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WORDS OF HOPE
I’m looking at a stunning image of the Carina Nebula, a luminous region about 7,600 light-years away. Of this cosmic wonder, Marina Koren writes: “The nebula is home to countless young stars, glittering like gemstones. These stars are so full of energy that they whip cosmic gas around, shaping it into peaks and valleys at the nebula’s edge. Beyond that veil of dust are still more stars shimmering in the darkness…. Instead of highlighting the vastness of space, the Carina Nebula image reveals its richness. We see a scene bursting with density and texture. At first glance, the edge of the nebula resembles a rocky mountaintop, something hard and scalable. Look closer, and the nebula seems soft and smoky. You can imagine walking through it and feeling the powdery particles brush against your skin.” https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/the-coolest-space-picture-i-e2-80-99ve-ever-seen/ar-AAZvfVQ
Like many of you, I am star-struck by the latest images from the James Webb Space Telescope, and truth be told: we need a little awe right now. Our vision has been diminished, dulled, and distorted by years of political fractiousness, pandemic living, injustice, economic challenges and more. Some days we are just “holding on.”
In her chapter “Wonder” in This Here Flesh, African American writer and theologian Cole Arthur Riley defines awe as “the practice of beholding the beautiful.” The mouth-gapping images surely deserve some beholding. Did you know that the word “behold” is used nearly 1300 times in the Bible—from God’s directive to behold creation in its goodness to the angels’ urging the shepherds to behold the good tidings of Jesus’ birth? These things call for a wondrous attentiveness to be sure.
Cole Arthur Riley believes that the practice of awe is quite powerful– that it can “stave off despair from disillusionment,” that it loosens the cords that restrain love, that it is a force for liberation. In fact, “our beholding—seeing the veils of this world peeled back again and again—if only for a moment—is no small form of salvation.”
To be sure, awe needs not be confined to the galactic. Day to day wonders can connect us with the divine as well. If you’ve been feeling numb or discouraged, practice awe: gaze into the night sky or the heart of a flower and behold the God of the universe.
PRAYER
Holy, Holy, Holy! Heaven and earth are full of your glory, O God. May it stir us to awe and love. 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