Friday, February 13, 2009

Friday, February 13, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:40-45


A man suffering from a virulent skin-disease came to him and pleaded on his knees saying, 'If you are willing, you can cleanse me.' Feeling sorry for him, Jesus stretched out his hand, touched him and said to him, 'I am willing. Be cleansed.' And at once the skin-disease left him and he was cleansed. And at once Jesus sternly sent him away and said to him, 'Mind you tell no one anything, but go and show yourself to the priest, and make the offering for your cleansing prescribed by Moses as evidence to them.' The man went away, but then started freely proclaiming and telling the story everywhere, so that Jesus could no longer go openly into any town, but stayed outside in deserted places. Even so, people from all around kept coming to him.

Reflection

Bring healing, O Lord, to broken places and wounded faces. Reveal your hearts desire and satisfy ours.

There is not much more I can say today. The world of tragedies, death and threat surrounds and fills my consciousness. Health evaporates like mist. Sunny security disappears behind impenetrable clouds. Accidents smash the joyous beauty of youth.

And dumbstruck souls struggle to catch their breath. Or they vainly fill the far corners of the room with airy blather, denying mortality and running from the inescapable needs they wish not to acknowledge, needs that would land them in your lap.

And I sit in the quiet, wanting only the nearness of you who say you are willing, willing to touch and heal.

So touch and heal, dearest Friend. You know all those for whom I pray with weak words and fearful heart.

But there is no reason for fear. That which we fear can and will happen. Sooner or later, it always does.

But you happen, too. And you are willing to touch and heal every hurt, awakening that hope that does not die.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, February 06, 2009

Friday, February 6, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:35-39


In the morning, long before dawn, [Jesus] got up and left the house and went off to a lonely place and prayed there. Simon and his companions set out in search of him, and when they found him they said, 'Everybody is looking for you.' He answered, 'Let us go elsewhere, to the neighboring country towns, so that I can proclaim the message there too, because that is why I came.' And he went all through Galilee, preaching in their synagogues and driving out devils.

Reflection

‘That is why I came.’ It makes no sense, but the words bring strange comfort. There’s nothing remarkable about them, except the quietness I hear in your voice.

You don’t force the words, Jesus. There’s no dramatic emphasis, no steely resolve, just a simple statement expressing an unshakable awareness of who you are and what you are about.

You are about the revealing of God’s intention to change the world, to fill it with compassion and justice like water covers the sea. This is what you are about in every moment and circumstance. Your eyes fix on a single point on the far horizon that informs each word and act. Your focus never changes.

Mine does. I think that is why I am moved by your words. You know who you are, and you never lose track of the center of your soul no matter what else is happening, no matter how others respond, regardless of momentary distractions.

Approval or rejection, success or failure do not deter you from that which you came to do.

And you came to draw us into the love that burns at your heart. Little wonder that your words should bless me. You know why you are here, and you are here for me, for all of us.

God knows we all need it.

Draw us in, Jesus. May God’s loving rule be the horizon point that steers us each moment through the landscape of our days.

Fix our vision on the compassion that is your intention for our world that we, as you, may know why we are here.

Pr. David L. Miller

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:32-37

That evening, after sunset, they brought to [Jesus] all who were sick and those who were possessed by devils. The whole town came crowding round the door, and he cured many who were sick with diseases of one kind or another; he also drove out many devils, but he would not allow them to speak, because they knew who he was. In the morning, long before dawn, he got up and left the house and went off to a lonely place and prayed there. Simon and his companions set out in search of him, and when they found him they said, 'Everybody is looking for you.'

Reflection

You knew how to attract a crowd, Jesus. A healing or two, driving demons from the souls of the tormented: such behavior does not go unnoticed.

And when it was, you sought quiet respite for your soul. I understand that. I could use some quiet respite.

But soon enough those who need and want you come looking. Anxiety drips from their words, ‘Everybody is looking for you. Where have you been? We searched everywhere.’

They didn’t want you to escape them. But what did they want? The spectacle, to know the thrill of seeing your acts of power? To listen to your words? To enjoy your nearness and the souls they became when they were with you?

Maybe they wanted to use your power for their own purposes. It is a normal human impulse, however selfish.

