So what is the "Big Bad"?
It’s knowing that those you thought were your friends now seek to harm you, that your family shuns you. And now that your family and friends have turned against you, that no one stands with you. It’s facing inescapable death when there is no longer any water. It’s the realization that you and your child are not going to survive. It’s drowning when the mighty waters rise above you. It’s the sure knowledge that no knight, whatever his or her stripe, can save you from what is to come. It is there in the moment you realize all is lost, the moment when clarity shows you there really is no escape.
The Big Bad is front and center in this week’s scriptures. But it’s not alone. We find Hagar expecting death in the desert—for herself and for her baby—when her water runs out. We find the Psalmist fearing the exact opposite end: too much water. Death has been the Big Bad for so long—the biggest, the true inescapable fate—for as long as recorded history.
But that time has ended.
It is now the day of our trouble. We need to call on the Lord. If the prophet Jeremiah tries to withhold the message of God, it becomes like "a burning fire shut up in his bones," a fire he cannot hold in. That message, the one so hot no one can contain it, is that God continues to care about us, cares enough to "deliver the life of the needy from the hands of the evildoers."
Jeremiah’s bone-burning message eventually took human form as the Messiah, Jesus Christ. And it was His sacrifice that turned death—once an inescapable prison—into a mere way-station. That’s why, in the day of our troubles—facing our own world-shattering Big Bad—we can confidently call on the Lord.
We can know—in our very bones—the Big Bad can never overcome the Big Good.
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Blessings,
Steve
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SCRIPTURES FOR SUNDAY AND THE COMING WEEK
Find them here:
https://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/texts.php?id=147
Print them from here:
https://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/pdf//Ax_Proper7.pdf
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