I hear a voice I had not known: “I relieved your shoulder of the burden; your hands were freed from the basket. In distress you called, and I rescued you. – Psalm 81:5b-7a (NRSV)
I’ve never felt close to God in a personal buddy-buddy kind of way. It’s never been my spiritual practice to call up Jesus in prayer like we’re BFFs who need to ponder every personal detail together, from hairstyles to romance.
Maybe it’s due to my upbringing in an Evangelical & Reformed UCC congregation with its formal worship, its elevated altar (not a communion table), and its hazy white dossal behind which I assumed as a child that God might dwell. Maybe it’s due to my personality type. Certainly it’s an aspect of my theology. I’m particularly fond of God’s mystery and grandeur; I’m less keen on God whispering sweet nothings in my ear.
In any event, God has always been distant to me. To hear the voice of God, the actual disembodied voice of God, would be to hear a voice that I do not recognize.
Sometimes this spiritual distance with God seems unorthodox. Across the theological span of modern American Christianity, closeness with God is prevalent and valued.
“Proximity to Jesus will save us.”
“Proximity to justice will save us.”
Those of us with a theology of God’s aloofness, and those of us experiencing a season of spiritual dryness, can be tempted to doubt that we can be saved across the distance. “If proximity is necessary for salvation,” we find ourselves thinking, “we may never be delivered.”
And yet there it is in Psalm 81—the assurance that deliverance can come through an unknown voice, justice can pour out from a well we didn’t dig, relief can be given by a stranger.
Prayer: Thank you, God, that deliverance comes even when it is unknown and far away.
written for the Daily Devotional
Thank you
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My name is Bill Leonard ([email protected])
Bill
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Hi Rachel,
It is , I feel, “honest,” and brave for anyone who “wears the cloth” to admit that he or she feels distance from God and /or periods of spiritual dryness. When I first began to “read your thoughts and prayers in “Writing to God” your honesty regarding g times of great joy, mixed with “I am here alone, here at a loss” was a human voice, an authentic voice. Even in that inability to feel God’s presence you give us the tools to “feel God’s presence, perhaps not that clear, loud voice. On “day 28 “ in the book you continue… “I pray. Return me safely to sunlight.”
Jesus cried out “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Other spiritual leaders like St Theresa have experienced depression , living and seeing nothing but the paths of poverty and illness for so many. Today, it is seeing the very sad truths that justice is STiLL an issue as children and people are killed unmercifully.
In all of your writings I see you “honoring” your “humanness” and ours when you acknowledge feelings that God can feel absent. Your words “allow” our humanness. I am grateful for that.
With that , you seem to be able to go to that “next thought “ of either “Hope” and or “thankfulness.” ~ Day 29 in “writing to God” ~ “I bring Thanksgiving, To you I sing praise, I breathe in Julian of Norwich’s prayer that all will be well.”
Thank you for sharing ALL of your thoughts. They can be helpful to us all as we journey the path of living God while being “human.” ~ Amen.
I appreciate your affirming feedback, Ann.