Rain Falls

“and sends rain on the just and on the unjust” Matthew 5:45 ESV

Rain – I have a hard time understanding God’s battle plan. If I were running the cosmic war, I would make it as difficult as possible on my enemies and as wonderful as I could for my allies. I’d be sure that my troops got the best of everything. Good food, great jobs, wonderful children, pleasant neighborhoods, peaceful communities. The list would go on and on about all the marvelous treasures in life if you joined my team. At the same time, I’d make sure that the plagues of Egypt fell on the unrighteous. They would be the sad recipients of hell on earth. Famine, disease, destruction, sorrow, defeat. I’d throw it all at them until they capitulated. That’s a battle plan I could understand.

But God doesn’t listen to my clever strategy. He sends the rain on the just and the unjust. What kind of tactic is that? How can I ever conduct recruiting or hope to encourage desertion from the enemy ranks if God pours out favors on those who oppose Him? It’s just plain insanity. What’s worse is that God doesn’t seem to protect His own troops from evil treatment. His children experience sorrow and grief, affliction and destruction, loss and labor. Of course, they do have the power of the Spirit but they don’t seem to be immune from the trials and tribulations of the world. In fact, they might even get more than their fair share. It’s hard to imagine a more upside-down strategy than this!

Maybe you’ve never thought about the big battle plan. Maybe you’ve only recognized the disparity in your own little corner of the war. But my guess is that there have been times when you said, “God, what are You doing? Those people across the street don’t believe in You at all and I do. But they get all the breaks. They have plenty of money. Their kids go to private school. They just went on vacation – again. I’m following You as best as I can and I just lost my job, my children are in bad schools and the car needs repairs. How can this be fair?”

We need a cosmic view.

Yeshua gives us an insight into the cosmic plan when he says that the Father causes the sun to shine and the rain to fall on the good, the bad and the ugly. Actually, he didn’t say “ugly.” That was Clint Eastwood. But the insight Yeshua gives is astounding. God’s game plan in the cosmic battle of truth and justice is blessing. And God’s blessing plan is distributed across His entire creation. So, God blesses His enemies because God loves them, even when they are fighting against Him.

The plan is radical—and crazy. But it is absolutely consistent with the character of God. God does not fight fire with fire. He does not wreak havoc on those who oppose Him. He is compassionate. He applies the blessing strategy over and over, year after year, century after century because He wishes to woo the rebels back to His arms, not drive them to surrender to His might. His strategy is vulnerability, not fortification. He goes to battle with love, not power. No wonder we don’t understand Him.

We are far more inclined to the strategy of the evil one. Why shouldn’t we be? Every battle plan in human experience, every movie, every comic book story operates on the basis of overwhelming power. The arms race is all about fearing the power of the antagonist. I can’t send my missiles to destroy your cities because you would send your missiles to destroy mine. Defense in the world’s system is a matter of having more power than the enemy. God’s plan calls for total vulnerability. The world wants total control.

There is a great irony here. God, the Creator of the universe, the God who lacks no power at all and who could, with a single word, eliminate all His enemies, comes to battle armed with only compassion. All of the rest of us, including the evil one, who are severely limited in power compared to God Allmighty, gobble up as much power as we possibly can in order to ensure our victory. How strange is that? If the God of creation enters the battle unarmed, don’t you think He understands the true nature of combat?

We reflect a different reality. Our thinking has been infected with the addiction to control. We think that the answer to threat is force. We are a world that firmly believes in shock and awe warfare. What a tragic mistake. There is no end to that strategy. Power always begets the need for more power. Force always produces more resistance. A battle plan based on total control can only finally succeed when everyone is dead. But, of course, that really is the cosmic objective. The evil one gladly lends his support to our misguided versions of battle strategy because they all serve his plan. He is not interested in victory. He knows that he has already lost. His strategy is to destroy the image of God found in all of God’s creation. That means that he is more than willing to destroy everything that he can get his hands on before his final defeat. Every battle plan except compassion is equally useful to him because every other plan leads to more annihilation of God’s image. So, cut the rain forest because we need furniture. Drill the wilderness because we need fuel. Exploit the poor because we need silk shirts. Blow up a bus because we want recognition. Open the killing fields because we want power. Manufacture excess because we want affluence. It all fits the destruction strategy. Erase God from the earth, no matter what the cost.

So God sends the rain. A gentle reminder of another battle strategy. A remembrance of His character. Cosmic victory in a drop of water.

Topical Index: compassion, control, war, rain, Matthew 5:45

 

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F J

Funny thing that rain. He gives to all and when we ‘the just because He said so’ abuse the gift of rain more than Compassion says works for Him, I will sometimes find the the sky becomes as iron as a just reflection of my heart. Such an amazing battle plan to draw us out of abuse or into our Job times at the well of non-comprehension that leads to the river of lived out faith & even more certain in the knowing of the waters to come even when parched, stretched and longing… for He is good.

