PIE CRUST
PROMISES
"Will
you stay if we promise to be good?"
"That's
a pie-crust promise. Easily made, easily broken!"
-Mary
Poppins
I'm
usually unsatisfied with my behavior no matter what time of the year it is.
Nevertheless I make no resolutions for such promises, easily made, are easily
broken. David learned that lesson well when, on one occasion, he resolved to
hold his tongue...and couldn't do it.
David
was angry with God, yet he knew he shouldn't vent his anger in the presence of
God's enemies. (It's always wrong to speak against a friend, especially in the
presence of his antagonists.) So he resolved not to speak. "I will watch my
ways and keep my tongue from sin," he vowed. "I will put a muzzle on
my mouth as long as the wicked are in my presence."
For
a short time he was able to restrain himself, but "the fire burned,"
David fumed, erupted...and lamented: "Show me...my end, and the number of
my days. Let me know how fleeting is my life. You have made my days a mere
handbreadth; the span of my years is as nothing before you. Each man's life is
but a breath." Thus failed resolve leads us to consider the brevity and frailty
of our existence.
We
are eternal creatures with perfection in our hearts, and the perennial desire
to move toward that perfection. Yet we exist in time and space as imperfect,
flawed human beings, utterly unable to keep our promises. "The Spirit is
willing, but the flesh (our unaided humanity) is weak." That's why our
resolve breaks down and we fall back to old habits and patterns of behavior.
There
is but one way to make any real progress toward goodness: it is to know how frail we are. So David prays, "Cause me to know my end," literally,
"my boundaries" (vs. 4). Change begins with humility and the awareness
that our resolve is mere "breath" (vs. 5). We voice our resolutions
and they dissipate like breath into thin air.
Enduring
change does not come by vows, decrees, New Year resolutions and strong resolve,
but solely by the grace of God. Our part is to earnestly desire righteousness
and to pray for it. God's part is to bring it about in His own time and in His
own way. "Man proposes; God disposes, an older generation of Christians
used to say.
This
David learned: "Now, Lord, what do I look for? My hope is in you. Save me
from all my transgressions... (Then) I was silent; I did not open my mouth, for you did it!" (vss. 7-9).
There
is an echo in Paul's promise: "The one who calls you is faithful and he will do it!" (1 Thessalonians
5:24).
David
Roper