in every child's eye
Monday August 5th,
Ecclesiastes 1&2: 20 So my heart began to despair over all my toilsome labor under the
sun. 21 For a man may do his work with wisdom, knowledge
and skill, and then he must leave all he owns to someone who has not worked for
it. This too is meaningless and a great misfortune. 22
What does a man get for all the toil and anxious striving with which he labors
under the sun? 23 All his days his work is pain and
grief; even at night his mind does not rest. This too is meaningless. All too often, our view of life becomes
too much like a clothes line, we start at one end and hang things on it until
we get to the end, and hopefully, at the end God will reward us for all the
things we hung on the line, all the things we have done. Instead, God calls us onto a path, one where
we are surrounded by others and by the God who always comes down and walks with
us. If all we do in life, all our accomplishments,
is for some selfish end goal, we above all creatures are to be pitied. In the end all we are left with is a big pile
of stinking stuff that relatives and others fight over while we lie alone
dying. If life is lived as part of the
body of Christ, full of give and take, sharing with one another and seeing in
every blade of grass and every child’s eye, the presence of God, seeing in
everything we have a blessing with which we can bless others, then we are
living the kingdom life right here and now.
In that Kingdom life there is meaningfulness, there is fullness, there
is life. The others who receive the blessing of our blessings do not
automatically become gracious children of God, just as it most likely took us a
while to figure that out in our lives, but it is not about their outcome, it is
about who we are. Our maturity depends
upon our ability to give from what God has given us. Those who can freely give are rich, those who
can’t freely give are poor, and it has nothing to do with wealth.
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