Nice one Skip, let us be water bearers and not umbrellas.

Christine Hall

Great TW today on the character of Yah. Coming slowly out of a Job type period I’m more aware of just how much I tried to be in control. Everything I thought I knew about my life has been turned upside down. But slowly, I can say like Job …..I thought I knew Yah’s ways / character….but this has taken me to …’ah now I ‘see’ his character ….His compassion mercy etc for me, this earth and all in it’ – what it took to get me there has been devastating but necessary.

While still in limbo, I can trust in HIS character and promises though I have no answers or know the next step. It’s taken a long time to get to that kind of shalom and having absolute no control over my any part of my life brought a new perspective on trust. As Berene Brown ( I think that’s her correct name) on her TED talk on vulnerability said…’ Being vulnerable can lead to innovation, creativity and change’. When we let go (or are forced to let go) and become ‘real’ I think people see HIS characteristics in us – not a ‘belief’ or ‘religion’ etc. That brings change and possibly sows a seed in those who have not encountered the God of creation – I.e. our lives suddenly are creative, innovative and consequently can bring change both in us and those around us. (Hope this makes sense – I’m still not fully compas mentos when trying to relate my thoughts).

Blessing Skip and many thanks for all the TW that have carried me through especially the last 6 months. Travels with Job came at just the right time and I found your insights into him and his situation so refreshing and insightful.
Christine

Laurita Hayes

“I think people see HIS characteristics in us – not a ‘belief’ or ‘religion’ etc. That brings change and possibly sows a seed in those who have not encountered the God of creation – I.e. our lives suddenly are creative, innovative and consequently can bring change both in us and those around us.”

You mean; become rain, Christine?

The 11th tradition of Alanon re-teaches what so many of us forgot in the blasted years. It says ” Our public relations policy is based on attraction rather than promotion…”. Steps out of darkness build us anew in the image of God that was forgotten or lost.

I was reading in Acts this morning about Paul’s shipwreck experience on the island of Melita. When he got bitten by the snake the people exclaimed: “he must be a murderer”, but when he didn’t die, they said “he must be a god”. The world only understands demotion or promotion, and conducts itself accordingly by extending or withholding its ‘favor’, and, further, thinks God must be the same. But attraction? This is the true hallmark of heaven. The question then becomes not “am I ‘right’?, but, “am I attractive”? Let us pause and check ourselves in that mirror of ourselves reflected in those around us. Are they being attracted to us? Do they crave our friendship and wish to stay a little longer with us? The power of attraction is the true power in the cosmos. It is what holds planets, galaxies, and even raindrops together. It is also what holds us together, too.

I pray with you that we all return to that child-like trust and vulnerability so necessary to produce the creativity, innovation and change you listed, and so become the attraction of rain “in a weary and thirsty land”. Amein.

Mark Parry

I have lived most of my life under the umbrella of two words of God ” my way’s are not your ways…as the heavens are higher than the earth so are my way’s higher than yours and my thought’s higher than your thoughts.” and “seek first the kingdom of God and his rightiousness and all these things will be added unto you”. While living under the cover of these perspectives has helped make some sense of the rain and dry spells, they have provided some shelter; my shoes still get a little soggy- but I truge on….generally with a smile. My gratitude for the rain maker grows daily!

Rich Pease

Skip-
Written like God’s Secretary of Peace!
God wasn’t kidding when He told us His thinking and ways
are way different than ours. How humbling and grateful we are
to have received His revelation of Himself. And how ardently we
of faith aspire to understand all that He is and all that He does.
He’s a Lover of the highest degree, way past our earthly pay grades.
Everything He does shows us the vast differences between the kingdom
and this world.
Indeed, we’re strangers in a strange land . . . but His Word tells us our
citizenship is in heaven. So we knowingly carry our crosses as we follow Him.
And no need to pack any bags!

John Adam

“The rain falls on the just and unjust fella,
Because the unjust’s stolen the just’s umbrella…”
Not sure where I heard that from 🙂

Mark Randall

Really enjoyed this TW, Skip! To be completely honest, I miss this sort of writing that you’re sooo very good at. One that inspires me, and probably most others, to truly look at the God of compassion that had mercy and compassion on such a wreck of a person like me.
We are so in desperate need to see such a powerful King/Creator/Redeemer of the broken. In such a messed up out of order world, we need to hear about this God. The mighty God – El Gibbor, Sar shalom – Prince of peace, Pele Yoetz – Wonderful Counsellor, Avi ad – everlasting Father, and most importantly, Emmanuel – the God who is with us.
Consequently enough, our Christian brothers and sisters, (and certainly our Jewish brothers and sisters as well) most likely need to hear about this God too. Personally, this God taught me and continues to teach me, that it would probably be best if I left my doctrine crusher at the door once He opens it if I were to have any hope that those inside, whom He loves to, would seek to know Him and His ways through whatever type of relationship He may allow us to have.