Archive | April 2006

Silence of Expectation

Holy Saturday is ahead, the most quiet day of the year. The silence of that silent night, holy night, the night when God was born was broken by the sounds of a baby, a mother’s words of comfort and angels in concert. Holy Saturday, by contrast, is the sound of perfect silence, Yesterday’s mockery, the good thief’s prayer, the cry of dereliction—all that is past now. Mary has dried her tears, and the whole creation is still, waiting for what will happen next. Death in the Afternoon by Fr. John Neuhaus

I pray that you have found some silence today, to pray, to meditate, to wait.

The Storm Is Over

“Reader, did you ever stand by the sea-shore after a storm when the wind happens to have gone down suddenly? The waves cannot cease with their cause; indeed, they sometimes seem at first to the ear to lash the surrounding shore more fiercely than while the wind blew. Still we are conscious that the inevitable calm has begun and is now but rocking them to sleep . . . At times a loud wave would every now and then come roaring, but it was only memory’s echo of the tempest that had swept their lives; the storm itself was over.” The Cloister and the Hearth by Charles Reade.

The storm is already over although it may seem that the aftermath is fierce. We are living in the peace that comes after God through Christ has stilled the storm of His own righteous wrath. The inevitable calm has begun. Many loud waves come roaring, but they can’t touch us. We are safe in the peace of the Cross and the Resurrection

In the Marketplace

This is the day when we do without Christ.
There seems, at first, to be little difference.
Only yesterday the ancient veil was rent,
And the earth shuddered and the dark grew vast;
But today, nothing happens, nothing at all.
TV sets flicker idly in empty rooms,
Showing again and again the same cartoons.
People circle aimlessly in the Mall
Where the Easter bunny struts his stuff before
Disinterested kids, ands cellophane grass
And plastic eggs are bought same as last year
Indeed, there is no news to tell but this:
The graves all are opened, and the living dead
Now walk among us—- or, so it is said.
By Sandol Stoddard

“The living dead.” Have you met anyone recently who was dead but is now alive?

Signs and Symbols

Here are the symbols and Scripture passages for the Resurrection Egg Hunt:

1. palm branch John 12:12-13
2. coin Matthew 26 14-16
3. towel John 13:3-5
4. cup and cracker Mark 14:22-25
5. thorns John 19:2-3
6. cross John 19: 17-18
7. nail Luke 23:33
8. dice John19:23-24
9. sword John 19:34
10. spices and gauze John 19:38-40
11. stone Matthew 27:59-60
12. empty Matthew 28:1-6

Just collect the items from around the house. We use a LEGO play sword, a small piece of towel, a penny, such easily available things that will fit into the plastic eggs. Then, we number the eggs with a Sharpie marker so that we can recognize them after the Easter egg hunt is over.

Hide the resurrection symbol eggs with the candy eggs, and while the children enjoy their treats, someone can read the Scripture verses aloud. Or the children can take turns reading the verses.

We always do this egg hunt on Saturday as a preparation for Resurrection Sunday and in order to keep the focus on worship and rejoicing on Sunday.

Meditation on a Saturday of Darkness

“Forgive us, O Lord, we acknowledge ourselves as type of the common man,
Of the men and women who shut the door and sit by the fire;
Who fear the blessings of God, the loneliness of the night of God, the surrender required, the deprivation inflicted,
Who fear the injustice of men less than the justice of God;
Who fear the hand at the window, the fire in the thatch, the fist in the tavern, the push into the canal,
Less than we fear the love of God.” T.S. Eliot,
Murder in the Cathedral

It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God. Hebrews 10:31

Another Book for Easter

NOTE: I’m woefully behind in my goal of posting once per hour over these three days of Easter celebration. I apologize to anyone who is disappointed, and I hope you enjoy what I do have for you. Life intrudes.

Resurrection, Tolstoy’s last novel, is the story of the nobleman, Nekludof and the prostitute, Katusha. Katusha is condemned to hard labor in Siberia for murder, but Nekludof, a member of her jury, recognizes her as the girl that he seduced and ruined as a youth. He feels responsible for her fate, and he works to redeem her, and then, eventually, recognizing his own sin and degradation, to redeem himself.

Quotations:

“Men are like rivers: the water is the same in each, and alike in all; but every river is narrow here, more rapid there, here slower, there broader, now clear, now cold, now dull, now warm. It is the same with men. Every man bears in himself the germs of every human quality; but sometimes one quality manifests itself, sometimes another, and the man often becomes unlike himself, while still remaining the same man.”

“To understand the whole of the Master’s will is not in my power. But to do His will that is written in my conscience is in my power.”

“The interest of her whole life lay in searching for opportunities to serve others just as the sportsman searches for game. And the sport had become the habit, the business, of her life, and she did it so naturally that those who knew her were no longer grateful, but simply expected it of her.”

The last quote describes Engineer Husband in some ways; not me, however much I might wish to a joyful and habitual servant.

The Robe by Lloyd Douglas

Last night I began re-reading The Robe by Lloyd C. Douglas, and I plan to work on it in snatches today. It’s the story of a Roman centurion, Marcus, and his personal slave, Demetrius. Marcus is stationed in Jerusalem when a confusing and rabble-rousing carpenter from Nazareth is condemned to be crucified. Unfortunately, Marcus is ordered to carry out the crucifixion, and he is the soldier who “wins” the robe of the condemned man in a game of dice.

This book was made into a movie, but I didn’t like the movie much. I like the book very much.

One line from the first page: “Lucia roused to a consciousness of the fret that she had taken to bed with her. It was still there, like a toothache.”

Isn’t that exactly how it feels to “take a fret to bed” with you? I awoke this morning with feelings that I took to bed last night.

Easter Eggs

Easter egg lying between gras



Do you hide Easter eggs for your family? We usually play that game the day before Easter Sunday on Saturday. We make the youngest urchins stay inside while the older children or the adults go outside and hide the eggs. Then, we all get the fun of watching the urchins find their candy-filled eggs. We have often had 12 aggs among the others that tell the story of the resurrection with little symbols hidden inside: a nail, a coin, a pice of towel, an empty egg to symbolize the empty tomb. These “resurrection eggs” give us the opportunity to share with the family again the story of what God has done for us in Christ.

Easter’s Coming by Aileen Fisher

Through the sunshine,
through the shadow,
down the hillside,
down the meadow,
little streams
run bright and merry,
bursting with the news
they carry,
singing, shouting,
laughing, humming,
“Easter’s coming,
Easter’s coming!”
By Aileen Fisher

It is coming. Hang on.

Easter Music

We listen to these songs on Resurrection Morning:

Handel’s Messiah

He’s Alive by Don Francisco

Easter Song by Keith Green

Hear the bells ringing
They’re singing that you can be born again
Hear the bells ringing
They’re singing Christ is risen from the dead

The angel up on the tombstone
Said He has risen, just as He said
Quickly now, go tell his disciples
That Jesus Christ is no longer dead

Joy to the word, He has risen, hallelujah
He’s risen, hallelujah
He’s risen, hallelujah.

Rise Again by Dallas Holm

Do you have any other suggestions?