It
has been nearly 24 hours and I find myself still strangely moved by the Sending
Prayer and Blessing at the end of yesterday’s worship service at Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church, here in Raleigh. Maybe
it is the fact that it was Martin Luther King’s birthday, maybe it is part of
the anxiety and foreboding that I feel about the next four years that our
nation faces but I cannot put it down.
Let us imagine, with God, a circle of compassion,
No one standing outside that circle.
We move ourselves closer to the margins
So, that the margins themselves will be erased.
We stand there with those whose dignity has been denied.
We locate ourselves with the poor and the powerless
and the voiceless.
Let us imagine, with God, a circle of compassion,
No one standing outside that circle.
We move ourselves closer to the margins
So, that the margins themselves will be erased.
We stand there with those whose dignity has been denied.
We locate ourselves with the poor and the powerless
and the voiceless.
At
the edges, we join the easily despised and the readily left out.
We stand with the persecuted
so that the persecution will stop.
We place ourselves next to the disposable.
So that the day will come
when we stop throwing people away.
And may the grace of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit
Bless us in this work.
so that the persecution will stop.
We place ourselves next to the disposable.
So that the day will come
when we stop throwing people away.
And may the grace of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit
Bless us in this work.
Thank you God, for giving me this New Year’s