Lenten Reflection–Birth of Dawn and Dew

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Overcome us that, so overcome, we may be ourselves: we desire the beginning of your reign as we desire dawn and dew, wetness at the birth of light. – C.S. Lewis

My husband and I have just spent our first night in Japan, traveling to share some precious time with our son who teaches in Tokyo, and staying with our close friends of thirty years who are serving as missionaries here. With our internal clocks off, we woke at 2 AM, so over the last hour, I have watched Tokyo awake cold, gray and overcast, much like dawns at home in the Pacific Northwest Although there was not the visible ‘rising sun’ this ancient land is known for, a birth of light still happened just as it does anywhere on earth to erase the night, even above and despite the cloud cover.

I am overwhelmed by the vastness of the ocean we flew over yesterday, the hugeness of this city and its multimillions of people, by the fact we are able to be here at all in mere hours in this modern age of transportation. I am overcome that I can witness the dawn no matter where I rise, insignificant as I am, that I am able to feel at home even in far off lands.

May I be confident, no matter where I sleep or awake, I can be witness to a dawning, inevitable, that rises over a vast Kingdom without borders, without corruption, without alienation, without end.

No matter where I lie, I will be covered in its cleansing dew.

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2 thoughts on “Lenten Reflection–Birth of Dawn and Dew

  1. I guess I’ve always been aware of time zones, but an effect of all the relationships I’ve made on the Internet is that I have come to reckon distances in terms of time zones — Vancouver is two time zones away, England is six, Finland is eight, and … surprise … Zimbabwe is eight! I’ve always had an interest in geography, but I now keep two atlases literally at my feet in my office and locate anybody with whom I make contact. It gives me that same sense of belonging to the “bigger picture.” And the sun comes up and the sun goes down!

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