Thursday, June 24, 2010

Sermon - 1 Kings 19:8-18 - What are you doing here Elijah?

Rev. Jeffrey T. Howard
Beaver Dam and Pitts Creek Churches
Sermon - 1 Kings 19:8-18 - What are you doing here Elijah?
June 20, 2010

Listen to this sermon.

Today I will be continuing with a series of sermons on the prophet Elijah. Elijah was the prophet of God at a very dangerous time for God’s people. The Omri dynasty in Israel was busy nationalizing farms for money and power, and converting the nation to worship the Phoenician weather god, Baal. Two weeks ago we saw the beginning of a three year draught which demonstrated the powerlessness of Baal and the great love and compassion of our God. Last week we saw how God was determined to stop the hoarding of grain and money by the government so that his people could be fed. Today we will look at the end of the draught and God’s decree on the Omri dynasty. But before we get to one of the most dramatic stories is all of scripture please pray with me.

“Grant unto us, O Lord, to be occupied in the mysteries of thy heavenly wisdom, with true progress in piety, to thy glory and our own edification. Amen.” (John Calvin)

The draught had reached its three year mark and showed no sign of letting up. Time and again the prophets would climb to the high places and ask Baal to open the windows of heaven and let the rain fall. But no rain came. As the draught deepened water became scarce and the crops dried up and died.

So, Elijah proposed a contest to end the draught. He and the prophets of Baal would both go to the high place of Baal worship on Mount Carmel. The prophets of Baal would pray that Baal would send the rain. Elijah would pray to his God Yahweh to end the draught. Whichever God sent the rain would be the God of Israel. Two great fires were laid out. The prophet of Baal danced around their pile of wood imploring Baal to ignite their fire with lightening, a fairly easy task for the so called weather God. Nothing happened. Baal seemed to be absent, or maybe he never existed at all.

Elijah soaked his wood with water and prayed that Yahweh, the Lord God of Israel, would set it on fire. And the fire exploded in seconds and the draught came to an end. With absolute proof that Yahweh is God, Elijah, in triumph, had the prophets of Baal slaughtered by the sword. And this got Queen Jezebel angry. She sent a message to Elijah telling him that he was next to die. So in fear Elijah fled south through Judah into the Negev Dessert. And there Elijah, afraid and alone, was ready to die.

We have all experienced times when we feel all alone. We wonder where God is. And when God seems distant we become afraid. I have often wondered where God is. Last year was a difficult one for me. I knew that my contract at my church would not be renewed for a variety of reasons. After three years in seminary and two years on a pastor’s salary in expensive Southern California my savings were nearly exhausted. But as I neared the end of my pastorate in November I was confident that God would call me to a new church. I had applications at churches all over the country. But church after church told me that a few families in their congregations had lost their jobs in the bad economy and they could no longer afford to hire a new pastor. With 20% unemployment in California I was concerned that I wouldn’t be able to find other work. And the work that was available did not pay enough to compensate for the high cost of living in Los Angeles. I was facing the same problems as many people in my congregation. As Christmas approached I still had not found a call, and I began to wonder where God was. I should have read about Elijah in the book of Kings.

1 Kings 19:8-18 8 So he got up and ate and drank. Strengthened by that food, he traveled forty days and forty nights until he reached Horeb, the mountain of God. 9 There he went into a cave and spent the night. And the word of the LORD came to him: "What are you doing here, Elijah?" 10 He replied, "I have been very zealous for the LORD God Almighty. The Israelites have rejected your covenant, broken down your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword. I am the only one left, and now they are trying to kill me too."

11 The LORD said, "Go out and stand on the mountain in the presence of the LORD, for the LORD is about to pass by." Then a great and powerful wind tore the mountains apart and shattered the rocks before the LORD, but the LORD was not in the wind. After the wind there was an earthquake, but the LORD was not in the earthquake. 12 After the earthquake came a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire. And after the fire came a gentle whisper. 13 When Elijah heard it, he pulled his cloak over his face and went out and stood at the mouth of the cave.

