Saturday, June 15, 2019

Matthew 6:25-34: WHU's Blowing Bubbles

Presented to The Alberni Valley Men's Breakfast, 16 June 2019 
by Captain Michael Ramsay

A few years ago we were in London England to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the founding of The Salvation Army. We enjoyed the Boundless conference and then stayed to tour England and Scotland a little bit afterwards. It was a good time. It didn't start out that way though.

When we arrived in the UK, our hotel reservations had evaporated: we had no place to stay. Our credit cards and bank cards didn't work: we couldn't access our money. We were calling my mom half way across the world to try to help us access our money and help us find a place to stay - but our phones didn't work properly either. We tracked down other Salvation Army Officers. It all worked out in the end but it was a stressful beginning.

One day, early in the Boundless conference, I had to leave early with my teenage daughter. She was old enough to stay alone but she wasn't confident enough to take the Metro on her own. She wasn't feeling well. I went to help her get to the hotel room. God knew how stressed I was as I was tempted to worry about everything that was happening.

It was at this time that God gave me a gift. I noticed that there were a lot of people on the metro wearing claret and blue. When I was still in elementary school, my cousin bought me a vlaret and blue West Ham United jersey. I had watched them win the FA Cup and, with my cousin;s encouragement, I became a fan. This was what the people were wearing - the uniform of my favourite EPL team.

I took my daughter to the apartment, got her settled and then I decided to follow all of the people in the West Ham kits. I got off the metro where they did and followed them to Upton Park. My credit card wasn't working but I had 10 pounds in my pocket and that is exactly what a ticket cost. That was exactly what the last ticket cost. I bought the last ticket left. It was a seat right on the centre line. It was the first day their new coach arrived at the stadium and West Ham won and kept a clean sheet as well.

That was when the trip turned around for me, God gave me this gift. He let me know that I could stop worrying about hotel rooms, credit cards, cell phones, where we would sleep, how wee would eat and other struggles. God was with us and He encouraged me with this gift.

Today, I encourage you not to worry about whatever your struggles are. God loves you and He knows what you need and He will provide.

Does a time come to mind when has the Lord offered you the comfort and encouragement that He offered me in London that day?
More daily blogs at
More articles, sermons, and papers at

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Ecclesiastes 1: Boney Fingers and Other Problems

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 09 June 2019 by Captain Michael Ramsay

Nothing makes sense anymore. Do you ever get to the point where you think that nothing makes sense anymore? Do you ever get to the point where you don’t really know what the point of anything is anymore? Ecclesiastes 1:2:

“Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”
  
This sounds a little familiar doesn’t it? Do we ever wonder why we invested all of this time and energy into things that seem entirely irrelevant to today?
  
Let me show you something: this hat, do we recognize it? This flag, do we recognize it? When I was a student I was able to go to the USSR. Young people met from each country. We exchanged greetings and shared cultural dances, etc. Canada’s cultural dance: I don’t know who made the selection. My guess is that we were surprised by the concept of a Canadian national dance because we chose the Hokey Pokey as our national dance. Hopefully people in Russia don’t still think that is our dance. Shortly after this the whole USSR dissolved and all of the efforts that were made to establish peace and understanding between the Soviet East and the Capitalist West, were meaningless, as were all of the domestic advances of the USSR for the Soviet Union disappeared from the face of the earth. We in the West were told that this collapse would usher in an era of peace but, of course, the opposite was true and even today you just need to turn on the TV to see how much positive affect student exchanges, perestroika and glasnost had on peace and understanding. It seems it was…

“Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”
But there is much more to this meaninglessness of Ecclesiastes than an old flag and a hat that I happen to have from a city that no longer exists in a country that no longer exists.[1]

Verse 3: What do people gain from all their labours
at which they toil under the sun?

We've heard the expression and maybe the Hoyt Axton song: work your fingers to the bone and what do you get? Boney fingers. Or maybe we've heard Tennessee Ernie Ford's version from an older song? You load 16 tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. The city of Detroit went bankrupt a couple of years ago. The Detroit Free press last year ran articles on the effect of the city's bankruptcy on pensioners. Some people had to all of a sudden find private health insurance of almost $1000 a month where it was covered before.[2] In Canada pensions that people are working for are not necessarily much more secure. Our country has talked about raising the retirement age to 67 instead of 65 and many people my age and younger have lamented that they may never be able to retire. Hoyt Axton: You work your fingers to the bone what do you get? Boney fingers. Tennessee Ernie Ford's: You load 16 tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. Ecclesiastes: What do you gain from all your labour and toil under the sun?

