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"Pacific Currents" The chronological roadway that we travel from October through November is slippery, the site of major collisions. Election Day and Thanksgiving, Advent and pre-Christmas hype crash into each other and send our sensibilities sprawling. We hurtle with limited visibility toward hazardous junctions of the secular and the liturgical. Psalm 80, for the 1st Sunday in Advent, gives voice to the cries of a people in disarray:
The Psalm for Epiphany states, “The just ruler rescues the needy when they cry out, liberates the poor and those who have no helper. With compassion, the lives of the weak and the needy are restored, their lives delivered from oppression and violence, their blood deemed too precious to be shed.” [Ps. 72: 12-14] These Psalms, these songs of freedom, redemption songs, cry out for all who contend with the shades of doubt and the phantoms of remorse that they may be embraced by the swift brightness of joy. These Psalms resound for all who slam into the unyielding walls of illness and fatigue that they may be assured that those barriers eventually dissolve in the constant mist of love; that hope is the doorway through pain. These Psalms empower all who yearn for an end to killing and brutality, slow starvation and incessant exploitation, that they may dispel the traffic jams, and open the roadways, fill up the valleys; level the hills; straighten out the crooked paths, and smooth out the rough passages so that all may run eagerly toward the Savior, toward the One who is rushing toward us in holy exuberance to “gather the outcast….and bring you home.” [Zeph. 3:20] May our journey be graced.
For previous editions of "Pacific Currents", click here. |
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