Then a voice said to him, "What are you doing here, Elijah?" 14 He replied, "I have been very zealous for the LORD God Almighty. The Israelites have rejected your covenant, broken down your altars, and put your prophets to death with the sword. I am the only one left, and now they are trying to kill me too." 15 The LORD said to him, "Go back the way you came,

Elijah knew that he had to find God somewhere or die. So he retraced the steps of his ancestors, the Israelites, and returned to Horeb, the mountain of God where Moses had received the Law, the covenant with God. Elijah climbed the mountain, as Moses did, to find God. Elijah experienced the wind racing across the face of the mountain and thought that God might be that wind, but then realized that his God had created the wind. So the wind was not God. Then the earth shook and Elijah thought the God might be the earth, Mother Nature, but the he remembered that his God had created the earth. So the earth was not God. Then he saw fire and molten rock billowing up from the volcano and through that God must be fire, but recalled that God created fire. So the fire could not be God. And then Elijah remembered that God can only be found in the silence of prayer.

Whenever we feel that God is far away, missing, lost, unresponsive, inept or awol all we have to do to find God is to turn to God in prayer. Asking the question “Where is God” is nonsensical. God is always with us. And God always knows where we are. God is always asking the question “What are you doing here?”

This is the question God asked Elijah. God didn’t want Elijah sitting some mountain top complaining about his lot life. Elijah had work to do. Ahab and Jezebel had to be removed as king and queen. The Omri dynasty had to be brought to an end. Worship of Yahweh, the Lord God had to be restored to Israel. It was time for Elijah to get to work.

And so whenever God seems far away and we turn to God in prayer, God reminds us of our call and renews us for ministry. So don’t be surprised when searching for God that God will find you and give you a task that you never expected. While I was searching for God I received a call from Pocomoke to be a pastor of two churches on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. This was not what I expected. I had married a Korean wife, and I expected that God would send us somewhere with a large Korean population. I knew about the Eastern Shore from summers in Ocean City and Bethany Beach. So, just as I was beginning to wonder if God wanted me to be a pastor after all, I received a call from you. Your pastor nominating committee wanted me to come to the eastern shore to preach. And you called me to be your pastor. God was working through you to affirm my call and renew me to begin a new ministry right here in Pocomoke.

Elijah’s call was dramatic. Elijah was told by God to anoint Elisha to continue his ministry as prophet. A new king was to be anointed in Syria who would defeat Ahab in a battle where which would lead to his death. And Elijah was to anoint Jehu to begin a new dynasty in Israel that would return the county to the worship of Yahweh..

So whenever we feel that God is missing and we turn to God in prayer, be prepared for a call to an amazing new ministry. God has big things she wants each of you to accomplish. But you will only find what God has for you when you think God is missing and you turn to God in prayer.

On this Father’s day we should remember that we can always find God in Jesus Christ, the Son of God. One day Jesus of Nazareth was searching for God and he climbed a mountain to be with Moses and Elijah and pray. This Jesus taught us that we who believe in him are truly children of God and entitle to pray to God and our father.

Father in heaven; bless all of the fathers of this congregation. Help then to find you in prayer. And be with them as they lead their families to worship you. We pray this in the glorious name of Jesus. Amen.


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Sermon – 1 Kings 21:14-21 – Abuse of Power

Rev. Jeffrey T. Howard
Sermon – 1 Kings 21:14-21 – Abuse of Power
Beaver Dam and Pitts Creek Presbyterian Churches
June 13, 2010

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Good morning. Today I am preaching my second in a series of sermons drawn from Kings, books one and two. These books were once united, but had to be split to accommodate the ancient skill of scroll making. One scroll could not hold the entire book so it was divided into two scrolls, part a and part b. And so we have the books of First and Second Kings. In First Kings we have already seen a cataclysmic struggle taking place between Ahab the King of Israel and Elijah the Prophet of God. This struggle represented a larger cosmic struggle between Yahweh, the God of Israel and Baal, the Phoenician weather god. Last week we saw Yahweh closing the windows of heaven to keep the rain out causing a three year draught proving that Baal was either powerless or nonexistent. Today we will look at the socio-political struggle and the economic ramifications in Israel which were the direct result of the idolatry that Ahab and Jezebel had introduced into the country. But before we get to all of this please pray with me.

