Sunday, 4 December 2011
Looking for God
In Psalm 105 verse 4 we read “Seek the Lord and his strength; seek his presence continually” (NRSV). In the context of that psalm,’ seeking the Lord’s presence’ amounts to looking at his wondrous works and recognizing all that he has bestowed on us in creation. From the blessings of a loving family, a warm dry home, and situated in lush countryside, it is perhaps not so difficult to recognize the Lord’s presence as to stop ourselves becoming contemptuous of the familiar.There is however more than one way in which to seek the Lord’s presence, and perhaps Matthew 25 vv35-36 expresses it elliptically. The Lord is to be found in the naked, the hungry, the thirsty, the sick, the imprisoned and the stranger.We may find it difficult to seek our powerful God among the weak and destitute, in the ‘other’. Yet He is God of all, not just a chosen few. Jesus was after all born to a young woman barely into her teens and in the humblest of situations: in an animal house, where his crib was a food box. Dressed in swathing bands, he was naked in the sense of too poor for the rich clothing we might have expected for him. He was among strangers and was soon to be exiled to avoid Herod’s slaughter. Such was the condition of his birth, and such is the condition in which we find him still.Finding the Lord in the least of his subjects, our responsibility and our duty is clear. It is not that in order to save ourselves we must offer alms to the poor: it is that in looking after these we offer them a glimpse of His glory reflected in our compassion for them. ‘Compassion’: that gut-twisting feeling that enough is enough and we must be the change we want to see. In such acts of ministry we begin to help others to perceive the Lord’s strength and to wish to join us in seeking him continually in a blessèd unending cycle of building His kingdom on earth.Seek his presence continually.
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