Snakes have always creeped me out. Maybe that’s why I loved
living in Ireland during my college years – a wonderful guarantee of no snakes.
Legend has it that Saint Patrick banished all the snakes from Ireland after a
forty day fast. While that story may be more symbolic than anything, It seems
like that is what the people from our Numbers Scripture this week could really
use right now.
Read Numbers 21:4-9 and John 3:14-21.
God’s people are not happy. They don’t have any food, and they
detest this miserable food. Wait, what? They sound like the child who opens the
refrigerator, stares at all the food, and declares that “We have nothing to
eat!” Now, the people have been complaining for a while in the wilderness. The
Israelites complain about their wilderness experience, longing for the comforts
and the certainty of slavery. In the previous chapter, the people spoke against
Moses and wished that they had died. In our passage this week, they not only
speak against Moses, but they speak against God as well. And rather than
instantly providing the solution, as God did with the provision of manna,
quail, and water out of a rock, Numbers says that God sent poisonous snakes.
After hearing about the 10 Commandments last week, I would
wager to guess that the people have broken the commandment to not use the Lord’s
name in vain. As we have talked about God-Promises these past few weeks, we
have heard that God is the promise-maker and the promise-keeper, knowing that
we are the promise-breakers. And we know that God brings us back into the
covenant time and time again. Yet that does not mean that there are never
consequences to the breaking of promises.
Brokenness seems to be a state of being for us as
individuals, as a church, and as a world. But we do not like to acknowledge it.
We want to skip Good Friday and go straight to Easter, we want to skip chemo
and be rid of this cancer already, we want to not apologize and just have our
relationship go back to the way it was. The truth for us in the Numbers story
is that we must admit our brokenness to God and to each other. The truth for us
is that sometimes healing and provision is not instantaneous, but a long, hard
journey through the wilderness.
But we are not on that long, hard journey through the
wilderness alone - God doesn’t leave us in our broken state. God works through
brokenness of the body of Jesus to bring us the antidote to sin and death. The
Good News from John is that our God turns the ultimate humiliation in death on
a cross into a victory over sin and death. The Good News is
that Jesus came not to condemn but to save the world. The Good News is that Jesus is
lifted high in the wilderness of our lives in Topeka in 2012.
Know that in our brokenness, God is working in us and through us to lead us to the path of shalom.
Grace and peace,
Pastor Kate
P.S. If you are feeling particularly broken, come join us at the service for healing and wholeness on Sunday at 5:00 pm.
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