Life
is filled with questions. I was told once
that a 4 year old child asks an average of 437 questions a day. At that time the Queen house had twin four
year olds, and I remember saying to the person, “I can believe it, and we have
it times two.” 874 questions a day…. is a lot of questions!
Just
as life is filled with questions, so is God’s word. The
first question in the whole Bible occurs as God walks through the Garden searching
for Adam and Eve and asks, “Where are you?”
This frequently asked question is echoed throughout scripture where it
seems humanity is the object of divine attention. In the New Testament, Mary and Joseph search
for Jesus and Jesus responds with a question/answer, “Did you not know that I
must be in my Father’s House?” Perhaps
the ultimate answer to this biblical question is that we have already been
found.
As
Wesleyans we would do well to remember that we don’t just go out and find
God. God always finds us first. Whether we have done right or wrong, there is
no end to God’s seeking us in love. Questions
are the start of a genuine conversation with the Creator. Our conversation with God does not start from
scratch. God has already begun it. We just need to plug into the conversation
that is already going on. God asks:
Who
do you say I AM?
Do you love more than these?
Do you want to be well?
Why do you worry?
My friend Dianne
tells a story of getting lost in a large department store. As her mother looked at rack after rack of
dresses, Dianne wandered out of her mother’s sight, or at least she
thought. Dianne walked to a sales clerk
and told the woman. “I am lost. I can’t find my mother.” The nice clerk called her mom’s name over the
intercom and her mother came running, wrapping her arms around Dianne, picking
her up and hugging her. “I have been
searching all over for you. And I wasn’t
going to stop until you were safe in my arms.”
The good
news for us is that God is searching and pursuing us in much the same way. In the chaos of life, we are invited to
remember, to respond, and to rest knowing we have already been found. Across North Carolina many children are in
the midst End of Grade and End of Course testing. Teachers are overwhelmed with the assessments
and students are anxious about knowing the right answer. I know many United Methodist clergy and lay
persons who will enter this environment to serve as proctors, and I pray their
presence conveys the ultimate answer to any question. Immanuel is here. God is with us. We have been found.
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