Holy Moments
See
what great love the Father
has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are! I John 3:1
I have a friend whose name is Kathleen. We actually call each other Gazelda, but that
is a story for another day. Kathleen and
I shared several seminary classes together.
We later enjoyed attending conferences together. We had this “thing” we did. We lived in different states and had very
different lives but this one thing we shared seemed to seal our
friendship. We named Holy Moments. Sacramental Moments. There were many and we never knew when we
would share one. A sacrament is when you
experience the holy with your senses.
Some sacramental moments we shared would include
a magnificent western sunset, the soft colors of the eastern sunrise, making
snow angels (never mind that we were grown women with children and jobs!),
walking in Evanston in the dark while it was snowing, sitting on the rocks on
the edge of Lake Michigan, seeing snow in the late spring in North Carolina, moving
worship or special music were certainly holy moments…You get the drift.
Barbara Brown Taylor, from The Preaching
Life writes, "The search for sacraments becomes a search for our
connections to God and to one another, and there is no end to them. They may
sometimes be difficult to recognize in all the cares and occupations of our
lives, and they may sometimes reveal truths we would rather not see, but to
deny their existence--to declare any part of our lives devoid of sacraments--is
to deny the sovereignty of God."
You see, when God encounters us in our ordinary lives - right in the middle of a place we had never thought of as particularly ‘godly,’ then we have a choice: we can keep on going and ignore what has happened, or we can mark – even just within ourselves – that moment, that spot, as holy.
You see, when God encounters us in our ordinary lives - right in the middle of a place we had never thought of as particularly ‘godly,’ then we have a choice: we can keep on going and ignore what has happened, or we can mark – even just within ourselves – that moment, that spot, as holy.
I
recently discovered a sacramental moment that was made between our three year
old grandson, Shep and his Granddaddy.
It was just an ordinary night of washing hands before dinner in the
little powder room. Shep was standing on
his stool so he could reach the water and the soap (!). Granddaddy was
supervising, and took the towel down and dried Shep’s hands. Then we all shared dinner. Where’s the sacrament? We didn’t know it had happened until the next
time that Shep was over for dinner and handwashing.
Once
again, Shep was getting ready for dinner.
Granddaddy was still on his way home.
Shep’s Mama told him to wash his hands. He replied, “But Granddaddy’s not here.” Again Mama said, “Shep, wash your
hands.” And he said, “OK Mama, but I’m
gonna wait for Granddaddy to dry them.”
The holy moment had been while Shep’s hands were being dried by his
Granddaddy – tenderly, thoroughly, together, grandfather and grandson. And he wanted to experience that again.
![Image result for grandfather and child's hands](https://www.gransnet.com/cms/uploads/GN_Images/content/grandparenting/all_holdinghands2_shutterstock.jpg)
In all
our busyness, we could have missed that Holy Moment. They happen all around us. All the time.
Look for them. Name them. They are the lavish love of God.
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