Thursday, April 28, 2022

Wisdom in the House of Mourning

 

"It is better to go to a house of mourning

Than to go to a house of feasting,

Because that is the end of every man,

And the living takes it to heart.

Sorrow is better than laughter, 

For when a face is sad a heart may be happy.

The mind of fools is in the house of pleasure."

Ecclesiastes 7:3-4

 

A strange scripture? Why would anyone prefer a funeral to a feast? The joy of celebration is from God to be enjoyed. Parties can be fun and make us forget our troubles - if only for a day - but a funeral is where all of life comes into clear view and we remember what is really important, what is really true. We tend to take our life for granted until someone loses theirs.

 

When I first heard this verse I remembered a time when I had seen wisdom come in the house of mourning. When I was 18, my dear and godly grandfather died. My mother grieved hard. She adored him, but at the time of my conception, their relationship had become strained. It was 1948 and an out-of-wedlock pregnancy was a disgrace. My parents married and moved away, separating themselves from family and faith. We lived a strangely isolated life, seldom visiting my grandparents, and, when we did, avoiding all aunts, uncles, cousins and family friends, those who had supported and loved my mother all her life.

 

At the funeral home, I saw my mother glowing as she received love from all the people she thought had abandoned and judged her. Her countenance was different than I had ever seen. In that house of mourning, wisdom was there. In that house of mourning, the peace of the God she knew in childhood flooded her. She was comforted by knowing her father was in His hands. She saw love and forgiveness were there all along. She saw God in a way she had not seen Him before. In that house of mourning, there was the joy that was missing from the party-times she loved.  I didn't know about Ecclesiastes 7 then, but I knew my mother had seen things in the right way in her place of mourning. My mother and I – the living – took it to heart.

 

I saw the same wisdom again when my dad's mother died suddenly. He saw the reality that any of us could die today, and it frightened him. He saw the end of every man, and rushed to meet with the pastor. He was wiser in the funeral home than in the bar room. 

  

Another time, members of our church gathered at the home of a young couple to pray. The husband had just been diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor. Doctors only gave him a few months to live. What a blow to this family and to us who loved them! But what wisdom was present there! In a room filled with over a hundred people, a hush fell as this young father shared about all God was showing him in his own "house of mourning." He said he wanted only for God to be glorified through this, whatever the outcome. He said "I get it!" and everyone knew he was seeing something we don't quite see yet. He gave us a glimpse. We who were blessed to hear wisdom speak hung on every word. We saw more, understood more, loved more, because we were in the "house of mourning."

 

Americans do not know how to mourn. In our hurry-up microwave culture, there simply isn’t time!  Mourning is a two-day affair. Employers expect you back to work and productive, showing no signs of grief. Not so in other cultures of the world. The Jewish people are fastidious about mourning, “sitting shiva” with the bereaved for seven days. In Africa family and neighbors gather around for as long as it takes. There is no shame in expressing grief. The Bible contains many laments, including the whole book of Lamentations, where Jeremiah mourns in detail the losses of the Jewish people in the Babylonian captivity of 586 BC. Every year, the Jewish people read the bool of Lamentations as part of a seven-day fast in remembrance.

 

A house of mourning doesn't have to be a funeral home. It can be in our private prayer time when God shows us our sin in light of His holiness. Or times when He convicts of idols and ways of the world. At the church altar when we respond to His presence. The house of mourning is any place where we see His greatness and our weakness.

 

Let us take the lessons of the house of mourning to heart! Sorrow can be better than laughter if it brings us closer to God. Mourning shows us life through an eternal lens.

Remember that Solomon also said in Ecclesiastes 3 that there is a time to laugh and a time to mourn.

 

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Seasons in Community

 

Ecc. 3:11 “He has made everything beautiful and appropriate in its time.”  (Amp.)

God uses the natural creation to teach us about the ebb and flow of seasons in our lives. We usually think of seasons as being personal, unique to ourselves but, in any church, at any given time, many seasons will be represented. It helps to not only discern our own season, but the seasons of others.

We wonder, why doesn’t God just bring us out of this season? We tend to think it’s just about us, but often it is not. We are not the only one on the planet that God is working in. Our life may be a part of God’s purpose in others. A common example is a woman feeling that her life is on hold while God is working on things in her husband’s heart. Or a mother suffering grief because of her children’s problems, while God is drawing them and working in their season, in His time.

Everyone is in their own unique season. It may be that churches and ministries have their seasons too. Perhaps, while you wait for direction, God is at work to provide a place and need for your particular giftings. As the body of Christ moves more and more into the time of harvest, no doubt we will see our individual seasons shift too.

We can help others discern their season by:      

·     --  Honestly sharing our personal experiences. Hearing that someone else has “been there” offers comfort.

·       --Listening!

