Lenten Meditation: The Eye of God

The Prayer of St. Teresa of Avila (1515-1582)

Let nothing disturb you, nothing frighten you, all things are passing.  God never changes.  Patience obtains all things.  Whoever has God lacks nothing.  God is enough.

These words were sung last night to a packed church by the Dordt College Choir (my husband and son’s alma mater) now on their spring tour.  It was a touching and beautiful evening of wonderful choral music by a group of students who clearly care deeply about sharing their faith, led by a talented and dedicated conductor who grew up in our town of Lynden, Dr. Ben Kornelis.

As the University where I work winds down to the end of a tough and wearing winter quarter this week, it struck me how hazardous being a college student is these days.   This quarter we had one completed suicide and five additional serious attempts.  A disturbing New York Times article today highlights the cluster of suicides of students at Cornell University in upstate New York.

This is a generation with seemingly little grounding in the preciousness of life, with less spiritual foundation for hope and inner peace, with broken and fragmented family support when the inevitable rough days happen.  These young adults give themselves up to their desperation and some tell me the pain of living is simply not worth sustaining, no matter how temporary the misery may be.

The words of St. Teresa are a reminder of God’s constancy always, through all things.  Like the helix nebula dubbed “The Eye of God”, He patiently watches over us, never changing, lacking nothing, being sufficient for all our needs.  Do not be afraid.  Do not despair.  He is here.

3 thoughts on “Lenten Meditation: The Eye of God

  1. Emily
    What an amazing picture, it does look like an eye!
    I am so thankful that God is always there, never changing. The world as you stated is constantly changing, Jesus is our only sure foundation. I have so enjoyed your words of wisdom and encouragement during this Lenton season. Thanks for being so faithful to take the time to share the talent God has given you in finding pictures that protray so well what you have shared in words. I am blessed to work with you and share life with you.

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  2. I am encouraged, Dear Emily, by your use of the word “grounding;” indeed, just yesterday I recorded a song as part of my “Beyond What The Eye Can See” project that has a chorus:

    Some may say I’m living backwards,
    With my face turned to the past,
    But those mem’ries give me grounding
    For new adventures that come so fast.

    In writing the song, I considered alternative phrases, including “keep me grounded,” but settled on “give me grounding” from a memory of watching a telephone installer put a phone in the new house of a new neighbor when I was in grade school. Of course I asked him why he took a sledge hammer and drove a LONG metal rod into the ground just out from where the phone line connected with the house. “This gives the phone system grounding,” he explained, “so that electricity won’t build up and burn the house down.”

    The lesson took. I took algebra in high school, not because I liked math but because I had been told it teaches one how to find unknowns, as in X. My formula adaptations might not pass an algebra test, but they’ve kept me from being intimidated by the X-marks-the-unknowns in my life. Oh, and chemistry!! I learned ONE thing!! Some elements bond and some elements don’t bond!! Ah, such grounding has permitted me to peruse new relationships with a pragmatic sense — does this situation bring something new and positive to my life or does it engender something new and positive to the other person’s life? If not, I had best move on and make room on both sides for something better.

    Such grounding is part and parcel of the more direct stuff: like gramatical rules that permit me to say EXACTLY what I mean, a sense of history and geography that embraces me as part of the global village, and a grounding in the arts that enhance my overall communicative capacities. So, yes, despite detractors, my memories and experiences DO give me grounding. So sad that too many young people today don’ get that.

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  3. Just some dust, God is in every atom in all creation, we always look for image or something we can see, we will never see God with our eyes! He is Light, he holds together all creation. One Love

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