Lenten Meditation–To The Ends

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

Did they not hear? Of course they did:
“Their voice has gone out into all the earth,
   their words to the ends of the world.” 
Romans 10:18

Of course we did.

But we are hearing impaired, choosing what to listen for and what to ignore.

The sound has gone out into all the land,
resonating and echoing in each human ear,
ready to settle in each human heart.

But we clap our hands over our ears to play deaf.

The words are plainspoken for all to discern.

But we poke holes, fuss over meaning, walk away from their call.

Did they not hear?

Of course we did.

But we did not listen.

Lenten Meditation–Beautiful Feet

How beautiful on the mountains
are the feet of those
who bring good news,
who proclaim peace
Isaiah 52: 7a

Feet are not the most beautiful part of the human body, but as image bearers, we must remember that even feet–calloused, crooked toed,  deformed nails, blisters, warts and all–reflect God.  They bear the load, travel the miles, climb the mountains, and allow a voice to be heard beyond the backyard.

His footprints on earthly  soil are proof of His having been present.   His dirty feet are proof that He is taking some of that earthly soil back with Him.

Feet were worthy of His cleansing touch.  If so for the lowly homely foot, so much more our hearts.

 

Lenten Meditation–Be Lifted Up

7 Lift up your heads, you gates;
be lifted up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
10 Who is he, this King of glory?
The LORD God Almighty—
he is the King of glory.
Psalm 24:7,10

We  regularly check the closed doors in our lives, all locked and sealed, to help us feel safe and secure.  Those doors keep us in and others out.

The time has come to open up.  He is knocking, asking to be allowed in.  It is time to break the seal and open wide.

A closed heart no longer beats.

 

Lenten Meditation–Will Not Abandon

 

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

…because you will not abandon me to the realm of the dead,
nor will you let your faithful one see decay.
Psalm 16:10

from Madeleine L’Engle:

“What God began, God will not abandon.  He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion.  God loves everyone, sings the psalmist.  What God has named will live forever, Alleluia!
The happy ending has never been easy to believe in.  After the Crucifixion the defeated little band of disciples had no hope, no expectation of Resurrection.  Everything they believed in had died on the cross with Jesus.  The world was right, and they had been wrong.  Even when the women told the disciples that Jesus had left the stone-sealed tomb, the disciples found it nearly impossible to believe that it was not all over.

The truth was, it was just beginning.”

Lenten Meditation: The Land of the Living

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

For he was cut off from the land of the living;
for the transgression of my people he was punished.
Isaiah 53:8b

“When Christ appeared to his disciples he said ‘Come look at my hands,’ and he invited Thomas to put his finger into the print of the nail.
Why did he want to keep the wounds of his humanity?
Wasn’t it because he wanted to carry back with him an eternal reminder of the sufferings of those on earth?
He carried the marks of suffering so he could continue to understand the needs of those suffering.
He wanted to be forever one with us.”
Dr. Paul Brand, hand surgeon to lepers and missionary

Lenten Meditation–Lamentations

Jeremiah's Lamentations by Rembrandt

Look around and see.
Is any suffering
like my suffering
that was inflicted on me?

Lamentations 1:12

It seems there is plenty to lament these days.
Unending tragedy and sadness, heartbreak and inner turmoil.
I was told by someone today that I couldn’t possibly understand the pain he was experiencing.
I could never know how much he sought the relief that only death could bring.

Sometimes we are so deep in our suffering we do not look around to see that another died in his suffering.
No suffering was like his suffering.
Suffered, died, then buried.
Suffered, died, buried, then sealed up securely.
Suffered, died, buried, sealed up securely, then rose bringing all the relief we’ll ever need.
Suffered, died, buried, sealed up securely, rose, calling out our name so we when look around and see,

We will know him and what he has done.

 

Lenten Meditation–No Comfort

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

Your rebuke has broken my heart;
and I am full of heaviness:
and I looked for some to take pity,
but there was none; and for comforters,
but I found none. Psalm 69:20

So at last I may understand, and understanding believe; see my ancient carcass, prone between the sheets, stained and worn like a scrap of paper dropped in the gutter, muddy and marred with being trodden underfoot, and hover over it, myself, like a butterfly released from its chrysalis stage and ready to fly away. Are caterpillars told of their impending resurrection? How in dying they will be transformed from poor earth — crawlers into creatures of the air, with exquisitely pained wings? If told, do they believe it?

Is it conceivable to them that so constricted an existence as this should burgeon into so gay and lightsome a one as a butterfly’s? I imagine the wise old caterpillars shaking their heads — no, it can’t be; it’s a fantasy, self–deception, a dream. Similarly,  our wise ones. Yet in the limbo between living and dying, as the night clocks tick remorselessly on, and the black sky implacably shows not one single streak or scratch of grey, I hear those words; I am the resurrection, and the life, and feel myself to be carried along on a great tide of joy and peace.”
Malcolm Muggeridge

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

Lenten Meditation–Delivered When Delighted

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

He trusts in the LORD; let the LORD rescue him.
Let him deliver him, since he delights in him.
Psalm 22:8

To hear this cruel mockery while suffering unspeakable pain
must have been as unbearable as the pain itself.
Of course he could have been rescued,
spared all that trauma,
simply have gotten down off the cross and walked away.

But he didn’t.
He chose not to.
He chose to stay and see it through
in order that we be delivered,
because he delights in us.

Mocking the mockery.

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.