“Grant unto us, O Lord, to be occupied in the mysteries of thy heavenly wisdom, with true progress in piety, to thy glory and our own edification. Amen.” (John Calvin)

1 Kings 21:14-21 14 Then they sent word to Jezebel: "Naboth has been stoned and is dead." 15 As soon as Jezebel heard that Naboth had been stoned to death, she said to Ahab, "Get up and take possession of the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite that he refused to sell you. He is no longer alive, but dead." 16 When Ahab heard that Naboth was dead, he got up and went down to take possession of Naboth's vineyard. 17 Then the word of the LORD came to Elijah the Tishbite: 18 "Go down to meet Ahab king of Israel, who rules in Samaria. He is now in Naboth's vineyard, where he has gone to take possession of it. 19 Say to him, 'This is what the LORD says: Have you not murdered a man and seized his property?' Then say to him, 'This is what the LORD says: In the place where dogs licked up Naboth's blood, dogs will lick up your blood-- yes, yours!'" 20 Ahab said to Elijah, "So you have found me, my enemy!" "I have found you," he answered, "because you have sold yourself to do evil in the eyes of the LORD. 21 'I am going to bring disaster on you.

There is a story from Greek antiquity about a King named Midas. Midas wanted power, absolute power. So he wished that everything he touched would turn to gold. His wish came true. But when he tried to drink some water it turned to gold as it touched his lips. Food turned to gold when he tried to eat. And when he tried to embrace his own daughter, she too turned to gold. As the old saying goes, “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” King Midas teaches us that life is not about hoarding things and amassing great wealth. There must be some other purpose to life.

Ahab may have been the King of Israel but he had completely turned away from the God of Israel. He may have thought that he is now worshiping his wife’s god, Baal, but in reality he was worshiping power. And the power he worshiped was corrupting him. He wanted to hoard more and more things and amass greater and greater wealth.

As a powerful person Ahab usually got what he wanted, and he wanted Naboth’s vineyard. At first he tried to buy the vineyard from Naboth, but Naboth refused. Ahab wanted the field to “grow vegetables”. He was not planning to grow corn or potatoes. The term “vegetable garden” in the Old Testament refers to a farm being used to supply the military with food and grow grain for the King’s storehouses. Ahab wanted the field to enhance his own power and wealth. With it he could feed a larger army and have grain to trade internationally.

Naboth was not about to give up the land with out a fight. He and his family had been given the land by Yahweh, the God of Israel. It was to stay in their possession forever provided that the cared for the poor, the needy, the widows, the orphans and the aliens in Israel. This was the covenant between God and the farmers of Israel. And Naboth was not going to break his covenant with God. So he told Ahab, “no deal”. Ahab was so overwhelmed by his lust for power that after Naboth’s rejection he was overcome by depression and went to bed refusing to eat.

Jezebel, Ahab’s wife, decided to act on her own while he sulked in bed. She, like her husband, coveted their neighbor’s land. She sent letters pretending to be the king, and got others to bear false witness against Naboth. And she had Naboth murdered. Obviously the Ten Commandments didn’t slow her down any.

This is just one story representing many more as the descendants of King Omri attempted to nationalize the farms of Israel. Before Omri the land was considered as being owned by God. God allowed families to farm the land provided that they generously shared the food grown with the poorest in the community. The farmers were not to harvest all the way to the edge of the field. They were not to pickup what fell off their wagons. That way the poor could glean the fields and get enough food to survive. But with the king’s desire for power there was no longer any concern for the poor. Any excess went into his storehouses and poor went hungry. As more and more land was nationalized to satisfy the desire for power of the king, less and less was available for the poor to glean. The poor were hungry. God had to act to stop Ahab and save his people so he sent Elijah to speak with the king.

