Monday - March 3, 2025
SCRIPTURE
Acts 10.11-16
[PETER] saw heaven opened and something like a large sheet being let down to earth by its four corners. It contained all kinds of four-footed animals, as well as reptiles and birds. Then a voice told him, “Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.”
“Surely not, Lord!” Peter replied. “I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.”
The voice spoke to him a second time, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.”
This happened three times, and immediately the sheet was taken back to heaven.
WORDS OF HOPE
Today’s Scripture reading is about one of those strange and colorful visions that are much more likely to happen in the narratives of the Hebrew Scripture Prophets than in the Book of Acts. The Apostle Peter is praying on his roof when suddenly Heaven literally opens up to lower a sheet filled with live animals. Such drama!
What can we learn from this strange event? First, the readers of Acts believed that Heaven was a place where God lived just beyond the clouds overhead. Second, Peter’s people were not vegetarians, third, they were selective of their diet because of old religious laws, and fourth, Peter was as hard to convince as ever to change his mind.
Even though the first century readers had no problem accepting miraculous events in their stories, they also would have known that this one was not just about a bagful of livestock. It was about being open to change. That’s where we come in. How many of us identify with Peter, a man so set in his ways that God was obligated to dazzle him three times with the vision before Peter finally got the message?
Change is seldom easy or instant. Declaring previously forbidden foods as legal cuisine was actually about accepting gentiles, the people who regularly ate those foods, as welcome members of an inclusive and expanding body of believers. This was a foreign concept to Peter, just as it is to many people who self-identify as Christians today.
It would seem we should have the advantage over Peter, who was learning to enrich his faith for the first time in history. We’ve had a couple of thousand years to become accustomed to the radically liberal teachings of Jesus, and to recognize and respect the beauty of humankind’s diversity, both among our denominations and alongside the world’s other faith systems.
But change is still a frightening concept to many of us. What can we do to help our neighbors embrace change? Simply by embracing change ourselves; by being open and understanding to those who cannot or will not. As always, by following Jesus’ example of being the change, not just talking about it. And, most important, by not waiting for God to drop a bag of animals out of the sky to do it for us.
PRAYER
God of Diversity, we have a lot of work ahead of us to fulfill your initiative of being your ambassadors of inclusive love. Show us the most constructive way each of us can play our parts in changing fear into trust and hate into love. As Jesus leads us, Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dan Peeler
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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