It is tempting to complain when our lives don't go well. In particular, it is tempting to blame God for our troubles. When we do that, we seem to be asking God, "What have you done for me lately?" although we may not say it in so many words. The Israelites did the very same thing when their lives were difficult during their desert wanderings. I started thinking about that during the past week, and I wrote this sermon. What HAS God done for us lately?
It’s just 5 weeks until the next November election. That
means we’ll soon be flooded with political ads on the television, on the radio,
and in our mailboxes. And every one of those ads will tell us how wonderful a
particular political candidate is! That candidate will remind us not only of his
or her long record of public service; we will hear in great detail what that
candidate has done for us lately. Politicians
assume that voters don’t care what they did 5 years ago. No, voters want to
know what those candidates have done for us lately.
Have they brought new jobs to the area? Have they strengthened our local
economy? Do we have more money in our wallets this year than we had last year
because of their actions? Before an election, politicians tend to emphasize
what they have done over the past several months. That’s why nothing much gets
done in Washington – or in Columbus – in the months leading up to an election.
No candidate wants to participate in anything controversial right before an
election!
I suppose that those politicians are right. People tend to
have very short memories. An insult, even an unintentional one, has been known
to ruin a friendship that has lasted for twenty years! “What have you done for
me lately?” I guess that question is just human nature. The Israelites
certainly asked it. Well… they didn’t ask it in so many words. But their
actions certainly asked it! They complained constantly that Moses and Aaron had
led them out into the desert to die. This morning’s story is only the first of
many times that the Israelites complained about their circumstances. They
didn’t have enough food… they didn’t have enough water… they didn’t know where
they were headed… they didn’t trust the God who was leading them. Whine, whine,
whine! And just in case you’ve forgotten, let me remind you what God had already done for them. God sent Moses to
confront Pharaoh and demand that he let the Israelites go free. God sent a
whole slew of plagues against Egypt; and not one affected the Israelites. God
protected the Israelites against the final, terrible plague: the death of all
the firstborn children of the Egyptians. And when the Egyptian army threatened
to destroy the Israelites, God parted the Red Sea and led them through it to
safely.
“What have you done for me lately?” Why, just look at all
that God had already done for them!
Why were they even asking that question? But we ask it ourselves all the time,
don’t we? We ask God “What have you done for me lately?” as though God hasn’t
done a darned thing for us before today. We forget all the times that God has
given us blessings, because we usually take them for granted. Maybe it isn’t a
bad idea for us to remind ourselves of what God has done for us all through our
lives. Those reminders can bring us back to reality when we are tempted to ask
God, “What have you done for me lately?”
To start with, we’re alive! We might not be, you know. There
is no compelling reason why we were born in the first place. But for the grace
of God, we might well have never been! But we are here on this earth, all of us unique individuals who never
existed before our lives began, and who will never again be duplicated. And not
only are we on this earth, God has given us the means to enjoy the world around
us! How many of us give thanks for our five senses? How many of us even stop to
think about our five senses? Our
senses are the way that we interact with the world in which we live; and the
way that we enjoy it.
·
We can see the beauty of a sunrise, the changing
colors in a fall forest, and the delicate structure of a butterfly’s wing.
·
We can hear the hum of cicadas in the late
summer, the majestic chords of Beethoven’s ninth symphony, and the purr of a
kitten.
·
We can smell the perfume of tea roses, the smoke
of a campfire in the fall, and the aroma of bacon frying in a skillet.
·
We can taste the sweetness of a spoonful of
honey, the tang of a home-grown tomato, and the salt of our own tears.
·
We can feel the smoothness of a baby’s cheek, the
embrace of a dear friend, and the comforting warmth of a kitchen after
returning from a twilight walk through the snow.
Just as much as the witness of our senses are the feelings
that they evoke in us. How can we gaze on the Grand Canyon without feeling a
sense of awe at its grandeur? How can we look at pictures from the Hubble
Telescope without a sense of wonder at the mysteries of spiral galaxies and
exploding stars and black holes? How can we look at our loved ones without
feeling grateful that their lives are entwined with ours? And we can’t forget
the gift of laughter and all the things that bring it into our lives – fat puppies
rolling on the floor; frisky colts hopping around their mamas, all long legs
and short, swishing tails; and toddling babies coming just that close to a giggle-filled wipeout on the carpet.
But perhaps the most precious thing that God has given to us
is the gift of relationships: human love and friendship, and God’s own
unfailing love for us, made visible in Jesus Christ. We might not see that
love, or hear it – but we know that it works its way into every aspect of our
lives! The old Irish poem St. Patrick’s
Breastplate expresses that mystery beautifully:
“Christ is with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.
Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all who love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and
stranger.”
What has God done for us lately? Why, God has given us this
world and enabled us to enjoy it. God has given us each other in loving
relationships. God has given us himself, in the man Jesus Christ and through
the eternal presence of the Holy Spirit. And in the end, God has promised to
lead us home to that place where we won’t need our physical senses to feel his
presence, as well as the presence of our loved ones who have gone on before us
and who will welcome us home into glory.
I know that it’s tempting to complain. The Israelites did
it. I do it. We all do it, from time to time! This world is a harsh place; and
it’s not getting any easier. We may not be on a trek through the desert like
the Israelites were, but we’re all on a journey through life; and that journey
can be difficult. When we are tempted to complain that life is just too hard,
maybe it would be helpful to remember that we are still God’s people, and that
God is still guiding us. Even in the wilderness of doubt and fear, God promises
his presence in whatever obstacles we might face. As we remember what God has
done for us, we can rely on God’s promise of grace, and mercy, and healing, and
love. What has God done for us lately? Why, God has given us all the joys of
our earthly lives, help in difficulties, and the promise of the fullness of
eternal life in the Promised Land! And that, my friends, is not a cause for
complaint. It’s a reason for celebration!