All of this is true, I suppose, and more.

All we are told is that they came looking. And so do I. That’s why I am here, fingers on the keys, listening again to stories from an ancient book which have long held the power to move me into awareness of what I need to know: You.

Mysterious you, who seem close as my breath one moment and far off the next, yet who abides.

I come looking, wanting you for more reasons than I know how to say, some of them selfish, others born of a spirit beyond me. The reason doesn’t matter. What matters is that I come looking, and you receive me no matter my reason.

Today, I just want to sit with you in the dark silence and know your soul. I want to know the silence from which your words and power spring that I may be this other soul that I am when I am with you.

And nothing else matters.

Pr. David L. Miller

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:29-32


And at once on leaving the synagogue, he went with James and John straight to the house of Simon and Andrew. Now Simon's mother-in-law was in bed and feverish, and at once they told him about her. He went in to her, took her by the hand and helped her up. And the fever left her and she began to serve them.

Reflection

Some moments freeze in time. Time stops so that you can look at what is happening and examine it before it is lost in the next action and the next.

I see two hands, Jesus. Your brown hand reaches beneath the hand of this unnamed woman, known to us only by her relationship to one of your followers.

I see you reach down as she lifts her hands to you. You take it and raise her up, gently, slowly, with little effort, it seems. Before I see her uncertain eyes searching for yours, I see only the hands.

And they tell the story of who you are and what you are doing.

They speak your care and desire to lift us above the maladies that weigh us down, holding us to earth, preventing flights of joy and purpose.

You would lift us beyond ourselves into life.

So lift us, Jesus, that we may know the strength and care of your hand, raising us to what we yet may be.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, January 30, 2009

Friday, January 30, 2009

Friday, January 30, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:21-27


They went as far as Capernaum, and at once on the Sabbath he went into the synagogue and began to teach. And his teaching made a deep impression on them because, unlike the scribes, he taught them with authority. And at once in their synagogue there was a man with an unclean spirit, and he shouted, 'What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are: the Holy One of God.' But Jesus rebuked it saying, 'Be quiet! Come out of him!' And the unclean spirit threw the man into convulsions and with a loud cry went out of him.

Reflection

You do not stand far off, Jesus. You get involved in the mess of living to heal and bless.

The presence of the possessed man made the synagogue unclean, impure, and the way to deal with impurity was to flee, to turn ones eyes away. Do not look. Do not touch. Stand clear.

If you do not, you become unclean, unacceptable to others, to God, to proper society.

But you do not stand clear, Jesus. The demon taunts you, telling you that you, indeed, are holy, pure, given to God, so you cannot have anything to do with the man. To do so is to become defiled.

In fear of becoming an outcast, this is just what many do.

But to this you say the magic words, ‘Shut up:’

Be quiet and come out of him, you say, for such thinking is far from the truth of God, who comes not to reinforce the codes of holiness that lift some but exclude the many. It is compassion not concern with personal protection of ones purity, ones’ ‘rightness,’ that concerns you, Jesus.

And to this way, beyond concern for the cleanliness of our own hands, that you invite us, leading us straight into the mess, there to know and serve the true holiness that is your compassion.

So lead us beyond such self-concern to the places where we may most know you, in the mess where you cast out the demons that hold our souls in fear that the purity of compassion may be born.

Pr. David L. Miller

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:21-27


They went as far as Capernaum, and at once on the Sabbath he went into the synagogue and began to teach. And his teaching made a deep impression on them because, unlike the scribes, he taught them with authority. And at once in their synagogue there was a man with an unclean spirit, and he shouted, 'What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are: the Holy One of God.' But Jesus rebuked it saying, 'Be quiet! Come out of him!' And the unclean spirit threw the man into convulsions and with a loud cry went out of him.

Reflection

The razor-edged cry of the mad cuts the heart and awakens fear of what we can neither understand nor control.

And what of those who loved the man, who cared for him, fed and reared him when he was a child? What of his mother and father, cut to the heart and helpless as they look upon what has happened to their child?

Helpless, indeed, and hopeless, knowing his future is out of their hands and beyond their influence. They look on little believing anything can heal him, wondering also what, what they did, what could they have done, what might have made things turn out differently.

