King of the Dirt Clods
When I was a boy, a large part of my summers was spent
outside. Considering back then we didn’t
have video games, internet, or cable television, there wasn’t much to do inside
anyway. So my friends and I spent many
hot humid Mississippi days riding our bikes, climbing trees, and squaring off
in dirt clod fights. In our epic
battles, we would first locate our fortifications - trees, ditches, and old
buildings - then spend countless hours bombarding each other with balls of dirt
and sometimes rocks, sticks, and even cow manure (because our fights were normally in or near cow pastures where "meadow muffins" were ubiquitous). It was great fun, unless you got hit in the
head, especially the face.
In Psalm 103:14, it says God “knoweth our frame; He
remembereth that we are dust.” There are
several things we could note from this passage, but what I want to focus on is
the phrase “we are dust.” This verse is
teaching that physical humanity is nothing more than animated dirt. Our bodies are dust particles stuck together
in moving clods. Maybe this is part of
what King David had in mind when he asked the Lord in Psalm 8:4, “What is man,
that Thou art mindful of him?” What
could be a greater condescension than the Lord of glory to think upon dust?
So if we are in fact dust, how senseless is it to be always
comparing ourselves with and desiring to be better than other dust? It may seem important now, but in the end, all our fretting
and striving to be the king of the dirt clods is simply a waste of time. As King Solomon said in Ecclesiastes 2:11, “I
looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on the labour that I had
labored to do: and, behold, all was vanity and vexation of spirit, and there
was no profit under the sun.” And again
in Mark 8:36, “For what doth it profit a man, to gain the whole world, and
forfeit his life?” Instead of wasting
our lives pursuing the throne of the dirt clods, let us pursue Him who alone is
worthy to be pursued, the crucified Lamb of God.
P.S. I assume some
could be offended at being called dust or animated dirt clods. Ironically, many of these same people would
have no problem saying they are evolved from tiny brainless amoebas. How they could think one is much better than
the other is beyond me.
P.P.S. Despite the
emphasis of this blog entry, Scripture teaches that humans are not mere
physical bodies. At minimum, human life
is a dichotomy. That is, men possess a
material existence (their bodies), but they also have an immaterial existence
(their souls). Genesis 2:7 reads, “And
Jehovah God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his
nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.” And it is with this immaterial soul that men
pursue God, because “God is a Spirit’ (John 4:24) who “dwelleth not in temples
made with hands” (Acts 17:24).
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