Not My Best Day

Reborn Kits 22" Sleeping Baby Doll Blank Soft Vinyl Head 3/4 Limbs Supplies  Gift | eBay

Remember those dolls whose arms and legs used to snap off?

My leg feels like some not very nice child tied it in knots and is now trying to pull it off at the hip. Consequently, I haven’t had a good night’s sleep all week.

So our plan for today is to try and rest–I’m buoyed up now by the wonderful glorious news from “thewhiterabbit,” which took me by surprise this morning: maybe my leg will be next.

Okay, I see Violet Crepuscular coming up the sidewalk, I’ll try to give you her next chapter of Oy, Rodney. And then, I think, some more prayers of thanks, a nice cigar, and one of Denzel Washington’s Equalizer movies. Yeah, I know they’re rather violent; but they also make me want to stand up and cheer. There’s something to be said for a character with well-nigh incredible powers and resources who uses them to rescue powerless people who are getting crushed. Could Sir Lancelot do more?

As Prester Jod once said, God makes use of heroic deeds and hard fighting.

And He hears our prayers! Let us never forget that.

Two Parables, One Lesson–for Today

FreeBibleimages :: Persistent Widow :: The parable Jesus told about a widow  who persisted in trying to get justice from an unjust judge (Luke 18:1-8)

What shall we do? Politics and churches, popes and premiers, courts and commentators–the crazies have taken over, and all our worldly institutions–in which we put our trust–have failed us.

Our Lord Jesus Christ has two parables we need to hear.

Luke 18: 2-8–An unjust judge who fears neither God nor man is troubled by a widow woman who comes to him again and again, seeking justice. “Yet because this widow troubleth me, I will avenge her, lest by her continued coming she weary me” (v. 5). And Jesus asks His audience, “And shall not God avenge His own elect, which cry day and night unto Him, though He bear long with them?”

Luke 11: 5-8–A man is wakened by a knock on his door at midnight. It’s his neighbor, needing to borrow bread so he can feed a friend who has just come to him. The man in bed doesn’t want to get out of bed; but, “I say unto you, Though he will not rise and give him, because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity he will rise and give him as many as he needeth” (v.8).

The lesson in both parables is the same, and speaks to us today:

Keep praying!

For one thing, it keeps up our connection to God–and we need that connection. For another, it states our faith in God, that He hears and answers prayers (which is what Humanist Manifesto II explicitly denies: they don’t want you praying). And for a third, God already knows what He is going to do and when He is going to do it, but we are His children by adoption and He will feel for us, He will care for us, He will know when the time has come to give us any particular blessing.

And it may be that, like the unjust judge and the man who’d already gone to bed, God will decide to give us what we need rather than be “troubled” by us forever.

Keep praying. We need deliverance out of the hands of wicked and ungodly rulers. It is in God’s power to grant us that deliverance. No evil empire ever rose without His decision not to stop it, because He respects our free will; and no evil empire ever lasted a minute longer than He decreed. As mighty as they are, He can throw them down in an instant. Ask the Assyrians.

Though He bear long with us… keep praying. He is God, the judge of all the earth. Keep praying.