Prepare the Way: December 5, 2020

Prepare the Way!

“The spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me; He has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed, to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and release to the prisoners…”
-Isaiah 61:1

According to Matthew Henry’s commentary, Jesus was “appointed and ordained … to be a preacher, a healer, a deliverer, a comforter, and a planter.” Talk about having the weight of the world on your shoulders. Often, we feel undereducated, underprepared, or under-equipped to measure up to Christ. “Why bother?” we might say. “We can’t effect change.”

At my college graduation, a well-known female national news broadcaster offered these words of advice: Crawl before you walk. At 22, I was incensed by her words. I was ready to take on the world! But her words are the bedrock toward effecting change. A cup of water here. A dollar there. A comment to a friend at just the right time. All the little ways we imitate Christ.

Through Christ, we can claim our power and mirror His calling by using our God-given talents to bring good news to the burdened or heal up the brokenhearted or help those captive to addiction or adultery or abuse or any other adversity.

The spirit of the Lord is indeed upon us, too.

Dear Lord: Help us to spread the good news, in small ways as well as large ways. With your help, we can do more than we imagine. Amen.

Prepare the Way: December 4, 2020

Prepare the Way!

“He will feed his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead the mother sheep.”-Isaiah 40:11

When I was a little girl, I stayed with my grandma Mary and my grandpa Daddy Chuck in their third-floor walk-up apartment in Chicago for two weeks every summer. Across the alley was a huge Baptist Church where I attended Vacation Bible School for a week. Do you remember the floppy felt biblical figures that were stuck to a felt scenery storyboard? Well, one of the stories was Jesus surrounded by a flock of sheep. I believed that picture and story literally well into my adulthood, no metaphor, just a guy in a long white gown, curly long brown hair holding a stick with sheep all around him, my mind at seven. Although I knew zip about sheep, I could see that Jesus was tender and loving to the animals and even carried a lamb gently in his arms and gazed lovingly into its eyes.

As I was reading numerous commentaries online to prepare and write this devotional, I discovered that there were other shepherds in the bible that I had forgotten or didn’t realize that they were shepherds.

  • One was Abel, the shepherd slain. “Abel was a type of Savior, in that being a shepherd, he sanctified his work to the glory of God, and offers a sacrifice of blood upon the altar of the Lord.”
  • Another was Jacob, the toiling shepherd who left and returned safely back to the Promised Land with his family and flock. Joseph was a type of Jesus reigning in Egypt for the good of his people. He had interpreted Pharaoh’s dreams as approaching famines and opened the storage areas for the people to avoid starvation.
  • Moses, “when he kept sheep, kept them in the wilderness, far away from all the other flocks, and when he became a shepherd over God’s people, his business was not to preserve them in Egypt, but to conduct them out of it.”
  • Zechariah and Jeremiah bemoaned the idle shepherds that would scatter God’s sheep and slaughter the little flock, “and God himself identified the rebellious and apostate nation of Israel as ‘sheep without a shepherd’.
  • God also calls David the Good Shepherd of Israel and promises that the coming Savior would one day arise to shepherd His little flock and in the majesty of Almighty God.
  • Quoting C.H. Spurgeon, “Let us hear the shepherd’s voice. If you be the lambs, hear the shepherd’s voice which says, “Follow me”, you that are not lambs, Hear his voice”. Those of us who are His sheep, let us hear the shepherds.

    Heavenly Father, we thank You for Your Word and the truth it contains. May we read, mark, learn and inwardly digest all that You would teach us and that we grow in grace and knowledge of You so that we may not be ashamed when we stand before Your Throne, in Jesus name, we pray. Amen.
    -Mary Ann Taylor

    Prepare the Way: December 3, 2020

    Prepare the Way!

    “Get you up to a high mountain, O Zion, herald of good tidings; lift up your voice with strength, O Jerusalem, herald of good tidings, lift it up, do not fear; say to the cities of Judah, ‘Here is your God!'”
    -Isaiah 40:9

    I believe that one of the metrics of a life well-lived is the number of “Zion” moments you experience. They can come anytime, and they most always (in my experience, anyway) come as a surprise — “surprised by joy” if you will.

    For me, the hallmark of a Zion moment is when I experience something so profound that I want to stop the world just long enough to look at it from as many angles as possible and determine its placement in the scrapbook of my life — the one I plan to thumb through before I move on past mortality. The title of my scrapbook, in big gold letters, is “Glimpses of God.”

