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“In
those days and at that time I will make a righteous Branch
sprout from David’s line; he will do what is just and right
in the land.” (Jeremiah
33:15)
If
we will focus on God, then hope is possible, even when events
around us seem to be hopeless.
Yeah
right! That’s
easy to say. But
the current global realities and my personal experiences
don’t seem to show much hope.
Think
of the common Palestinians right now, both Christians and
Muslims, who are experiencing oppression at the hands of
Israeli military personnel.
Some of those military operatives believe that the God
Who made this promise to Jeremiah condones their oppressive
acts!
Imagine
the thorn hearts of Jewish people who saw the Tomb of Joseph,
one of the most sacred places in their spiritual journey,
ransacked by the militant Arabs!
Right
now, my heart is broken, maybe angry, about the leadership
crisis in my country of origin--The Philippines.
President Joseph Estrada has brought the Filipino people to
their worst political-economic crisis since WWII. Estrada
who campaigned under the popular slogan, "Erap para sa
mahirap" or "Erap is for the Poor", has
since shown his true stripes as a macho, war-mongering, lavish
alcoholic promiscuous gambler that cannot master the skill and
tact necessary to fairly run a country. Since I was in
my high school days, I have been waiting for, and hoping for,
justice for my country and my people.
Will
there be Hope, Justice and Righteousness for the world's poor?
Christians
love to read Jeremiah 33:15, “In those days and at that time
I will make a righteous Branch sprout from David’s line; he
will do what is just and right in the land.”
We immediately identify this passage as referring to
Jesus.
I
personally believe this verse applies to Jesus.
But
consider the words of a 72-year old Rabbi who is helping me
understand the Hebrew Bible:
“Dann, I get nervous every time I hear Christians
apply the messianic passages of the Hebrew Bible to Jesus.”
“Why
is that, Rabbi?”
He
looked outside the window of the Jewish Community Centre in
Vancouver. He
stared upon the sky as if watching an invisible screen.
It was a cold and rainy day.
He took a deep breath and touched me.
Then his eyes, full of sadness and mercy, assured me of
our friendship. His
soft and unapologetic voice brought shocking vibrations
throughout my body: “My brothers and sisters died at the
hands of the Nazis during the Holocaust.
There were signs along the way that says: ‘You are
being killed in the name of Jesus Christ.’”
Hope?
Justice? Righteousness?
After the Holocaust?
That
became a crisis to me. Not
a crisis of faith. It
was a crisis of anger. Jesus
was misrepresented. Jesus’
name was misused to inflict unjust sufferings and death to the
people who was used by God to proclaim the message of hope,
justice and righteousness!
Is
it really possible to live with Hope, Justice and
Righteousness as followers of Jesus in a postChristian 21st
Century?
I
invite you to meditate on God’s self-revelation through the
Prophet Jeremiah. My
prayer is that, God would touch you in a very personal and
experiential way through The Word.
The people who are genuinely touched by God are people
who live in accordance with the character of God.
They model God’s Hope, God’s Justice and God’s
Righteousness.
The
ancient Hebrew people loved to coin terminologies that
describe their experiences of God or their understanding of
God’s role in their lives.
For example, Abraham called an experience YHVH Yireh
(The Lord Provides) after God saw to it that Abraham’s needs
was provided. Jacob
called a place Beth-El (House of God) after experiencing God
in a dream. Dani-El
means “God is my Judge” as far as the Prophet Daniel was
concerned.
Following
that ancient Hebrew tradition, let us focus on God according
to the 33rd chapter of Jeremiah:
GodCredential.
The God who gives us Hope is the One who formed and
established the earth (v.
2).
We live on this planet Earth.
It is but one of the planets in the Solar System.
Our Sun is but one of the billions of stars across our
galaxy. The Milky
Way, our particular galaxy, is just one of the billions of
galaxies across the Universe.
Recent theories even state that, there may be parallel
universes. Our
cosmic understanding based on modern science humbles my mind.
This humbled mind helps me to realize that my
understanding of life and reality is so finite.
If the whole creation is so infinite, how much more is
the infinity of The Creator?