As the crisis in the Gulf of Mexico grows, similar issues of land-use, hoarding and amassing great wealth face us today. The United States government is holding BP liable for not only the environmental effects but also the economic impact of the spill. There have been calls for the government to seize the assets of BP. And as the stock price of BP declines the investments of many British pensioners are being affected. Obviously there are no winners in the oil spill off the coast. In all of this we should remember that the Gulf of Mexico, like Naboth’s vineyard, was given to us by God for our benefit. God wants us to have the Gulf fish, shrimp and oysters to eat. God wants us to have the oil to heat our homes in the winter. And God wants to make certain that part of what comes out of the Gulf is used to benefit the poor and needy in our land. But God will oppose any use of the Gulf that is based on greed and hoarding. This purpose of drilling for oil is to heat our homes and power our cars, not to amass wealth for BP or excessive taxes for the government. The crises in the Gulf may be God’s corrective action to bring the uses of the Gulf into agreement with God’s will.

All of this teaches us that, like Naboth, God has given us jobs and businesses and farms not to be used to satisfy our lust for money and power, but to care for the poor and needy of our land. We are not to hoard things and amass great wealth. God gives us what we need and expects us to help others in need.

Where do we stand in all of this? Do we passively stand by watching as governments and corporations follow Jezebel in hoarding resources and amassing great wealth? Or do we stand with the poor of the world and insist that their needs be met? These are question we all face. Following God is never easy, but unlike hoarding and amassing wealth it is our path to happiness. The psalmist puts it this way,

Psalm 52:7-8 7 "See the one who would not take refuge in God, but trusted in abundant riches, and sought refuge in wealth!” 8 But I am like a green olive tree in the house of God. I trust in the steadfast love of God forever and ever.

So we receive love and blessings from God and we are called not to hoard our blessings and amass great wealth. Rather we are to share our blessings with those in need and the promise of scripture is that God will bless us with more than we could ever imagine.

Let us pray. Father in heaven we are grateful for all you have given us. Help us to be satisfied with what we have. Help us to generously share what we have been given. And help us to not covet what our neighbor has. We pray this in the name of your son who gave his very life for us. Amen.

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Sermon – 1 Kings 17:17-24 – A Man of God

Rev. Jeffrey T. Howard
Sermon – 1 Kings 17:17-24 – A Man of God
Pitts Creek and Beaver Dam Presbyterian Churches
June 6, 2010

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Good morning and welcome to Beaver Dam church on this Communion Sunday. Today we turn our attention to the Old Testament and one of its most important figures. We will be looking at the prophet Elijah, a man of God. When Elijah saw God’s people being led astray he risked his own life to bring them back to God. All along he was confident of God’s love and faithfulness. But before we look at one of the most touching stories of God’s faithfulness in all of scripture, please pray with me.

“Grant unto us, O Lord, to be occupied in the mysteries of thy heavenly wisdom, with true progress in piety, to thy glory and our own edification. Amen.” (John Calvin)

1 Kings 17:17-24 17 Some time later the son of the woman who owned the house became ill. He grew worse and worse, and finally stopped breathing. 18 She said to Elijah, "What do you have against me, man of God? Did you come to remind me of my sin and kill my son?" 19 "Give me your son," Elijah replied. He took him from her arms, carried him to the upper room where he was staying, and laid him on his bed. 20 Then he cried out to the LORD, "O LORD my God, have you brought tragedy also upon this widow I am staying with, by causing her son to die?" 21 Then he stretched himself out on the boy three times and cried to the LORD, "O LORD my God, let this boy's life return to him!" 22 The LORD heard Elijah's cry, and the boy's life returned to him, and he lived. 23 Elijah picked up the child and carried him down from the room into the house. He gave him to his mother and said, "Look, your son is alive!" 24 Then the woman said to Elijah, "Now I know that you are a man of God and that the word of the LORD from your mouth is the truth."

