Hello, dear, SUMite friends. I trust this post finds you in a good place.
Two post ago, my New Year’s post, I shared my ‘Word for the year. ‘Adventure’! I’ve held onto that ever since and wondered what adventure lay ahead. I had a hunch it would be something specifically with the Lord and would involve me stepping out of my comfort zone in some way. I shared Joan Chittister’s quote that specifically mentions that: “Adventures happen when we take the time to do what we have not done before.” (Joan Chittister)
I recently finished a book by John Eldredge and the late Brent Curtis called ‘Sacred Romance: Drawing Closer to the Heart of God’ and I came across this quote from Christian author and philosopher G. K. Chesterton. It read:
“An adventure is, by its very nature, a thing that comes to us. It is a thing that chooses us, not a thing we choose.”
The authors sighted the two examples to emphasise Chesterton’s words. Lucy, stumbling into Narnia through the back of the wardrobe. She wasn’t looking for it, in fact, she was hiding and fell into a new world. Similarly, Abraham wasn’t looking for an adventure, God called him to one.
The choice before us is to NOT to make it happen. Lucy, could have NOT told her siblings and Abraham could have said No to God, just like Jonah, initially did.
“The choice before us is a choice to enter in.”
Lent – a wilderness adventure of the heart.
Today marks Ash Wednesday. The first day of Lent. Lent marks the 40 days before Easter, culminating in Jesus’ death on Good Friday and resurrection on Easter Sunday. The 40 days mirror the number of days Jesus spent in the wilderness fasting and resisting the Devil prior to the commencement of his ministry.
It's useful to remember that immediately before Holy Spirit sent Jesus into the wilderness, Jesus had been baptised by John the Baptist. When Jesus rose from the water, the Gospel of Matthew says this:
“At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.” (Matthew 3:16b-17 NIV)
Jesus goes into the desert knowing he is beloved of the Father.
We too can enter the Lenten season with the same assurance: we are Beloved of God.
Lent is a favourite season of mine. I typically read the church liturgy each day and work through a couple of specific books during the season. And yes, I will generally ‘fast’ something but only do this out of desire to draw closer to God, not out of a sense of obligation. This year, I plan to detach myself from buying anything other than essentials like food and the like. No clothes, no books, no things.
I believe I found my adventure; well, it found me. I hope to dive deeper into God’s love for me, for us, for His beloved. To abide (John 15) in Jesus and to call on grace to help resist temptation including buying things. (I find it very easy to buy books – a great love of mine).
You may not observe Lent, which is all good. But I believe Father invites all of us into an adventure of love. A story, a great romance, where Father is both the author and the hero. And we’re His beloved.
May I invite us all to contemplate such themes during these next 40 days and step into this extraordinary story of love.
Much love, dear friends