Jeremiah’s
cosmic understanding may be less sophisticated than our 21st
century astronomy. His
understanding of the whole cosmos may consist of a flat
surface of land and bodies of waters.
The ends
of the earth
in their minds literally meant the end of the flat surface.
A canopy called heaven or sky covered this flat earth.
Beyond the canopy is the abode of God and angels.
Below the flat surface was the abode of the dead.
Human
understanding of cosmic reality keeps on growing.
Through God’s mercy and grace, mortals like us are
given the privilege of discovering more and more about the
nature of God’s creation.
I praise God for the human advances in science and
technology that adds to our understanding!
But beware, our understanding will always be finite or
limited.
Human
understanding of reality--whether premodern, modern, or
postmodern--is limited. Jeremiah
invites us to put our hope, not in our understanding of
Reality, but to the One Who designed Reality.
Hope
is the humble realization that our finite understanding of
Reality is limited. Hope
is the realization that the infinite God--whose design and
whose understanding of Reality is infinite--is my Ultimate
Anchor and my Ultimate Point of Reference as I try to
understand the realities of life.
Hope is appreciating the fact that our finite
understanding of Reality is growing.
Hope will help us grow continually.
GodScape.
God's
perspective of human experiential horizons is beyond human
knowledge and understanding (vv.
3-13).
We use the term landscape to describe a horizon
before our eyes—ricefields, cornfields, wheatfields,
mountains, lakes, dessert, etc.
Our present society—the Information Age—even coined
the term Netscape
to describe the horizon of the cyberspace.
What
do we call those horizons of human experiences that are beyond
human understanding? May
I suggest GodScape?
We are invited to experience a connection with God that
is beyond human comprehension; experiences that are beyond
logic but not illogical; experiences that are beyond reason
but not irrational. “Call
to me and I will answer you and tell you great and
unsearchable things you do not know.”
Human
experiential horizons are full of paradoxes.
Jeremiah lived in a city that was to be conquered by
the Babylonians. The
year was 585 BCE. The
Babylonian military forces were outside Jerusalem’s city
walls. The city
was in crisis. In
that historical setting, God told Jeremiah to buy a land in
the city (32:1-12). He
was commanded by God to invest in real estate when the price
of land was reduced to zero!
God’s reason? For
Jeremiah to model Hope in the midst of crisis!
In 586 BCE, the Babylonian forces razed Jerusalem to
the ground. The
land was destroyed.
The
people of Judah experienced Exile.
That was a painful, dark experiential horizon in the
journey of that people. Just
before their exile God promised hope: “… I will heal my
people and will let them enjoy abundant peace and security.
I will bring Judah and Israel back from captivity and
will build them as they were before” (vv. 6-7).
How
can God say those words of hope in that kind of historical
context? If I
were Jeremiah, would I have trusted God?
Would I deliver God’s message of hope to the people
of Judah?
It’s
easy to say “Yes” in retrospect.
But I am facing crises of my own today.
And I have no idea how I can see these events around me
through Jeremiah’s Hope.
I do not fully understand GodScape.
That’s why I called it GodScape.
It’s beyond human understanding.
But I am invited to call God, to connect with God,
even, or especially, in the paradoxes of my life’s horizons.
GodScript.
History is God’s story.
The current events are an on-going drama directed by
God. God gave us
a hint how the story will end.
God’s righteousness will be shown as the climax of
the story (vv.
14-18).
Hopelessness is often a result of looking at my life as
my own individual story.
My individualistic story revolves in my own individual
universe. In this
universe, my ego becomes the center.
In this universe, I am god.
In this universe, nobody else is affirmed except my
ego. In this
universe, I am alone. Ultimately,
this universe is empty and hopeless.
God
allowed the people of Judah to experience Exile to bring them
out of their ethno-centric, exclusivist conception of God.
Similarly, God allows painful experiences that are
beyond our understanding to bring us out of our ego-centered
universe wherein our ego is god.
The
theatre of life is God’s Universe.
History is God’s story.
World events are part of GodScript.
