Dust to Dust to Glory


Do you remember the Sago, West Virginia Mining disaster in January, that cost 12 men their lives? It was an especially awful event because of the false report of survivors, followed some hours later by the harsh reality of all but one lost.

It is now being reported that one of the miners who perished, Jackie Weaver, had an interesting practice each day he entered the mine — including that day he did not walk out. Mr Weaver would write a simple two word sentence in the coal dust each and every day….

Why in the coal dust? Well, it certainly was the commodity at hand at a coal mine. But perhaps the fact that dust is so fleeting and temporal, was part of his message — a message to himself and to others. Perhaps it was a message to put this very hard work into perspective, or perhaps it was a reminder of the temporal nature of human life.

He would do it every day we’re told. Repetition for emphasis? Repetition as a personal re-affirmation of his own beliefs? Repetition because others had yet to get his message? Probably all these reasons I suspect.

When I first read about Mr Weaver’s two word daily scribbling in the dust, my eyes welled up with emotion. As a pastor/theologian I saw the connection to one of the great and indisputable truths of the Bible: ashes to ashes, dust to dust — human beings’ bodies do not last forever, but die and decay.

Mr Weaver died that early January day after he wrote these two words one last time: Jesus saves.

If today was your final day (it could be, you know), what are you believing?

That event took 12 men back “to dust” — and at least one, I believe, to glory.

Pastor David

Dreams of the Future


Do dreams reveal the future?

I would say a blanket “NO” but I’ve been reading my Bible, and see that God occasionally made the future known to select individuals by means of their dreams. (But, this primarily happened prior to the completion of the Bible, which is God’s completed — and sufficient — revelation for His people.)

In two dreams given to the Pharaoh of Egypt (Genesis 41) the future was made known to him, after young Joseph interpreted the dreams. The message of the dreams was one and the same: 7 years of famine would follow 7 years of bounty.

Why do we desire to know the future? To prepare for it, and to profit from it I suspect. Pharaoh did just that, appointing Joseph to organize the food supply for the country — which allowed them all to survive the years of famine. If you and I knew something specific about our future, we’d be better able to act and take control. But we know little of our future, really. We know the generalities (grow old and die stuff), but nothing too specific.

Yet we can know the One who holds the future. We can put our trust in the Lord our God, and commit all our ways unto Him. That’s what Joseph did, as told in the book of Genesis. He did not know the future, but was faithful in the present — even through much difficulty. And in the end, Joseph could credit God with orchestrating all things for a greater good.

I think we should let dreams end with the night, and walk by faith each day.
Pastor David Bissett