The Edmonton Sun, January 25th,
2009. I don’t know anything more about Mariana Bridi than what the article
tells me. That she was a beauty queen is obvious. Youth and beauty seem to defy
corruption, maybe especially when in the form of Woman. The truth is, youth,
energy, and beauty seem like a trinity of incorruptibility. And so their death
strikes us like a thunderbolt and makes headline news. Let us not forget,
though, that every death is tragic.
The
death of Mariana Bridi is a terrible exhibit of a truth that is easily and regularly
confirmed by observation: Death can happen to anybody at any moment. In his
meditation on the meaning of life, King Solomon concluded that we should fear
God and obey him in light of the judgment to come. This conclusion is begged by
an observation he earlier made, “I returned, and saw under the sun, that the
race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to
the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of
skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all. For man also knoweth not his
time: as the fishes that are taken in an evil net, and as the birds that are
caught in the snare; so are the sons of men snared in an evil time, when it
falleth suddenly upon them” (Ecclesiastes 9.11, 12.) What he means is that
swiftness or strength or wisdom or whatever advantage a person may have over
others, is no guarantee of an escape from surprising pitfalls. Does this beauty
queen not look swift and light, sound and strong, rich and wise? but alas! also
like the gentle bird that gets caught in
the snare?
Strength
does not always win; wisdom is no security; beauty may be cut short. King
Solomon was well acquainted with this principle. This was not just a proverb to
him. He had had this older half-brother, Absalom, “from the sole of his foot
even to the crown of his head there was no blemish in him” (2 Samuel 14.25.) He
was the epitome of abundant life, just like this girl. His hair, for instance,
grew so richly that for curiosity’s sake it was put upon the balance once a
year to be weighed (verse 26.) Absalom was not only a beauty, but a beauty who
would be king in place of his father, just as Mariana Bridi would surely have
displaced many reigning beauty queens. But both were cut short by snares
lurking in the paths they trod.
What
snares lie ahead for you? Of course, you cannot know, for the nature of a snare
is that you step into it unawares, without noticing. Because of this, and for
reasons innumerable, the advice of Solomon should be taken to heart. You need to
look into it. What is this fear of God? this obedience? these commandments?
this judgment to come? What to do? Is there no snare waiting for me?
The reader up in Canada
will say, ‘This is a southern bug that killed the beauty queen down in Brazil . But I’m
okay.’ Yes, and the reader down in Brazil
reads his or her own newspaper, and says, ‘This is a faraway avalanche that
buried the ski bunny way up in the Rocky Mountains .
But I’m okay.’ Shall we not say that such reasoning is pure evasion? Is it not
reckless to maintain that the snare is always laid for someone else? Will you
put off this warning to fear and obey God? Do you think that beauty, wisdom, or
strength is a guarantee of time, life, and opportunity to do later what you
know deep down you should do now? “For let us hear the conclusion of the whole
matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man.
For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether
it be good, or whether it be evil” (Ecclesiastes 12.13, 14.) Fearing God is Old
Testament faith. Fear God today by trusting Christ for tomorrow.
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