In the tenth century before Christ the people of God wanted a king because they were afraid. They were afraid of the Philistines who had begun settling on the coast and brought with them terrifying new weapon made from iron. The bronze weapons of the Israelites were no longer adequate. So they wanted a standing army with modern weapons made from iron and a king to lead them. There was no real need for this because God had protected them for hundreds of years. Wanting a king and a modern army was a sign of their unfaithfulness. God’s people were unwilling to trust God. So they anointed a king and then their troubles started.

A hundred years later a king came to the throne in Israel. He was a violent army general named Omri. He nationalized the farms and built storehouses for the grain which he used to build up his army and his new capital city called Samaria. He negotiated peace treaties with the surrounding nations and arranged for the marriage of his son with the daughter of a Phoenician priest. This son, Ahab, became king and his wife Jezebel convinced him to covert to and lead his nation to the god Baal.

Baalmarqart was the Phoenician weather God. If your fields were to wet to plant potatoes you would climb a local hill and pray to Baal to close the windows of heaven and keep the water out. Of if your fields were baking in the summer sun you would return to the hill and ask Baal to open the windows and let the rain fall.

Yahweh, the Lord God of Israel, did not want his people to worship Baal because Baal was a false God, he did not really exist. So Yahweh sent the profit Elijah to speak with King Ahab. And this must have really annoyed Ahab because Elijah’s name literally means “Yahweh is God”.

So Elijah, Yahweh is God, appeared before Ahab an announced a test. Yahweh was going to close the windows of heaven and lock them for three years and Baal couldn’t do anything about it. Elijah, confident that the promised drought would occur fled to the wilderness where God provided him with food and water. Ahab went back to his lavish lifestyle confident that his storehouses of grain and his cisterns filled with water would satisfy his needs no matter what happened.

This contest between God and Baal affected more that just Ahab and Elijah. As the drought deepened people became hungry and thirsty. Their health began to deteriorate. Some died. As you heard earlier a woman raising a young son lost her husband, and then watched as the limited amount of grain and olive oil in her panty began to run out. And she realized that it was just a matter of time until she and her son would also die. This woman had been betrayed by her god. She was a worshiper of Baal, and Baal did not send the rain as promised.

Elijah came to her home and asked for something to eat. He told her that Yahweh, his God, would provide enough grain and enough oil to sustain all of them until the drought ended. Elijah asked the widow to believe this, to have faith in his God. She did believe and was blessed by God with sufficient food.

But her faith was fragile. When her son died she feared that her unfaithfulness to Baal might have been the cause. But Elijah, using the power of God brought her son back to life. This miracle sealed the deal, and the Phoenician follower of Baal, from Jezebel’s home town, became a believer in Yahweh, the Lord, God of Israel.

This is a story of faith, not just belief in God, but trusting that God will love and care for us no matter what happens. So if you find yourself in the hospital after a stroke or after surgery on your back, your knee or your stomach remember that God loves you and is with you always. We can have faith in a faithful God.

Psalm 146 puts it this way, “Do not put your trust in princes, in mortal men, who cannot save. When their spirit departs, they return to the ground; on that very day their plans come to nothing. Blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in Yahweh his God, the Maker of heaven and earth, the sea, and everything in them—the LORD, who remains faithful forever.”

Thomas A. Dorsey, “Georgia Tom” as he was called was the son of a revivalist preacher. Tom played the piano and went on to study jazz. For forty years he was the music director for Pilgrim Baptist Church in Chicago and served as the President of the National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses. In 1932 Tom’s wife died and Tom’s placed all of his faith in his faithful God. And God blessed him with a hymn which has become the most successful gospel song ever written and the theme song for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement. We sang it earlier, and listen again as it talks about faith in a faithful God.

1. Precious Lord, take my hand,
Lead me on, help me stand;
I am tired, I am weak, I am worn;
Through the storm, through the night,
Lead me on to the light;
Take my hand, precious Lord, lead me home.

