Opening Prayer: O Lord, your path always seems to lead through the sea and not around it. Forgive me when I get so comfortable with the familiar that I fail to trust you to lead me out of my slavery and dysfunction. Give me the courage and the strength and the grace to follow you, wherever it may lead. Because following you always leads to freedom.
Scripture: Psalm 77:19-20
Journal: How has God brought you out of slavery? How is God trying to get slavery out of you? How does the process of going through the sea play into that?
Reflection: “Your path led through the sea, your way through the mighty waters, though you footprints were not seen.” (Psalm 77:19) A very wise man once said that there are actually two exodus stories in the book of Exodus. The first is God getting Israel out of slavery and the second is God getting slavery out of Israel. The first happened one day, as God led his people out of Egypt and through the Red Sea. The second took forty years of wandering in the wilderness. It seems that the comfortable and familiar, no matter how hard and dysfunctional, don’t loosen their grip on us easily. The problem is that following Jesus almost never involves what is easy, comfortable, or familiar.
I’m coming to realize more
and more that God’s way always leads through the sea—and then through
the wilderness—not around it. It is only
by going through the sea, and then the wilderness, that God gets slavery out of
us. It is a long and arduous
journey. The life of slavery runs
deep. Its roots have dug way down into
us and it will take some time and effort to pull them out.
“Freedom cannot abide in a
heart dominated by desire, in a slave’s heart,” wrote John of the Cross. “It abides in a liberated heart, in a child’s
heart.” Going through, not
around, is how God brings that liberation about. “There is no way out, only through,” wrote
Gerald May. And he was so right. There is something about going through,
instead of around, that is transforming.
But the bottom line is that
until we love our liberation more than we love our captivity, we will always be
slaves.
Pray
Closing Prayer: Forgive me, O God when I love my captivity more than I love the freedom you are offering me. Don’t just get me out of slavery, but also get slavery out of me.
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