214-351-1901
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Lean on me when you’re not strong
And I’ll be your friend.
I’ll help you carry on
For it won’t be long
‘Till I’m gonna need
Somebody to lean on.
Bill Withers
WORDS OF HOPE
Her 16-year-old grandson was murdered 15 years ago, a boy she loved more than life itself. She grieved and grieved and asked God why he let those other boys take her child’s life like that. The day of the guilty verdict she was in the courtroom, expecting to feel better seeing them sentenced to prison, but it actually made her feel worse. As she sat there crying and crying, a lady came over and gave her a hug and let her lean on her. She stayed for a good two hours. Sometimes they just sat in silence. She never knew who the woman was, but it made so much difference having someone to finally lean on. *
Bryan Stevenson, Director of the Equal Justice Initiative, met this woman in the halls of a New Orleans courthouse where he had successfully defended a man unjustly imprisoned at 16, a man who had spent 45 years in prison. The woman said that she began coming to the courtroom about a year after the sentencing of her grandson’s murderers in case someone there, someone hurting, needed somebody to lean on. There was just so much violence, so much pain, so much hurting each other, she decided she was “supposed to catch some of the stones people cast at each other.” She saw in Stevenson another “stone catcher.”
Stevenson recognized the Biblical allusion to the adulterous woman and the men eager to stone her. He remembered Jesus’ merciful response and his critique of the crowd telling them: Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” He recalled an earlier speech of his own, saying: “But today, our self-righteousness, our fear, and our anger have caused even the Christians to hurl stones at the people who fall down, even when we know we should forgive or show compassion. We have to be stone catchers.”
And the question for us, as we are called to take up our cross, is how we can be stone catchers? Where are we called to step between the judgement, hostility, injustice of the stone throwers to lift up in mercy the lost and the least, the unjustly incarcerated?
PRAYER
May God give us eyes to see where we might be a saving grace and a shoulder to lean on.
Too many stones, God—stones of racist words and actions, stones of violence in our homes and in the streets, stones of unjust laws by politicians bent on vengeful control of the marginalized. Armor us in your love to meet the challenges of this day. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
*This story is told in Stevenson’s powerful work Just Mercy.
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com