Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Gargoyles & Idols ~

Those who cling to worthless idols forfeit the grace that could be theirs. Jonah 2:8
Notre Dame Cathedral
Today we're in Chapter 25 of Meeting God in Quiet Places: the Cotswold Parables by F. LaGard Smith. LaGard is looking at the gargoyles on St. Michael's church in his village and wondering why they're on a Christian church. But whether the gargoyles are on the facade of St. Michael's, Notre Dame or Westminster, they are a grotesque and menacing sight. Why are they there? What do they mean? 

Well, basically the gargoyles on the churches in London and Paris---as well as other places around the world--were put there to resist the evil in the world; each  one a talisman against the devil and his evil works of darkness. Unfortunately, they don't work. What in the world were the architects and churchmen thinking? No one and nothing protects us from evil except God! Why are Christians worshiping in houses with gargoyles on them? Is someone hedging their bets in regard to their security against evil forces?

Remember the old television show that asked: Who do you trust? Have you thought whether you're trusting in God or something else? Maybe you're hedging your bets by adding a cross or some other  idol to your life. The psalmist David had something to say about idols:  
                                                       
They have mouths but cannot speak,  
eyes, but they cannot see;                                        
they have ears, but cannot hear,
nor is there breath in their mouths,
those who make them will be like them,
and so will all who trust in them.

We have "In God we trust" on our money, but do we really trust in God? Or have we made an idol of something else? For the Israelites making their exodus from Egypt, it was a golden calf. For fear of vampires, there's a cross. For the pagan Goths, it was gargoyles--and evidently Christians as well. But there are other things we depend on to bring us security--something to fall back on in hard times: job security, credit cards, an insurance policy or pension fund. Or maybe it isn't just something material. It could be dependency on friends--the right friends and associates, of course. A college degree is dependable, isn't it? Support from our spouse is always there to depend on. No matter what you place your faith in, you must decide whether it's genuine security or counterfeit. 

Look at Israel's misplaced trust: they put their trust in horses, chariots, and political alliances and had a rude awakening. All their military strength failed them because "they did not look to the Holy One of Israel, or seek help from the Lord." They had their priorities mixed up and they lost. Do you trust in God or in burglar alarms, security patrols and handguns? Handguns are a big item in today's world. I even know a preacher who makes guns one of his identifying marks. What does that say about his faith? 

LaGard says: "The problem with putting our trust in anything other than God is that it shrinks our view of God's infinite power. The specific details may vary, whether it's insurance policies, or handguns, or even relationships. But the real problem is that we worship a god too small." And he continues in the next paragraph, "Whatever is not of God is a gargoyle. Whatever is not of faith is only thinly masked paganism. It might as well be a wooden idol!" Hmmm...something to think about today. I'll add a little more tomorrow.

Have a wonderful day with the family!
Blessings...Mimi

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Trusting in the Unseen: Riding in a Hot Air Balloon

"Trust in the Lord with all your heart." Proverbs 3:5
Hot air balloons are popular in this part of the country with the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, an annual event that brings people from all over the world just to experience it. One morning, there is a mass ascension of 700 or more balloons going up into a bright blue sky within 1 1/2 hours. And it's quite amazing to watch. Would you like to climb into a basket and take a balloon ride?

That is the basis of F. LaGard Smith's 2nd chapter of Meeting God in Quiet Places: the Cotswold Parables. In this chapter, LaGard compares the trust a person must have to fly in a balloon--the ability to trust that someone will take you up and bring you down again safely--to trusting the invisible God with your life. We are sometimes willing to trust another person that we can actually see, but we aren't likely to trust an invisible power that we can't see. And isn't faith in the unseen what faith is all about?

His whole idea is apparent when comparing the way one may see the beautiful balloon drifting lazily through the air and think about how lovely it would be to ride in it, or even running after it and watching it float along. But the real question is: Would you climb into the basket and take a ride? The same is true of climbing into God's basket and trusting Him to control your life. And again, you may feel that being in God's basket is a bit confining, and that having to do things His way goes against the grain. But isn't that a normal human reaction?

Have you ever really given up control to God, been dependent on God, and felt how freeing it is?

LaGard says:
"Jesus talked about the kind of freedom that is really free. 'If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed,' said Jesus. What makes us really free? In the words of Jesus 'the truth will set you free.' The truth that we are never in control even when we think we are. The truth that a life without God is the most fearful life anyone can live. The truth that the most fulfilled people in the world are those who have 'let go and let God'."

Letting go isn't all that easy, is it? You cling to your fears and stay on the ground. You cling to your fears and stay out of God's basket. What is preventing you from climbing into the basket and taking off with God? What is preventing others? You may decide to run after God--to seek a relationship with Him. But the running and the seeking are replacements for actually letting go of everything that is holding you back and knowing true freedom.

Compare the feeling of letting go of control when you take a ride in a hot air balloon to letting go of everything and letting God control your life. You can choose to experience the exhilaration and freedom that knows no bounds, just like floating in a big, colorful hot air balloon!
Have a wonderful Sunday!
Blessings...Mimi