“I wish I hadn’t broken it.”
My son’s small voice was heavy with grief last night as he
looked upon the shattered pieces of a Lego set he’d been constructing for
several weeks. Earlier in the day, in a fit of anger, he’d thrown it to the
ground, breaking it and scattering the formerly interlocking pieces everywhere.
It had taken us quite a while to gather up the pieces and even now I need to
walk with care so as not to step on a Lego landmine.
“I know, son. You worked so hard on it. But I can help you put
it back together if you let me.”
After I tucked him in, I couldn’t help but liken the grief my
boy felt over his Lego set to the sorrow many of us feel about the state of our
nation. It, too, took a beating yesterday, fueled by anger and unmet
expectations. While the details are still fuzzy and I will refrain from casting
blame, yesterday’s events further exposed the deep rifts of animosity and
mistrust that have formed in our society. We call ourselves the United States,
but I can’t think of a time in my life when we’ve been more fractured. We all
want America to prosper, but our disagreements about how to do that have fueled
a pursuit of power at all costs. Add to that our unwillingness to listen to
people who disagree with us, and our knee-jerk tendency to blame others rather
than taking a good hard look in the mirror, and it’s no wonder why we are
experiencing such deep division. It’s messy and painful and at times it seems
hopeless.
But we have one thing going for us.
We don’t have to put the
pieces back together by ourselves.
Like my son, we have a Father who is willing to enter into
the messiness of our reality, a messiness that we had a part in creating, and He
will help us heal our broken society. Now, I’m not naïve enough to believe that
everyone in our country will all of a sudden yearn for Jesus to take the wheel.
But for those of us who call Him Lord, if we will keep our eyes fixed on him
and allow his values to shape our values, then we can begin piecing our fractured
society back together again starting with our own little spheres of influence.
If we, who call Jesus our Lord, will stop pointing the fingers at others and
start asking ourselves, “how would Jesus have me respond?” then we can break
the cycles that breed division and dysfunction in our society. Let the healing
start with us.
So let me be the first to say it: “God, we’ve made a mess
and we need your help.”
“If my people who are called by my name humble
themselves, and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I
will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”
2 Chronicles 7:14
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