Saturday, March 8, 2008

A Blog

I'm into marking up my Bible, so it is so hard for me not to underline just about every line that is printed in red--that is, the stuff that Jesus says. I was reading about when Jesus first met Matthew and says shortly after, "They that be whole need not a physician, but they who are sick." It stings but eases my mind, because I'm thinking about my recent revelation over this spring break that I really have some rottenness at my core. Sometimes my motives and deeds are all bad and perverse--and I haven't made moves, the right moves, to go about doing better. (Don't ask how said revelation came about.) So I just thought "Yeah, I am not whole. At. All."

My thinking at this point in my life is that when Jesus says "he who endures till the end will be saved" he doesn't expect us to get everything right or be flawless, which is what I keep thinking I will do and the facade I keep trying to put up. What I don't think about is if I did succeed in this, I wouldn't need God. (And even the disciples didn't endure everything, they fled as the guards came for Christ. Nor was it for them to endure that...) I need to get over myself. You, self, are not perfect, nor do people view you as such. Stop trying to paint a picture and be about doing, please! So what am I to do when I realize I'm rotten and got work to do? God is my strength and helps me after a fall. And all I can do after a fall is continue in the Way. But as I've said before, I forget and like to take the reins ('cause I don't need nobody, right?).

So, you know after He met Matthew, the text starts going over all the names of the prophets. Here enters Simon the Canaanite. Now, I know I've looked over this maybe hundreds of times. But today--I dunno, maybe with all the hype about immigration, how ethnicity is being dealt with in the presidential campaigns, black and Latino relations, Obama's Muslim heritage--it kinda struck home that Jesus had a Canaanite for a disciple, people whom the Israelites didn't look on favorably. There is just so much to do on our parts to really let down our prejudices; I have so many walls up, I'm walking into them without being aware sometimes. It will probably take a lifetime for me to get the stones out of my eye, before I even reach my brother's eye.

Sigh.

When I read over the gospels, I'm always wondering "What was Jesus talking about when he was having dinner with folks whom the Pharisees thought he shouldn't be eating?" Even though I try hard not to, to some extent I get locked into these ideas of what it is to act in a godly manner, when there is so much expanding I need to do in my own actions ("I desire mercy").

Anyway, I just thought it all interesting. It's good to take a break from what I'm hearing in a sermon and just read and absorb. I mean, we should all prove things for ourselves (and I didn't say that; got it from the Bible). John the Baptist sent his disciples to Christ to ask him if he was "the one who should come or do we look for another." Even John the Baptist needed proof. Nothing wrong with searching out a thing for yourself.

1 comment:

Sutherngurl said...

congrats on taking your last final! what are your summer school plans? I'm thinking of dropping in on you for a visit this summer if that's agreeable to you. call me.