In Our Vulnerability We Find Our Strength – Joyce Sasse
It is generally assumed we attend church on Sunday to focus on the content of the Worship Service. But at one of the most vulnerable times in my stroke-recovery process my source of strength came from the thoughtful actions and bits of conversation my friends shared in our in-between times.
A friend gave me a ride since I couldn’t drive. Throughout our outing I carefully clung to my cane for stability. My words were mumbled and intermittent. My eyes and ears were dim.
But once we got to the church’s stair-landing I felt the gentle, warm hug of a friend who constantly faces her own mental-depression demons. Her wordless-sincerity spoke volumes.
What a pleasure, next, to hear my recently retired Kindergarten Teacher friend give me a quick summary of the speech she had made for the High School Graduation Exercises. At my request she was ready to forward by e-mail the whole text – words that challenged and gave hope to the kids and quickened my heart.
My old fisherman-friend and I laughed as we carefully made our way down the stairs for coffee – me holding one rail so I wouldn’t stumble, her holding the other side while impaired by a 90 % loss of vision. We did make a pair!
Our talk soon turned to the “Celebration of Life” to be held for a ranch woman friend whose livestock, family and community meant everything to her. True, her “spit-fire” personality often left many feel intimidated. But the generosity and kindness she and her husband shared were elements that had often helped me understand what it meant to be true stewards of the land. While I no longer attend “funerals”, I’m able to speak to special family members by a letter.
What we realized as we hugged and chatted and shared our vulnerabilities with each other is just how important the moments we share are for each of us.
The Apostle Paul put it so well. “When I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:9). Our power lies with the Spirit of the Almighty.
There is a Jewish hymn in the book “Voices United” that speaks about the on-going work of the Creator. “If our God had simply saved us, merely brought us out of Egypt …”, we sing, that would have been “enough” (dayeinu). But when our God “calls the whole world into freedom” and “opens up the new Creation”, we become more than blessed. Regardless our vulnerabilities … “Dayeinu”. God gives us blessing beyond our imagining.
It is in our vulnerabilities that we find our strength.
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