2. When my way grows drear,
Precious Lord, linger near;
When my life is almost gone,
Hear my cry, hear my call,
Hold my hand lest I fall;
Take my hand, precious Lord, lead me home.

We are gathering around this table this morning to remember the great faithfulness of God. No matter what happens God is faithful and will be there with us. If we have no money, no food, nowhere to turn God is there. If we loose our health or a loved on dies God is there. God is always faithful to those who believe. We trust that God is with us and loves us no matter what happens. So we return again and again to feed on this spiritual food that will never run out and will always satisfy our hunger and quench our thirst for God and lead us to resurrection and eternal life.

Over the next few weeks we will continue our look at the contest between Yahweh and Baal
and the conflict between King Ahab and Elijah. The final destruction of faith in Baal is still in the future, but already God has proven his faithfulness, love and compassion.

Lord, God of Heaven, we thank you for being our rock upon which we stand. We thank you for your steadfast love for us. We trust that you will be there whenever we need you. Amen.

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Sermon – Proverbs - 8:1-4, 22-31 – Wisdom Speaks

Rev. Jeffrey T. Howard
Sermon – Proverbs - 8:1-4, 22-31 – Wisdom Speaks
Beaver Dam and Pitts Creek Presbyterian Churches
May 30, 2010

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Good morning and welcome to Beaver Dam Presbyterian Church. This is Trinity Sunday, the day each year when we remember that we worship one God in three persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Our belief in the trinity is what distinguishes us as Christians. The great theologian Augustine once was wondering how to explain this concept of the trinity. A story goes this way: he was walking along the beach one day and saw a boy running back and forth into the ocean putting water in a hole that he had dug in the sand. Augustine has him what he was doing. The boy said that he was trying to put the ocean into the hole. Then Augustine realized that he was trying to put an infinite God into his finite mind whenever he tried to think about the Trinity. Let us pray.

“Grant unto us, O Lord, to be occupied in the mysteries of thy heavenly wisdom, with true progress in piety, to thy glory and our own edification. Amen.” (John Calvin)

This past week Grace returned from a conference in Chicago. I picked her up at BWI Airport and we had dinner in Annapolis. It has probably been ten years since I was last in Annapolis. It is a beautiful city. While we were there we saw the midshipmen in their sparkling white uniforms for the Naval Academy’s graduation ceremonies. It prompted me to think about my own time in college.

Over thirty years ago now I left home and went to Dickinson College in Carlisle PA. Since I was good at math and science I figured that I would be a physics major. While studying Physics I realized that I was asking bigger questions than science could answer. I was learning how things worked but I wanted to know why thing worked as they did. This led me into the philosophy department where I began taking classes in the philosophy of science, philosophy of religion and ethics. There I learned that we understand our world through something called wisdom. The only way I could find answers to my questions about why things are was by first acquiring wisdom. I learned that a philosopher is literally a “lover of wisdom”. So I decided to study philosophy to find the wisdom I was looking for.

I studied the great philosophers, Plato Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, and many others. And I found a consensus that wisdom could be found in the human mind. Our ability to think, to reason, is what allows us to make sense of the world around us. We construct in our minds the framework we need to understand the world we live in. This is called wisdom. Wisdom as an activity of the human mind is something most of us take for granted today. We assume that we are wise enough to govern ourselves, to grow food, teach children, and to do all the things necessary for a functioning society. And we believe that this wisdom comes from inside us, from our ability to think.

But increasingly we see the limitations of human wisdom. We thought that we were wise enough to safely drill for oil in the Gulf. We thought that we were wise enough to prevent credit bubbles and recessions. But time and again human wisdom falls short.

I once heard a story once about a bank president who was retiring. He and his successor met one day for lunch. The new guy said, “Sir, I have been watching you for years as this bank has grown. I hope to follow in your footsteps. Can you give me some advice? What are the keys to your success?

