The Rev. Richard L. Bryant
Editor's note: The Rev. Richard Bryant died Dec. 29, 2025, and his devoted wife, Mary, has been posting some of Richard's "work in progress" essays on his Substack, "Elevate the Discourse." We found this one particularly moving, and we hope that when Richard got to heaven, all that God said was "well done, good and faithful servant."
Special to United Methodist Insight | Feb. 17, 2026
10. We’re out of slaw.
9. You can’t have the Wifi password
8. The diet soda is over there
7. You’re supposed to replace the toner
6. Don’t touch the thermostat
5. We have macaroni and cheese every night
4. Meet your new roommate, Steve Irwin
3. Elvis has only just arrived
2. There’ll be a Church Council meeting at 4 pm
1. I gave you over to the stubbornness of your heart to follow your devices.
The last one has got to be one of the most emotional and stressful expressions God utters in the Old Testament. It’s an intimate revelation of God’s frustration and love. The Psalmist records God saying, “I let you do your own thing, follow your plans, despite stubbornness, and what I knew to be wrong; I let you go.” I sent you off despite everything to the contrary because that’s what you claimed you wanted and you wouldn’t listen. God sounds like the parent of a teenager. Idea number one: sometimes, God’s people get it wrong. Believing themselves right in the face of obvious wrongness, they, as the Psalm says, “simply weren’t agreeable toward God.”
There are expressions you hear in some circles, “God’s ways are unknowable and mysterious.” God is beyond us. I also think we use phrases like that when we want to let ourselves off the hook and keep doing our own thing. How could we know what God, so far beyond us, wants us to do? Such reasoning is an excuse. In Psalm 81, nothing is beyond us; God couldn’t be clearer. God’s call for dialogue is in black and white, and we feign ignorance.
Idea number two: God asks in verse 11, “How I wish my people Israel would listen to me!” There’s no mystery there. Why aren’t we listening? Is it easier to pretend we’re still wandering in a wilderness of our design? Yes. When we walk without a purpose, we fight among ourselves. As we stop and listen to God, we realize our God-given potential to be the church. God’s authentic and honest voice seems challenging to hear, but it is not hard for those who are listening.
Peace,
Richard