And all the while, blaming themselves.

It is not one man alone who rails against you Jesus, his mind twisted by disease so that he cannot know or give the love in which the Holy Mystery intended us to live, the love and sharing that makes us truly human. This is denied him.

But it is denied, too, to all those who know and care for him. His family and friends also suffer in bondage, all who look on and wonder what they, what anyone can do to help.

You do not wonder, Jesus. You command the demons of madness and destruction to flee the soul of the suffering, making well not just one, but the many whose lives he touches, most often with pain.

We hunger for your command, with authority, making well, revealing your determined will to heal your world and especially those whose struggles are also our own.

So come this day, Jesus. Come with power in the lives of those disfigured with illness and confusion, whose bodies and minds are thrown about by forces they cannot stop. Speak the world and heal them, Jesus.

Bring wholeness, soundness of body and soul, through all the resources and human hearts at your command that troubled souls may be released from bondage to freedom.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, January 23, 2009

Friday, January 23, 2009

Friday, January 23, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:14-20


After John had been arrested, Jesus went into Galilee. There he proclaimed the gospel from God saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the gospel.' As he was walking along by the Lake of Galilee he saw Simon and Simon's brother Andrew casting a net in the lake -- for they were fishermen. And Jesus said to them, 'Come after me and I will make you into fishers of people.' And at once they left their nets and followed him. Going on a little further, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John; they too were in their boat, mending the nets. At once he called them and, leaving their father Zebedee in the boat with the men he employed, they went after him.

Reflection

Come … and I will change you. Isn’t that what you are saying Jesus? I will make something of you that you are not.

But I do not want to be a ‘fisher of people,’ … a ‘fisher of men’ as older translations read. The metaphor feels trite and forced. The comparison of fishing and gathering human souls around the power of your presence and purpose isn’t fitting in my imagination.

I am impressed with the magnetism you possessed, Jesus. Your heart was on fire, restlessly burning and yearning for a reality being born in the work of your hands, the rule of God.

God’s kingdom pushes through the crust of old ways. Bellies are fed with bread of life. Souls are nourished with certain awareness of their dignity and infinite value to God.

Oppression ceases and tears of sorrow are transformed into the joy of the dance. For God’s new order of life and peace, justice and compassion pushes aside all that limits and disfigures life.

Death and disease are destroyed, injustice and oppression are overturned, and hopeless despair evaporates in the heat of divine love.

This is the fire that burnt at your soul, Jesus. And human souls wanted to draw near because the air around you was 10 degrees warmer than anywhere else.

And warmed, they, too, burned and yearned for the compassion of your kingdom, your rule, where what you are fills all that is.

So let it be also in me, that other human hearts may draw near the warmth of your fire in me.

Pr. David L. Miller

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:14-15


After John had been arrested, Jesus went into Galilee. There he proclaimed the gospel from God saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the gospel.' As he was walking along by the Lake of Galilee he saw Simon and Simon's brother Andrew casting a net in the lake -- for they were fishermen. And Jesus said to them, 'Come after me and I will make you into fishers of people.' And at once they left their nets and followed him.

Reflection

At once, they left. Really?

It seems so unlikely, unless they had met you before Jesus, unless they had some idea of who you are, what you are doing.

That’s the way this story is told in another gospel. There, it’s clear that these early followers had an inkling of who you are, but even then: they had no idea how radical and world-changing their journey would be. How could they?

But leaving home, family, a way of life and earning a living is striking, even a stark challenge to modern diffidence.

We certainly have desires leave it all, to give up what we are doing and have accomplished for something else, perhaps simpler, more focused and heart-rewarding than the daily rigors of our current existence.

But these are escapist dreams. And there is no indication that those who first followed you were escaping their lives, leaving to get away from responsibilities to work and family.

They were going to something, to someone--you. They wanted to gain whatever it was you first stirred in their hearts, a hunger for the new life and reality that is God’s kingdom.

Did they know what it was or meant? Probably not, or not much. But they knew it was blessing for them and this tired world, so they came, leaving behind what was … for the holy promise of what is, even now, at hand.

Give us the anticipation and joy of releasing our grip on what is that we may walk into the future that is at hand, here and now.