    Lord, thank you for leading me up the mountain whenever I’m covered in dust. The world you show me is proof of your majesty, and of the mystery that awaits us all beyond it. Amen.
    -Michael Boss

    Prepare the Way: December 2, 2020

    Prepare the Way!

    “Then the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.
    -Isaiah 40:5

    I cannot read this passage without hearing the magnificent choral music of Handel’s Messiah bursting forth: “And the glory, the glory of the Lord shall be reveal-ed …” As wonderful as Rock and Roll may be to the masses (of we “Boomers”), nothing sets my soul to soaring like the rip-roaring choral production of Handel’s music. It is without peer. Period (no pun intended).

    Advent is a dark and dreary season, what with short days, gray and drizzly skies, blustery winds sending the few remaining unraked leaves to dancing in the corner of the yard like manic pixies high on pixie juice, and holiday music to jangle the few remaining nerves of parents and their perpetually home-schooled broods.

    I need the high tones of the classics to lift me up, out, and away from the drudgeries of a pandemic life. I need those rich and solemn tones to remind me there is a God away and beyond myself – a God who is NOT content to remain at arm’s length away, but who seeks the warmth and safety of my own belly during these scary, dark days.

    The glory of the Lord shall be revealed. And the scary part? It will not just be revealed to us. No, I believe God intends God’s glory to be revealed in us and through us and around us so that the world itself may see it. Not just “some” of the world, but ALL people. I think I’d better get busy getting that manger ready!

    Dear God, you want the world to see your glory. You want the world to see your glory revealed in the weakness of human flesh. I am so NOT worthy to carry this honor, but not my will, but THINE be done. God, help me. Amen.
    -The Rev. Keith Axberg

    Prepare the Way: December 1, 2020

    Prepare the Way!

    “Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill be made low; the uneven ground shall become level, and the rough places a plain.”
    -Isaiah 40:4

    I have to admit, this was a challenging reflection for me to write. To gain a better understanding of this short passage, I took time to reflect on several commentaries on the book of Isaiah. One of the more common interpretations of this passage is that it speaks to each of us as individuals and (metaphorically) tasks us with reflecting on our “rough places” to better prepare for the Lord. This makes sense- use prayer to reflect on our day to day interactions and make the rough places easier to travel.

    A second interpretation (one that holds more hope for me right now), is that these words point to the power of the Lord as he observes the current state of the world, nation, and communities. I am certain that the Lord is not surprised, and it is a comfort that in his time, in his way, injustices in the world (uneven ground) and obstacles (mountains) are not beyond his reach. It is easy to feel powerless (and yet still want to be responsible) in the face of the pandemic, political divisions, and economic challenges we face. I take comfort in knowing that we don’t face these circumstances alone.

    Lord, I ask that you give me eyes to see your work in the world around me, in small and great things. I ask you to calm my mind so that I can experience gratitude for your hand in the affairs of each day. Amen.
    -Lara Cole

    Prepare the Way: November 30, 2020

    Prepare the Way!

    “A voice cries out ‘In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.’”
    -Isaiah 40:3

    During the 33 years I lived in Texas, I felt like a lone crier in the wilderness often during election season. At times, literal loss of voice befell me as I spoke up loudly for issues and the rights of our society’s marginalized—which often included myself. The church of my youth may as well have left me for dead. Thankfully, I no longer feel alone.

    As a boy, I was taught to stick up for other kids being mistreated or bullied. What a wonderful and necessary practice! The only problem was that I was being mistreated. I was different and I knew it; unfortunately, the other little boys who bullied me knew it, too. Worst was the shame I felt when confiding in my parents the powerlessness to fight back. Peace is tough stuff, and in my experience, especially so for those who are different. The Others. The Less-Than. Thankfully, I was blest with words far larger than fists, and eventually, I grew courageous enough to use them.

    Every day I’m still grateful that I found safe places to belong: music, the library, our vegetable garden. A life today without any of those three is simply unimaginable. Without drama, I can truthfully say they saved my life, and many times at that. After years of learning with several loving spiritual guides and one heaven-sent psychotherapist, I understand that the pain was never about me, but rather the brokenness of my attackers. Thankfully, the source of despair became a source of love and hope.

    We’re not told everything will ever be perfect—or even comfortable. But scripture reminds us that there is a way through that comes from God. Our faithfulness to the call of preparation is holy construction work, ceaselessly building roads and bridges to those who need our voice.

    Dear God, help us to be brave and vocal as we cry out in the wilderness for your way of truth and peace. Amen.
    -David Sloat