But God Knows
For when dreams increase and words grow many, there is vanity; but God is the one you must fear. Ecclesiastes 5:7
I have to make a confession. I read “Dear Abby” almost every day in the newspaper. I started when my daughter was in Junior High and she was reading it so I decided I had better know what was in the letters. It’s now a habit and I find it amusing sometimes, confusing sometimes, and down right aggravating often times! I’m regularly surprised by what angers people.
In one letter I learned that there are people who think that other people are wrong – like they were breaking some law of etiquette – because they put food on their plates at a meal and eat all of one thing, then they move on to the next thing and eat all of that before they taste anything else. They finish eating by consuming one food at a time until their plate is empty.
People write to “Dear Abby” wanting to know if these people are, indeed, breaking etiquette. It angers them to see this behavior at a table where they are also eating. It reminded me of a friend of mine who told me she had been in an argument with her husband because he was driving them to the mall and she thought he took the wrong route. They got to the mall but she didn’t like the way he took them. She stood her ground that he was wrong and they had an all out fight about it!
I find myself in the same sort of disbelief as when people get mad about where they park their cars – like having to walk 50 feet to their door is some sort of abuse from a neighbor.
I have helped an elderly woman a couple of times and as we were talking if something was said that was hard to take or about a difficult situation she would just say, “But God….” It was as if she wanted to remind me that God is always there with the “but I have it under control” or the “but I know how you feel” or the “but I will take care of you.”
As I was reading these letters to “Dear Abby” today I was thinking, “But God” doesn’t care about the order we eat our food.” “But God” does care about how we treat others. If we are getting angered by inconsequential issues like the order in which someone eats her food, the route she takes to the mall, and where people park their cars what on earth are we saying about our priorities? Do people forget that God hears all of our conversations and knows our every thought?
“But God” must be grieved that we are not more kind and humble with others. Do these things matter in light of eternity? Should we be getting angry over such trivial things? In his letter to the Romans Paul said to them, “As for the one who is weak in faith, welcome him, but not to quarrel over opinions,” Romans 14:1.
What order to eat our food, the route we take to get some place, and where to park the car are preferences. There are no Biblical or civil laws that set these things in stone. We need to ease up so we can get to more important talk. We may be sitting in anger and judgment of another “but God” is waiting for us to point others to Him as we always consider them more important than ourselves.
I probably need to stop reading “Dear Abby” and get on with something more meaningful. My adult daughter, now a wife and mother, doesn’t even get a newspaper. My excuses to read “idle chatter” are over.