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Tell you a couple stories:
Story 1: At my church a VERY large woman was in tears thanking the Lord for his goodness, at saving her infant son's life. She said that she saw him trying to put a spoon into a 120v wall receptacle. She said she ran toward him and got him away from it in the nick of time. I rolled my eyes, thinking what she should be thankful for is that she didn't trip and land on top of the poor kid! (I'm an electrician. I know several relevant facts: A). A spoon is impossible to get into the holes of a 120v 15amp receptacle B). Only one out of three holes in the receptacle actually has the potential to shock. C). Even that one hole can only shock someone if they are also grounded or touching some voltage 'potential' significantly different from what is in that one hole. D). A very heavy person can crush a child.
Story 2: In my distant past, I used to build custom residential cabinets. Yesterday I was working on some kitchen cabinets for a remodel my daughter and son-in-law are doing, which has been going very slowly. But for some reason yesterday, everything was going right. No mistakes, perfect alignment of face frames etc etc etc... I was thanking the Lord, because at every turn where normally I would have been making mistakes, I didn't. I could even go down to the basement for something, and REMEMBER! what I went down for! I got completely done with the face frames, gluing and nailing them to the cabinets--an amount of work that normally, for half-blind, half-stupid, me, should have taken a week! I was so grateful to God for doing that to me. Well, today I took my daughter and son-in-law over there to ask for a decision on something, and, wouldn't you know it --they had wanted it done in oak, not poplar, and beaded, not plain. (That glue is stronger than the wood, btw. It messed up the uprights pretty badly. It's going to take some doing to make a good job out of it.
In years past, I have scorned (in my mind) people saying, "No! God had nothing to do with it!" Because, logically, God has something to do with all fact. But, is God's involvement a question of degrees?
I would ask, a) Is there a category difference on what to credit God with and thank him vs not to thank him? b) Is there really anything for which we should not be thankful? c) How do we even know what to thank him for, besides as best we understand the facts? That heavy girl, in the first story, was she wrong to thank the Lord in her ignorance? Is her thankfulness any less valid than mine or yours? God gave me a good day yesterday. That today it is shown to be worse than useless in completing the cabinets doesn't change what God did for me, I'm thinking. Life is full of vanity and frustration, and that's good, too!
It's true that we delight in the spectacular, --miracles, interventions, breaking points and yielding of hearts and on and on-- but are those more important or harder for God to do that than to let things go on as they 'naturally' would?
I notice how seldom God gets onto our case about our ignorance of the facts. But I see in several places, the condemnation upon the unthankful.
Thoughts?
Story 1: At my church a VERY large woman was in tears thanking the Lord for his goodness, at saving her infant son's life. She said that she saw him trying to put a spoon into a 120v wall receptacle. She said she ran toward him and got him away from it in the nick of time. I rolled my eyes, thinking what she should be thankful for is that she didn't trip and land on top of the poor kid! (I'm an electrician. I know several relevant facts: A). A spoon is impossible to get into the holes of a 120v 15amp receptacle B). Only one out of three holes in the receptacle actually has the potential to shock. C). Even that one hole can only shock someone if they are also grounded or touching some voltage 'potential' significantly different from what is in that one hole. D). A very heavy person can crush a child.
Story 2: In my distant past, I used to build custom residential cabinets. Yesterday I was working on some kitchen cabinets for a remodel my daughter and son-in-law are doing, which has been going very slowly. But for some reason yesterday, everything was going right. No mistakes, perfect alignment of face frames etc etc etc... I was thanking the Lord, because at every turn where normally I would have been making mistakes, I didn't. I could even go down to the basement for something, and REMEMBER! what I went down for! I got completely done with the face frames, gluing and nailing them to the cabinets--an amount of work that normally, for half-blind, half-stupid, me, should have taken a week! I was so grateful to God for doing that to me. Well, today I took my daughter and son-in-law over there to ask for a decision on something, and, wouldn't you know it --they had wanted it done in oak, not poplar, and beaded, not plain. (That glue is stronger than the wood, btw. It messed up the uprights pretty badly. It's going to take some doing to make a good job out of it.
In years past, I have scorned (in my mind) people saying, "No! God had nothing to do with it!" Because, logically, God has something to do with all fact. But, is God's involvement a question of degrees?
I would ask, a) Is there a category difference on what to credit God with and thank him vs not to thank him? b) Is there really anything for which we should not be thankful? c) How do we even know what to thank him for, besides as best we understand the facts? That heavy girl, in the first story, was she wrong to thank the Lord in her ignorance? Is her thankfulness any less valid than mine or yours? God gave me a good day yesterday. That today it is shown to be worse than useless in completing the cabinets doesn't change what God did for me, I'm thinking. Life is full of vanity and frustration, and that's good, too!
It's true that we delight in the spectacular, --miracles, interventions, breaking points and yielding of hearts and on and on-- but are those more important or harder for God to do that than to let things go on as they 'naturally' would?
I notice how seldom God gets onto our case about our ignorance of the facts. But I see in several places, the condemnation upon the unthankful.
Thoughts?
