Time

In reading N. T. Wright’s book ‘A Case for the Psalms’ (not that I ever needed a case making for the Psalms, finding them totally invaluable throughout my Christian life!), I came across a quote which articulated for me a long-held belief that the more we understand of God’s perspective on time, the easier we will find it to cope with waiting in our time.

“Make us to be people who know how to stand at the threshold of human time and God’s time, and there to learn both humility and hope. Our time is not worthless, but any worth it may possess will come from God’s goodness, not our control of our circumstances.” (N. T. Wright, ‘The Case for the Psalms’, P 38)

We are people who belong to eternity but who are, in Michael Card’s words, stranded in time. Aaron Shust says ‘there is only one desire in the heart of Your redeemed/ To step deeper in the place where earth and heaven meet.’ Learning to live in our time but seeing eternity from God’s perspective does wonders for how we view the drudgery and the waiting of our daily lives. So often, we feel helpless because we cannot control our circumstances or dictate when things will happen to us. Yet as we wait and hope (the two being inextricably linked together etymologically and in our experience), we learn that ‘there is a time for everything’ (Eccl 3:1); times are appointed by God (Gen 1:14) and He is Lord of all time. (Rev 1:8)

Embedded hope

In all of my tentative forays into learning about websites and other computer-related things, I came across the idea of ’embedded systems’. An embedded system is a computer system with a dedicated function within a larger mechanical or electrical system. It is embedded as part of a complete device often including hardware and mechanical parts. Embedding an image within a webpage or email means that the image is visible within the webpage or email without having to link to another source: in email, for example, this would mean that you can see the image when you open the email without having to click on a link to see it. The advantage is it’s quick and easily visible; the disadvantage is the file size!

Anyway, in all these musings on things embedded, I started musing about the word itself. ‘To embed’ has a number of meanings, as given below:

1. To fix firmly in a surrounding mass: embed a post in concrete; fossils embedded in shale.
2. To enclose snugly or firmly.
3. To cause to be an integral part of a surrounding whole.
4. To assign (a journalist) to travel with a military unit during an armed conflict.
5. Biology To enclose (a specimen) in a supporting material before sectioning for microscopic examination.

 

Hebrews 6:13-20 talks about the certainty of God’s promise and says that His promises come with the guarantee of His own nature. We read ‘When God made his promise to Abraham, since there was no one greater for him to swear by, he swore by himself.’ (Heb 6:13) There was no one greater for Him to swear by, so the oath had His own guarantee; His very being secured the promise. We who rely on God’s promises for our hope can be encouraged because God cannot lie and so ‘we have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure.’ (Heb 6:19) Hope is effectively embedded in our lives: it becomes an integral part of a surrounding whole; God fixes hope firmly within our lives. Ps 25:5 says ‘my hope is in You all day long.’ Our hope is not in our own prowess or skills or abilities but in God’s unfailing love. (Ps 33:20, 22)

 

The analogy is not quite perfect, for obviously God is the source of our hope and it could be argued that He is not embedded within us in the sense that He is far above all, far greater than we are, transcendent. But on the other hand, He does dwell within us (Rom 8:10) and so in a sense, we have hope because we have God; the two cannot really be separated. God is the source of our hope and this becomes an anchor for us, firm and secure. The mystery, Paul says, is that Christ is in you, the hope of glory. (Col 1:27) Having hope embedded within us is better than any computer system or image!

Birthday boys

We also had two birthdays to celebrate:

The Chambers of the Heart

The science questions about the heart last night got me pondering what I know about the heart. Below is a slightly different love song about the heart, looking at it with a combination of science facts and irony… Some of the lyrics definitely made me smile, so if you’re not into mushy love songs, Mitch Benn’s ‘Chambers of the Heart’ is probably more to your liking.

