Psalm 146
I
don’t know how it happens but sometimes the lectionary and the events of the
day or week line up in ways that are ironic if not prophetic. “Do not put your
trust in princes…” might be both for an Election Day. I want to quickly point
out that “princes” is plural which means it is a bipartisan critique on those “in
whom there is no help.” It is because their breath is as fleeting as ours so
that whether one lives in a red state or a blue we all occupy the same place
when the earth reclaims us as its own and mortal plans perish. There are no partisan politics six feet under. Dead is dead. Not a very comforting
thought. On the other hand there is a prince who can help, whose plans do not
perish, who is worthy of trust. The plan of this prince is justice for the
oppressed, food for the hungry, freedom for the prisoner, sight for the blind.
To lift up those bowed down and watch over the stranger and the widow and the
orphan while bringing the ways of the wicked to naught. It appears from the
scriptures that God’s very nature is to care for those the world despises or
ignores so that the banquet hall of the forever future feast will be filled
with those who like Lazarus at the rich man’s gate had no place at the table in
this life. That is not a political
agenda as God’s vision is not a party platform. It is how God ushers the future
into our present so that whenever and wherever mercy, love and peace are found
the joys of heaven are known. We who have been claimed by Christ are free to
vote today for whatever prince we want but our trust can only be in the Prince
of Peace whose plans will never perish and whose faithfulness is forever.
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