Be Loved This Lent
Photograph by samira sadeqi / Unsplash It was one of those nights when my mind wasn’t Read More
Donna K. Whitney | Read 1 Samuel 16:1-13
Notice the development in Samuel’s capacity for discernment. The first son of Jesse that he sees seems like a perfectly good candidate to be king. But the Lord tells Samuel that Eliab is not the one, and he gives Samuel some guidance as to the matter of discernment: “Do not...
All-seeing God, we pray for the gift of discernment. We pray for open, wise, and compassionate hearts and minds, so that we might see ourselves and see one another as you see us. Amen.
All four scriptures for this week explore the importance of discernment. The Gospel reading uses images of vision and blindness to engage deeper reflection about ethical and spiritual awareness and the ways in which we are to respond to what we discern. The reading from 1 Samuel illustrates Samuel’s journey into discernment and invites us to consider the degree to which we see ourselves and others as God sees. The Twenty-third Psalm suggests that in our deepest darkness, there remains the possibility of an encounter with God. In Ephesians, the writer uses images of sleep and death as foils for the truth of Christ. Embedded in the epistle is an apparent contradiction that invites discernment regarding silence and speech.
Read John 9:1-41. How do you understand healing as distinct from curing? What practices does your spiritual tradition offer for engaging your own inner capacity for healing and wholeness?
Read 1 Samuel 16:1-13. Who do we as individuals and communities fail to see as God sees them, maybe even failing to see them at all?
Read Psalm 23. Recall a difficult time in which you encountered God in a particularly deep way. How do your inevitable experiences with suffering and evil challenge and/or strengthen your faith?
Read Ephesians 5:8-14. What do you as an individual want to wake up from? What do you want to wake up for?
Respond by posting a prayer.