Perhaps it may turn out a sang,
Perhaps turn out a sermon.

-- R. Burns Epistle to a Young Friend

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Of Arugula and Kings

The almighty, living God turned to Gabriel and spoke thusly. “Go, take these two portions of My being. There are two destinies waiting. To each of them give one portion of Myself.”

Carrying two glowing, pulsating lights of Life, Gabriel opened the door into the realm between two universes and disappeared. He had stepped into the Mall of Unborn Destinies.

“I have here two portions of the nature of God. The first is the very cloth of His nature. When wrapped around you, it clothes you with the breath of God. As water surrounds one who is within the sea, so does His very breath envelop you. With this, the wind that clothes, you will have His power – power to subdue armies, shame the enemies of God and accomplish His work on the earth. Here is the power of God as a gift. Here is the immersion into the Spirit.”

A destiny stepped forward: “This portion of God is for me.”

“True,” replied the angel. “And remember, whoever receives such a great portion of power as this is will surely be known by many. Ere your earthly pilgrimage is done, your true character will be known; yea, even revealed, by means of this power. Such is the destiny of all who wear and wield this portion, for it touches only the outward man, affecting the inner man not one whit. Outward power will always unveil the inner resources, or the lack thereof.”

The first destined one received and stepped back.

Gabriel spoke again.

“I have here the second of two elements of the Living God. This is not a gift but an inheritance. A gift is worn on the outer man; an inheritance is planted deep inside – like a seed. Yet, even though it is such a small planting, this planting grows and, in time, fills all the inner man.”

Another destiny stepped forward. “I believe this element is to be mine for my earthly pilgrimage.”

“True,” responded the angel again. “I must tell you that what has been given you is a glorious thing – the only element in the universe known to God or angels that can change the human heart. Yet, even this very element of God cannot accomplish its task nor can it grow and fill your entire being unless it be compounded well. It must be mixed lavishly with pain, sorrow, and crushing.”

The second destined one received and stepped back.

Beside Gabriel sat the angel Recorder. He dutifully entered into his ledger the record of the two destinies.

“And who shall these destinies become after they go through the door to the visible universe?” asked Recorder.


Replied Gabriel softly, “Each, in his time, shall be king.”


-- From the Prologue to A Tale of Three Kings by Gene Edwards



I don’t know when Edwards wrote his little book. The copyright on my edition is 1980 and I first ran across it in the early ‘90’s. He could have used a better editor (pot, meet kettle), but, all its faults aside, it is an interesting work. Edwards wrote it in response to abuses of power in authoritarian evangelical churches. It tells the story of Saul and David, then David and his son Absalom as a way of illustrating how to properly respond to abusive pastors and church leaders, church splits, and Christian-on-Christian bashing.

For some reason I could not find listed my favorite response to abusive authority: grab ‘em by the tie and slam them against the wall while foaming at the mouth and screaming assorted profanities and vulgarities. This is possibly because – though it is extremely effective, at least until the cops handcuff you – a minimum sixteen-inch bicep is usually required, depending, of course, on the size of the authority to be elevated.

People who “do the Lord’s work” have a tendency let it go to their heads. Though there are innumerable servants of God who are humble and self-sacrificing, too many in positions of authority think they have a right to dominate and control while making unreasonable demands on the time and resources of others.

Notice what Edwards says: power unveils. That is not limited to the spiritual realm – or maybe I should say the spiritual realm is not limited to church. Just look at the vast majority of politicians and others with political power. The smugness of power can go from the presidency right down to the dog-catcher. Pick any ten police officers and you’ll find at least one who just can’t keep from showing people who the man really is. Pick any ten U.S. Senators and you will find ten like that.

I still say McCain will win, and win more electoral votes than Bush did in 2004. I predict that Obama will not get 49% of the popular vote. I’m calling it 51 to 48.5 for McCain, with Bob Barr getting most of the remainder. However, if I am wrong (for an exhaustive list of things about which I have been wrong, contact my wife), and Obama does receive the mantle of power, we will see a lot of “unveiling” in a hurry.

5 comments:

julie said...

Heh - power unveils, indeed. On Tuesday we had our big choral festival at the local arts center. Jr. high kids were there from about 1:00 to about 9:00 - a long day. Before the evening events started at 7:00, the regular volunteer ushers showed up, among them an older woman who obviously couldn't resist being in control. I swear she was about to have a stroke because kids who had been there all day kept going into the main performance seating area with backpacks. She'd spy one heading in and rush over to scold, while the hapless kid just gaped, stunned. Finally, someone would distract her and the kid would scurry in.

She had the power to keep people out, and damn if she wasn't determined to use it.

Re. the election, I agree with you - I think McCain still has a good chance to win it.

robinstarfish said...

If Ann Coulter is right, the current poll spread gives McCain a good shot. He'll need to uncover much of the ACORN fraud though. Ohio alone could swing it.

One sign in the "pride comes before a fall" category is Obama's planning of a giant celebration party in Grant Park. That kind of hubris is rarely rewarded.

mushroom said...

That's funny. It's like watching Barney Fife -- as long as I'm not the victim.

mushroom said...

I thought the same thing about the post-election celebration.

USS Ben USN (Ret) said...

Good lesson, Mushroom!
And thanks for pointing out that even those without much power (relatively) and authority can also fall prey to abusing it.

Power must be tempered by wisdom and humility before God.
A humble man or woman does not seek to abuse their power and authority over others.
They are a pleasure to work for and they inspire loyalty, and good moral.
The people in their charge will give their all.

But a prideful, egotistical narcissist is hell to work for.
Nobody likes him. He is hated, because he oppresses.
The people under his charge do the bare minimum, moral is low or non-existent.
He seeks to hurt, and everyone knows it.

Of course, these are two human extremes, and people may be anywhere in between, as say, King David was.
But when David did the worst he did repent, but he payed a heavy price in consequences.

And it's important we aren't spared the consequences.

Thanks for a great post, Mushroom!
A humbling post. :^)