Last Friday, I was at physical therapy, this despite the fact
that I knew there was snow on the way.
But the weather apps and people all said what little snow we got would
melt on the streets and it was safe to drive.
And the drive to the physical therapist’s office was fine. It was
lightly snowing and as a Florida transplant, I was proud of myself driving in
the falling snow.
But as the physical therapist worked on me and put me through the
paces, exercise wise, I noticed that the snow was falling harder, almost
blizzard-like. Still I told myself it
would be fine to drive, the snow would melt on the road just as it had the
other day.
The physical therapist noted that the snow was now filling the
cracks in the pavement. And some minutes
later, we noticed the cars were covered in a fine, gauzy veil of white.
And still I told myself that it would be fine to drive—they
hadn’t even canceled school.
When I walked out to my car a short time later, there was easily
an inch or two of snow on the pavement.
It was not melting. It was still
snowing.
I told myself it was fine.
Five minutes later I slid through the intersection on the first
left turn I had to make.
Fortunately there were no cars in the way, but let me say the
journey home was fraught. At one point
the snow turned to sleet and my windshield wipers trembled and shook as the ice
built up on each one.
Adrenaline flooded my system.
All I wanted was to do was get home—in one piece preferably.
I did make it home, eventually, and safely. But driving in that was a mistake. My senses had not betrayed me. What I saw visually said “Don’t drive in
this!” But my own heart, my brain
overwrote that in a failure of discernment.
What we see in today’s reading from what I will call Part 5 in
our “Awkward Stories of Genesis” series, is a failure of the senses and
discernment.
Isaac has had a rough life beginning with his father Abraham
nearly sacrificing him when he was a kid to now, in today’s reading, his wife
and son attempting and succeeding at conning him while he is on his
deathbed. Rebekah, Isaac’s wife, wants
Jacob and not Esau to get Isaac’s blessing, so while Esau is away, she both
literally and figuratively cooks up a plan.
She makes a big meal and then has Jacob put some goatskins on his arms
and neck.
Then Jacob takes the meal to Isaac, hoping to deceive his
father’s senses. Isaac is blind, but the
smell of the food—he had asked Esau to prepare a meal—and the feel of Jacob’s
arms covered in goatskin—Esau was, apparently a very hairy man, are almost
enough to fool Isaac.
But Isaac’s gut tells him that something is off. The voice he hears is not Esau’s but Jacob’s,
so finally Isaac asks Jacob to come closer.
He smells his son and concluding that the man standing before him smells
of the earth, of nature, of the field, he believes that this is indeed Esau.
The whole scene is reminiscent of one of our most well-known
fairy tales, Little Red Riding Hood.
“My grandma,” Little Red Riding Hood says to the wolf who is
masquerading as her grandmother, “what big ears you have … what big eyes you
have,” and the wolf has an answer for everything.
When you are a child hearing Little Red Riding Hood for the first
time, you might be thinking, “Come on, who mistakes a wolf for a little old
lady?” But that’s the point of the
story.
It’s the same with Isaac.
Even blind and dying, Isaac should not have been fooled. After all, at least one of his
senses—sound—tells him flat out this is not Esau. Something else, his gut perhaps—tells him
Esau has not been gone long enough hunting.
He has come back too soon.
Something is not right. But, like
the wolf, Jacob has an answer to each of Isaac’s questions.
Last week, I suggested the story of Abraham nearly killing Isaac
is not a story of blind obedience to God but might instead be a lesson on
discernment that Abraham fails. God
would never ask a parent to kill their child.
And this week’s story of how Rebekah and Jacob fool Isaac is also
a story about discernment. Isaac knows
something is off in the story he is being told that Esau returned early from
the hunt, that his voice sounds suspiciously like Jacob’s. But Isaac is basically told he cannot trust
what he hears. He cannot trust this
stirring inside of him that questions what he’s being told.
And Isaac, blind and weary and tired and close to death, perhaps
doesn’t have the internal strength, the cognitive energy, to fight the story
Rebekah and Jacob have written for him.
Also last week, I pointed out that in the book of Genesis, post-Eden,
God still talks directly to people and yet they still mess up. What hope to do we have in discerning God’s
will in this day when all of our senses are bombarded with AI deepfakes and
algorithms that flood our online life with advertisements for things we didn’t
even know we wanted but now feel like we absolutely need.
We are left like Isaac, blind to the world and without enough
faith in our gut to stand up and fight back against the lies and manipulations
we are being told.
I’ve used that word “gut” a couple of times now. Trusting our gut. My mom used to refer to those gut feelings as
“uh oh” feelings, meaning you know something is not quite right, perhaps even
dangerous—but you can’t pinpoint what exactly is making you feel that way.
I would argue those gut feelings, those “uh oh” feelings are the
prodding of the Holy Spirit inside of you, saying, “Hey, let’s step back a
moment and think about this.”
When you think about it that way, you suddenly realize that it’s
possible you have been trying to silence the Holy Spirit a lot.
So, what do we do? How do
we listen for that still, small voice?
How do we separate God’s voice from all the mimics?
It starts with intentionality.
It starts with daily prayer. It
starts with spiritual exercise that you take seriously, not New Year’s
resolutions that we abandon by the end of January, but with daily, sustained
conversation with God.
It starts with making the effort to identify where God is in your
life and what He trying to tell you.
I mentioned that last Friday, I ignored my senses—I could see the
snow was bad—and I ignored my gut—after sliding through the intersection, I
should have just parked somewhere and waited it out. That was a failure of listening to God.
But then Saturday came. It
was frigid outside but the sky was just as blue as anything you could
imagine. The sky was saturated in blue,
dripping with blue, or maybe I was just hearing the sound of the melting snow
cascading down my roof and then pouring, a steady stream, down the gutter
spout.
But there was another noise that day. It was birdsong. Even in Cincinnati there are birds that don’t
fly south for the winter, but what I noticed the other day was that those birds
had been silent and now it was as if something had woken them up, because they
were clearly singing, in particular the House Finch and the cardinal.
They were singing as if it were spring even though snow still
blanketed the ground and icicles as thick as my waist still hung from the eaves
of the church across the street.
The snow and the cold air may have screamed winter, but the birds
discerned something else entirely. The
days were longer and the sun seemed brighter.
Spring is coming and so the birds sing.
As for me, I sat curled up under a heavy blanket in my recliner
and despite what I saw and what I felt, when I heard the birds singing, I too
discerned that spring was coming.
No offense to the forecasting abilities of a certain ground hog,
but I expect to see the crocus soon and not sometime in mid-March.
Notice that when I made the wrong decision on Friday to keep
driving, that not only did I ignore my senses and my gut, but that the decision
was partly based on fear. I wanted to
get home. I was afraid if I stopped in a
parking lot somewhere, I might get snowed in, so fear drove my decision to keep
going.
But the next day, my discerning of spring came from a different
place. I listened to birdsong. I felt the sun. My prediction that spring was on its way was
made from a place of hope and peace and steadiness.
This is how we discern God’s presence in our lives. God does not amplify our fear. He knows that we are afraid—we’re only
human—but He asks that we trust Him in those times.
We make such better decisions when we act from a place of hope
and love than when we act from fear.
Choose love or choose fear.
Only one can bring us peace.
So begin here—love God, love your neighbor, unconditionally and
without exception.
Listen to the Holy Spirit.
Amen.