I was just thinking, Lord...
Daily Prayer, Spirituality and Worship in the Roman Catholic Tradition
I was just thinking, Lord...

January 22 is the annual Day of Prayer for the Protection of Unborn Children but I made a calendar error when scheduling this post - so it comes a day late! I'm grateful to Andy Alexander, S.J. whose (italicized) reflections I've incorporated in my prayer tonight.
We Cannot Measure How You Heal by John Bell
We cannot measure how you heal
or answer every sufferer’s prayer,
yet we believe your grace responds
where faith and doubt unite to care.
Your hands, though bloodied on the cross
survive to hold and heal and warn,
to carry all through death to life
and cradle children yet unborn.
The pain that will not go away,
the guilt that clings from things long past,
the fear of what the future holds
are present as if meant to last.
But present too is love which tends
the hurt we never hoped to find,
the private agonies inside
the memories that haunt the mind.
So some have come who need your help,
and some have come to make amends,
as hands which shaped and saved the world
are present in the touch of friends.
Lord, let your Spirit meet us here
to mend the body, mind and soul,
to disentangle peace from pain
and make your broken people whole.
In my husband’s suffering and death, we learned that hope is not a superficial wish that everything will get better, or that painful circumstances will change, but it is an attitude and perspective with which to live life that is chosen and which matures the more it is embraced. In the spirit of "where sin abounds grace abounds all the more," the same can be said about hope. Where pain and suffering are present, so is hope, and it is present everywhere: in the love and generosity of those around us, and in the many little signs and blessings God sends to assure us that we are not alone.
Hope is not empty, and it does not disappoint when things don’t go our way or when God doesn’t answer prayers the way we want; in fact, it is precisely in those moments that hope holds its most precious meaning, because they challenge us. They force us to dig deep, to look beyond ourselves to God, remembering that his design for our lives is one of love, and it is far bigger than our limited understanding. As cliché as this is to say, Christian hope ultimately lies in the fact that we have been offered eternal life. The Jubilee of Hope was a potent reminder of this, and I am so humbled and grateful that after being reminded of this so clearly during the jubilee, John now gets to bask in that beautiful and mysterious gift to which we all aspire.
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| Mid Summer Night's Gathering by Laurie Pace |
You make your home within me
though I've locked my heart's front door...
You listen to my every word
though silent I may be...
You come to mend and heal me
when I deny my wounds...
You never give up loving me
though I give up on love...
Your mercy's deeper than my sins,
my guilt drowns in its shallows...
Your grace is always there for me
when from your face I turn...
Without you I have nothing, Lord,
and all I have is yours...
Chorus
Chorus
Like any other day, Lord,
this day is your gift to me:
may I come to its close in peace,
having spent it with you by my side...
Amen.

There
are times, Lord, when all I want to do
is to rest in the quiet of your presence,
in the silence of your peace...
There are times when your silence tells me
all I need to know of how you love me:
when your heart speaks to mine
in a language without words,
when words could never tell the love
that my heart finds in yours...
Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
and watch over me as I sleep
that awake, I might keep watch with you
and asleep rest in your peace...
Amen.
