Thursday, June 4, 2020

Your Dying Spouse 761 - The Looter In The Mirror {Five Minute Friday}

And there it went, the opportunity for change, its spark dying like the embers floating up rom a looted Auto Zone.

The death of George Floyd in police restraint rightly horrified millions, and pointed with stunning clarity the need for change.

For a little while, there, it looked like people were coming together. And then it blew apart, in an orgy of destruction, thievery, and violence directed mainly against police, but also toward anyone brave enough to try to stand up to the thugs.

The Santa Monica Music Center, which since 1972 had provided lessons and instruments to unerprivileged kids, was ransacked and wrecked.

A landmark Minneapolis restaurant, set to reopen in just days, after the coronavirus closure, was burned to the ground, and won't be rebuilt.

A retired police officer in St. Louis, working as a security guard, was murered when the pawn shop he was defending was looted. The officer happened to be black.

The popular narrative is that the peaceful protestors and the rioters are different, that they are somehow identifiable groups...and for some that's certainly true.

But there are many who in the day stand in Sonshine, and who choose to remain for the pagan bacchanals of darkness.

Devotion to Christ and a greedy thirst for destruction coexist in every heart. We all carry the mark of Cain.

Don't scoff...maybe you never robbed a liquor store or set fire to someone's car, but did you ever feel hurt by something your spouse said, and then planned and delivered a scathing comeback that left him or her white-faced and shocked?

Did you ever premeditate the attempted murder of a soul you'd promised to love and cherish?

A lot of commercials during the COVID thing said, "We're all in this together!" It's a nice thought, and a good way to sell face masks.

Well, we're all in this together, too.

Racism and Antifa and abortion are horrible, but they are symptoms of an illness we've allowed into our world through acquiesence and ignorance and ennui and a perceived guilt for somehow not being sensitive enough, not being tolerant enough.

Not tolerant enough...odd, that, because the illness is intolerance of God.

We've pushed Him away, tired of His rules, thinking His commandments unfair because they cramp some folks' style.

No commandment is safe. Those who break them are often lauded, and criticim of these worthies earns the critic profane censure (and a host of social media unfollows).

And now, having given in to our darker nature, here we are. It will be a long road back even to that imperfect place we were before.

The riots will be the remembered legacy, as they were in Watts and Detroit and Liberty City and Ferguson. No one will recall the peaceful protests except those who took part, and those memories will fade.

Commissions will be formed, some new laws will be enacted limiting police use of force, qualified immunity may go away. Reparations will be added to a House bill, and quietly removed in committee.

And nothing will change, because you can't legislate the generation of love.

Only time and peace and intention and grace can do that, and those are gone from this place, sent sadly away by our darker angels.

They have a right to feel neglected;
we surely should have listened more,
but the past can't be corrected
by the burning of my neighbour's store.
Frustration's understandable,
and there are things we need to change,
but that does not excuse the vandal,
even fueled by hopeless rage,
for he is dragging others down
to that dark and limbic place
where the good intentions drown
so very far from chance of grace.
I fear that we will not be quit
of this, until the torches are unlit.

Music from The King, with In The Ghetto.


I do try to answer each comment in a timely fashion, but with Internet providers really stretched, I have only about half of the access I once did. Please bear with me!


Thanks to Carol Ashby, Blessed Are The Pure Of Heart is back on Kindle, and will be available in paperback soon.

Friends are everything. I couldn't have done it.

Below are my recent releases on Kindle -please excuse their presence in the body of the blog. I haven't the energy to get them up as 'buttons' in the sidebar. You can click on the covers to go to the Amazon links.








17 comments:

  1. I agree well said Andrew - a fellow fmfer

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  2. Looters Loot; Protestors Protest.
    Let us not confuse the two.
    One is destructive. One is productive.
    It's not a sKin issue it's a sIn issue.

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  3. it's so true, you can legislate love for each other. It's just not possible. visiting from FMF19

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  4. beautiful, powerful words! thank you for sharing your perspective, andrew, it is always a blessing.

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  5. Sin is an integral part of the human condition. To reach the lost for Christ, they need to see love.

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  6. PS. You speak truth about evil, but Jesus has conquered darkness. Great post.

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  7. (((((Andrew)))))

    I remember that Elvis song from my junior high days...
    And your words are so beautiful and powerful and TRUE.

    Annie in Texas

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  8. An 'intolerance of God' is like zooming out and looking at the big picture and then defining it for what it really, truly is. That's a big thought. Thanks, Andrew, for giving me something to virtually chew on.

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  9. When will we ever learn? When will we ever learn?

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  10. Love wins! But will we ever learn?

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  11. What a good reminder that we all have guilt of some sort. None of us are blameless. Grateful for grace to cover all our transgressions as we work for peace! Thanks for this perspective, Andrew.

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  12. For sure, Andrew. We can't legislate matters of the heart - love, respect, kindness. Real change comes from the inside out and can't be legislated or mandated.

    Only God.

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  13. Andrew, this is such a powerful post. You're right. We can't legislate or generate love. Until we as a culture acknowledge our need for God and a desire for Him, we are going to flounder. As others have said, change must begin on the inside of a person, not from somewhere outside.

    I'm meditating on your words, my friend. And, I'm praying for you and Barb.

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  14. We had protests in our small town, planned by a college instructor. People came from Chicago - two states away. Around my kitchen table, you can find a bunch of college young men -sometimes 10, sometimes more - of every race - and they care about each other - and I think right here - isn't this what the world wants? needs? Who would want it any other way? They're all young men seeking God - maybe that is the difference!

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