Sasha on Donna's bed |
Low: An Honest Advent Devotional ~ by John Pavlovitz, 2019, theology
God comes to meet us in the low places of our lives, Pavlovitz says. When we plant our feet firmly in the dirt of everyday life, we see Jesus meeting us in our low places. The invitation of Jesus, he says, is not to escape this world "to an elevated heavenly sanctuary somewhere; it is to bring heaven down" (p. 5). Jesus gets low, meeting us on the ground where we are.
Today is the second day of Advent. Yesterday, I started this book that Donna gave me four months ago. She and I met the author last year when he talked about an earlier book, so we expect this one to be thought-provoking, and it is. Today, the book really got to me.
Week 1 ~ Monday
"All our relationships can be understood as intersections: the places our road meets that of another person and both stories are rewritten, sometimes wonderfully and sometimes less so. ... Today, dwell on the people who've crossed your circuitous path and changed your story. ... Sit with gratitude for them and for the difference they've made on your journey" (pp. 8, 9).You may wonder why I've shown you a pensive cat to illustrate my thoughts. Donna has been keeping Sasha while Sandy Richter was in the hospital and rehab and back in the hospital for close to three months. I was at Donna's Sunday morning when she got a call that Sandy had died around 3:00 a.m. Somehow, Sasha seemed to know and had been acting strange all morning, Donna said. In this photo, Sasha reflects how I was also feeling ... sad, bereft ... but also grateful that I got to know Sandy.
Sandy Richter (1940-2019) |
It's been a sad year, with lots of us feeling low. I guess I really need this time of meditating on the pages of Low: An Honest Advent Devotional.Litany of Remembrance
When I see a funny cat picture on Facebook and want to share it,
I'll remember you.
When I recall you saying, "We only grow taller until we're perfect,"
I'll remember you.
When the elevator door opens on your floor at the Crown Center,
I'll remember you.
When the friends at "our" table sit around talking after dinner,
we'll remember you.
Because you've been so much part of our lives at the Crown Center,
we'll remember you.
So long as we live, you too shall live, for you are now a part of us,
as we remember you.
I am so sorry to hear of the passing of another dear friend. These things tend to come in waves and it seems to cut us to the core. I am so glad you have Clawdia, Donna, now Sasha, and others to support you during the tough times. Our next door neighbor of 25 years died suddenly in September so we've been spending lot of time with her husband as he navigates life on his own.
ReplyDeleteThis day's devotion hit me the same way. I will miss her every day.
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