CHRIST
IN WINTER: Reflections on Faith for the Years of Winter… ©
I
called on an older lady, a bit older than I am now, when I arrived at a new
church. It’s important to get to know all your members as soon as possible, and
older folks are easier to find, so they are usually the ones we get to know
first. She was a recent widow and told me of how helpful her daughter, her only
child, had been to her in her newly-widowed period. “But you never know how a
child will finally turn out,” she said, shaking her head a bit.
I
later learned that the daughter was 53 years old and a professor of English!
But her mother wasn’t sure how she would turn out. [I understand that better
now that my children are approaching that age.]
God
does not practice safe love.
Jesus
says, “Be perfect, even as your heavenly father is perfect.” [Mt 5:48] God is
not perfect as measured against some outside standard of moral or intellectual
perfection. God IS the standard by which perfection is measured. Whatever God
is, that is perfection. God is perfect because God is always true to the divine
identity.
Perfection
is a matter of being true to one’s own identity. We are human beings. We are
perfect when we are totally true to that identity. When we are imperfect is
when we act like animals, or parasites, or posts [“dumb as a post”], or when we
act like God, trying to play God for others or the world or ourselves. As
Luther said, “Let God be God.”
Parenthood
is risky. God has been raising us up for billions of years, and is not sure how
we’ll turn out. God could have taken the safe route, not “wasted” those
billions of years of nurturing, of bringing us along, but that’s not true to
the divine identity. Risk-taking love is true to the nature of the divine
identity.
JRMcF
johnrobertmcfarland@gmail.com
I
tweet as yooper1721.
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