Register  
Thursday, July 29, 2010

You are here:  Church » Pastoral Blogs » Old Testament  
St. Paul: On The Same Page
What is this blog about? - Friday, June 01, 2007

Each week I'll be writing some thoughts about the upcoming Sunday lessons, two Sundays ahead. My hope is that this will help laity be better prepared for worship, that it will help me to be better prepared for preaching, and that it might possibly be a service to some of my fellow pastors as well. NOTE: this is not a heavy exegetical blog. I won't be digging into the Hebrew or Greek. That is step-one of the sermon preparation. This is step-two, some cogitating about the devotional application of the text. How can we apply it to our lives. I hope it's helpful.

You can find a schedule of all the Sunday readings here.

You can read the SPOTS Devotion from St. Paul here in pdf format.

 read more ...
What is this blog about? - Friday, June 01, 2007

Each week I'll be writing some thoughts about the upcoming Sunday lessons, two Sundays ahead. My hope is that this will help laity be better prepared for worship, that it will help me to be better prepared for preaching, and that it might possibly be a service to some of my fellow pastors as well. NOTE: this is not a heavy exegetical blog. I won't be digging into the Hebrew or Greek. That is step-one of the sermon preparation. This is step-two, some cogitating about the devotional application of the text. How can we apply it to our lives. I hope it's helpful.

You can find a schedule of all the Sunday readings here.

You can read the SPOTS Devotion from St. Paul here in pdf format.

 read more ...
  
Blog Leader:
Pastor Neuendorf
  
Church MenuChurch Menu
  
By AuthorBy Author
  
By CategoryBy Category
  

St. Paul Blogs
Lamentations 3:22-33 - by Don Neuendorf
Monday, June 22, 2009 :: 276 Views :: 1 Comments :: Old Testament, Pastors ::

Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lord's great love we are not consumed...

Jeremiah has been called "The Weeping Prophet." How would you like that for a nickname? But he had a lot to weep about. He witnessed the destruction of Jerusalem twice - once in prophecy and once in person. He saw the terrible consequences of rebellion against God when the city of Jerusalem was beseiged, the people starved and reduced to cannibalism, the nation overthrown, the king blinded and taken away along with most of the population in chains.

The book is called, in our English translations, "Lamentations." Outcries. Weeping. In the Hebrew it is called 'ekah, "How..." A poignant beginning that expresses the yearning for an understanding of these tragedies.

And yet the Gospel is here too. It begins at last, after pages of pain, in chapter 3 verse 21. "Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope..."

What do you "call to mind" when you are in despair?...


Lots of people have talked to me about what they call to mind when bad things happen to them. Most of them report thinking of how much worse it could be. They see others in the same hospital who are much worse off than they, and they're grateful. But that's an odd kind of gratitude if you think about it.

Perhaps what they mean is this: that they deserve much worse from God (Lam.3:39), but he has been good to them only to allow them their current suffering.

But Jeremiah, the weeping prophet, goes much further. It would be hard to imagine much worse than the horrors he saw. But he says, "Because of God's great love we are not consumed..." That is, they were not utterly destroyed. (So far he sounds like you, but then he goes on...) "for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness."

Jeremiah says that it is GOOD to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord. It is a blessing to bear a heavy burden for a time, even "to bury [our] face in the dust" so that we will learn from the Lord about his faithfulness. "For he does not willingly bring affliction or grief to the children of men."

It is not that things could be much worse. It is that God, our loving and compassionate Father, will make things much better.

Comments
By Christel on Thursday, July 02, 2009 2:42 PM
This post reminds me a lot of a lady I know in the church here. She is faced daily with spiritual and physical burdens, yet her attitude is not "It could be much worse" but an attitude of rejoicing in life's tribulations. She rejoices in the opportunities it gives her to share the Gospel. I dare to say that telling yourself "it could be worse" is the wrong attitude to have. We should be grateful for the burden and seek the Lord through it all, for He is always faithful.

Only registered users may post comments.
 Print   

Home  |  About St. Paul  |  Church  |  Day School  |  Early Childhood  |  News & Events  |  Programs & Activities
Copyright (c) 2010 St Paul Ann Arbor   |  Privacy Statement  |  Terms Of Use  |  Icthus Technologies