Lenten Meditation: A Great Light

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

The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned.
Isaiah 9:2

How often do I walk in total darkness?   As little as possible. It is petrifying to try to find one’s way around when the power goes out on a moonless stormy night, trying to find where the candles are stored, or the flashlight that isn’t where it is supposed to be.  Toes get stubbed, knees get bruised, heads get bonked.  It is a feeling of complete vulnerability to navigate without light.

The darkest place I remember being was in Lewis and Clark Caverns in Montana when we took a walking tour when I was eight years old.  Part of the tour was walking to a deep part of the cavern and the tour guide turned off the lights.  There is nothing so dark as being underground where there is no sun, no moon, no stars.  You can’t see your hand right in front of your face.  It is what the blind experience day and night, but one minute of it was much too long for me.  My gratitude was immense when the lights came back on.

And so I long for the light to illuminate the dark pathways of life, to plunge the shadow of death into the dawn.   The light will rise, bringing me with it.