TAKE COURAGE
based on Psalm 27: 1-14
By David Rogne
I was at a party one evening where a woman was talking about a recent trip
she had taken to England. "And you know," she said, "one of the things I
really admire about the English is their fortitude. Why, everywhere I went,
all over England, I saw signs on buildings that I think must have been put
up during the dark days of World War II. The signs said, 'Take Courage.’" I
couldn't help but smile when she said it, for I had seen those signs too. I
couldn't bring myself to tell her, but the buildings on which those signs
were found are often pubs and "Courage" is the name of a beer! Of course, it
is a play on words, and the advertisers know how inclined we are to notice
the phrase, for courage is something we greatly need. Not just courage for
heroic acts, but courage that can win out against depression, brace the
spirit against anxiety, enable people to be composed in hardship, to stand
up under pressure, to carry on in the face of doubt, to be hopeful when the
good things have slipped out of life.
The struggle for that kind of courage - the courage to go on - is described
frequently on the pages of the Bible. Those who wrote the Psalms were
frequently dejected because of some severe problem they were going through.
Perhaps that is why the Psalms are so meaningful to us - they were written
by people whose human problems are discernible, and we can identify with
them.
The Psalmist acknowledges that the reasons for losing heart are numerous. He
speaks of adversaries or foes. David seems to have known a lot about that.
He was in the king business. Before he became king there were those who
opposed him because they felt he was ambitious. After he became king there
were those who opposed him because they were loyal to the old regime. He
knew that there were ruthless people out to get him, including his own son,
Absolom, who led a revolt that forced David out of the capital.
We may not be in the king business, but we know that any business can
experience what David experienced.
The author speaks of being cut-off from loved ones. He says, "My father and
mother forsake me." It may not have come to that for us, but we do know what
it is to feel alone.
Dr. Abraham Maslow, famed research analyst, estimates that the average
American meets only about 50% of his need for love, interpersonal support,
and intimacy. In the latter stages of his research, Maslow became even more
negative in his summary: "The truth is that the average American does not
have a real friend in the world." Can such an attitude affect our survival?
You bet it can.
Dr. William Glasser, another psychotherapist, writes "Several years ago I
talked to a man who had barely survived a serious attempt to kill himself.
When I asked him why he had tried, he replied that he was lonely and had
been lonely for so long that being dead seemed a better choice than living
in such pain. Research bears him out. Most people who commit or attempt
suicide describe incredible loneliness as the reason." Feeling forsaken or
alone can devastate us.
The Psalmist also speaks of violence which puts him in physical jeopardy. We
know something of what he was talking about. Some of us grew up in
communities where the front door was never locked, or if it was, the key was
under the mat so that all who knew about it could let themselves in. Kids
could play hide and seek or kick the can until late into the night. One
could ride the bus anywhere or spend an afternoon in any park. Now we have
double locks on the door, burglar alarms, fewer people go out at night and
many stay away from parks. There was a story in the newspaper awhile back of
an elderly couple who had lived in the same house in the same neighborhood
most of their lives. They took their own lives because they were too filled
with fear to go out, and too old to move. It wasn't worth going on. We know
about violence.
The reason why people lose heart when confronted with these very real
problems is that there is no place for God in their view. One of the most
famous paintings in the world is DaVinci's "Mona Lisa." Most of us can bring
to mind the portrait of the enchanting wife of a Milan banker, immortalized
in half-length view, her hands quietly folded and her enigmatic smile. The
background is nice, too - a soft garden-like backdrop of trees and hills,
which could almost stand alone as a landscape painting, thanks to Leonardo's
genius in the use of light and shadow. But it is Mona Lisa, not the garden,
that makes the picture. Remove her and the life of the picture goes with
her.
The Bible offers us a view of life in which God is central. If you remove
God from the picture, as our secular view of life does, then all we have
left is background. No central point of reference. No focus. Nothing that
ties our view of life together. Life becomes more than we can handle.
Faced with his own dejection the other thing the Psalmist does is to share
some ideas about how he discovered the courage to go on. For one thing, he
remembered past events.” My head is lifted up," he says. Remembrance of past
blessings gives us confidence to move into an uncharted future. Judaism and
Christianity are both religions of remembering. Atheistic communism, on the
other hand, is a philosophy of forgetting. Before Czechoslovakian communism
was overthrown a few years ago, the Czech president, Gustav Husak, was
called "the president of forgetting." Commenting along this line, historian
Milan Hubl writes: "The first step in liquidating a people is to erase its
memory. Destroy its books, its culture, its history... before long the
nation will forget what it is, and what it was."
