Wednesday, June 24, 2015

White for the harvest John 4

Behold, I say to you, lift up your eyes and look on the fields, that they are white for harvest. John 4:35

What does this have to say about cloth, you may be asking.
Well, it was the situation they were in. They were looking at a town in Samaria. It was the site of people dressed in white coming from the town to see this Jesus that the woman at the well had told them about. This woman who avoided people was running through town telling people that the Messiah had come and talked to her, of all people. People dressed in white, as that is how they dressed. People who were going to be washed white themselves. They listened to Jesus and begged him to stay for days. Unlike those in the towns where Jesus came from, who sent him away. Like Jerusalem, which he cried over more than once.
So we might be dressed in white, wanting to be clean on the outside, but knowing we are not white on the inside. The woman at the well was not described as far as her apparel. Was she dressed in white? Was she differently dressed because she was an inner-outsider? Everyone knew who she was. After 6 men, I'm sure she was the talk of the town. Had she played the harlot and gotten thrown out of these households? Was she ugly and would take whoever would take her in? Did men reject her time and time again? She didn't seem to have a problem finding another fellow to take her in. It sounded like she was in an affair unmarried at this point, which would have pointed to her being the cause of her own immorality. Jesus didn't sugar-coat her sin. He didn't avoid talking about it. And that avoidance of talking about her sin lead her to talk justifiably about herself. She worshiped as a daughter of Jacob, and she knew that Jesus, a Jew, would reject her for worshiping away from Jerusalem, so she let him judge her on that account. At least it wouldn't hurt as much as being judged for being an adulteress. But this avoidance led Jesus to the opportunity to deal with the heart issue, not just the outward evidence of the sin within.
Jesus was good at seeing the inner person and taking the issue there. And when the heart is dealt with, freedom ensues. So much freedom that a person who would come to the well at times to avoid people would run down the streets telling people that someone pointed out her sin and must be the Messiah! Now that is transformation! That is salvation, and redemption!
How about you and me? Do we go around telling people how Jesus pointed out our sin and saved us? If you can't do that, I ask you to look at your salvation. If you haven't let Jesus deal with your sin, I would ask you if He has given you the living water. If you can't even admit you are a sinner, or were living in a lifestyle of sin before you were saved (yes, you still sin, but it is not your common way any longer), then I ask you to talk to God about that. Those who will not confess their sins will not be saved. Not a long litany of sins. This isn't the confessional in a Catholic church. Good grief, if I was only saved from the sins I could confess outright, I'd be so piled in them I couldn't move. I sin in ways I don't even realize. It is the confess that I am a sinner...a person with inclination to sin, who practices sin, and has no life in me. I am dead in my sin, Paul says in Romans 4,5, and 6. Jesus gives life. Dead seeds stay dead until water permeates them. Water brings life. Jesus offers the living water, and applies it to the seed as needed to make it not only alive, but grow. This life changes everything, including our response to life. We are not ashamed any more. We rejoice that Jesus chose to speak to us, the outcast. And then others dressed in white can overflow the hillsides coming to Him. They can experience Him and be purged of their sins as well.
So look up and see the results of a sinner being saved. It is a curious thing, and a site to behold.

The harvest fields were white, and here Jesus draws the comparison. They were ready to be harvested, brought into the kingdom. Are you dressed in white? Are you ready to be harvested? If you haven't been, I ask you to come to Jesus, talk to Him through reading His Words to you, and see that He is who I, a harvested soul, say He is.  

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Pallet talk John 5

2895. krabattos -- a camp bed 
... 2895 -- a small bed used by the poor; "" () a rude pallet made of thick padded quilt
or mat" (M. Vincent); "a Macedonian word (Lat ) for a bed, pallet, or ... 
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2895.html


Jesus said to him, “Get up, pick up your pallet and walk.” Immediately the man became well, and picked up his pallet and began to walk. John 5:8

This is a well-known story of Jesus healing the man at the pool of Bethesda. For 38 years the man hanged out at the pool hoping to be healed. That's a LONG time. He wasn't able to get into the pool by himself. I imagine he had people take him there and they probably stayed a few days, but then were off to make their livings and take care of their other burdens of life. Him life, however, consisted of laying there, begging for food and help. How did he go to the bathroom? How did he do anything? They must have had a nursing staff or the place would have been a complete stenchy mess. Maybe it was. But Jesus sees a guy laying on a padded quilt of some sort and asks him if he wants to be healed. Dumb question, right? Maybe not. Maybe we get to the rut of life and are afraid to climb out. We can't imagine life any other way. But Jesus gives him only 3 instructions.

