxication with peace than wine or beer.

Transformation is a non-chemical, fully approved by AA, change in our chemistry. Before we turned white with bedazzlement, we were sober. Now we are high. Before the apartment looked like something that would only embarrass a designer, we were dowdy. Now we are transformed. We are ready for the photo shoot.

The disciples over and over expressed this kind of sea change in themselves after they met Jesus. Today, we seem to need comedy, booze, and decorators, designers--especially interior designers--to boost our understanding of what it might mean to be different. For starters, though, we can just hum that old hymn.

Dear God of humankind, forgive our foolish ways. And clothe us in our rightful minds. Amen.

Donna Schaper osw Senior Minister, Judson Memorial Church, New York, New York.


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