Daily Scripture

Saturday March 24, 2007

+ Fourth Week of Lent

We want answers.

Readings: Jeremiah 11:18, 12:19-20 Psalm 7:2-3, 9-12 John 7:40-53

”_Let us destroy the tree in its vigor; let us cut him off from the land of the living so that his name will be spoken no more _.” [Jeremiah 12:19]

So the guards went to the chief priests and Pharisees who asked them, ‘Why did you not bring him in?’ The guards answered, ‘Never before has anyone spoken like this man.’” [John 7:45-46]

Could it be that we don’t get answers because we don’t ask the right questions? I think we spend a great deal of time, perhaps a great portion of our lives in denial about who we are and who we are to become.

I have been reading When the Heart Waits – Spiritual Direction for Life’s Sacred Questions by Sue Monk Kidd [Harper, San Francisco, 1990], a New York Times best seller shortly after it was published. Of course, I’m reading is seventeen years later. I recommend it highly not because it is revelatory but because it is ‘affirmatory’ if I may coin that word. As you read it, I promise you will be reading your own story.

Based on Carl Jung’s insights in to personality development and Joseph Campbell’s theory of the importance of myth and symbol in sorting out our identity within a complex of many relationships including our relationship with God, Sue describes her own struggle to find her true identity.

I may not ask the right questions because I’m afraid of the answers. I fear the darkness but hide in the darkness in order to avoid the light. Denial becomes a way of life but in reality it is the path to death.

This is a paradox, however, because unless we willingly succumb to the dark night of the soul, we cannot find the light of God’s truth.

Jesus was not exempt from this process that peaked in the Garden of Gethsemane on the night before he died.

True spiritual freedom is not something that we pursue but something to which we succumb by letting go and letting God. Those who were truly liberated in Christ were not those who simply understood his words but those who were absorbed into his life so that with Paul they could say, “I live no longer I, but Christ lives in me.” Or to put it another way, “Say not that God is in my heart but that I am in the heart of God.”


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