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Thursday, June 6, 2019

The dead are better off than the living


In Ecclesiastes 4:1-3 Solomon says,
    I saw the tears of the oppressed and they have no comforter;  power was on the side of their oppressors and they have no comforter. 
    And I declared that the dead who had already died, are happier than the living, who are still alive. 
    Better than both is the one who has never been born, who has not seen the evil that is done under the sun.

     I don't know if it's just a product of getting older, but I often feel akin to what Solomon writes in these verses.  How often do we see news-stories of people who are taken advantage of by those in power.  It may be city council person who doesn't want a certain person to speak at a town-hall and has that person physically removed from the premises by "security guards".  It may be a person whose house has been "condemned" by a county who wants to sell their land to a business or owner of a shopping center because they would get more tax money from those uses of the land than from the homeowner.   It could be a high school principal who fires a teacher because they "go off script" and teach what the 1st or 2nd Amendments are really about or maybe a YouTube channel we tune into that has been taken down because some people down like what they say.

    These stories punch us in the gut and we throw up our hands and say "How can this be happening in America?!! How can these people abuse their power and destroy people's lives so carelessly and callously?"   

    Oppression is a subject we all can relate to on some level in our lives.   We have all felt it's effects.  Maybe it was a teacher who didn't like us and made our lives hell.   Maybe it was a boss who played favorites to others who didn't have families to care for.   Whatever the cause, we have all been on the receiving end of oppression.   It's painful and it can feel like you have no options but to leave and try somewhere else.

   Solomon goes on to say that the dead are better off than those living through oppression.

   I had a good friend of mine, Tim, who I had known since the 3rd grade.  Tim and I were fast friends.   He was the first kid to reach out to me when I moved to the new town.  We did everything together.  We graduated high school together and were at each others weddings.   I remember getting the phone call from my brother telling me the news that Tim had just been diagnosed with terminal leukemia and would not live more than 48 hours.   He left behind a wife and 3 kids in the blink of an eye.    At first I was sad for Tim because he was going to miss out on seeing his kids grow up and have kids of their own.  But lately I have felt more like Solomon and in many ways I feel jealous of Tim because he doesn't have to see this country he loved (he served in the Navy) fall apart and politicians abuse their power to destroy those they don't like or agree with. 

    Power is a corrosive force in nature.  It's like salt water which will destroy the strongest of metals given enough exposure and enough time.   Power seeks more power.   Finding people who can withstand it's siren's call is a daunting task.  When King George heard that the famous General Washington, who had defeated his once proud army and navy, had returned to work as a farmer and had not allowed himself to be anointed "king"  he said,
"He must be the greatest man to have ever lived, for it takes great power to say 'no' to power". 
     George Washington showed us how to handle power appropriately by walking away from it.     Sadly, today we have no George Washington's in America anymore.   Instead, we have many lining up for the job as President who see it as a way to control its citizens rather than to give freedom to them.   They want to wield power to put people in line with their views by punishing those who don't.   We are a nation slowly disintegrating by the abuse of power and oppression. 

     May God have mercy on America.



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