The retiring president simply said, “Make wise decisions.”
His replacement replied, “How do I make wise decisions.”
The president said, “In one word, ‘experience’”
“And how do you get experience?”
The president said, “In two words, make unwise decisions.”
And so the limitation of human wisdom: we become wise by making unwise mistakes.

The problem is that wisdom is not the product of the human mind. Rather, wisdom is a creation of God that God then used in the creation and ordering of the world. The Book of Proverbs puts it this way.

Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31 (my translation):
Does not Wisdom proclaim, and the Teacher delivers her voice?
On the heights, by the road, in the house and on the pathways she stands.
“To you, men and women, I call, my voice to the children of Adam:

The LORD acquired me at the beginning of his journey, before his work of times past.

Ages ago I was established, before the beginning of the Earth –
when there were no seas, I was brought forth in birth,
when there were no springs abounding with water
before the mountains were prepared for farming
before the hills, I was born.

God had not yet made the earth, or the beginning of the soil of the land.
when God prepared the heavens I was engraved in it.
when God made firm the clouds above
when God made strong the springs of the deep
when God set the boundary of the sea that the water not encroach the shore.
when God marked off the foundations of the earth

I was beside God as the architect
I was daily God’s delight, dancing before him all the time, rejoicing in the world, God’s earth. And my delight was the children of Adam

Proverbs 8 is a work of Hebrew poetry. It takes an abstract concept, “wisdom” and personifies it as a woman. The work of this woman can be seen everywhere we look in all of God’s creation, in the wise ordering of the world. She is the reason science is possible. Scientists are constantly looking for her, and evidence for what she has done can be found everywhere because she is hollering at us from every street corner.

We are told that Wisdom was the first of God’s creative works. This was necessary so provide for the wise ordering of the world as it was created. Wisdom decided that two atoms of hydrogen should be joined with one atom of oxygen to form a molecule of water, and God said that it was so. Wisdom ordained that every action should have an equal but opposite reaction making rockets possible, and God made it happened. Wisdom established the rules of evolution which has produced the biological diversity of the earth, and God created the plants and animals and the DNA that made this happen. The author of proverbs described God’s creation as dance where God and Wisdom whirl and twirl and rejoice in each other’s arms.

Wisdom’s favorite activity was the creation of all of us because Wisdom could give us many things: the ability to raise chickens and cows, the ability to sing and play instruments, the ability to preach and teach other, the ability to make cloth and grow crops, and the ability to lead others. We can do all of these things because we are wise, not with the wisdom of the world, but with the wisdom of God, sent to us as a gift to joyfully dance, whirl and twirl with us.

As we dance with Wisdom we learn to fear God, to turn from evil and embrace what is good. We seek out and learn from our counselors. We desire knowledge and reproofs that lead us to better lives. We learn to think before we speak and always use gracious words. With Wisdom dancing at our side we can help the poor, and build up the church.

“I was out shopping yesterday, and whom did I run into? Wisdom, yeah, there she was. She called me over and we began talking, Wisdom and I. Then I went down to the courthouse, and there she was again, making a plea for justice in some dingy courtroom where somebody had been unjustly accused. After that I dropped by the school, and she had gotten there before me calling for students and teachers alike always to seek the truth. Then I went for a walk in the woods, moving along the trail in quiet meditation. Wisdom snuck up on me and said, “Now that we are alone, I have something I want to share with you, a present I want you to enjoy. You know, I have been around for a long time, really for the beginning of time. I have been whirling and dancing with God all along. I am God’s delight, laughing and playing. I want you to know the lightness of spirit and gladness that come when you welcome me. Will you set aside those thoughts, words and deeds that make your life heavy and sad for you and others? Will you come and laugh and play with me? Will you come and dance with me? Will you?” (adapted from Feasting on the Word)

Holy Spirit we ask that you deliver to us the give of wisdom so that we may recognize God in the world around us. Help us to learn to dance with Wisdom so that we might whirl and twirl with delight. And join us in this dance with the Father and the Son so that we may delight in the dance of the Trinity whirling and twirling for eternity. Amen.

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