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When I feel the pains of trials, I turn to God and the comfort of the scriptures. However, in my youth, I did not have a believing faith, as the writer of Hosea put it, I was a "half-baked cake and mixed in with worldy influence (Holy Bible, Hosea 7.8).
As a youth, growing up in the Gulf Coast near what is called by some as Hurricane Alley, we fled once from a category three hurricane that had landfall in and around Galveston, when we returned I remember seeing debris, trash and the remnants of Texas gulf coast flooding from the rain and the powerful storm surge. The image of sailboats, recreational watercraft, and the enormous gulf shrimping boats on land in the middle of the freeway leading from Texas City to Galveston was unbelievably drastic, as if a heavenly hand had picked the ship from the harbor and transported it to the highway. The Gulf of Mexico and its powerful ocean currents during hurricane landfall can move large pieces of waterborne vehicles, a sobering reminder of the forces of nature that we cannot control. Additionally, the damage caused by buildings and homes with roofs flying apart due to accompanying tornadoes, often spun off from hurricanes, underscores the unpredictability of these natural phenomena.
I recall seeing where a building once stood, specifically the concrete foundation. As a kid, I used to work in a bait house that is no longer where it used to be; the salty waters of Galveston Bay have claimed the building and are now part of Poseidon's kingdom. The only remains of the often-visited bait shop are the column stilts in the sandbar, which previously held a robust fish and bait shop and a tackle store.
Storms of Life
Sometimes, I refer to commentary to add depth and understanding to scripture from scholars more versed and studied than myself, a practice that I have only recently learned to appreciate the humble value of exposition. A deeper look at Hosea from the commentary by Lloyd J. Ogilvie reveals an emphasis on the theme of the ancient Israelites during a time when they relied heavily on the financial resources in the land, namely Egypt and Assyria (Holy Bible, Hosea 7.11). Instead of relying on God to supply and provide, and during times of distress or trial, they cried and wailed in their beds instead of seeking out God through prayer and meditation (Ogilvie 110-111).
I pause to take a moment to interrupt a train of thought, because I feel it is important to mention, and I believe that is how God works sometimes in our lives. When we search him out, he gives us clues, hints, and signs. Upon reading more of Lloyd J. Ogilvie's commentary on the book of Hosea, I was struck by his reference to John Steinbeck's The Winter of Our Discontent. The theological mind is of particular interest to me as I learn, and I am also interested in the reason for the reference to Steinbeck's work for the commentary on Hosea. To gain a deeper understanding, I read an excerpt from the book, which allowed me to learn more about the attitude of the fictional character, Ethan Hawley.
Erosion Kills a Man
Ethan Hawley faces difficulties; the challenge is that he was reared in a well-to-do family, and is now in dire straits and working as a grocery store clerk. As he speaks in the story, the work of sweeping, stocking shelves, and providing customer service is beneath him. Ethan, struggling to pay his mortgage and worried about caring for his wife and children, feels disempowered working for someone wealthier than him, when he believes he should have owned a prominent business. It appears that Ethan is losing heart.
As the story broadens, Ethan and a local banker engage in conversation that provokes Ethan's irritation. The banker, aware of Ethan's family heritage and acquainted with his father's business acumen in the past, is surprised by how Ethan's cynicism and display of no desire to strive, is apathetic, void of enthusiasm for work, and has not accepted a temporary financial setback. The banker tries to pick up Ethan's spirits, saying something similar: "It is not all lost. Just start over and change your attitude." As it is, Ethan responds to the bankers remarks that it must be easy for him to suggest to another to overcome a hard time in life since he himslef has not had to grapple the same obstacle and that a man does not fall or succumb to failure from a direct hit; instead, what brings a man down is slow deterioration (Steinbeck 13).
Although sometimes we are hit with trials that can immediately cripple us, such as a family death, a job loss, an unexpected illness, financial hardships, or, as mentioned before, natural disasters, we are often slowly worn down by life itself.
