October 2019

Housebreak Sandy Dog or a Wasp

“Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent” (Rev. 3:19).

          A wasp was in the house, so I rolled up a newspaper, and the hunt was on. I sought that wasp until I “cornered” him. The newspaper served its role as I swatted, and the wasp was cast outside. Why such “zeal” (eagerness and enthusiasm) for taking care of that wasp? I do not love wasps, especially in the house.

          Sandy Dog was a different situation. She was a beloved pet for our family. I remember the day that we went to get her; I was about nine years old. She was chosen out of a litter of about six to seven adorable puppies.  Sandy’s mother was a Dachshund, but Sandy had long legs, so she was a cross of some sort. I remember it was an overcast day; we all wore jackets. The mother and puppies were outside by a worn doghouse. “Ok, kids, which one do you want?” asked mom as dad picked up one after the other for us to get a closer look. Sandy was chosen, I am not sure by whom or why. But she was chosen to be with our family, to be part of our household. Oldest brother Jeff spent the first couple sleep-disrupted nights consoling Sandy.

          Sandy was scolded and disciplined for making messes. We spent time and resources setting boundaries for her. A fence in the backyard (“no digging in the yard!”) and a leash to go elsewhere. Our family put in numerous hours training Sandy to sit, stay, come, fetch, to not bark at people, to not jump up on people, and—we did not do as well with this--teaching her not to beg. My memory is dad would give her a little taste. The kids witnessed this, and she would receive several tastes through a meal. When she did receive “reproof and discipline,” Sandy was scolded, her collar yanked, a slap on the rump, etc., all to get her to do what we wanted. The aim was to get Sandy disciplined so  that she could live with us. We were not training her to be happy by doing whatever she desired. Nevertheless, her tail wagged and happiness was at its peak when she accomplished something that she knew pleased us.

          You and I are loved children of God.  He chose us. We also receive His love through “reproof and discipline,” in order that we are most joyful when we are in His grasp, doing what He would have us to do. God’s aim, His will for us, is not for us to be happy in our sinful flesh, as a component of this fallen-in-sin world, influenced by Satan’s deceptions. God’s aim for us is for us to be with Him now and forever. So, in this present, lost situation, we face suffering that draws us ever closer to the One who is in control. God uses suffering to speak to us (Job 36:15). God uses suffering to enrich our hope (1 Peter 5:10).  God uses suffering to have us find peace in His promises (Psalm 119:50). There is also much more of God’s loving work with us in Hebrews ch.12.

          Praise God that we are not viewed like a wasp. To remove pages of suffering from our lives would be seeing humans as nothing more than a wasp. That wasp had minimal suffering. It was doing what it wanted and no efforts to discipline it were used. Cast the thing away. Praise God that we are loved, more than a good pet, and that He uses suffering to increase our faith by having us listen to Him, hope in Him, and live in His promises. “Draw us to Thee Unceasingly, into Thy kingdom take us” (LSB701:5).

The Lord be with you,                                                              

Pastor Sam Wiseman