Saturday, May 28, 2016

The Fowler's Snare


Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler, and from the noisome pestilence.
     -Psalm 91:3

Since most of us don't hunt our own food, other than to stalk good prices at the grocery store, the image of the fowler is somewhat lost on us. I recently read a book in which the main character has to rely on his survival skills, without any of the conveniences or inventions of modern life. One source of food which he finds is a type of bird that rests on the ground, but is difficult to catch, so he has to hunt the bird in a certain way.

This particular bird would fly at the first approach of anything it saw as threatening. So the hunter learned to not look at the bird or move straight towards it. Instead, he would look to the side of the bird and inch toward it in a way that was not direct, as if his attention was elsewhere, until he was close enough to spear the unsuspecting bird.

Isn't that how our Enemy approaches us, and how sin sneaks up on us? When we are faced with obvious sin, we flee. Like that bird taking off as the fowler closes toward him, we get out of there fast!

But when little innocuous things, maybe seemingly innocent things, sneak up, we don't immediately see the threat if we are not focused on doing God's will and if we aren't regularly in His word. It may be  a pass-time that consumes time we should devote to God, a relationship with the wrong sort of close friend, anger or malice that we allow to fester instead of forgiving, or any other "small" brush with sin that we indulge instead of running from it. We may not even notice as this "minor" sin infects our life and interrupts our closeness with God. And this interruption of communion with Him often leads to being oblivious to even more dangerous sins. Pretty soon, we are caught, ensnared by the things that crept up on us by seeming so harmless.

The secret to avoiding such a snare is told later in the same Psalm. Verses 9 and 10 say "Because thou hast made the LORD, which is my refuge, even the most High, thy habitation; there shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh they dwelling."

To have God's protection and deliverance on a daily basis, we need to make Him our habitation. We must be daily living with Him - conscious of His presence, obedient to his commandments, and seeking His will - in order to avoid the daily snares.


Thursday, May 26, 2016

Hoarding Your Own Hurt

There is a sore evil which I have seen under the sun, namely, riches kept for the owners thereof to their hurt.
     -Ecclesiastes 5:13 (KJV)
Image courtesy of Stuart Miles
viaFreeDigitalPhotos.net


As I was reading my Bible today, Ecclesiastes 5:13 really stood out to me. In fact, I read it in another version to make sure I had correctly understood its meaning. The NIV translates the phrase about riches as"wealth hoarded to the harm of its owners".

The behavior of hoarding has become a common problem in our society. We have TV shows that reveal the accumulated junk and living conditions of the most avid hoarders. Hoarding has its own special psychological disorder associated with it. The issue shows up more and more frequently in our news. A recent WFAA report stated that "doctors estimate up to five percent of the population hoards." (Inside a hoarding house: Dirty secret for thousands in North Texas)
The WFAA article points out that hoarding has less to do with cleanliness than with an underlying emotional cause. For Christians who find themselves hoarding it is, in addition, a spiritual issue...as many emotional issues are.
Why do people hoard? The word "hoard" may conjure up an image of a dragon sitting greedily atop his pile of gold. For most people, though, hoarding is not primarily an issue of greed. Primarily, hoarding in the modern western world boils down to one of two things:
Fear: "But what if I need that someday?" 
Yes, you should probably keep your holiday decorations because you know you are going to need them in a few months. Realistically, though, are you going to need the hundreds of pages of first grade schoolwork you've saved - now that your first grade angel is in high school? (Pick a few special ones, and discard the rest.) Or what about the supplies for a hobby you gave up a decade ago but "might get back to someday"? Or the clothes you wore 10 or 15 pounds ago that you're holding onto for "when I get back in shape"? (Again, pick a couple of special outfits, if you must keep something as a goal or to celebrate, and give the rest to someone who needs and can use them.)
Laziness: "But that pile of first grade papers/bucket of supplies/closet is so big and cluttered. It will take forever to clean that!"
The Bible speaks over and over about the dangers of fear and the benefits of diligence and hard work. So fear and laziness should never be motivations for our actions. By hoarding, we mostly hurt ourselves and those around us, since the hoarded "stuff" cuts down on our physical space in which to enjoy life and sucks away our time and energy maintaining it, cleaning it, and finding things lost in it.
The Quakers have a word for all that hoarded stuff: "cumber". As in, it encumbers you. How are we supposed to serve God effectively and run the race set before us if we are runners weighed down by all that extra cumber? And how can we effectively minister to a world that needs God to meet their spiritual needs while we may, in fact, be hoarding uselessly away the very items that might be a blessing to them and meet their physical needs?
Now, off to clean the closet...and the first grade paper box.