Interfaith Insight - 2020
Permanent link for "Finding hope in the pandemic" by Sue Spears on May 26, 2020
We welcome Sue Spears as we continue our series from the
Kaufman Interfaith Institute staff. As the Office Coordinator, Sue
keeps, not just the office, but all of us staff coordinated. You
could say she provides the glue that holds all of the events,
projects, internet, publicity, budgets, etc. together. Sue has a
Masters in Social Work and has worked at Grand Valley State
University since 2007.
This completes the series from the Kaufman staff and I trust
you have seen the variety of beliefs and perspectives that we each
bring from our Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and various Christian
perspectives. We are a microcosm of our increasingly diverse society
and as such we work together and respect each person as we journey
toward truth and acceptance. Doug Kindschi
Fear and anxiety. They are everywhere today. On the faces of
those without a mask; in the eyes of those with a mask. I see in
these faces a lack of hope and my heart hurts. I want to say, “Don’t
be afraid! Don’t worry! Let me share with you the source of my hope!”
I’ve been a Christian since the day, as a little girl, when I
understood that my sin separated me from God and reconciliation was
only possible by accepting the free gift of salvation offered through
His son, Jesus Christ’s death on the cross. Christianity is, at its
essence, a relationship. A relationship with the God who has created
all things, who loves me, and who holds all of my days in his hands.
If I truly believe that God is sovereign and that His purposes
will be realized – I don’t worry. I can’t worry. Instead, I choose
to rest in the hope that God brings to those who trust in Jesus. John
Piper, founder and senior teacher of www.desiringGod.org, and chancellor of Bethlehem
College & Seminary in Minneapolis, wrote a short book several
weeks ago: “Coronavirus and Christ.” In this book, Piper writes that
the secret to trusting, to resting, to living free of fear and worry
is “knowing that the same sovereignty that could stop the coronavirus,
yet doesn’t, is the very sovereignty that sustains the soul in it.”
That statement fills me with a sense of peace and hope. It
strips me of the natural bent to worry, replacing this with the wonder
of knowing that the God who is sovereign over all things, the God that
I choose to trust in, is in control over this virus. This is not
something that has happened outside of His knowledge or purpose, but
as PART of these purposes. It’s not a random happenstance. As hard
as it is to make sense of it, there is a reason for all that happens
in our lives, including this virus. The Bible tells the story of Job,
a righteous man who underwent tremendous suffering as God allowed
Satan to test his faith. And yet Job says in Job 13:15, “Though he
slay me, yet will I trust in Him.” And in later in Job 42:2, “I know
that you can do all things, and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted.”
As humans, we have a natural desire to control. We want to make
plans! Yet trials have a way of stripping from us the control we so
desperately try to hold on to, and we see clearly how little in
control we really are. As summer grows closer, we are challenged with
the uncertainty of knowing what these upcoming months will look like.
Will we be able to take that vacation that was planned months ago?
Send our child to his favorite camp? Have friends over for BBQ’s and
pool parties? Enjoy days at the beach? Attend picnics and family
reunions? We hope to do all of these things, but we really don’t know
if we will be able to. It’s out of our hands; out of our control.
And we don’t like that. I don’t like that. So I remind myself daily
that God is in full control and take comfort in that. I choose to
trust Him.
As a Christ-follower, I don’t want to waste time; I want to
redeem time. I want to find ways to make good out of what seems bad
right now. I want to encourage people not to worry and to share with
them the source of my hope. I want to reach out to friends and family
who I’m not able to connect with regularly, in a small way trying to
reignite those relationships that have been so dear in various seasons
of my life. And if I do suffer, I want to “suffer well.” Romans
5:3-5 says, “We rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering
produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character
produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love
has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit.”
Working in an interfaith office is, for me,
eye-opening, faith-growing, and heart-challenging. It keeps me “on my
toes.” I have learned much about the faith traditions of my
colleagues, and I enjoy watching now how these traditions bring each
of them comfort. I understand that while we have many marked
differences in opinions and beliefs regarding issues of faith, I can
respect these differences and ultimately, each individual as a person
uniquely created by God.
Philippians 4:6-7 says, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in
every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present
your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all
understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ
Jesus.” Jesus is the source of my hope. As I trust Him and His
purposes today, even in the midst of this virus, I am comforted. I am
grateful for the peace that keeps me from despair. May we each reflect
upon where, in the midst of this virus, we find our hope
Posted on Permanent link for "Finding hope in the pandemic" by Sue Spears on May 26, 2020.