The clips here are HOYT AXTON and JOHNNY CASH (not Tennessee Ernie Ford)





We've heard the idea that if we work longer and harder we will earn enough to survive or even prosper. We have all heard of the prosperity heresy… that God won't let good hard-working Christians starve; they will all be rich: It is not true. Just like the parable Jesus tells about the man who builds storehouses to invest for his retirement. Luke 12:20: “But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’  Another music reference for us today. You know the song by Harry F. Chapin, 'Cat's in the Cradle?'

And the cat's in the cradle and the silver spoon
Little boy blue and the man in the moon
"When you coming home, dad?" "I don't know when"
But we'll get together then
You know we'll have a good time then


    
It is a song about a dad who works so hard, presumably for his family, that he has no time for his child because he is working so much. His child grows up and then his dad retires and has time for his son but his son is now too busy for him. Like father like son. The story of the song's writer is equally as tragic. Harry Chapin realized that he was a workaholic who desired to spend time with his family as the song says but Harry Chapin also did not get the chance; he died suddenly at 38 years old before he could retire, leaving behind his daughter who grew up to be a performer - just like him.

Hoyt Axton: You work your fingers to the bone what do you get? Boney fingers. Tennessee Ernie Ford's: You load 16 tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. Ecclesiastes: What do you gain from all your labour and toil under the sun?

All of this work, all of this toil and nothing ever changes. Ecclesiastes 1, some more, verses 4-7:

4 Generations come and generations go,
but the earth remains forever.
5 The sun rises and the sun sets,
and hurries back to where it rises.
6 The wind blows to the south
and turns to the north;
round and round it goes,
ever returning on its course.
7 All streams flow into the sea,
yet the sea is never full.
To the place the streams come from,
there they return again.

All our hard work and other efforts and nothing seems to change. I can remember feeling duped by politicians more than once, voting for a new person or party believing that when they get in everything will be better only to have them elected and see everything just continues on the same trajectory as always. I still vote in every election that I can and I take the time to research the people, the parties and the issues but there is a reason why less and less people - especially young people - are voting these days.

Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

Hard work, politics, even big societal changes - we've heard the expression, 'the more things change, the more they stay the same'?

Now Ecclesiastes really is a book that you have to read in its entirety to grasp its full meaning but we just don't have time to do that here today. Maybe you could do that at home though. I read it once or twice in its entirety recently. I think it took about half an hour. The context is very important because if we just continued to bring out quotes about everything that is meaningless searching for meaning we may even find apparent contradictions in this letter. Suffice it to say that a major theme is

Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

But I do want to bring our attention to something that I find very interesting and maybe even significant. Who wrote this book? In all probability it was King Solomon or someone at his behest or pretending to be him.[3] But, who is the teacher that is referred to by the author?

Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

I had always just assumed that this teacher (or preacher depending on your translation) was the author of the book or another person - but I no longer think this to be the case necessarily. I looked at the Hebrew for this text a little bit: Qohelet. This word that we translate as 'teacher' is quite interesting. The Hebrew word Qohelet is in its feminine form. A small number of scholars then can argue that the teacher of Ecclesiastes is a woman. One problem for this is simply that masculine pronouns and language are used consistently throughout. I think it is likely that the author was indeed male (which matters not) but I think that when the text refers to the teacher that the text is not referring to a specific person. I think the text is referring to Wisdom herself. We know the name ‘Sophia’ is Latin for Wisdom. The Hebrew word for ‘Wisdom’ in its feminine form is found here as in other Wisdom literature, even in our Bible; in the book of Proverbs for example Wisdom is personified as a woman.[4] All of this I tell you simply because I found it interesting while I was doing my research. It really doesn’t matter whether the teacher is Solomon himself, a man or a woman or whether, consistent with other Wisdom literature, the teacher is Wisdom herself but I found it interesting and I thought that you might as well. If the teacher is Wisdom it doesn’t change the meaning of the text but I think it does make it a little more clear that indeed this passage still speaks to us today. However, in the end the whole discussion about who the teacher really is…

Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says Wisdom.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

This book does go through many things that one considers meaningless: study, work, moral perfectionism/over-righteousness, wickedness/foolishness, life, death, envy, fame, freedom, happiness, hopelessness, talk, fellowship, and even wisdom itself.