·      -- Not pressuring them to conform to expectations of others

·       --Operating in the gifts of the Spirit to give insight and healing

We can support another in their season by:

·       --Not judging or comparing

·       --Walking alongside in prayer and friendship

·      -- Offering compassion and understanding

 Romans 12:15 “Rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep.”

It is often easier to weep with those who weep than to rejoice with those whose season is more joyful than mine.                                                                                           

Proverbs 15:23 “A man hath joy by the answer of his mouth; and a word spoken in due season, how good it is.”

1 Corinthians 12:4-7 “Now, there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit.

And there are varieties of effects, but the same God who works all things in all persons, but to each one is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.”

 Questions to ponder, pray, share:

·       --Have you been left waiting in a season while God was working in someone else’s life?

·      -- How might the Holy Spirit use a gift of the Spirit to help you understand your season?

·      -- Do you have fellowship that offers the opportunity for honest sharing? If not, ask God to point you to those you can trust.

Discern Your Season

 

Ecc. 3:  1-4     

"To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:

A time to be born - and a time to die.

A time to plant and a time to pluck up that which is planted.

A time to kill and a time to heal, a time to break down, and a time to build up.

A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance."

Southerners often don’t fully understand the seasons.  We had many days in the 70’s this winter. Even the trees and shrubs get confused and bud before the last freeze of the year. I got an education in seasons when we planned a trip to New England one May. The tourist guide said that May was "OFF SEASON”, but that meant little to us! Upon arrival, l we found that most inns and restaurants were closed. The ground was slushy, and no flowers bloomed. We experienced being out of season, in the right place at the wrong time.

Are you feeling a little “off-season”? Do you see others moving into ministries, yet doors haven’t opened for you?  Have your plans been delayed by work obligations or the need to care for a family member? Does your life look different than you expected? Whatever your season, God intends to use it for your growth and transformation.

 It's not always easy to discern the season you are in - to be in the right place in the right season. The calendar marks the first day of Spring, but spiritual seasons are not so easily recognized. The Lord will give wisdom when we seek Him.

 Understanding our season enables us to make the most of the lessons it teaches.  If we steward the season well, we won’t compare our lives with others or strive to move on to the next season too soon.  Our faith will grow, bringing peace with it.  God promises that we will bring forth fruit in season. If we expect things out of season, we rush God.

 

  • Elisha had a season of serving Elijah and a season of leading
  • David had seasons as shepherd, military hero, king, dethroned king
  • Saul did not operate within his season. He couldn't accept his successor and could not get over God choosing someone else.

 We learn from nature that seasons do not last forever!

 Questions to ponder, pray, share:       

-How would I describe the season of life I am in?     

-How does remembering past seasons offer perspective to my present circumstances?

·       --Am I offering gratitude to God for His past faithfulness in my life?

·       --Am I offering worship to Him - for “He who promised is faithful.” Hebrews 10:23

 

Sowing in Tears

 

    


 Psalm 126:5-6   

                   "Those who sow in tears shall reap with joyful shouting

He who goes to and fro weeping, carrying his bag of seed,

Shall indeed come again with a shout of joy, bringing his sheaves with him."

What does it mean to sow in tears? We don’t always understand the agricultural metaphors and parables of the Bible because our culture is industrial. We don’t depend directly on the cycle of plowing, sowing, waiting and reaping for our livelihood. The people of Jesus’ day fully understood because their very lives revolved around these seasons.

After harvest, the people enjoyed the fruit of their labor, but as the year progressed, the harvest was depleted. The food supply was dwindling. When planting season came back around, all they had left was a bag of grain. Perhaps the forecast looked grim - a dry season was coming.  They could eat now or plant it as seed, trusting God to bring rain, growth and harvest.  When they courageously sowed their seed and released their faith, tears came.

It's okay to show your tears.

Like the farmer who has just sown that last bag of seed, you may find yourselves in that middle place, the one between planting and harvest.

In the valley between mountains.

In the middle between the need and the testimony.

Transitions are hard. They signal the death of one season, the hope for another.

 A new harvest will come and you will INDEED come again rejoicing, bringing new sheaves of harvest with you! You will reap answers to your faithful prayers.

 Galatians 6:9 “And let us not be weary in well doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not”

 Keep sowing in your middle place!  It may look like you have nothing left to sow.  Sow gratitude and praise. Sow seeds of care and encouragement to others. God understands if your sowing is in tears. He will even provide new seed to sow!

2 Cor 9:10 “Now He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness.”

Questions to ponder, pray, share:

·        --Do you recall a time when you sowed in tears?

·       --How would you identify your present season: sowing, waiting or reaping?

·      -- If you are in the waiting phase, what seeds are you continuing to sow?

·       --Thank God for the sheaves you will harvest and that you will bring in with great joy.!

Hebrews 13:15 “By him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually.”