I don’t know about you, but I am experiencing a deep sense of sadness this week for those who are affected by the awful virus that is ravaging some areas of our country and the world. Medical personnel and others are toiling long hours under extreme conditions to help those infected by COVID-19. Now it is closer to home. At the time, there are nine confirmed cases in our county. In a neighboring county, we mourn the loss of one who was a beloved deputy, school resource officer, husband, and the father of young children. In the North Carolina Conference, we grieve in the loss of a young pastor in the Harbor District who preached to her congregation online last Sunday. And, in the midst of the chaos, we pause to give thanks for the blessing of healing from the virus in the life of a much beloved United Methodist pastor in the Western North Carolina Conference.
This week we are told by medical officials to brace for the worst that is yet to come. In all of the sadness, where do we find hope and blessing? Psalm 59:16 tells us, “But I will sing of your strength, in the morning I will sing of your love; for you are my fortress, my refuge in times of trouble.” The Lord is our strength and blessing. The Lord is our fortress and refuge. The Lord is our hope and blessing.
In her poem, Blessing in the Chaos, writer and artist Jan Richardson expresses the blessing God gives us in times like these.
To all that is chaotic in you,
let there come silence.
Let there be a calming
of the clamoring, a stilling
of the voices that have laid their claim on you,
that have made their home in you,
that go with you even to the holy places
but will not let you rest,
will not let you hear your life
with wholeness
or feel the grace
that fashioned you.
Let what distracts you cease.
Let what divides you cease.
Let there come an end
to what diminishes and demeans,
and let depart all that keeps you in its cage.
Let there be an opening into the quiet
that lies beneath the chaos,
where you find the peace
you did not think possible
and see what shimmers within the storm.
(from The Cure for Sorrow: A Book of Blessings for Times of Grief)
I am reminded of Psalm 46:10, “Be still, and know that I am God! I am exalted among the nations; I am exalted in the earth. The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge.” Be still. The blessing is in the stillness. It is in the staying home we have been asked to do. I hope that you see it as a gift. For indeed, it is. Staying home allows us to experience God’s presence, cling to God’s grace, and rest in God’s mercy. It draws us away from “the voices that have laid their claim on you (us)” and “will not let you (us) rest.” Staying home and resting with God opens us to the “quiet that lies beneath the chaos” where blessing is possible.