Just Enough Turbulence
Today’s message was written by Rev. Dr. Roger Kunkel, founder of Dial Hope.
George Bernard Shaw called Beethoven, “the most turbulent spirit that ever found expression in pure sound. The power of the Ninth Symphony is the turbulent joy of humanity.” Of course, when turbulence runs our lives, everything becomes chaotic, crazy. But that isn’t the fault of turbulence. We humans are to blame. To be sure, the only people without problems, concerns, and turbulence are in the cemetery!
The knack in life is to keep enough turbulence to be expansive without being inundated by it. As Nietzsche once commented, “We must have enough chaos in our lives to give birth to dancing stars.”
This reminds me of Henry David Thoreau. When his mother found him still awake in bed as a young child she asked, “Why, Henry dear, why don’t you go to sleep?” “Mother,” said he, “I have been looking through the stars to see if I couldn’t see God behind them.”
Let us pray: O God, we are thankful that you do not give us all we ask, but only what we need. May we be wise as foxes and innocent as lambs, so that we can live in this world and remain effective without losing our dream of love, faithfulness, and joy. So often we complain that you ask more of us than we can manage. Then, an ageless Down Syndrome child beams up at us in the supermarket, a homeless mother, fighting for her kids, looks clear-eyed at us and talks trustingly of you and her future. Some irrepressible Samaritan shows up to sign us up as innkeepers. So we learn again that what’s up to us is not everything, but only the most we can do is to make grace real to others, to help justice roll down like waters, and peace flow like a river, and beauty spring out of ugliness, and hope take wing like an eagle. Loving God, how great Thou art! In Jesus Spirit we pray. Amen.
Daily Message Author: Roger Kunkel
(November 24, 1934 – June 29, 2011) Rev. Dr. Roger Kunkel was a native of Parsons, Kansas, graduated from Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri, where he received an award for “Outstanding Student and Citizen”. After graduating from Princeton Theological Seminary, he earned a Doctor of Ministry degree from McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, Illinois, and went on to serve as Senior Pastor in Duluth, Minnesota, and Riverside, Illinois. He served as Chaplain of Heritage Park Rehab Center in Bradenton, Florida, after retiring from his pastorate at First Presbyterian Church of Sarasota in 1998. Full Bio