Pr. David L. Miller

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:14-15


After John had been arrested, Jesus went into Galilee. There he proclaimed the gospel from God saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the gospel.'

Reflection

The time is now. It always is, Jesus. This is the moment that I know I have. Another breath brings a new moment, until the day when the next breath doesn’t come.

I think little of leaving this earth. My body is well and my mind is still intact, more or less. But more than any time in my life I am aware that there are far fewer acts remaining than have already occurred.

And I know that I have bobbled my lines in earlier scenes. Only occasionally, have I played my part well, the part that only I can play. And I am aware that now is the time. If I am ever finally to get it right, to be the soul you (and I) have always known that I am and hunger to be, now is the time.

I can no longer look for future moments or circumstances where there are fewer obstacles to the soul’s maturity to itself.

I want to be able to say that the time is fulfilled, finally, for my heart has entered and dwells in that inner chamber where I am one with you, and my every word speaks the deep truth of who you are in me. And fear itself is gone.

Then your reign will have come not only here or there, but to and in me, and my soul is surrendered to the Source of Life and all Being.

So bring your kingdom on earth, Jesus, and to me. I want the fulfillment you alone bring.

Pr. David L. Miller

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:14-15


After John had been arrested, Jesus went into Galilee. There he [Jesus]proclaimed the gospel from God saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the gospel.'

Reflection

Enlarge my vision, Jesus. Stretch sight beyond the narrow range of anxious self. Transform my seeing.

Your kingdom lies at hand, laboring present in this moment. The first order of repenting is to change how we see, looking for signs and snippets of your own sweet self in the selves around us and the temper of the times.

For your rule is here in the lives of our souls and the soul of the world, laboring to burst the thick crust of resistance to the truly new and free. Your reign is the making new of what is tired and old, making young our hearts so that we again know the joy of being alive, beloved and free to be whatever sort of vessel you have made us.

So let us see you in beauty and in faces of dignity, in smiles of care and in committed hearts living in ways that make your loving justice real and now.

Strip away all doubt of the nearness of your rule that I may see you and rejoice that I live a life not forsaken, but shot through with the holy nearness of a love I can at which I can only wonder.

A love that will be forever and day, always and every place full. This is your rule.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, January 16, 2009

Friday, January 16, 2009

Today’s text

John 1:35-39


The next day as John stood there again with two of his disciples, Jesus went past, and John looked towards him and said, 'Look, there is the lamb of God.' And the two disciples heard what he said and followed Jesus. Jesus turned round, saw them following and said, 'What do you want?' They answered, 'Rabbi' -- which means Teacher -- 'where do you live? He replied, 'Come and see'; so they went and saw where he lived, and stayed with him that day. It was about the tenth hour.

Reflection

‘Where do you live?’ I want to know. I want to live there too.

I want to walk as you, Jesus, beyond the tiny world of my needs and wants where every word and act echoes with the sound of self.

You tell us, Jesus, that you live in the One Love you call the Father. That One is your home; you in the Father, the Father in you.

Your every word and action resonates with the being, the tenor, the truth of your dwelling, your home, the place heart and mind reside.

So, too, with every human heart.

Our words echo with the resonance of the places our minds and hearts make their home. If my mind resides in pettiness and self-absorbed concern, my words will ring shallow, lacking depth of significance or any life-giving purpose beyond my narrow desires.

But when my heart takes time (and it does take time) to reside in you, you lead me to a larger and resplendent world of God’s holy intention to bless and give life. You invite me to abide there, to listen, to know whatever I can know dwelling with you and the Father.

Then it is that I step out of the narrow circle of self into a way of being that echoes with eternal concerns and true purpose.

I speak from that home that is home, you.

And I become a human being.

Pr. David L. Miller

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Today’s text

John 1:35-39


The next day as John stood there again with two of his disciples, Jesus went past, and John looked towards him and said, 'Look, there is the lamb of God.' And the two disciples heard what he said and followed Jesus. Jesus turned round, saw them following and said, 'What do you want?' They answered, 'Rabbi' -- which means Teacher -- 'where do you live? He replied, 'Come and see'; so they went and saw where he lived, and stayed with him that day. It was about the tenth hour.