    1) Get up. Well, he thinks, if I could do that I wouldn't be laying here. He had to have the faith to stand up, believing that the strength would be there if he would just do it. His legs would have no strength. His back would have no support. His feet and ankles hadn't born weight for at least 38 years. Was Jesus out of his mind?
    2) Take up your pallet. That meant bending over and bearing weight. That meant balance, arms strength, and a strong back.
    3) Walk. With weight, with balance, with strength. Do something he hadn't done for years.

All 3 of these things would require faith. Faith that Jesus knew what He was asking. Faith that he wasn't going to struggle to rise up, look the fool when he fell down, or stagger like a drunk under the weight of his burden. Realistically, he would at best look a fool. He could really hurt himself. But the alternative was to lie there for the rest of his life. He didn't even know this was Jesus! He knew nothing but that he wanted to believe this man that offered him the thing he had wanted all his life. Healing.

We may not have physical infermities. We may be held down by the sickness of soul, the weakness of lack of faith, and knowledge of our limitations. Jesus comes to us and asks if we want to get over it. He tells us to get up. To accept his healing and strength and to stand. Prepare for the next thing. Take up our pallet. Get off our backsides and move on. We aren't going back down except to rest. We are moving on. And walk. Get going. Get on with life. Take the pallet and take it home and put it away. We don't need to lay out in public showing our weakness any more, but walk in the strength, power, balance, and under the direction of the Lord. When we do, Jesus comes and tells us who He is! And when people tell us we aren't supposed to be doing this, we tell them that Jesus told us to! We tell them that Jesus said to walk in his strength and power every day of our lives. That we are to follow His directions and not man-made rules that limit God's power. We have a new life.

There was a wonderful testimony of a Muslim convert to Christianity. He spent his years trying to figure out how to properly worship Allah. When he converted, he had the same concerns. How do you properly worship God? And God's answer was to walk in freedom. There were not chains of ritual and format, hours of the day to bow in worship or certain Sabbath rules to keep. Jesus sends the Spirit so that we can worship Him in Spirit and in Truth. That is every day in every way, with the worship coming from the heart and obedience in heart and not format. He was liberated and rejoicing that his worship was so much more than before! May we get up, no longer depend on the sickbed, and walk in the Spirit as He has commanded so that He may reveal Himself to us in new and glorious ways.


Friday, June 19, 2015

Repairer of the Seams Ezekiel 27

Ezekiel 27:26-27
Your rowers have brought you into great waters; the east wind has broken you in the heart of the seas. Your wealth, your wares, your merchandise, your sailors and your pilots, your repairer of seams, your dealers in merchandise and all your men of war who are in you, with all your company that is in your midst, will fall into the heart of the sea.

There is the reference to the repairer of seams in the NASB version. Other versions refer to shiprights and builders. But we will go with the repairer of seams. Also mentioned in 27: 9, the old men and the wise were repairing the seams in the boat or the sails, knowing that if the weak spots were not repaired, the whole thing was going down. And we all know that the same thing can happen with cloth.

