Welcome to the Seven Rivers blog! Remember when you were young and you refused to eat the vegetables that your parents gave you? Well, it turns out they were right. You are what you eat. The Coronavirus (Covid-19) has us indoors consuming a lot of news, social media, and content that can make us anxious and afraid. This blog is intended to provide us with "good food" that will cause our eyes and hearts to be lifted upward to God and outward in love to our neighbors.
In August of 1527 the bubonic plague came to Wittenberg, Germany where the reformer Martin Luther was living with his pregnant wife, Katharina. While everyone else began fleeing the city, they decided to stay and opened up their home as a ward for the sick. A pastor in the town of Breslau about 200 miles to the east wrote Luther to ask his opinion about what a Christian should do in such circumstances. His response is amazingly relevant and a help to Christians thinking about Coronavirus almost 500 years later! The full letter is here (12 pages). My executive summary of the highlights is here (3 pages).
Last fall we preached through 14 weeks on Sacred Practices. Now would be a great time to revisit those sermons! Many of you read the book, The Common Rule, which was one of the catalysts for the series. The author, Justin Earley, recently sent out a very helpful new guide, “Spiritual Rhythms for Quarantine”. He writes,
Suddenly, what has always been true is plainly apparent - we live in a dangerous world, and your house stands as a missional outpost of love amidst that danger. This is your moment to rise to that call. Everything you have ever known about household rhythms is now disrupted, which means this is an incredible opportunity to form new rhythms that guide you towards God’s power in a time of humanity’s powerlessness. That guide you towards courage in a cultural moment of fear. That guide you towards concentration and presence, in a blitz of information and alerts. That guide you towards self-sacrifice in a mood of self-preservation. And above all - that guide you towards a household gathered in love, rather than scattered in fear.
The pastoral team uses The Gospel Coalition website regularly. They have put together a growing collection of practical and theological articles on the Coronavirus here.
Some really interesting ones: