I am about to create new heavens and a new earth;
the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind.
(Isaiah 65:17)
I don’t always remember that when God says things like this God
PROMISES. I respond as if God is saying
“maybe I will, maybe I won’t.” So I
hedge my bets. I stack up achievements,
do my best to be perfect (ha!) and work to be as self-reliant as I can. “Self-reliance failed us,” the AA Big Book
says. That doesn’t stop me from becoming
despondent when I fail. The maybe is
often under the surface.
Even when I care about suffering beyond my own I can fall
into believing the “maybe.” Then I may work
really hard to fix it (or you!) I act as
if God says “It depends on you (singular or plural). It depends how you live,
how you love, whether you confess your failures (and feel really bad about it). If you….then the promise. It is the ultimate bad equation.
That is called being a “functional atheist.” Or is it just bad religion? Give lip service to God—and to placing trust
in God—but hedge your bets. Sing praise
to God’s love and graciousness but be sure to operate as if new life that lasts
is simply one possibility among many.
And whatever you do, don’t admit your doubt that God’s promises will
have any real impact in the here and now.
Does God do commerce in promise, or possibility?
I say God offers both.
The promise is that there WILL BE a new heaven and a new earth. The promise is for us—all of us—from microbe
to mountain, from acid raindrop to polluted ocean, all will be made new.
The possibility is that we will be part of creating it. It is, indeed, only a possibility. God gives us a choice. Where will we align ourselves? Who or what will we care about enough to DO
something about tipping the balance. How
will we support the emergence of the new creation? How do I?
How do you?
Some days I just
don’t know. But in this moment I know
one thing: it is a lot easier to discern
the next step when I remember that I am not dealing with alternate facts with
God. I can trust what God promises and
throw in my lot to be part of the promise coming to pass. How about you?
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