There are 3 types of seam failures. I just finished repairing 2 antique quilts for a lady. They showed each types of failure. One form is where the stitching thread breaks. This is actually the easiest to repair. The thing holding the 2 pieces of cloth together breaks, but the fabric itself is not damaged. The line is usually obvious where the repair can be made. We just need another thread that will hold things together. These failures usually come because of stress on the seam when the quality of the thread is bad. Like our lives, we can have stresses that pull on the fabric of our lives. That which is not of God is weak and the strain makes us snap. The seam slowly begins opening up, and without repair, will continue to enlarge a hole in our lives. Sometimes other seams may have to be opened up to lay flat the one that needs to be repaired, and then the opened seam can be sewn shut and if done well, no one will ever see that there was ever a problem. God is like that. He can take the place of the old, brittle beliefs and notions of our lives and replace them with His strength when the things of the world cannot hold up. He can handle it. He might have to do some unsewing to fix the problem, but He can repair all of our holes.

Then there is the shallow seam. The thread was sewn too closely to the edge of the fabric and the stress placed on it causes the edge of the seam to unravel. This is a much more serious problem. That thread which is to hold things together is right and true, but misplaced. That quarter or 5/8 inch seam was not sewn correctly and leaves a weak spot which eventually can be breached. Sewing on the original line again will accomplish nothing.The solution here can be more tricky. If the seam was supposed to be deep, taking the regular seam around the weakness can solve the problem. But if the seam was narrow to start with, placing the original seam can be just as hazardous as it has just become a narrow seam like the one that unraveled. Whole pieces may have to be picked out and replaced, and then requilted. This process is far more time consuming, and unless you have kept pieces of the original fabric, it will be hard to make the piece look right. The patches may be obvious, but at least the quilt is still useful. We can be like this. We are inconsistent. We run life out of alignment and a little too close to the edge. And we fray and unravel. If this is an occasional problem, the repairs are sometimes easy and sometimes obvious, but we can be fixed and used. If the seam was consistently shallow, there is nothing that can be done to strengthen the seams. Some fabric may be able to be salvaged and used in another quilt, but this piece is only good for sitting around. Any stress will pull it apart. Repairs are futile.

And then there is the worst failure. That of rot. These quilts were from close to the turn of the century, and there is a characteristic of most quilts from that era. The black fabric disintegrates. It rots away. There are parts of it there, or there are shapes that show that there was fabric there once, but it is gone now. The batting is exposed, the fabrics around it make it obvious that something was supposed to be there, was once there, and has not held up over time. If there was little of the offending fabric in the overall quilt, new patches can be appliqued into place. Sometimes old fabric can be salvaged from another quilt or fabric collection, but more often than not we don't have that available. Reproductions or close matches can be put into the holes. But if enough of the quilt was made with fabrics that were inherently flawed, like the chemicals used to dye fabric black back then, the quilt will become worthless and unrepairable. It might be set aside sadly, folded as a memory, but it will not be able to be used for its intended purpose. But if there were only a few pieces used, the holes can be filled with time and different fabric and a lot of patience.

These quilts were examples of that. One's edges had been used and abused to the point that I had to cut a whole row of blocks off and rebind it. The center of the quilt, away from the edges, was in quite good shape. The other seams and patches that had worn down were patched. Seams were repaired. Useable fabric from the cut off portion was salvaged from the cut off edge and used to replace rotted or abused spots in the quilt. With the new binding, that quilt became useable again. The second one had more of a disintegration problem. There was need for far more patching, more applique over rotting pieces. The edges had to be rebound as well, but the quality and age of the fabric showed that it was not original to the quilt. There were far more narrow seams where the patches frayed. It was a work that I wanted to save, but the more I patched, the more I realized just how fragile this work was. It was returned to the owner with a note that this piece had to be handled with care not not hung up or used. It was just for show and memories. There were seams that couldn't be patched, but were not serious enough to deal with or were so tenuous that working on them would probably cause more harm. I really began wondering if it was worth my time and her money to have taken this second piece on. And that is how it is with some broken lives. We question God for investing in them when it seems He will get no real reward for all of His trouble.