Trust is an expectancy grounded in remembrance. Only as we learn to see
God's hand in the past will we learn to trust God in the future. One of the
benefits of pausing to say grace before a meal, no matter how uninspired we
feel, is that the person praying is obliged to look for places where God
meets us in life. When we thank God for daily mercies, it means that we have
to notice them, take stock of them, and that leaves a deposit of assurance
that we are cared for. That assurance can come back to comfort us in dark
days when the blessings seem less obvious.
Another thing the Psalmist intends to do is to be present at the place of
worship. He wants "to live in the house of the Lord." That is, he wants to
be a regular member of the community that puts God at the center of life. We
humans need that regular reinforcement that comes from associating with
others who are seeking to grow in faith. In Maeterlinck's book The Life of
the Bee the author remarks upon the honeybee's need for community. The bee
is one of nature's creatures most in need of being gathered into community
with other bees. "She will dive for an instant into flower-filled space," he
writes, "as the swimmer will dive into the sea that is filled with pearls,
but under pain of death it behooves her at regular intervals to return and
breathe the crowd as the swimmer must return and breathe the air. Isolate
her, and however abundant the food or favorable the temperature, she will
expire in a few days not of hunger or cold, but of loneliness." This is a
way of saying that you cannot keep a bee; you can keep only bees. Nor can
you keep a human being; you can keep only human beings. Nor can you keep a
Christian; you can keep only Christians. Christians need to gather with one
another to share what God is doing in their lives. It gives them courage to
go on.
The Psalmist also intends to communicate with God through prayer. "Your
face, Lord, I will seek," he says. He intends to approach God, not as a
force, but as a person! Such communication doesn't have to be in carefully
groomed, pious language. In fact, it is more personal if one speaks freely
from the heart. In Clarence Day's book God And My Father speaking of his
father's peculiar attitude toward God, he says, "In moments of prayer, when
(my father) and God tried to commune with each other, it
wasn't his own shortcomings that were brought on the carpet, but God's...He
expected a great deal of God...It seemed that God spoiled his plans...This
aroused his wrath. He would call God's attention to such things...he didn't
actually accuse God of gross inefficiency, but when he prayed his tone was
loud..., like that of a dissatisfied guest in a carelessly managed hotel." I
am not suggesting that all of our prayers should follow that example. But
how refreshing it must be for God to be confronted by a human being who
feels confident enough in the relationship to speak plainly about what is on
the person's mind. That person has a relationship that gives confidence when
shadows fall across the path.
The Psalmist also discovers the importance of conduct. "Teach me your way, O
Lord," he says. He is in the process of discovering that religion is not
simply a matter of prayers, but of conduct.
P.T. Forsyth, a theologian of another era, wrote about this aspect of
religion, saying, "Disincarnate prayers - prayers for others - which permit
us not to do anything for them...are a substitute for action, a cheap way of
having a good conscience. They are a lie and a hypocrisy. It can seem too
easy to pray at the bedside of a sick person, then to depart, leaving him
alone with his sickness; to pray for a family in distress without adding to
the prayer (what is needed) to resolve the problems; to pray for the peoples
of the world who are suffering from famine, oppression, or exploitation,
without taking part in the political struggle against social injustice." To
take action requires courage. A belief that such activities are part of
God's plan for the world encourages us to act.
Worshipping, praying, remembering, acting. It is in the doing of these
things that the Psalmist discovers a faith that sustains him and gives him
courage. In the King James version of this passage he is translated as
saying, "I would have fainted unless I had believed."
Henry Troyat describes a discovery made by the Russian novelist, Tolstoy.
One spring day when Tolstoy was walking in the forest, his mind suddenly
felt lighter and his whole body began to move more freely through the
light-spattered dimness. Intrigued, he observed that he was always sad when
he rejected God with his reason and always cheerful when he accepted God
like a child. "At the thought of God, happy waves of life welled up inside
me," Tolstoy wrote. "Everything came alive, took on meaning. The moment I
thought I knew God, I lived. But the moment I forgot Him, the moment I
stopped believing, I also stopped living...To know God and to live are the
same thing. God is life."
That is what the Psalmist discovered. "I believe that I shall see the
goodness of the Lord in the land of the living!" he concluded. "Wait for the
Lord; be strong and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord." What he
discovered, we can discover. Learn to see God at work in the world and it
will give you courage.