I can identify with Steinbeck's fictional character, Ethan. The elements that can erode the spirit of man are common to all and are familiar and recognizable: the rains of vanity, the gusts of materialism, the tides of our backgrounds and life events, as the commentator of the second epistle to Corinthians expounds, discussing Paul's description of his life challenges in spreading the gospel (Tasker 76-77; Holy Bible, 2 Corinthians 4.17). The highly intense thermo effects of lust, compounded by the relentless abrasive rubbing from the sands of anger, along with the debris and scraps of overindulgence, envy, and laziness that slowly, consistently, little by little eat away at and into the fabric of a man, can cripple his external being.
The similarities and contrasts between the Israelites in Hosea and their apparent reliance on other nations for support, rather than God, and John Steinbeck's Ethan, prompt reflection on our own life and situation in the absence of genuine dependence on God.
As a Christian, I reflect on Jesus' parable about sowing seed (Holy Bible, Matthew 13.22), which represents the type of ground that has thorns growing in it. God desires to plant his spirit in a person. One type of soil where God plants in the heart of men is a kind of ground that has allowed thorns and briers to grow up with the good seed of his spirit, but as the two grow together, the robust thorns and thistles suffocate or choke out the good seed.
The analogy here is that the spirit of God and his teachings are planted in the heart and mind of a man, but the thorns and briers of greed, the strangling vine of envy, the roots of lusting after the world, and the budding flowers of life's worries drown out the God-spirit-planted seedling. Like a vapor that fades away, a Christian's commitment and faithfulness to Jesus' teachings are tested when adversity strikes, and this has been my experience.
Earth Trembling
Unlike Texas hurricanes, living in California, the ground often quakes and trembles. One is familiar with the fluctuations and movement of the ground, especially in Southern California, which includes Los Angeles and its surrounding cities, towns, and districts. The Northridge earthquake in 1994 was felt as far south, as San Diego county, at the time where I was stationed at Camp Pendleton, I was awakened at the time, by a fellow Marine shaking my bunkbed to wake me up for something, to my surprise and everyone else, however, we all were startled by the early morning movement of the squad bay by the trembling of the ground, that was over just as quickly as it began, although felt for more than a hundred miles away in Oceanside the epicenter and surrounding builidngs, structures and landscape in the San Fernando Valley suffered catastrophic damage that left people with out necessities for weeks, and took years to rebuild and recover. Similar to the devastating effects of hurricanes in Texas.
Fires of Life
We are prone to anual fires as well, recently this past year we had terrible fires that devastated areas of surrounding towns of Los Angeles, although tragic and devasting is the loss of personal property and the dispersion of people from their homes, what I see when reading the paper or watching the news, and is common in most of the images after the destruction of what was left are the same images burned into my memory as kid living in Texas and arriving back from evacuation to see what was left are the ghostly, permanent, almost immortal resilient slabs of impenetrable concrete foundations and it is here that I will conclude my thoughts on a lasting foundation.
Foundations
Recently, in our country, we have seen and experienced, at least online and in the news, and by extension, personal accounts through associations and relationships with individuals impacted, the devastating aftermath of natural disasters like hurricanes, fires, floods, and earthquakes. The events are tragic, and for those who live in those areas, picking up the pieces is trying and will leave long-lasting scars emotionally and physically.
My thoughts are with those who have been affected, from fires and floods to earthquakes and tornadoes, and words cannot comfort those who have lost loved ones; they will fall powerless in the face of grieving eyes and mourning ears. Although I try to shine the light of God's guidance, I hope it seeps through.
Jesus ' teachings serve as a foundation for us to remember and live by. He often used motifs, such as the image of building a house that stands firm even when storms come (Holy Bible, Matthew 7.24-27). The apostle Paul also described how our earthly bodies are prone to decay, but if we do not give up or lose heart, we can look forward to eternal life (Holy Bible, 2 Corinthians 4.16-18). However, we may feel outwardly worn down, like Steinbeck's despondent Ethan. We can relate to the Israelites and believe that our material possessions are of the utmost importance, but with faith, we know the spirit that God places in our hearts will last forever, as he takes care of us.
Works Cited
Holy Bible. New International Version, Cornerstone Bible Publishers, 1999.
Ogilvie, Lloyd John. The Communicator's Commentary. Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah. Vol. 20, Word Inc., 1990.
Steinbeck, John. The Winter of Our Discontent. The Viking Press Inc., 1961.
Tasker, R. V. G. The Second Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians: An Introduction and Commentary. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1977.



