Thursday – August 4, 2022

Donald (Luke) Day

SCRIPTURE

1 John 3.17

But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him?

WORDS OF HOPE

Compassion was a favorite theme of the writer of the Letter of 1 John. Compassion allows us to see the other individual as God sees them. Scientists who research brain development have learned that there is a deep and more primitive portion of our brain which responds to other individuals who differ from us. It’s like a “friend or foe” switch which rapidly signals difference as possible danger. If you resemble me in a basic way, you may be a member of my family or tribe and of no danger; if you differ, there may be a danger.

This primitive brain reflex is seen in many animals and may have helped as a survival instinct. Gender, body size, skin or hair color are some of the different signals. This portion of the mammalian brain differs from the cerebral cortex where we think and make our judgments primarily in its rapidity to assess the observed difference and trigger a reaction. It is capable of alerting us to the difference as “possible danger” before our slower cerebral cortex thinks about the matter and makes our judgment.

This basic brain organization allows for rapid response in danger, but it increases the negative effect of social prejudice which is taught to everyone. Now, how does that impact the statement: “compassion allows us to see others as God sees them”? When we act in compassion to help or encourage someone who is suffering, we enter their distress with them. This behavior which originates in our cerebral cortex may be a little slower to trigger, but it overwhelms that more primitive “friend or foe” brain message and allows us to approach the “other one” without fear.

This primitive brain trigger system is based on avoidance of fear (fear of difference which may mean danger). Our active compassion is based on love. Remember, love casts out fear. And for the Christian, what is our source of love? God! Our cerebral cortex directs us into a loving act of compassion which manifests the divine love we share with the other individual.

The great Creator God of diversity does not see differences between humans, because all humans are valued children of God. So, as you act in compassion to help someone else, you are seeing them as God sees them… loving and valuing them has God does.

PRAYER

Creator God, may our lives be filled with your richest blessings of a diverse array of your children for each of us to love as you love us.

DEVOTION AUTHOR

Donald (Luke) Day
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare


Need More Inspiration? Read our Daily Devotions

By Donna Jackson April 18, 2025
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By Jonathon McClellan April 17, 2025
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By Hardy Haberman April 16, 2025
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By Donald (Luke) Day April 15, 2025
SCRIPTURE  2 Corinthians 2:15 But thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumph in Christ, and manifests through us the sweet aroma of the knowledge of Him in every place. WORDS OF HOPE On this Holy Tuesday, as Jesus made his words and presence known among every level of the population of Jerusalem, let’s consider the wisdom in this prayer by John Cardinal Newman: "Dear Jesus, help me to spread your sweet fragrance everywhere I go. Flood my soul with your spirit and life. Penetrate and possess my whole being so utterly that my life may be only a radiance of your life. Shine through me, and be so in me, that every soul with whom I come into contact may feel your presence in my soul. Let them look up and see not me but only you Jesus and give you glory. Stay within me and then I will begin to shine as you shine; so, to share as to be a light to others, and that light, O Jesus, will be all from you. It will be you shining on others through me. Let me preach you without preaching, not by words alone but by my life example; by the captivating force and sympathetic influence of what I am which is the evident fullness of the love my heart and life bears for you. Amen" Were there specific portions of this prayer which had extra meaning to you? That's probably God's Spirit talking to you about your life’s need for a more vibrant spiritual life. The phrase that stays with me the most from this prayer is: "Dear Jesus, help me to spread your sweet fragrance everywhere I go." When I was a kid, we used a common phrase to describe another kid whom we disliked: "he's a stinker!" It may have become part of our vocabulary from the old Our Gang movies, in which one little nuisance boy was named Stinky. Have you ever wondered if your presence, words and actions within the group might be given a similar label? As we go about our life, we emit an emotional and “spiritual fragrance" which has an effect upon other people. Will it be good or "stinky"? All of us have known individuals whose fragrance spreads gloom, doubt, suspicion and gossip. However, a life filled with the Spirit of God has a very different fragrance. Each Christian is like a rose bush which God planted in the individual’s daily life. The loving life of Christ shines upon its leaves and urges each rosebud to open its petals wide to let the sweet scent of God's love perfume the whole garden area. I’m reminded of the words from 2 Corinthians 2:14-15; "But thanks be to God, who in Jesus Christ always leads us... and through us spreads in every place [we go] the sweet fragrance that comes from knowing Jesus. For we are the aroma of Christ among those” [with whom we have contact]. (II Corinthians 2:14-15) Will our aroma be one of kindness, forgiveness, love and acceptance which is the scent of God to a needy world? PRAYER “Let me preach you without preaching, not by words alone, but by my life example; by the captivating force and sympathetic influence of what I am which is the evident fullness of love my heart and life bears for you." Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Donald (Luke) Day Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Thomas Riggs April 14, 2025
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By Dr. Gary Kindley April 11, 2025
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