In the chambers of the heart

You can feel the beat of life

It’s great here in the atria

No trouble and no strife

Such is the emotion of being in this place

I can feel the tears well in my eyes ventricle down my face

In the chambers of the heart

There’s an electrical charge

Each valve and muscle working

Not distended or enlarged

But now I know aorta get a move on to the brain

If I get stuck in an artery, don’t let me die in vein

In the chambers of the heart

You can hear the whole world beating

Sometimes you feel the heat

It depends on what you’ve eaten

There’s more magic here than any other body part

It would be swell to be red cells

In the chambers of the heart

In the chambers of the heart

You can feel just where you are

Nowhere else could ever be

So cardiovascular

You can tussle with corpuscles

When the tricuspid valve’s dilated

And I don’t think I’ve ever felt so high

As when I’m fully oxygenated

In the chambers of the heart

You can hear the whole world’s rhythm

You can feel the blood cells rush

And get swept along right with ‘em

This perpetual motion is like a work of art

Let’s float around to the pumping sound

In the chambers of the heart

Sometimes it beats so loud it’s kind of hard to hear

Is this love or is it tachycardia?

I’m sure it’s nothing bad; I’m just a little stressed

But I know I can never leave; I’m under cardiac arrest

In the chambers of the heart

The whole universe is pumping

You could almost go to sleep

If it weren’t for all that thumping

But I hope it doesn’t stop because it’s tricky to re-start

While it beats away we’ll be okay

In the chambers of the heart.

A God-shaped hole

Augustine, famous theologian and North African bishop (354-430), said “Because God has made us for Himself, our hearts are restless until they rest in Him.” Last night’s family service looked at this theme, talking about the ‘God-shaped hole’ that is in all of us which we often seek to fill with all manner of things, but which can only actually be filled by God Himself.

The Plumb song ‘God-shaped hole’ says of this hole ‘it’s a void only He can fill’ and Stephen spoke from John 7:37-38 last night. Here, Jesus talks about the thirst within each one of us which only He can slake. The NIV says ‘whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow from within him’ – the word here being koilia in Greek and translated in other versions as ‘belly’ or ‘womb’, meaning an empty place which needs filling. We often think of our lives as a jigsaw puzzle and can feel as though the missing piece does not fit:

beans jigsaw

God is that missing piece which makes our lives complete: He is the perfect fit who does not have to be forced into position. He is able to bring new life to us, to refresh us and to satisfy our deepest longings, but He waits for us to invite Him in.

As is usual with family services, we also had a quiz on various topics connected with the heart. Questions included science facts about the heart (how many chambers the heart has, where the ventricles are etc.), songs about the heart (who sang ‘Heart of Glass’, for example – Blondie) and famous Valentines (did you know, for example, that St Valentine is not only the patron saint of lovers but is the saint of beekeepers?) The women won both quizzes against the men, proving (according to Stephen!) that when it comes to matters of the heart, women are ahead of men…!!

The Dream Gets Slam-Dunked

Mark continued his series on Joseph’s dream this morning, looking at Genesis 39:1-23. In this chapter, we see Joseph working for Potiphar and receiving God’s blessing in such measure that this spilled over to the whole of Potiphar’s life. God’s blessing was awesome as a result of Joseph: God can also bless all around us because of our presence.

The dream was about to be shattered again, however; this time because the enemy has a plan to spoil the dream. The original plan was to lure Joseph into temptation – and then sin – through Potiphar’s wife, but Joseph behaved with integrity because of his faith (Gen 39:9). refusing to sin against God or to hurt Potiphar. Plan B involved the lies of Potiphar’s wife which led to Potiphar imprisoning Joseph again. How hard it must have been for Joseph at this point, to be once again wrongfully imprisoned!

The devil wanted to destroy Joseph and wants to wreck God’s plans for our lives, but if we faithfully serve God, He will turn every situation around. Even in prison, Joseph knew God’s blessing (Gen 39:21) and the prison warder was blessed because of him. We have to know that no matter what the enemy schemes, he cannot touch God’s plan! God is in control, even when our dreams seem to lie in tatters. God actually needed Joseph in prison so he could meet the people who would ultimately introduce him to Pharaoh so that God’s plans could actually be fulfilled.

This passage shows us that God’s blessing is awesome and affects the people all around us. The devil may have a plan to spoil the dream, but God’s plan overrides any plan of the devil, whose schemes have already been defeated. When the dream seems to be slam-dunked, God is still in charge; He is ‘Sovereign Over Us’, as Aaron Keyes sings.