Reflection

It is a simple question, Jesus. We ask it all the time. Where are you from? Where is your home?

We don’t mean much by it. Usually, we only are seeking to discover something about the person that will keep the conversation moving. Maybe where they live will tell us something about them.

So it is hard to imagine great significance in this bit of ancient conversation, except that it is you whom they are asking. And so many times you invited people to abide with you, dwell with you, live in you.

The question quickly changes into something more personal and meaningful: Where do you live? Just what is it that you invite us to come and see?

A home, a place to lay your head? Yes, in a manner of speaking.

Where do you live, Jesus? I live too much of my life in my anxieties about getting things done and worrying about how I will be perceived. Far, far too much time.

You didn’t live there at all. You lived in the bosom of the Loving Mystery, your heart and mind dwelling in God’s eternal love and purpose. You lived in the awareness of what was truly important, revealing the will of the One who sent you.

That One was your home, your food and drink, your every thought and joy. You lived constantly mindful of what life is to be, enlarging the presence of God and God’s love and justice.

In this home, your heart rested and your mind meditated on how you were to live. And to this home you invite us.

Lord Jesus, may I come and see where you live that I may dwell constantly with you. I make my home in you this day.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, January 09, 2009

Friday, January 9, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:4-11


John the Baptist was in the desert, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. All Judaea and all the people of Jerusalem made their way to him, and as they were baptized by him in the river Jordan they confessed their sins. John wore a garment of camel-skin, and he lived on locusts and wild honey. In the course of his preaching he said, 'After me is coming someone who is more powerful than me, and I am not fit to kneel down and undo the strap of his sandals. I have baptized you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.' It was at this time that Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized in the Jordan by John. And at once, as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit, like a dove, descending on him. And a voice came from heaven, 'You are my Son, the Beloved; my favor rests on you.'

Reflection

‘You are mine,’ truly a voice from heaven, revealing our secret need, and Jesus great knowledge.

I know the words are not first spoken to me, Loving Mystery. You speak them to Jesus, and from this moment his life flows like a stream. Not everything he does works, not everyone accepts or even understands him, and the powerful will destroy him.

But he goes his way with that knowledge that enlarges the soul and makes it great: He is treasured, wanted, assured that he belongs to you, who are Love mysterious and unfailing. Nothing that happens later can change this, no disappointment, no suffering, no failure, nothing.

This assurance is the source of his soul, the fountain of grace at the core of Jesus life, flowing outward to all, to me.

I am carried in a river called beloved, through the land of grace, beneath skies that resonate with the voice that assures, ‘You are mine.’

A voice from heaven. May I hear you today. Everyday.

Pr. David L. Miller

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:4-11


John the Baptist was in the desert, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. All Judaea and all the people of Jerusalem made their way to him, and as they were baptized by him in the river Jordan they confessed their sins. John wore a garment of camel-skin, and he lived on locusts and wild honey. In the course of his preaching he said, 'After me is coming someone who is more powerful than me, and I am not fit to kneel down and undo the strap of his sandals. I have baptized you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.' It was at this time that Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized in the Jordan by John. And at once, as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit, like a dove, descending on him. And a voice came from heaven, 'You are my Son, the Beloved; my favor rests on you.'

Reflection

Stay with me, Jesus. Stay with me. I want to stand beside you in the water.

The water is muddy, murky and clouded with the mire of human imperfection--including my own. The water is no mere river but existence, life itself, and it doesn’t run clear and clean.

I need to stand there with you and feel your smile as you know that you are beloved. I need the favor that rests on you to shine also on me. I need to know your arm around me, welcoming me into your belovedness, even as the waters swirl.

I need to be lifted above the rejections and judgments that come my way, which I apparently accept. My sadness attests their power in my heart. My mind is a hall of voices, echoing accusations and denials present and long past, reminding me, as if I needed it, how odd and unacceptable I often am, even to myself.

The voices steal my identity from me and with it my joy, my vitality, my name.

Only now am I willing and able to fight to take it back.

Looking at you in water, smiling, something sparks in me. Certainly, I feel my need for your welcoming arm around me. But I also know the truth that every voice I carry within is a liar.

