Quarantine – It is not good.

Covid 19, it is not good, quarantine

In someway, I would like to rant on the political side of this situation.
In others, I would like to formulate my own stance on the virus.
In a third way, mostly I am just fatigued.

I am tired of projections and predictions.
I am tired of distancing.
I am tried of awaiting what may or may not come.

This in no way is to disregard those suffering. My heart hurts for those who are hurting. My prayer is God moves swiftly in your healing, in your provision, in your life. These are the words of fatigue, which in and of itself is a paradox since isolation has also slowed life down where little is getting done.

I am the first to admit that I lack answers to the questions of when, how long, and the one that haunts all of us “why”.

What I do know is that this has made the lonely more lonely. It has made the fight for joy that much harder. It has made the gap in Christian community that much more vast. We can Zoom, we can FaceTime, snap stories and Tik Tok around the clock, but we were made for two purposes: to love God and love others. While we have thousands of methods to deliver content, it is still impossible to deliver a hug. While we can mass stream the message, we still sit at a place where we need one person to sit with us in our mess.

I am not advocating breaking stride with recommendations. I am anxious to see this season end. And end, one day it will. My hope and prayer is that when days of distance end, we do not keep the patterns of our distancing. My hope is that we run into spaces and places with people. My concern is that if even for just a short season this new normal of life over devices keeps us at a distance from one another. That in this space of curated faith we forget the community of that saints.

This is not a discussion of rights and freedoms. This is a discussion of design. God in the garden looked at his creation of man and said “it is not good” for man to be alone. The first note in the biblical narrative of something that was not good. Everything else to that point had been good. In fact, man crafted in the image of God was “very good”, until the point of recognition that he was alone.

More than ever we feel alone and that is not good. More than ever we need each other. More than ever once this passes, we will need to gather. More than ever we will need to join hearts, hands, voices in prayer and praise to our Creator. I am tired, I am fatigued, but I am hopeful. I am hopeful of longing hearts opening homes to one another. Friends, family, and even strangers may break bread around tables together in communion. I am hopeful that those who in the midst of crisis have found or renewed faith will find a community of disciples to build them and equip them. I am hopeful because in the midst of crisis, Christ has been preached around the globe. I am hopeful that saints have slowed down and taken real time with their Savior.

I am hopeful because on this Easter as much as any other, the message of the greatest hope is still very true: Jesus is risen. He is alive forever more and this is very good.

Peace in the Middle

 And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.
Philippians 4:7-8

peace in the middle,

Like kids, I am not sure you are supposed to say you have favorites when it comes to Bible verses. Yet, there has been a trend of “life verse” picking ever since I was a college lad at Lee University. It is carefully selecting a single verse that represents so much of what God is doing and saying in your life.

Now, I am not knocking this practice. Our family picks a verse or two as an anchor point each year. This year’s verse focuses on perseverance.

The downside of this singular verse approach is that you often miss the accompanying scenery. It is like going to the Grand Canyon and focusing on a single boulder. You miss the beauty of the vista and grandness of the canyon. Philippians 4 is the Grand Canyon of scripture. Pick any verse of the first thirteen and there you have your boulder. Just try it. Oh, let me help how about this one: “I can do all these through Christ who gives me strength.” Much like a late night TV informercial salesman I urge you, but wait there is more: “rejoice in the Lord always, again I say rejoice.” Did you realize these verses are neighbors. In fact the first quoted verse is number 13. The next is numbered 4. Not books apart, not even chapters apart, mere words apart from one another.

Sandwiched between “rejoice” and “do all things” are two verses that serve as a reminder of what he gives and more importantly who HE is – PEACE.

 7 And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.

It is just as easy to edit our life to see the struggle, the anxiety, the circumstances. It just as easy to focus on the single boulder that seems to stand in our way. It just as easy to make laser in on the struggle. When we expand our vision beyond the narrowness of our own vision and see the scope what we find is God’s peace and the God of peace in the middle of our rejoicing and the power to do all the things he has asked us to do. In center of the snippets is PEACE.

Sure the storms come. He still speaks peace. Sure trials are faced. He still is peace. His peace is our guard and he is our PEACE. Peace is a neighbor to our rejoicing. Peace is a neighbor to his strength in us. Peace, peace is in the center of it all.

I write this as our world is closing itself off as a protection from a virus. Anxious thoughts will arise. Uncertainty will surface. My prayer is that you know peace and know the God of peace. Peace is always in the middle, just look for it.

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