Come to Stillness: Take a few minutes to allow your mind and
heart to be still before God.
Opening Prayer: Power of Love, shining through the risen
Jesus, radiantly shine in the dark places of my pain. Let their power to infect me be broken and
drawn into your heart. (Feed My Shepherds by Flora Slosson Wuellner)
Scripture Reading for the Day: Mark 16:1-8
Reading for Reflection:
One of the consequences of having been
sick enough to die once myself is that I am now much more interested in any
celebrations regarding being raised from the dead than I once was.
For some years, I prepared for Easter by
attending a Good Friday service and watching the cross go out the back door,
its ominous and unsettling black veil flowing in the breeze, trying to summon
up the courage to imagine and to face some semblance of the sense of loss the
disciples must have felt on that day, trying to come to grips with what it
means if there is another word after good-bye and what it means if there is
not. Being close to being draped in
black and carried out the same door myself has, shall we say, made the whole
thing a bit easier for me to imagine.
I was in the hospital around Easter, and
the doctors gave me a pass to go to church on Easter morning. My sister came to pick me up and help me get
there. Sitting in the pew that morning,
barely two blocks from the hospital where I was told I might well have been
dead instead of alive on this Easter morning, it came to me that the resurrection
is a theological concept that may well be ignored unless one’s death cannot be.
It follows that forgiveness is not much of
a concept without something for which to forgive and be forgiven. Healing has no meaning in the absence of
illness. Peace is no treasure at all to
those who have known no war and no strife.
Saying hello has no joy in it without the saying of good-bye.
I am coming to believe that the thing God
said just before “Let there be light” was “Good-bye, dark.” And that Noah could not say hello to the
rainbow without first having said good-bye to the world as it disappeared
beneath the waters of the flood. And
that something deep and mysterious about saying good-bye from the bottom of the
pit made the hello that Joseph spoke to his father all those years later all
the more wondrous. “Good-bye, Egypt ” turned out to be another way for the
Israelites to say “Hello, Canaan .”
“Good-bye, Jesus of Nazareth,” whispers
Mary through her tears at the foot of the cross on Friday afternoon. “Hello, Lord of the Universe,” she murmurs to
the one she mistakes for a gardener, on Sunday morning. (Between the
Dreaming and the Coming True by Robert Benson)
Reflection and Listening: silent and written
Prayer: for the church, for others, for myself
Prayer: for the church, for others, for myself
Closing Prayer: Living God, who for our redemption gave your only-begotten
Son to the death of the cross, and by his glorious resurrection have delivered us
from the power of our enemy: grant us so to die daily unto sin, that we may
evermore live with him in the joy of his risen life; through Jesus Christ our
Lord. Amen. (A Collect for Easter, Oremus)
No comments:
Post a Comment