Only one voice tells the truth of my life, your voice. And you speak to me from the heart of your belovedness as we stand together in the waters. I feel your smile, a smile that is for me, even as you extend your arm and say, ‘Stand with me. Stand with me.’

And we stand side-by side, with the swirling waters around our ankles and the golden light of your belovedness enveloping us, filling our souls with the one truth that matters.

Pr. David L. Miller

Monday, January 05, 2009

Monday, January 5, 2009

Today’s text

Mark 1:4-11


John the Baptist was in the desert, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. All Judaea and all the people of Jerusalem made their way to him, and as they were baptized by him in the river Jordan they confessed their sins. John wore a garment of camel-skin, and he lived on locusts and wild honey. In the course of his preaching he said, 'After me is coming someone who is more powerful than me, and I am not fit to kneel down and undo the strap of his sandals. I have baptized you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.' It was at this time that Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized in the Jordan by John. And at once, as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit, like a dove, descending on him. And a voice came from heaven, 'You are my Son, the Beloved; my favor rests on you.'

Reflection

Someone is coming.

And John is waiting, waiting for his heart’s desire, waiting for the fulfillment of his joy, waiting for completion of a promise that he may have begun to wonder about. Will it happen?

I would have wondered. Doubts on days when nothing much was happening weigh my soul with the gravity of grayness. Life goes on but without the splendor of hope or the electricity of expectation.

But not today … or yesterday. Today, my body bears a fire. Burning steadily at my core, it sparks to flame at the words, ‘after me is coming someone who is more powerful,’ someone who baptizes with fire.

Is this the fire I feel, Jesus, your holy flame, the breath of your life?

I have done nothing to fan its burning beyond reading these words, suddenly to find this joy and knowledge, yes knowledge, that you come and will again to me.

This fire is beyond faith, for it gives already the experience of your presence. It fulfills in some fashion your promise to come--and to come to me. Promise has become presence, expectation has become possession, and hope has become reality.

Yes, there is more of you of you to know and receive. But the fire of your life burns with warm assurance and natural joy. For you come and always will.

So come Lord Jesus. Light each day the fire of expectation in my heart. Satisfy the soul's fondest desire.

Pr. David L. Miller

Friday, January 02, 2009

Friday, January 2, 2009

Today’s text

Matthew 2:7-12


Then Herod summoned the wise men to see him privately. He asked them the exact date on which the star had appeared and sent them on to Bethlehem with the words, 'Go and find out all about the child, and when you have found him, let me know, so that I too may go and do him homage.' Having listened to what the king had to say, they set out. And suddenly the star they had seen rising went forward and halted over the place where the child was. The sight of the star filled them with delight, and going into the house they saw the child with his mother Mary, and falling to their knees they did him homage. Then, opening their treasures, they offered him gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh. But they were given a warning in a dream not to go back to Herod, and returned to their own country by a different way.

Reflection

The eternal conflict continues, Jesus, and I am in the middle of it.

The wise come, seeking to know and be made new by your appearing. But those holding the reins of power seek you only to destroy you and the seeds of newness you plant in the earth’s dusty soil.

So it goes. You come, seeking to born in us again that shoots of truly new life may emerge from amid the dusty decades of our living. But the powers that rule our souls resist their overthrow.

Something in us prefers to keep all things as they are, instead of watering the seeds of the soul from which you grow.

Your growth means change; a change in habits, attitudes, joys and sorrows, in how I speak and use my time. It means becoming a new person, a new soul centered in the joyous growth of the seed of your life in soil of our souls.

Old routines, long engrained, having worn deep ruts in our souls pull us back by the gravity of habit into the selves in which we are stuck. They don’t easily release their grip.

But we have been again to the manger. We have seen your face. The light of eternity has warmed our cheeks and hearts and excited our minds with unexpected possibilities. Something new was awakened, a hope that our lives can be more, more gracious, more purposeful, more holy and joyful, more of you than normally they are.

I want this more, now and all year long. So let me be as wise as the seekers who came bearing gifts.

They did not try to defeat your enemy. They went away from him to savor what they had seen and to contemplate the awakening of mind and heart that had happened for them at your infant bed.