But that is our God. He looks fondly on we old quilts and though the world puts no earthly value into us (when you look for value of quilts of that era, they are worth little to nothing on today's market), He sees us as precious, as worth it. He paid for us with the blood of His Son, washed us up, patched our fragile, worn and torn seams and patches, and either uses us or puts us on display as examples of His extreme mercy. And for that, we well up in extreme gratefulness. We will be damaged by this life, but God is our good repairer of the seams, wise in His dealing with us, knowing where we need reseamed, patched, places covered over, or parts cut off to stop the bleeding. He then knows where to put us to display His glory. It may be on the bed, on the wall, or in a case or closet, but we are His precious treasure. And we need to love each other, repairs and all, as fellow possessions of the King. We need not judge each other's frailties...we have enough of our own. Some of our repairs don't show up to those who see us, but we know that we are just as likely to come to need for repair because of what we were originally made of, who sewed us together in the first place, and how closely we were quilted. The workmanship we received was not of our own doing. Pride is foolish as we did not make ourselves. But our Master Repairer mends us all when the use and abuse of life takes its toll.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Rewarded with Purple Clothes Daniel 5

Daniel 5:7 The king called aloud to bring in the conjurers, the Chaldeans and the diviners. The king spoke and said to the wise men of Babylon: Any man who can read this inscription and explain its interpretation to me shall be clothed with purple and have a necklace of gold around his neck, and have authority as third ruler in the kingdom.”

The handwriting on the wall. This is the story of where that phrase came from.

Belshazzar's feast is interuptted by this hand...he had taken the cups from the temple of the Lord and decided to use them in his drunken partying. And God did not take that lightly. There is the hand and the writing that he could not read. He knew it was important and needed to be read, but he had no way of knowing what it was. So he issued this reward for its interpretation. Purple, royal clothes. Third in line for power. Unfortunately for him, that person might be second that very evening, for he did not live through the night. But his wife remembered the story of Daniel interpreting for his father the king, so Daniel was blessed with the opportunity to have another shot at revealing his God to these heathen kings. God was ready to speak, but even the kings knew that someone else more in touch with God had to intercede for them as they did not know this God.

This was not the first time God had his people bear bad news to kings. Joseph had to tell of famine, and Daniel had to tell Belshazzar that God would require his live as he was not worthy to be king because he had seen God's dealings with his father, Nebuchadnezzer. He had gone from powerful to eating grass as an animal, and allowed to return to power, humbled before the God of Daniel. But Belshazzar ignored God's dealings and profaned the temple and the instruments that were holy unto the Lord.

So in a way, he gave away the kingly clothes almost prophetically, for he would not longer be wearing them. Someone more worthy would have them. And that person would be Daniel. Daniel did not seek the glory or privilege, just to speak for God when asked by the king to do so. This is what is now called “speaking truth to power.” You tell powerful people what they don't want to hear. It's the hardest thing for a person to do. He knew that if he told this king what God said it could mean his head, or another trip to the lion's den. But he did not fear to tell Belshazzar the words of God. And God protected him again. Those who stand for the Lord don't always walk away unscathed. Many have spoken truth to power and were killed, imprisoned, or thrown down wells like Jeremiah. But for now God used the instrument of Daniel to make His point to the nation. Often we think we deserve the rewards that come with standing on the Lord's side...but when called to speak for the Lord, we need not worry about the rewards or consequences of that speech. We will be rewarded. The consequences cannot be eternal ones, but just temporary. We, like Abraham, should sometimes refuse the world's rewards so they don't believe that they have provided for us, but God alone.

Sometimes we are rewarded, sometimes we pay dearly, for our stand for the Lord. Like Peter, we ask Jesus when he tells us what we have to pay, what will happen to the other guy. (John 20) And He lovingly tells us to mind our own business. Follow Him. Let Him decide if you will wear royal robes or graveclothes. It doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things. We are just to obey, to speak, to reveal the mind of God to those who call upon us to read His writing to them. We can't be afraid to tell them the truth...that they are sinners if we need to...and warn them or comfort them or whatever we are called to speak. Just make sure it is God's Word in God's time. And if your favorite color isn't purple, that's ok. The robes in heaven aren't, for God will not be sharing His kingdom with anyone, for no one will inform Him of anything He doesn't already know. He won't be seeking wise men, but be surrounded by all those made wise by Him.


It's our place...at His feet. And a joyous place that will be.