From Jim O'Brien
June 18, 2009
Hi Friend, Invisible Barriers The days slip by so quickly
when Donna is out of school that we knew we should jump at our first
opportunity this week to stop in at a nearby French restaurant. The owner/chef
after 23 years in the “What do you miss most?” I
asked, to which she described the community life that still exists. In animated
and enthusiastic tones she talked about visiting neighbors, sharing a glass of
wine and talking for hours. “We all know one another,” she said. “I’ve lived
here 23 years and I only know one of my neighbors.” I thought about that for
awhile There was a time that people
sat on the front porch in the evening and spoke to neighbors as they walked
past. We knew everyone in our community, the names of their kids, where they
went to church, where they worked, their hobbies, their favorite sports and
something about their relatives. But barriers were erected that changed all
that. It wasn’t done maliciously or with purpose but the result is the same. What are the barriers?
Sociologists have identified two items as the most severe culprits; television
and air conditioning. The latter caused us to close our doors, shut the windows
and keep our friends outside and the former drew our attention away from
neighbors and fixed it on strangers on the other side of the continent. The barrier erected in the
life of our French chef is the distance between continents. It is external and
physical but it changed her spirit leaving an internal longing to fill the hole
in her heart. I used to think that man is the being with the strongest desire
for relationship. But I was wrong. It is one of the fascinating
enigmas of the universe that God wants to have a relationship with humans. As
King David wrote, “What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of
man, that thou visitest him?” (Psalm 8:4) This is exemplified by a
time once when the Lord, came down from the third heaven and walked on earth.
His purpose was to see for himself if Most people know that Moses
went up into the mountain to receive the tablets of stone from God. What is
less well known is that just prior to receiving the law, Moses along with
Aaron, his sons and the seventy elders of However man may perceive God
it staggers the imagination that God would choose to share a meal with simple
humans. Amidst an increasing torrent
of anti-Christian messages the evidence is clearer than ever. Being cut off
from the true God is being cut off from blessings. So what are the barriers
that have been erected between man and God? The most visible are two, and it
was not God that put them there. The first is a failure to recognize who the
real God is. Not so long ago, a member of
our congregation who worked overseas for over a year returned with vivid
descriptions of the striking difference between the culture of America and that
of the third world country in which she worked. Oddly enough, the most obvious
dissimilarity was religion, not just because she is a believer, but because of
the damaging influence of pagan worship. The culture she visited was dominated
by ancestor worship where families in abject poverty spend a small fortune on
gold icons while their own children literally starve. She was aghast to witness
such injustice and inhumanity in a country that numbered in the millions as a
result of idol worship. People who don’t know the true God lose blessings that
naturally extend from a relationship with him. He is the civilizing influence
that causes the Spirit of Justice to prevail. A second barrier that cuts
men off from God is forgetting his commandments. While the majority of Americans
profess to believe in God and claim to be Christian, they know little about God
or the Bible. Just as Jesus wasn’t saying these
people didn’t worship him. He said they worshiped him in vain. It was an
unproductive worship because they rejected his laws. What does God want from man?
He simply wants a genuine relationship. And that requires a commitment to live
by a standard of conduct outlined in the Laws of God. Until next time,