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READING
“Letting go into God is coming home to our true selves.” Ilia Delio
WORDS OF HOPE
In a recent devotion, Brenee Brown speaks of the constant spiritual homesickness that is a part of her life now. In the past, she would dip into God-encounters in order to refuel for the world of research and teaching and speaking, but now that world has lost its luster compared to the deep sense of belonging, of finding her home in God.
In thinking about the urgency of coming home, a compelling metaphor surfaces—apt on this World Turtle Day: the migration of the sea turtles, in particular, the leatherback. The female forages on jellyfish and crabs in the blue waters of the Atlantic, as far north as Nova Scotia, to fuel the intense energy needed for the return home to mate in the warm waters of the Carribean and lay her eggs on the nesting beaches, on or near the very beaches where she was born. As all whose journeys are long, she returns to rest stops that have provided refuge in the past. As well, at cleaning stations, the health of the turtle is maintained by small fish who, in symbiotic relationship, dine on food remnants and parasites that collect on her leathery skin.
Scientists have long pondered the mystery of the geolocation skills of sea turtles and recently have discovered that they imprint on the magnetic field of their unique natal beach as hatchlings and return as adults. www.livescience.com/49468-turtles-migration-magnetic-field.html.
Similarly, we humans bear within us a God-shaped hole, some emptiness or void which renders other pursuits shallow and sends us on our own spiritual migration to the embrace of God.
Felicia Murrell speaks of our home as love, an internal and external place free of shame and judgment, a place we know unconditional love. “Home is a soft place for the body to land, a safe place for the soul to fully disrobe. Home is the place where our failures don’t kill, our sins can’t crush, and even when we are at our worst, we’re safe. Home is the place where we are free to take our deepest, fullest, least encumbered breath.”
“At home, there’s no need to guess whether we’re in or out, welcomed or not. Home always prepares a place with us in mind.”
This week I invite us to ponder the questions Murrell poses at the end of her reflection: “How are you preparing a home of unconditional acceptance for yourself? How do you welcome your body, make room for your mind? In what ways are you engaging your soul with intentionality? How are you regaining the safety of home for yourself?”
PRAYER
May the magnetic field of your embracing love draw us home, O God—no matter how far we have gone off course. 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