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Tag Archives: Matthew Clark

Malachi 4 (The Birth of John Foretold)

The above image is from Revealed: A Storybook Bible for Grown-Ups compiled by Ned Bustard. The Image is called “Intertestamental Angel” and was created by Matthew Clark.

The Lord of Heaven’s Armies says, “The day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace. On that day the arrogant and the wicked will be burned up like straw. They will be consumed—roots, branches, and all.

“But for you who fear my name, the Sun of Righteousness will rise with healing in his wings. And you will go free, leaping with joy like calves let out to pasture. On the day when I act, you will tread upon the wicked as if they were dust under your feet,” says the Lord of Heaven’s Armies.

“Remember to obey the Law of Moses, my servant—all the decrees and regulations that I gave him on Mount Sinai for all Israel.

“Look, I am sending you the prophet Elijah before the great and dreadful day of the Lord arrives. His preaching will turn the hearts of fathers to their children, and the hearts of children to their fathers. Otherwise I will come and strike the land with a curse.”

Dear God, I was wanting to tap into something more artsy this morning as I prayed to you. I was listening to some secular country music as I showered, and sometimes something in those songs will touch me, but nothing was hitting. Just a lot of sad people in broken relationships. Why do I like those songs so much when I am in a joyous marriage? I don’t know. Perhaps they tap into that insecure boy who grew up listening to them all those years ago. My wife and I have a joke that I like drinking songs, but I don’t drink. It’s a hazy mystery that a therapist could probably help me unlock.

Anyway, I sat down at this desk this morning, and I saw one of my favorite artistic scriptural resources. I found this book years ago at a retreat at Laity Lodge. I have found a lot of value in looking at an artist’s rendition of a Bible story and then looking to see what she or he displayed in their art that I might have missed in my own reading.

So this morning, as I prepare for Advent, I was drawn to this passage and art from Malachi. It’s the last communication the Protestant Bible gives us before John and Jesus will be born 400 years later. First, let me stop and think about that. It was 404 years ago the Puritans landed at Plymouth Rock. So it’s easy to look back over 2,000 to 2,500 years and put 400 years into perspective, but when I zoom in and think of our own time, 400 years ago is 1624 A.D. Four hundred years from now is 2424 A.D. That’s a lot of time to pass between messages from you. I measure time in days, weeks, and months. You measure it in years, decades, and centuries. A thousand years truly is as a day to you! It’s amazing this book from Malachi was even kept and remembered that long.

With all that said, I want to spend a little time preparing for Jesus. Preparing for this Christmas season. The Lent I spent with you in the spring was a special time. Advent should probably be the same.

Matthew Clark’s image of the “Intertestamental Angel” is seemingly pretty simple. Let me see if there is anything remarkable I can pull from his rendition of this story:

  • Angels. I forget about angels all of the time. One of the country songs I did hear this morning that made me think about you was “Broken Halos” by Chris Stapleton. He mentioned angels coming down “to help us on our way.” It made me think of the Nancy French book Ghosted: An American Story when she described her in-laws praying for her infant son in the NICU, and asking for an angel to guard him. Later, when he was about three years old, before they had told him about his time in the NICU as an infant, he told her over breakfast about a dream he had of himself in a bubble, alone and reaching for a pacifier that was just out of reach. He was describing her memory of his NICU incubator. But then he said he wasn’t alone. Buzz Lightyear was there…well, not Buzz, but he was big like Buzz. And he was comforting him and telling him he wasn’t alone. The angel was, indeed, there. I just got chills even typing this again. Oh, Father, how I humbly worship you.
  • Wings.
  • The halo around the angel that a lot of Catholic art uses to represent someone is at least a saint.
  • The angel has his arm extended, but we cannot tell if he is pointing, directly, calming.
  • Clark has represented the fire of judgment behind the wings. Is the angel’s arm dividing those who go there and those who don’t?

Bustard’s description of the image:

The fires of judgment are burning hotter than in Nebuchadnezzar’s fiery furnace, but the healing wings of the angel are extended to offer protection for those who fear the Lord. This print is one half of a diptych, and with its other half form one work of art to help convey the idea that the Old and New Testaments form one story.

As I read back over the passage, verse 6 is interesting, and I wonder what it really means:

His preaching will turn the hearts of fathers to their children, and the hearts of children to their fathers. Otherwise I will come and strike the land with a curse.”

This could be as simple as familial parents and children, but this feels more generational to me in this context. Respecting the faith and life of those who came before me in the faith. Living my life so that I might use it for what you need the future generations to have from it.

