Thursday - June 29, 2023
READING
So for tonight we pray for
What we know can be.
And on this day we hope for
What we still can’t see.
It’s up to us to be the change,
And even though this world needs so much more,
There’s so much to be thankful for.
Carol Bayer Sager, David Foster, Richard Page
WORDS OF HOPE
In a recent blog post, Sarah Bessey speaks of her most consistent spiritual discipline: daily long walks where she and God “get down to it”—"where she can rage and cry, argue and rest, yearn and worship.” On one of these encounters, she considers what she can hold on to “after the ways life beats us down, after the diagnosis and the losses, the unanswered prayers and the empty certainties, after the grave side service and the broken heart and the loneliness that still comes.”
One of the principles she arrives at is to “live into what I’m for, not just settle for being against. It is always worthwhile to name what I hope for, and to live in that shelter.” In a world which is too often oppositional, where we are often defined by what we are against, it can be a source of inspiration, healing, and peace to stop and ask: what is it I hope for and then turn those yearnings to prayer and action. What is it you hope for—for yourself, your intimate circle, your city, state, nation, for creation?
As I put the finishing touches on this devotion, it is Juneteenth, and I am reminded of Maya Angelou’s words in her poem “Still I Rise”…
Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise…
Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.
I rise
I rise
I rise.
At age 89 Opal Lee, fueled by a dream that burned inside, began the 1400 mile walk from Ft. Worth to Washington DC with the goal of making Juneteenth a national holiday. Not expecting to see it come to fruition in her lifetime, she still hoped, and lived in the shelter of that hope. As we consider our hopes and dreams today, may we pray to align our deepest yearnings with God’s dreams —for liberation, justice, and shalom for all people.
PRAYER
Gracious God, we give thanks that we are the blessed incarnation of your dreams and hopes. Inspire us to birth new hope in the world and then help us build your new creation. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
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