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About reveds

Occupation: Pastor, Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Lennox, SD Education: BS - Christian Education, Sterling College; MDiv. - Princeton Theological Seminary Family: Married, with Four children. Hobbies: Running (will someday run a marathon), Sci-Fi (especially Doctor Who and Sherlock), Theater, and anything else my kids will let me do.

The Second Coming

I’ve been doing a bit of reading this Advent Season, trying to preach advent messages from a fresh perspective.  I came upon this from C.S. Lewis I thought I’d share.

In King Lear (III:VII) there is a man who is such a minor character that Shakespeare has not given him even a name; he is merely “First Servant.”  All the characters around him – Regan, Cornwall, and Edmund – have fine long-term plans.  They think they know how the story is going to end, and they are quite wrong.  The servant has no such delusions.  He has no notion of how the play is going to go.  but he understands the present scene.  He sees an abomination (the blinding of Gloucester) taking place.  He will not stand it.  His sword is out and pointed at his master’s breast in a moment: then Regan stabs him dead from behind.  That is his whole part: eight lines all told.  But if it were real life and not a play, that is the part it would be best to have acted.

The doctrine of the Second Coming teaches us that we do not and cannot know when the world drama will end.  the curtain may be rung down at any moment: say, before you have finished reading this paragraph.  This seems to some people intolerably frustrating.  So many things would be interrupted.  Perhaps you were going to get married next month, perhaps you were going to get a raise next week: you may be on the verge of a great scientific discovery; you may be maturing great social and political reforms.  Surely no good and wise God would be so very unreasonable as to cut all this short?  Not now, of all moments.

But we think thus because we keep on assuming that we know the play.  We do not know the play.  We do not even know whether we are in Act I or Act V.  We do not know who are the major and the minor characters.  The Author knows.  The audience, if there is an audience (if angels and archangels and all the company of Heaven fill the pit and the stalls), may have an inkling.  But we, never seeing the play from outside, never meeting any characters except the tiny minority who are “on” in the same scenes as ourselves, wholly ignorant of the future and very imperfectly informed about the past, cannot tell at what moment the end ought to come.  That it will come when it ought, we may be sure; but we waste our time in guessing when that will be.  That it has a meaning we may be sure, but we cannot see it.  When it is over, we may be told.  We are led to expect that the Author will have something to say to each of us on the part that each of us has played.  The playing it well is what matters infinitely.

Thank you Mr. Lewis!  Let us watch and be ready.

Covered with Snow

Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;
wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. (Psalm 51:7)

Bear with me this morning; I am trying to find a silver lining to all this snow.  I used to dream of a white Christmas, whistling along with Bing on the radio; then I moved to Iowa.  After clearing the driveway twice yesterday, and knowing I’ll have to do it again today, I’m struggling to find my happy place when it comes to all this snow.

I do love to see the joy on my children’s faces when it snows (but I wonder if they are more excited about school being cancelled).  Getting everyone bundled up and out in the snow was a blast.  Watching them roll and dive in the snow transported me back to a carefree time when there were no worries in the world. 

Still, as I watched the snow fall last night, I was filled with a sense of peace and comfort that didn’t come from the sound of frolicking children.  Little by little the snow came down and covered everything around me.  The leaves that I never got out to rake this fall, the yellow pinstripe on the back of my car that I got while backing into the babysitter’s truck, the dirt and muck that was kicked up by the plow as it came down the street; all of it was covered by a clean white blanket of new fallen snow.

I then saw the snow in a new way: this is how God sees me in Jesus Christ.  I know this may come as a surprise to most of you, but I am not a perfect guy.  Far from it.  If the truth be known, there are days when I should be the one in the pews not the pulpit.  Even on my best days my righteous works of service and sacrifice are tainted by motives of self-promotion and vain-glory.  Like my yard around me, there are stains and dirt polluting my life, scars from my past offences, evidences of work left undone.  But God, in His grace and love, has covered me with the righteousness of Christ, so that all He sees when He looks at me is the perfection and purity of His Son.  The righteousness of Christ has covered me – it doesn’t change the fact that His Spirit will continue to work in me to produce the fruits of righteousness, cleansing and overcoming the effects of sin in my life.  Even still, as I stand before the throne of God, I am reckoned righteous because of Jesus my Savior.

O what confidence and joy I can have now to live my life in the grace of Jesus Christ.  I am covered by His righteousness.  I strive to live my life now in a way that will bring honor to His name, giving thanks for His love and righteousness which saves me.  But I also know that, though I will not reach perfection in this life, because of Jesus, I have been declared right with God. 

There’s a lot of snow out there, I’ll probably have a foot or two to clear this afternoon.  As heavy as the blanket of snow might be, it is nothing in comparison to the grace of God which covers us in the righteousness of Christ.  May this thought bring you true joy and peace!

Grace and peace,

SDG