Each Friday, we share links we found especially interesting or inspiring during the previous week.
Rebecca:
Some of the most beautiful (and saddest) lines in the Psalms are found Psalm 137:
By the waters of Babylon,there we sat down and wept,when we remembered Zion.2 On the willows therewe hung up our lyres.3 For there our captorsrequired of us songs,and our tormentors, mirth, saying,“Sing us one of the songs of Zion!”4 How shall we sing the LORD's songin a foreign land?
When Israel first arrived in Babylon, the degree to the which the land was foreign was striking. We know from the book of Daniel, for instance, how idolatry ruled the land. How foreign was that place from Jerusalem and from the Temple and from the land of the Lord their God. The psalmist calls the Babylonians not only his captors, but also his tormentors. The foreign-ness of that place was palpable. It threw the Psalmist off balance. How could he sing?
Persis:
Simonetta Carr writes about When Broken People Show Up At Your Broken Church:
It’s easy to find articles indicting the church for its failure to welcome and help people with mental illness. A Google search of these keywords brings up dismal results. That’s probably because we are quicker to report bad news than good ones. There are, in fact, loving communities where people with mental illness find love and inclusion...
Realizing we are all in the same boat and in equal need of a Savior brings down barriers, eliminates stigma, fosters sincere compassion, and encourages open communication. In that sense, Covenant OPC is not unusual. There are many other churches where the gospel is preached every Sunday, constantly changing hearts of stone. They are still imperfect, but so are families, doctors, and hospitals. We all learn as we go, and it’s this willingness to admit we’re broken and to humbly learn to love our broken neighbors that makes a difference.
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