From this point forward every day
brought new delegations to the pastors, new offers for them to lend the future queen
to various ventures (all of course with the very best intentions, for the
greater good; and if the pastors should benefit, well, so much the better.)
The pastors formed their own company,
King and Queen Enterprises. They had a marketing department, a fashion
department, they launched a music industry, a construction company, an
entertainment division, an investment firm. They used the images of the King
and Queen to be on their letterhead and marketing material.
They kept the betrothed so busy and in
motion that she could no longer think, all she could do is what she was told to
do, with the learned pastors saying, “We know best. Trust us, we know best.”
Her ladies-in-waiting, who served out of
love for both her and the king, were replaced by women from the City of
Fashion, the City of Marketing, the City of Politics, and the City of Dollar.
Her food was laced with sedatives one meal and stimulants the next meal. She
was never allowed to rest. She was never allowed to contemplate the return of
her beloved King. Her heart was never permitted to behold Him.
As the pastors’ wealth and power accumulated,
they became convinced that the king would not return, at least not in their
lifetime. Why not align themselves with the political and national and military
powers of the region? Why not endorse them – of course endorse them in the name
of the King – why not insist that all people give their hearts to power and
might and national identity – rather than allegiance to the King of kings?
Well, dear reader…again, my heart
breaks.
Now to be sure not all pastors and
shepherds got caught up in the insanity, but if you had traveled to this land
you will not have found them at the royal court – which had become an Imperial
Court with an Imperial Cult, with its leader from the City of Dollar and its
council from the cities of the World.
The faithful pastors could be found
walking the streets and looking for the disenfranchised, the hurting, the sick,
the refugee, the hungry, and those who remembered the good and kind and gentle
King (Matthew 12:18 – 21). These pastors were binding up wounds and carrying
the hurting to the inn for healing at their own expense (Luke 10:30 – 37). These shepherds were giving their lives for
the sheep (John 10:1 – 18).
And the bride-to-be? She was cast out of
her royal lodgings in rags after she was used up by the faithless pastors (they
had no shortage of women to replace her as a figurehead). She wandered the
streets, eating from dumpsters, sleeping under bridges in cardboard boxes.
Yet, as the Father of the Great and Good
King would have it, she was discovered by some nondescript faithful pastors in
their search for the untouchable and unlovable, and they and their little
flocks brought her in and clothed her and fed her and gave her shelter and love
and care. Most importantly of all they spoke of her beloved, of the Great and
Good King…for they loved Him with all that they had and all that they were.