Earth's Mundane on Heaven's Marquee

From Psalm 68 – 5 A father of the fatherless, a defender of widows,
Is God in His holy habitation.
6 God sets the solitary in families;
He brings out those who are bound into prosperity;
But the rebellious dwell in a dry land.

"Christ did not die for men because they were intrinsically worth dying for," differentiates CS Lewis in Miracles, " but because He is intrinsically loving, and therefore loves infinitely."

Intrinsically is the right word as we contemplate the unity of Psalm 68. Without such insights, I can picture ministry in humanity's sticky details as something that interrupts God's bliss, or at least as something He takes on for internal payoff when we "grow up." But this window on Heaven won't allow such a bifurcated view.

The Psalmist insists that in His holy habitation, God is about repairing human relationships. From that lofty vantage point, He sets the solitary in families. He brings those who are bound into prosperity. The ring of dollars and cents is not discordant in Heaven. They figure as one of the ways He demonstrates His seamless character.

No wonder, then, we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. The character of Heaven's King is demonstrated in this place. No wonder the angels long to know what we know. The One they stand before has His gaze fixed upon us, and His passionate interest bound up with our daily details.

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