One major company introduced a few years ago what it referred
to as an added functionality for their subscribers. A service they called
"Escape-A-Date" allows users to arrange for their cell phone to ring
at a specified time. The call then guides the answerer through an automated
"escape script" that allows the individual to talk his or her way out
of being with the gullible person across the table any longer. The evening
comes to an abrupt end as half of the party is seemingly in need of rushing off
to tend to business. If the date is going well, the courtesy call is simply not
answered.
This added functionality rivals its non-automated partners
in crime, "alibi clubs," in which online members enlist one another
to create an alibi. One only has to post a request for an alibi, which is then
answered and acted out to maintain a facade of innocence. Complete strangers
call each other's spouses, bosses, or children, explaining the delay, lessening
the disappointment, providing an excuse that allows the one in trouble to go
free. Even the most ridiculous scenarios need only the compassion of a fellow
stranger to keep the lines of communication "open."
The other day I found an ancient phrase of the psalmist that
leaped out at me as I read of all the emerging functionalities that are
tempting my life that could wreck havoc or “mayhem” on genuine functionality. I
don’t have to look far to discover counterproductive fruit springing up all
around me. It is something like the
"grass on a rooftop" the psalmist describes. In psalm 129, the writer
is referring to the deceptive or the wicked, those who work against God's
kingdom. Crying out to God he asks that they be like "grass on a rooftop,"
in verses 6 & 7.
I thought that was a quite odd request so I referenced the phrase
and learned that the crevices of the flat roofs of Eastern houses grass indeed
springs up, seeming almost to boast about its heightened position in rebellious
places. In my own experience it seems to be like the tufts of grass that seem
to tirelessly fight back to own a place in the cracks of me rock walk from the
parking area to the front porch here at Quiet Rest, grass on the rooftop
stubbornly declares its existence and demands attention, lest the roof itself
be damaged. Still, why would anyone ask God to make his enemies like the
annoying grass with which he unremittingly fights each year? The conclusions
seem almost disheartening. Will the corruption and counter production that
endlessly springs forth in the crevices of society ever cease? Will the
deception and wickedness that grows like weeds not be stopped?
The psalmist's colorful description reminds me that, for
now, it will likely not be stopped. But in the image of grass upon a roof, I’m
thinking, the psalmist elicits my sight and prayer — these enemies and their
schemes that threaten in a less glamorous light. "May they be as useless
as grass on a rooftop, turning yellow when only half grown, ignored by the
harvester, despised by the binder."
Am I so simpleminded to believe that the weeds of certain
corruption will remain, but like grass on a rooftop it will never be grass as
it was intended, or even as it might hope. Am I so full of naivety to think
that communication spoken through alibi clubs and escape scripts is not
communication and eventually will bear its counterproductive fruit. Grass on a
rooftop cannot fill the reapers' hands, nor can it fill the gatherers' arms. It
may boast in its elevated position and rebellious standing, but having shallow
roots and nowhere to grow, it cannot remain standing for long. It bears no
fulfillment, nothing to cut or to carry, nothing for the hand to grasp, nothing
that will last.
In the words of the Count of Monte Cristo, woe
therefore "wait and hope."
"For until the day comes when God
will deign to reveal the future to man, all human wisdom is contained in these
words: Wait and hope." So, for me as a Christian I commit to waiting for the coming kingdom in
its fullness and take hope in its signs in these the last day of my world, today. And when I pray, I pray that those who work against the kingdom of God in whatever capacity
shall be like grass on a rooftop, until the day when weeds and tears shall be
no more.
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