Lenten Meditation–Shake Their Heads

photo by Josh Scholten http://www.cascadecompass.com

All they that see Him laugh Him to scorn
they shoot out their lips and shake their heads.
Psalm 22:7
The mocking and head shaking have never stopped to this day.  In the media, in school yards, in academic corridors and the public square: disbelief and scorn over the kingdom of God come to earth.  Derision is part of our daily diet, so things have not changed.

He could have defended himself but didn’t need to.  He knew what the others refused to see and acknowledge, so forgave their ridicule.   Scorn, laughter, spouting off and dismissal is met with grace and mercy.

It’s enough to keep us scratching our heads over the wonder of it all.

 

Lenten Meditation–All We Like Sheep

All we like sheep have gone astray,
we have turned –every one– to his own way;
and the Lord has laid on him
the iniquity of us all.
Isaiah 53:6

Human beings are stubbornly independent creatures craving self-determination: we want to decide everything for ourselves.  As much as we might like the comfort of being part of the flock, there are times when we make a break for it and go our own way, even if it means risking getting lost, hungry or harmed.

It is chaos when we choose to ignore the call of the shepherd, if we refuse to be found when being sought, if we struggle to be free if picked up and carried back.

Lost and scattered, coyote-bait if left to our own devices, we are undeserving of a shepherd who willingly gives his life to lead us safely home.

All that is asked is that we follow.

Lenten Meditation–We Are Healed

photo by Josh Scholten http://www.cascadecompass.com

and with his stripes we are healed
Isaiah 53:5

I’d much rather think about God as a baby taking his first breath born in a stable than a dying man breathing his last on a cross.  I didn’t grow up in churches with crucifixes, so didn’t dwell on the wounds inflicted on a bleeding and suffering God.  Instead, the empty cross represented a symbol of hope:  death defeated.

But there can be no victory without the wounds, without the bloodshed and without the death.   And there is no victory without a baby born of blood amid the waste and squalor of a dark cave meant to house animals. Mine can be no sterile faith immune from all the messiness of human anguish, sorrow and pain in a fallen and sinful world.  His skin shed real blood.  His cries echoed the agony we feel when abandoned and forsaken.

Sitting in a packed church today among hundreds mourning the sudden and incomprehensible loss of a sister in Christ, I knew there were many broken and bleeding hearts in that sanctuary.  We were all struggling with the dichotomy of our faith: we struggle to express joy when confronted with the harsh reality of the grave, we know God’s purpose is not always knowable yet we express confidence in His sovereign plan, we acknowledge His timing is different than our timing yet we live as though we have forever on earth, we have seen His love is strongest when we are hurting and need comforting yet we don’t want to appear that we need it.

Beyond the beautiful hymns, the scriptural assurances and the floral arrangements, we were desperate for the tender mercies that can come only from a bleeding God.  He understands how badly the hurt feels and how anguished is our cry.

And so as he reaches out to share our pain, man to man, God to man, we are restored.   Our wounds must be exposed, the bleeding for all to see, in order for everlasting healing to take place.

Lenten Meditation–Bringing Peace

Urakami Cathedral fragment remaining in Nagasaki photo by Nate Gibson

…the punishment that brought us peace was upon him
Isaiah 53:5
On a ruined wall in Hiroshima is dimly etched the figure of a human being who was standing next to it when the flash came.  The body, through instantaneously vaporized, stopped enough of the awful light to leave that abiding epitaph.  When German theologian Heinrich Vogel gazed at the dim silhouette, the thought gripped him: Jesus Christ was there in the inferno with that person;  what was done to him was done to Christ; the horror he may have had no instant to feel, Jesus felt.  The Light of the world stood uncomprehended, comprehending, and undone by the hideous splendor of humankind’s stolen fire…Jesus’ presence in the midst of atomic holocaust was intimated also in the fact that the bomb on Nagasaki exploded very close to the largest Christian cathedral in all Asia, annihilating 1,100 worshippers.  God, in order that we might meet him, narrowed himself down into Jesus.  But Jesus was also the narrowing down of the totality of humankind.   Our Lord does not ask that we stare heroically into the nuclear abyss; he asks that we look toward him and let our sight become aligned with his.  Will we put our lives on the line, his line, against the onrush of chaos?”
from “The Central Murder” by  Dale Aukerman

Lenten Meditation–Bruised and Wounded

photo by Josh Scholten http://www.cascadecompass.com

But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities
Isaiah 53: 5

All day long I look for wounds needing healing in my work.  Some are visible and obvious.  Most are invisible.  Sometimes I am not even sure what wounds I’m looking for as my patient won’t or can’t tell me.  I need to probe the surface and then peel away the layers, deeper and deeper,  until I find where it hurts.

Some wounds never do reveal themselves as the patient has no intention of letting them be discovered.  The suffering, intense as it is, remains unrelieved and unknowable.

Not so the wounds described in Isaiah, revealed as our tender God unfurls, willingly exposing His selfless bruised core.