It is time to get ready for Lent. Ash Wednesday is February 18th, and as usual I need your help in providing daily reflections for the season. This year our theme is Stop Playing Games and Join God’s Reconciling Work During Lent.
The good news of the gospel is God’s desire to reconcile all things to Godself. This is an holistic plan, that embraces not just our inner transformation and reconciliation to God but restoration of creation, the making of peace where there is enmity, healing where there is brokenness and renewal wherever the image of God is distorted. Our creator has begun a process of redemption to restore all things to what they were meant to be.
For in him (Christ) all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, by making peace through the blood of his cross (Col 1:19-20)
The question is how do we get there? As Kerry Dearborn asks in her inspiring new book Drinking from the Wells of New Creation What transforms approaches to reconciliation from being empty verbal niceties or guilt-assauging “quick fixes” to dynamic expressions of the gospel? (68)
She believes that through the Holy Spirit, God’s love has flooded our hearts, united us with God and empowered us to participate in the reconciliation established by God through Christ’s life, death and resurrection. She goes on to explain that it is the imagination that opens the heart’s floodgates to both receive and release the Spirit’s love to others. First the imagination is the solvent breaking down old ways of seeing the world. Second its creative facility offers us a new vision of life and hope, reshaping our desires and expectations around God’s vision of reconciliation. Third its integrative power connects heart, mind and body to this new vision and catalyzes responses. (69)
It is this good news and the power of the imagination to reshape and transform our responses so that God’s great plan for reconciliation becomes central to all we are and do, that we want to engage in through Mustard Seed Associates’ programs this year. I also plan to make it the central theme of our Lenten reflections.
This is a big topic and one that we will obviously only be able to scratch the surface of. There are so many areas in which we need to see reconciliation. God longs for us to draw close and embrace the inner restoration and reconciliation to the image of God within us. God also desires racial reconciliation, economic reconciliation and reconciliation to the land and our calling to be good stewards are but a few of the areas we hope to touch on.
As we begin our journey together I am reminded of Native American activist Richard Twiss who, not long before he died said to me: “We don’t want you to invite us to your table we want you to invite us to sit down and create a new table together.” In the same spirit, Diana Butler bass says: Tolerance allows divergent opinions to exist; hospitality welcomes and invites others into dialogue in a spirit of love and trust.
For reconciliation there must be open collaboration and hospitality that opens our hearts and our minds to the reconciling love of God. That is just what we want to do and we hope that you will join us on the journey.
As I prepare for a series like this I am reminded of the story of the great banquet feast where the servants go out into the highways and byways to invite people to attend.
So this is your invitation to you to come to the banquet feast. Stir your imagination and allow the Holy Spirit to inspire you. Do you have a story of reconciliation – within yourself, to God, to others, or to God’s world you would like to share? Sign up to contribute to the Lenten blog series this year. Leave a comment below and I will send you details of how to submit your article.
Do you know of others whose stories should be told during Lent this year? Invite them to be a part of this too.
17 comments
Christine, I would like to contribute to your Lent series.
Thanks Karen. I will add your name to the list and send out an email next week with details.
I would like to join you, also.
Thanks Jean
I would like to offer something
Thank you Gelli.
Christine, I would like to contribute to your Lent Series.
Thanks Michelle
I will give it some thought as to whether I have something to contribute to this discussion. Do send me your note.
I could post the story in my blog but I would rather share it here.
Sounds good Ruth
Hi Christine, it’s been a few years since I wrote for the Lent series. But the “Reconciliation ” theme seems to be popping up in front of me over and over again. I feel that perhaps God is nudging me to pick up my pen again. Please send me the instructions for submitting an article.
Theresa, it would be wonderful to hear from you again. I will get back to everyone next week with final details but generally speaking 600 – 800 words plus a bio and any photos you want included as jpegs.
Hi Christine and Tom,
Yes, I would love to contribute an article; I’ll send the link as a reply to your email.
Blessings to you both,
Steve
Wonderful I always love your contributions Steve
Yes, very happy to contribute a piece, look forward to it.
OOps, didn’t realise I was signed in as Wordpress, this is Keren D-W, so you already have my email etc. 🙂