214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com
SCRIPTURE
Ecclesiastes 4.9-12
Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor:
If either of them falls, one can help the other up. But pity those who fall and have no one to help them up.
WORDS OF HOPE
Some days I wake up with a blue feeling; not complete hopelessness, but a slight fear of what is to come. On that same day, I have concluded things are OK, if not completely normal. The day certainly has a way of coming full circle and feeling optimistic. It is most certainly the chemical make-up of alphas and omega’s. Beginnings and endings.
A movie theme that has often been remade, is the story of the last man on earth. Will Smith took on the role that Vincent Price once played as the sole surviving human on Earth, at least that’s my memory of it, except Will’s world was also full of trendy vampires. We are not the last people on earth, and to not feel alone in our problems and feelings is a very good thing, don’t you think?
It’s one thing to have the responsibilities of being the first people on earth as in the Genesis story. It’s entirely another to be the last one. There are no longer any checks and balances of good versus evil. Anything goes as long as the last person is predisposed to survive.
Yet another “last person” story starred Burgess Meredith in a Twilight Zone episode expertly handled by writer Rod Serling. Meredith’s character had no use for other people at all and considered them annoyances who interrupted his reading. Of course, he inevitably drops and steps on his thick reading glasses and his perfect world becomes his prison.
This leads to so many thoughts about how fortunate we are, no matter how dysfunctional the world is around us, to be able to find an oasis of sanity with people who also share our hope. In the disparaging Twilight Zone story Rod Serling tells, we are left with the feeling of hopelessness or severe loneliness.
But look at us on planet Earth today. We have so many people around us! There’s never a cause to be lonely, especially in the church community we call Cathedral of Hope where many people have discovered both their alpha and omega, the beginning of a new life and the end of a search.
There might be opportunities for solitude, for prayer or meditation, but I’m glad I don’t have to think about being the last person on earth.… At least today. As much as I enjoy my solitude, I know I enjoy the hope being around other people gives me. What about you?
PRAYER
Thank you for the hope and comfort that lives in the community of your saints. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Charlie C. Rose
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com