20.02.18
We had a guest speaker at our home league meeting this afternoon and her theme was, broken. Sarah spoke firstly about things being broken, and how we all experience breaking something and if it is something special to us we may try to fix it, but it never looks again as it did before. And we oft times just throw it away, because we are encouraged to throw things away and buy new. There is too much time and effort involved in mending something, it's easier to put it in the bin and replace it.
Even
hearts can be broken, it has been known for men and women to die of a broken
heart, hours or days after their spouse had died.
We can
break things in our bodies, our teeth, or our bones. Breaking bones can have a
life changing effect on some people, especially the elderly, people find their
bones don't heal as well as they did when they were young.
Sometimes
we can feel broken by circumstances, and we feel shattered, and in tatters, and
we find ourselves not dealing with things, not going through a healing process
but rather trying to throw away the brokenness and acting tough so that no one
will know what’s going on. We are made to feel that broken equals uselessness, that we must be worthless, and we feel forgotten, much like the broken plate just tossed into the dustbin and sent to the dump.
Sarah
showed us a photograph of a bowl that had been repaired by Kintsugi which
means, golden joinery, which is the art of mending broken things with gold,
showing that it can still be useful, and it also then increases it's value.
Something which was quite ordinary before it was broken becomes a thing of
great beauty and value after it has been mended, put back together with gold.
There is
brokenness in the world and in our individual lives because of sin, when sin
entered the world, God didn't then cast it aside, He didn't discard it, but put
a remedy in place that would heal people's brokenness, that would forgive our
sins. God sent His Son, Jesus to die in our place, He took our sin and gave us
His righteousness. Jesus took our broken lives and gave us freedom in Him.
Sarah
reminded us of some of the fractures in the lives of the men and women God used
throughout the Bible, just when you are thinking about your brokenness bare
this in mind.
Moses
had a speech problem
Jonah
was self-absorbed
David
was an adulterer and a murderer
Samson
was a womaniser
Rahab
was a prostitute
the
Samaritan woman had a string of divorces
Zacchaeus
was engaged in extortion
Peter
was hot headed, impulsive and temperamental
Naomi
was a bitter widow
Leah
wasn't attractive enough
Joseph
was abused and abandoned
Jacob
was a liar and a schemer
Martha
worried about anything
Romans
8:28
And we know that all things work together for good to those who love
God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.
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