So I will launch no assault on the ruts and habits that resist the seed of your newness in my soul. I can no more overcome them than the wise man could unseat Herod.

I will go another way. I will avoid the destroyers who resist your newness. I will go to those places where best I can remember what I have seen and heard, where I remember what it was like to look at you so closely again, where I can hear your voice in my depths:

‘Behold I make all things new, even you.’

I will savor your voice and every moment of newness and joy in which I know freedom from my sad, old self. For you are making me new, finally at 56, into the soul I might have been long before.

But I know nothing is lost. Nothing. All that I am, even the sad and troubled years, will be graced and given back, to become a gift of your great loving.

Pr. David L. Miller

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Today’s text

Matthew 2:7-11


Then Herod summoned the wise men to see him privately. He asked them the exact date on which the star had appeared and sent them on to Bethlehem with the words, 'Go and find out all about the child, and when you have found him, let me know, so that I too may go and do him homage.' Having listened to what the king had to say, they set out. And suddenly the star they had seen rising went forward and halted over the place where the child was. The sight of the star filled them with delight, and going into the house they saw the child with his mother Mary, and falling to their knees they did him homage. Then, opening their treasures, they offered him gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh.

Reflection

Come, Lord Jesus. Awaken purest desire in my heart.

Desires clash, Jesus. The wise seek the place of new birth to do homage and give gifts. Herod seeks his advantage, turning what comes to protect possessions and serve self.

The wise come seeking to bless and to receive blessing. Herod seeks nothing, wanting only to protect what is his.

The wise see the world through eyes acute to the coming of the holy. The selfish see through lenses of fear. For them, the coming of God is not a time of open-armed welcome, but an occasion to close ranks to prevent the threat of change, and any change is threat.

And now a new day comes, soon a new year. And I am the same old person, more driven by fears than by anticipation of the holy and lovely, the graced and genuine, the presence of you who are ever present.

Come and convert my heart, Lord Jesus.

Take away the eyes of my anxiety that I may not fear when you come to me in ways that distress my soul or disturb the way I order my little world. It grieves me to think that I might miss you, whom I most need.

So show me the way of wisdom that I may find my way to the places where your life is birthed in and near me. Then, I will open my arms to welcome and worship you, giving such gifts as I have to share.

Come, Lord Jesus. Calm my fears and make my heart wise that I may see and welcome you in every place you come to me.

Pr. David L. Miller

Monday, December 29, 2008

Monday, December 29, 2008

Today’s text

Matthew 2:1-6


After Jesus had been born at Bethlehem in Judaea during the reign of King Herod, suddenly some wise men came to Jerusalem from the east asking, 'Where is the infant king of the Jews? We saw his star as it rose and have come to do him homage.' When King Herod heard this he was perturbed, and so was the whole of Jerusalem. He called together all the chief priests and the scribes of the people, and enquired of them where the Christ was to be born. They told him, 'At Bethlehem in Judaea, for this is what the prophet wrote: And you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, you are by no means the least among the leaders of Judah, for from you will come a leader who will shepherd my people Israel.'

Reflection

Great and small, all are swept into the drama of your fleshly becoming, Jesus.

What could the wise men possible want with you? The comfort of their studies kept them close to home and the instruments of their observations. Certainly, they had seen signs in the heavens before that required careful interpretation.

Why does this sign demand departure from their charts and books on a difficult journey? They came to give homage, but what did they expect to see and receive? What illumination did they seek? The wise and discerning are always looking for greater light and understanding.

Were they to find this in a peasant’s child, said to be some kind of king? But born in a barn? Is this the place of wisdom, in smallness and poverty, far from the seats of power where real rulers command and shape the lives of common souls?

But this is where you seem most at work, Holy One, far from the places where we look for significance--or seek it for ourselves. You are there, in the out of the way and the common, asking for our homage.

Kneeling amid the straw and the manure of the average has become the way of wisdom, the road of true understanding and peace.

So we re-enter our dailiness following the holy feast, tired and hoping to return to normal, so that we might get some sleep and right the ship of our lives. But the common places, the office, the workplace, the usual struggles, the difficult faces, look different than before.

