The following
meditation is from Doug Hood’s book,
Nurture Faith:
Five Minute Meditations to Strengthen Your Walk with Christ.
Psalm 4:6 (Common English Bible)
If there remains anyone who
argues that the Bible isn’t relevant for today they have demonstrated that they
haven’t paid attention to the Bible – not close attention anyway. Is there
anything more timeless than the agonizing cry, “We can’t find goodness
anywhere?” Each morning our minds are
disturbed by the growing threat of the militant Islamic group, ISIS, the
conflict between Israel and Palestine and the racial unrest in Ferguson,
Missouri. Beneath these attention getting headlines is the less mentioned but
continuing concern of the growing wealth gap in our country and the millions in
our nation who struggle daily to simply have enough. There are no snappy
answers to the painful question of human struggle.
It is well that the Bible does
not offer a quick and pre-fabricated answer to this despairing cry. And it is
best for us to refrain from such a temptation. First, we are not free to
indulge in any cynical or dismissal attitudes such as, “Well, that’s life,” or,
“Bad things just happen.” As followers of Jesus we are baptized into the common
confession that our lives are in the hands of God, and that this God is a God
of love. Second, we don’t occupy some place between God and the struggle of
humanity. Not one of us has some special insight into the mysterious work of
God in the midst of our common difficulty. Each of us must sweat it out with everyone
else.
What remains is a prayer: “Lord,
show us once more the light of your face.”
This is the prayer of the Psalmist and nothing new can be added. The
prayer is the same today as it was yesterday, fresh and urgent. It is as new as
the earthquake that shook the San Francisco Bay Area a few days ago and the
agony that kept someone awake last night. It is new when we utter it
personally, today. No devotional, not one inspirational book can answer the
plea, the emotional depth of that prayer.
On our knees we pray. If we
listen in the silences between our words the Holy Spirit reminds us that God
was never absent in the horrors of human life in the Bible – nor will God be
absent today. On the Via Dolorosa – the way of the cross – in Jerusalem, God
was very present in the heart of human misery giving, giving and giving himself,
so that after this there would be no fear, no despair and no doubt of God’s
love. The cry, “We can’t find goodness anywhere,” still sounds in the streets
of our communities. We live with it and we hear it echo in our souls. But the
Spirit helps us recall the suffering of Christ – a suffering accepted out of
Christ’s love for us. It is a love that will work for the good of all those who
love him.
Joy,
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