Father, Advent is coming. Jesus is coming. Prepare my heart for it this season. Fill me with love. Fill me with joy. Fill me with celebration. There is so much to do over the next six weeks. It is my busiest season at work. But it is also my biggest opportunity to love others well. To let your love flow through me. Help me to do that, oh, Lord! Help me to love you well.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 22, 2024 in Malachi

 

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Daniel 4:24-32

“The Madness of King Nebuchadnezzar” by Matthew Clark. From Revealed: A Storybook Bible for Grown-Ups by Ned Bustard

24 “‘This is what the dream means, Your Majesty, and what the Most High has declared will happen to my lord the king. 25 You will be driven from human society, and you will live in the fields with the wild animals. You will eat grass like a cow, and you will be drenched with the dew of heaven. Seven periods of time will pass while you live this way, until you learn that the Most High rules over the kingdoms of the world and gives them to anyone he chooses. 26 But the stump and roots of the tree were left in the ground. This means that you will receive your kingdom back again when you have learned that heaven rules.

27 “‘King Nebuchadnezzar, please accept my advice. Stop sinning and do what is right. Break from your wicked past and be merciful to the poor. Perhaps then you will continue to prosper.’

28 “But all these things did happen to King Nebuchadnezzar. 29 Twelve months later he was taking a walk on the flat roof of the royal palace in Babylon. 30 As he looked out across the city, he said, ‘Look at this great city of Babylon! By my own mighty power, I have built this beautiful city as my royal residence to display my majestic splendor.’

31 “While these words were still in his mouth, a voice called down from heaven, ‘O King Nebuchadnezzar, this message is for you! You are no longer ruler of this kingdom. 32 You will be driven from human society. You will live in the fields with the wild animals, and you will eat grass like a cow. Seven periods of time will pass while you live this way, until you learn that the Most High rules over the kingdoms of the world and gives them to anyone he chooses.’

Daniel 4:24-32

Dear God, this story convicts me this morning. I found myself jokingly talking like Nebuchadnezzar this morning. I have a tricky issue I’m trying to think through, and I knew I wanted to spend some time with you in earnest prayer about it this morning, but I also had some ideas of my own. So as I talked to my wife about it, I jokingly said that I had come up with some ideas, but I would check in with the Holy Spirit to see if He had any thoughts on the matter, as if it would be an automatic ratification of what I had come up with. As if I could do any of this on my own.

Daniel’s words are for me this morning: “Stop sinning and do what is right.” In this case, it’s just hubris. But the truth is, the ideas I came up with overnight, while they were good, I do think they came from you and you speaking to me and not from me. No, I’m a fool. I’m vain. I want to be respected. I want to be liked. But you are the author of everything good, not only in my life but in me as well. If I have any good thoughts, they are from you. If I have any good decisions or counsel to provide someone else, it is from you. You are my only hope. You are the only thing that keeps me from making a complete disaster of my life. You and you alone.

As I look at this image created by Matthew Clark it can be a little hard to see what all he is putting in there. I see what I think is a snake coming around Nebuchadnezzar’s neck and under his beard. It’s almost like he’s wearing a helmet with oxen horns and ears. It looks like his mouth is hanging open. This is what it looks like when we descend into ourselves.

I want to reprint here what Bustard shares about this piece:

Verse 33 continues with, “Immediately the word was fulfilled against Nebuchadnezzar. He was driven from among men and ate grass like an ox, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven till his hair grew as long as eagles’ feathers, and his nails were like birds’ claws.” [Matthew Clark] writes, “the ‘horns of divinity’ appear in many ancient Sumerian and Babylonian idols. Also, the ancient peoples often thought of crazy people as touched by divinity. So, ironically, Nebuchadnezzar achieved what he desired to accomplish in chapter three when he commissioned the golden statue of himself–but not exactly the way he wanted!” Ultimately the king recovered his sanity and could “praise and extol and honor the King of heaven, for all his works are right and his ways are just; and those who walk in pride he is able to humble.”

Father, I am humble before you right now. I am an arrogant fool, and I am sorry. I experience success and I count is as credit to me. It is not. It is you. It is all about you. I pray that my life today might be about worshipping you and carrying you into the world. I pray that those who encounter me might experience a piece of you and your Holy Spirit today. My utmost for your highest. All that I am for all that you are. Take my life, Lord, and let it be consecrated unto you.

I pray all of this in the name of the Lord of Lords, the King of King, and my God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit,

Amen

 

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