People are artist-participants who are both given a
script and their own personal creativity to express their role
in God’s drama. God
directs the drama. In
this drama, in this Universe, my role might end in a horrible
death after a series of painful experiences of suffering.
In this drama, I have to interact with other
artist-participants. In
this drama, I am not the center.
From the perspective of modern individualism, this is
not the way to live. But
the theatre of life is God’s Universe, not mine.
History is God’s story, not mine.
My role is both God’s and mine, but I have to make
the decision how I would act, when the Director queues me in.
The
Story of God ends in Hope, Justice and Righteousness.
That’s what the Great Script says.
I may be in the middle of a crisis.
I may be experiencing pain right now, which is just a
series of painful experiences in my horizon.
I might die a horrible death.
But I know how the Great Story ends.
In that Story, I am an artist-participant.
And I’ll do my part well!
GodSignature.
The laws of nature--from the most basic micro-particle
to the ultimate macro-reality of the universe--is God’s
signature of faithfulness and sovereignty.
This signature is my security why I hope in God (vv.
19-26).
While reading these verses, I can’t help but imagine
the talks between God and Jeremiah.
“Umm,
Jeremiah…” God begins the conversation.
“Yes,
God. Here am
I,” Jeremiah replies. Responding
with Here
am I
is like saying “Present!” or “Here!” when the
classroom teacher calls your name.
“You
don’t seem to buy the idea of Hope in the midst of crisis,
eh?” asks God. (I’m
not sure whether God really says “Eh” or “Huh” but I
learned to do creative writing in Canada.)
Jeremiah
complains: “How
can we, as a people, hang on to Hope?
You promised King David that his royal dynasty would
rule over Israel forever.
You promised the Levites that they would continue to be
priests in your temple forever.
Now, the lame duck royal family is about to be
dethroned. The
temple is about to be ruined.
There’s no stability!
No permanence! No
Hope!”
“Ah,
ah, ah! Your
perspective is too limited,” answers God.
“I don’t blame you.
You’re a limited, finite, near-sighted mortal.
But I love you.”
“And
also…” Jeremiah is about to make Complaint No. 2.
But
God interrupts: “Wait, I’m not finished talking yet.
Well, well. My
prophet doubts my promises, eh?
Have I broken my promise about the cycle of night and
day? No.
Likewise, I’ll fulfill my promises to the descendants
of David and Levi.”
What
if the setting of Jeremiah was our 21st century
Quantum Age? I
think God would have said something like this: “Jeremiah,
chill! My promise
is like an on-going symphony.
Look at the world.
It’s a world of music.
Everything that exists is part of my unfinished
symphony.”
“I
don’t understand, God.”
“Well,
you better start understanding how I run my Universe,”
explains God. “You
see that LCD screen? It’s
a matter composed of atoms, right?
Atoms are made of protons, neutrons and electrons.
Mortals like you can’t divide electrons further.
But protons and neutrons are each made of three even
tinier particles called quarks.
Now, from the current knowledge of mortals like you,
quarks and electrons may not be particles at all but
multi-dimensional entities called ‘branes,’ some of which
manifest themselves as tiny loops of ‘string.’
While the strings are identical, the way they vibrate
determines whether they act as electrons or quarks, somewhat
as a violin string sound A or B, depending on how it’s
tuned. My
Universe, Jeremiah, is an on-going symphony.”
“I
don’t see the point, Lord?”
“The
point is,” God continues, “that in my Theatre, I direct
the Drama with the music accompaniment.
As long as I’m directing the music, the drama
continues and the Story will still end in Hope, Justice, and
Righteousness. That’s
my Signature Design! Got
it?”
Conclusion.
No
conclusion. The
drama goes on. The
symphony is still being played.

Maligayang
Pasko at
Masaganang Bagong Taon!

L-R:
JOJI makes a living as an Investment
Funds Advisor. BYRON (16) plays power forward in his
senior-hi basketball team. L'NIELLE JOY (17) serves in
her high school GradCommittee. DANN PANTOJA makes a
living as a Leadership
Consultant
and studies
Biblical Hebrew. ALETHEA (20) works as a PR Staff in a
high-tech company while studying Public Relations at BC
Institute of Technology. |