Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Ebenezer

Use the word, “Ebenezer” this time of year, and you are bound to think of Dickens’ famous Ebenezer Scrooge, Esquire. A greedy, grumpy, and supremely selfish man eventually transformed and reborn.

Aren’t you glad at the end of that tale? Isn’t it a relief to see what happens to that crusty old man? The Ebenezer that emerges at the end of the play inspires Hope in us because we want to believe that given eyes to see, the past, the present and the future we can be made new. We so desperately need that kind of Hope. Deep down we fear what we might be missing, don’t we? We identify with Dickens’ portrayal because Ebenezer reminds us who we are and who we might become. But there is another Ebenezer I want to talk about.

In the Bible, an Ebenezer was a memorial. It was like a totem pole of thankfulness. An altar erected to God to remind the people of all He had done. It was meant to give them Hope. Why does God think the people need an Ebenezer? It is because we forget.

We forget how blessed we are.
We forget what God has done.
We forget all the times we have been rescued.
We forget the joy we have known.
We forget to be thankful.

God knew we are Forgetters. We are Ebenezers like Scrooge who get greedy and grumpy and need again and again to be transformed into Rememberers. Rememberers who know how fortunate we are. Rememberers who care about the poor and needy. Rememberers who look for a way to give of the little or much we have with joy.

So in response to our Scroogish nature, Joe and I bought some rocks. We also bought a great big cedar bowl. Into the bowl we place stones on which are written memories of the miracles and blessings authored by Jehoveh Jirah - the God who provides. We do this lest we forget all that the Lord has done for our family. We do this to become Rememberers. It is our Ebenezer Bowl, to remind us who God is, who we are and what He has done for us in the past and in the present. Each blank stone is a reminder that God has a plan for the future. Someday, all the stones will tell a story.

In Hebrew, Ebenezer means Stone of Help and it is with the help of these stones that I hope to actually BE an Ebenezer Scrooge, Esq..... transformed, reborn and made new... a portrait of Hope... a reflection of God.

1 Samuel 7:12.
Then Samuel took a stone and set it up.... He named it Ebenezer, saying, “The LORD helped us."



PS - Credit for the Ebenezer Bowl goes to my friend Jill who got her idea from her friend. And maybe Jill’s friend got the idea from someone else. In any case, it all started in the Old Testament. It was God’s idea all along... that we not forget. That we REMEMBER.



What do YOU do in YOUR family to remember?

5 comments:

Unknown said...

I pray my life is always a memorial stone! We just went through our Joshua Stone bowl the other day when we added Carli's decision for Christ.

Vessel said...

You always have a word that touches something in me that I have put away or have become to busy to think through. Thanks for that.
I need to be Ebenezer too.

Denise said...

our first feast of tents (5 f.o.t.'s ago) each family was given a rock, and on it they wrote a way(s) God had been faithful to them. then we layed (piled) our ebenezer alter by the oak tree at the entrance of the church.
after we shared, we sang "great is thy faithfulness." it was a beautiful time, a wonderful memorial marker.

i am big on memorial markers. i need them, so i can go back to what i know for sure. so i can take my kids back to what they know for sure.

i bet i have ebenezers in plain sight. God's faithful markers of him
transforming the hopeless to Life!

isn't He wonderful, our tangible "God with us"

i love you friend!

Michelle said...

There are GOOD ideas, and there are GOD-inspired ideas. The Ebenezer bowl is definitely the latter. I love what it represents. Thanks to you, Shirin, and all those who have passed along this gem, that the Martin family will have its very own Ebenezer bowl. I will share it with family and friends and maybe they will be inspired to do the same. And if this idea continues to circulate, just imagine: a nation -- a world -- of rememberers.

Robin said...

Guess what our family is going to start in 2009?!

What a beautiful way to keep our focus.