214-351-1901
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READING
“So God created every one of us in the male and female image of God. Then God gave us God's own image —something so holy that it could never be harmed, and never be taken away. A never-aloneness. An origin and destination. A source code of grace.” Nadia Bolz-Weber
WORDS OF HOPE
G-R-A-C-E are the first letters I enter into my daily NYTimes Wordle template. I tried various options when I first started this daily ritual, but I always come back to Grace. Even in this word game, it is the source from which all flows.
Wordle bot, which I consult after the game is over, applauds my choice: “This is a great opening word. On average, someone who guesses grace will cut the 2,309 possible choices to just 101.” I think the Holy One would give the nod to it as well.
I am not alone in anchoring it all—my life, everything—in Grace which Nadia Bolz-Weber calls “God’s source code, the spirit’s renewable resource.” So often in her sermons Bolz-Weber returns to “the thing I forget and then turn around and see the power of every day. The thing that has changed my life and the lives of so many and that thing is, of course ... Beyonce,” she jests, and follows with Grace.
We’ve all had those periods in our lives when one calamity after another knocks us down, and just when we are just recovering from one difficulty—sickness, loss, financial hardship, painful relationship issues-- we’re hit with another. Like churning, pounding ocean waves in a storm, they can bring us to our knees.
I’ve been in the midst of one of those recently and continue to learn God’s ways and the gifts of grace. So often, after the events are over, we can look back and see mercy in our midst and pour out our full-throated gratitude. “Thank you, thank you, thank you” surges from the heart for things large and small and for those who were ministers of grace during that time.
What I have longed for, though, and what seems to be more present as I age, is the ability to see Grace in the midst of the pain, disorientation, chaos, hurt, need. Not always, but often enough to draw one step closer to the mystical sense of oneness with God.
Oh, to grace, how great a debtor daily I’m constrained to be. And thy goodness like a fetter binds my wandering heart to thee.
PRAYER
For grace seen and unseen, revealed and hidden, we thank you, O God. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com