Perhaps they are as depressing as ever--or more. Yet these places are the stable, the manger where you lie, awaiting the homage of our loving attention, so that you may teach us the wisdom of gentleness, the understanding that peace begins here, in the places we prefer to flee.

For earth itself has become the straw in which hides holiness and true illumination of soul. So we give ourselves again to the small duties of our days, doing them as to you, praying that such homage will illumine our hearts with the light of your love, laid always in the straw.

Pr. David L. Miller

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Monday, December 24, 2008

Today’s text

Luke 2:15-20


Now it happened that when the angels had gone from them into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, 'Let us go to Bethlehem and see this event which the Lord has made known to us.' So they hurried away and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in the manger. When they saw the child they repeated what they had been told about him, and everyone who heard it was astonished at what the shepherds said to them. As for Mary, she treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart. And the shepherds went back glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, just as they had been told.

Reflection

Come, Lord Jesus.

Come to us who have no idea what it is that we find in you.

The shepherds went and found you. Did they adore you? Did they kneel and worship you? Did they stand, gaping, open-mouthed at the strange events happening along their normally quiet hillside?

We are not told. But certainly they had no depth of understanding of what was really happening. The dawn of a new time lay before them in the manger. Everything, even God, it seems, had changed.

No longer could the Holy Immensity be considered only as immeasurably grand, cosmic, transcending all comprehension. The inconceivable had occurred: God had become small, tiny as an ovum, dependent as an unborn child, helpless as a newborn.

The approach of God awakened no fear. Who fears an infant?

Yet in this child the incomparable immensity of the divine heart beat for all human kind, welcoming us to pick him up, rock him gently in our arms and hold him near, that the One who is Love might awaken the same in us.

It doesn’t say so in the Bible. But I like to think the Shepherds, at least one of them, picked you up and held you. That’s what I would have done. And every time I imagine this scene I see one of them holding you, rapt in joy by your infant face.

I know: They understood nothing about what was going on that they could really explain. They could only tell the story and give praise to God for the gifts of the evening, the extent of which far exceeded their thoughts.

But not their joy. They knew, and somehow believed, God had visited them. And we know that in this child you visit every hillside of this earth, with the peace of your great favor.

We don’t comprehend it much better than did those shepherds who first showed up at your infant bed. But that doesn’t matter. For we have found you, Lord Jesus, coming to us. And that is all we need, for this day, for this life, for forever.

May we, too, hold you to our hearts. Come, Lord Jesus, awaken in us the Love you are.

Then it is that Christmas shall come.

Pr. David L. Miller

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Today’s text

Luke 2:1-7


An angel of the Lord stood over them and the glory of the Lord shone round them. They were terrified, but the angel said, 'Do not be afraid. Look, I bring you news of great joy, a joy to be shared by the whole people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. And here is a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.' And all at once with the angel there was a great throng of the hosts of heaven, praising God with the words: Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace for those he favors.

Reflection

Come, Lord Jesus. Banish all fear and give us heavenly joy.

These messengers of light reveled in the joy of their task. They tumbled over themselves announcing to a few shepherds, working the night shift, that there is nothing to fear. Nothing. Not then, Not now. Not ever. Not for us.

To you, is born, this day, a savior.

And this is very good news. For we are in pretty bad need of being saved, saved from all that crushes from us the breath of joy.

Joy is your intention, Holy One, nothing less: Dancing, singing, laughing, playing, falling over ourselves joy, the joy awakened by the awareness that all is not lost. All is never lost. For you are never far, and you never forsake all you have made, and made just for the fun of it--made that the joy of your divine heart might be shared.

Joy is your will: joy for all that is; joy for all creation; joy rising from the lips of all that breathes. You make us in joy and for the joy of the love that flows in a ceaseless stream from your eternal heart.

But the weight of our worries, our lacerating losses and the depth of our doubt crush the angels’ simple words: Peace for those you favor.

And you favor us, always have, always will. We dwell in the circle of your favor.

So come Lord Jesus. Favor our hearts with your presence abiding. Amid days too full and struggles unwanted, open our eyes to hear and our hearts to believe the angels’ joyful song of peace.

For you come to us this day, and every day, a savior. Come Lord Jesus. Save us.

Pr. David L. Miller