When I was a teenager or even a young adult I read this book as if it was written by a high school or university student. Looking for the poignancy in apparent contradictions, my favourite verses at that time came from Chapter 7:16-18:

Do not be over-righteous,
neither be over-wise—
why destroy yourself?

Do not be over-wicked,
and do not be a fool—
why die before your time?

It is good to grasp the one
and not let go of the other.
Whoever fears God will follow each extreme (or avoid them both).

I have spent some time in the past few weeks reading and studying this again and now I read it as a middle aged person who is not tempted to be caught up in the novelty of paradox as much as I am to be swept away by the apathy of experience. Many people try to sum up this book with the cliché that life is meaningless without God but I think that this book says much more than that. I think the book points out quite clearly that even with God in our lives these meaningless events occur. Even if you are a Christian you can lead your life as a health nut, only eating the appropriate amount of organic health food and still die of cancer. You can be an athlete who works out and exercises appropriately and still have a heart attack. You can study 15 years in University and spend all your money doing so and still not get a degree or you might get that degree but then not be able to find any work so that all that time and money you spent was indeed meaningless. You might be like that fellow in Luke’s parable that we mentioned earlier who is really good with his money and saves up for his retirement only to die before he is able to retire. You might work harder than anyone else in your job and never get a promotion. You may volunteer for a million years and never get a paid position. Life is like this. Life is not roses and puppies. You will have good times and you will have bad times. Whether you have money and health, or study hard and work hard or whether you don’t won’t affect that (cf. also James 4:13-17). You cannot inoculate yourself from trouble; you can not vaccinate yourself against hard times. I think this is the message of Ecclesiastes. Ecclesiastes 9:11:

The race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong,
nor does food come to the wise
or wealth to the brilliant or favour to the learned;
but time and chance happen to them all.

This is important. You cannot be vaccinated against bad times; you cannot be inoculated against life. Trying to do so, trying to solve all of life's problems on our own won't work.  It doesn't matter how rich or poor, smart or dumb, pretty or pretty ugly you might be, time and circumstance happens to us all. What we can do is seek to learn and have the joy of the Lord in all of our circumstances (Phil 4:4-8). We cannot ever fully prevent the tragedies of life from happening. Life happens. But when the tragedies do occur we can turn to the Lord who promises He will never leave us nor forsake us (Dt 31:6, Heb 13:5). As the Teacher tells us to conclude this book:

Now all has been heard;
here is the conclusion of the matter:
Fear (Respect) God and keep his commandments,
for this is the duty of all mankind.

And as we do that, as we seek the Lord and trust in Him, everything will be okay - even when it isn't.

Let us pray.




[1] Cf. Tewoldernedhin Habtu, Africa Bible Commentary, (Nairobi, Kenya: Word Alive Publishers, 2010), 814, ‘What’s the Point? 1:1-2:6’ about the still prevelant  Afican perpective of a transient people on a on a not as temporary earth.
[2] Cf. Susan Tompor, 'Even 5 years later, retirees feel the effects of Detroit's bankruptcy' (Detroit Free Press Published 6:00 a.m. ET July 18, 2018 | Updated 3:34 p.m. ET July 18, 2018): https://www.freep.com/story/money/personal-finance/susan-tompor/2018/07/18/detroit-bankruptcy-retirees-pension/759446002/
[3] Cf. also J. Stafford Wright, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Ecclesiastes/Introduction to Ecclesiastes/Authorship of Ecclesiastes, Book Version: 4.0.2
[4] Cf. W. Sibley Towner, The Book of Ecclesiastes, (NIB V: Abingdon Press: Nashville, 1997) 268, 280. If the teacher/preacher here is not ‘Wisdom’ then it puts the book of Ecclesiasts in an unique situation as Wisdom, though a major theme would never make a cameo as one personified.

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Room For Creation

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 02 June 2019 
by Captain Michael Ramsay

Click the link to read the picture book: http://sheepspeak.com/Room_for_Creation_Web_Ramsay.pdf