The Makings of a Rain Dance
Supposedly, Native Americans thought they could persuade the heavens to rain on parched land by calling on the gods through music and dance.
Not a unique thought. Nearly every continent on the face of the earth boasts of rainmaking rituals in times past. The rituals, a message to some sort of god they couldn’t see, is actually, in my view, a testimony that even in the most primitive times, people knew there was a God. Because they couldn’t see Him, they fashioned an image of Him.
God doesn’t cotton to that. (Sorry. My South slipped out there.) He said we’re not to worship “a graven image.” And you sure don’t want to be praying to one for rain. Or concocting some sort of dancing part, either to supposedly open the skies.
Where Mike and I live, the keepers of the water locks have been letting a lot of water from our chain of lakes out, lowering the water table significantly. We understand. Some. They are anticipating the hurricane season when torrential rains can more than fill the lakes and waterways. They can flood homes and destroy lives.
Last year, the west coast of Florida suffered through several hurricanes. Some of them didn’t stop wreaking havoc at the state line, either. You watched. You know.
But as I craft this week’s post, I’m looking out on dry (read dying) grass and citrus trees that need water to make the grapefruit, lemons, and oranges juicy. The water level is the lowest we’ve ever seen.
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A little dry... |
I trust Him. He will send the rain when He sees fit. And it won’t be just for me. The Bible tells us “He causes it to rain on the just and the unjust alike.” That’s in the book of Matthew, chapter 5 in the New Testament.
So, I’m praying for that healing rain to fall on all of us…friends and enemies alike and leave the dancing to others.
Update: I wrote this post, put it in my blog queue, and then...? And then it rained. Not a drizzle. Not a sprinkle here and there. It rained what I would call a "thunder boomer" with the heavens opening and pouring massive amounts of rain on our parched land.
Thanks, God. We needed that.