Tag Archives: Second Chance

“Because You Were Foreigners”

He defends the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and loves the foreigner residing among you, giving them food and clothing. And you are to love those who are foreigners, for you yourselves were foreigners in Egypt.
Deuteronomy 10:18-19 (NIV)

I dropped my car off to be serviced yesterday. I was given a ride home and had a very enjoyable conversation with the young man who was tasked with driving me. He was raised in a very different place and culture and was obviously getting used to the quirks of living in a community built by Dutch settlers. He asked if I was from Pella.

I laughed.

With the last name Vander Well, I told him that he had made a safe assumption. Then I informed him that when I moved into the community over 20 years ago, it was obvious that everyone who was from Pella knew that Vander Well is not a Pella Dutch name. My great-grandfather settled in northwest Iowa.

I am of the third generation of a Dutch immigrant in America. I live in a community settled and created by Dutch immigrants. As I’ve studied the history of the great Dutch migration in the 19th century and the history of our community, I’ve discovered a double-edged sword.

On one hand, there is a lot for which to be grateful. There is a legacy of faith, industriousness, frugality, and pride. These are the foundation of an amazing community and heritage we perpetually honor and celebrate. On the other edge of the sword is self-righteousness religiosity, legalism, judgement, and prejudice. I’ve heard many painful stories. Individuals outcast and ostracized. Divisions leading to hatred and resentment. Outsiders unwelcome.

Welcome to humanity.

Moses is leading a similarly human people, which is why in yesterday’s chapter he reminded them three times that God’s choosing them and giving them the Promised Land was not because they earned it or deserved it. Quite the opposite, they had perpetually proven themselves stubborn, whiny, ungrateful, disobedient, and faithless. Which is why today’s chapter is so powerful.

God tells Moses to chisel out two stone tablets to replace the ones he’d smashed. It’s God saying, “Come back up the mountain. I’ll make you a copy of the Ten Words. Oh, and bring a box, an ark, to provide a womb for my Words.”

Second chances. Their brokenness and failure does not negate God’s love, His covenant, or His gracious faithfulness. He is going with them. He will live among them, smack-dab in the middle of their camp. He will fulfill His plans for them, work His purposes through them, and deliver on His promises to give them possession of the land. All this despite them being stubborn, whiny, ungrateful, disobedient, and faithless.

This is the gospel before the Gospel.

The chapter then shifts. In light of God’s grace and mercy what does He ask of His people?

This is the heart of God and the heartbeat of His Great Story. This chapter is what Jesus channels and quotes repeatedly.

Circumcise your hearts. This isn’t about religious observation, but about transformation of spirit that leads to grateful love of God and the tangible love of others.

Love God. Love others. Jesus said those two commands summed up the whole of the Law of Moses.

Then God reminds His people – again – that if they are going to truly love others they need to love the ones He loves. The orphan. The widow. The outcast. The foreigner. The immigrant. The outsider.

Moses is building on zachor – moral memory – that flowed through yesterday’s chapter. God whispers: “Remember your chains. Remember your story – your history – being foreigners and slaves in the land of another people. Treat foreigners among you with the love, grace, and hospitality you wished Egypt had shown you. Be different. Follow my ways, not the ways of the world.”

As I meditated on these things in the quiet this morning, I was amazed at how much it resonated with our current culture and headlines. Borders, immigration, ICE raids, deportations, foreigners, and migrant workers fill never ending news cycles. Ancient Hebrews. 19th century Dutch settlers. 21st century foreigners and immigrants. What goes around comes around.

Welcome to humanity.

I don’t control national policy. I live far from my country’s borders. But, I can take to heart what God asks of me. The very thing He asked of His people through Moses. Love Him. Love others. Especially those who aren’t like me.

As we pulled into the driveway of our home, I thanked my young chauffeur sincerely. I wished him well. He was from a very different place, a very different people, and a very different heritage. He was a fine young man. I liked him a lot. He’s going to do really well here in our community. We’re fortunate he’s here, even if his name makes it obvious that he’s not from around here.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
Logo of the Bible Gateway website, featuring an open book icon in orange on the left and the website name in black text.

Chapter-a-Day Zechariah 10

Marish Lane, near Denham. This lane is near th...
Image via Wikipedia

They’ll get a fresh start, as if nothing had ever happened.
And why? Because I am their very own God,
   I’ll do what needs to be done for them. Zechariah 10:6b (MSG)

“Short cuts make long delays, argued Pippin. “The country is rough round here, and there are bogs and all kinds of difficulties down in the Marish – I know the land in these parts. And if you are worrying about Black Riders, I can’t see that it is any worse meeting them on a road than in a wood or a field.”

“It is less easy to find people in the wood and fields,” answered Frodo. “And if you are supposed to be on the road, there is some chance that you will be looked for on the road and not off it.”

“All right!” said Pippin. “I will follow you into every bog and ditch. But it is hard! I had counted on passing the Golden Perch at Stock before sundown. The best beer in the Eastfarthing, or used to be: it is a long time before I tasted it.”

“That settles it!” said Frodo. “Short cuts make delays, but inns make longer ones. At all costs we must keep you away from the Golden Perch!”

The journey is long. The road winds and forks and there are the occasional rabbit trails that take me of course. No one walks the entire journey without occasionally needing a fresh start. It’s just not humanly possible. Show me a person who has never needed a fresh start and I’ll show you that you don’t know them very well. Getting off course, experiencing the short cuts that make for long delays, and getting lost are part of the journey for all of us.

One of the most important lessons I’ve learned on the road thus far is that God is a God of fresh starts and second chances. Were it not so, I would have been hopelessly lost many, many years ago. But grace, God’s favor which is freely given and cannot be earned, is the fuel that drives each stretch and brings me back to the path when I find myself wandering off on footpaths that lead me off course.

Need a fresh start today? Simply step back on the path and start walking. It will soon be as if nothing ever happened. God has already done what needs to be done.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Chapter-a-Day Exodus 34

Everyone needs a mulligan. Moses was there with God forty days and forty nights. He didn't eat any food; he didn't drink any water. And he wrote on the tablets the words of the covenant, the Ten Words. Exodus 34:28 (MSG)

In the world of my childhood, on the playground, there was no better picture of grace than the "do over." You line up your shot beneath the basketball hoop and give it your best heave. The ball misses the hoop entirely and you shout "DO OVER!" Things did not turn out as you planned, so you get another shot. When we grow up and play golf, this is called a "Mulligan."

Casual readers of God's message, or watchers of the movie the Ten Commandments, will easily remember Moses going up the mountain and coming back with the tablets to find the people worshiping the golden calf. What we don't often remember is that Moses and the people got a "do over." Moses ascended the mountain again, and stayed up there for 40 days and nights again, and returned down the mountain again.

The return trip, however, was different. This time, the people waited and anticipated Moses' return. There was no falling into doubt and idolatry. Instead of descending in anger and shock, Moses descended aglow with God's glory. Same story, different outcome.

There are many times in life when we need a spiritual "Mulligan." We start a leg of the journey with the best of intentions and end up, as Bob Dylan sang, "on a bad motorcycle with the Devil in the seat, going 90 miles-an-hour down a dead end street."

God specializes in second chances. We all need a "do over" from time to time. Take a mulligan today. Tee it up again. Get a fresh start.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Dru Bloomfield