continued from Part 6
Before I became a Christian, I avoided the more exuberant
ones I knew as much as possible. They could be
an intimidating lot always preaching wrath and judgement and sin and what I
needed to do to avoid it and did I want to come to church on Sunday.
This God they spoke of, well, He scared me. I didn’t know much about Him but He sounded
like an old guy with a beating stick watching and waiting for someone to do
something wrong. Guilt was his weapon
and punishment his payback.
Yet for some reason I could not explain, I was drawn to
these people I knew who went to church and seemed so joyful, so
not-about-to-fall-apart-at-the-drop-of-a-hat like I was.
Then one morning, with the lazy days of summer past, and the
routine of fall setting in, I decided to darken the doorstep of church for a
second time.
The God I saw and heard about in this church was not the god
I had drummed up in my own imagination, He was different. He was loving, forgiving, gentle, patient,
humble, personal. Following that first
Sunday, I kept being drawn back, as if my heart was being beckoned by words I knew
not, the gentle calling of Jesus, “Come to me all you who labour and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matt.
11:28)
The familiar extending of a gift from invisible hands, this
time accepted with a humble heart and open hands.
I left that day forever
changed; a new heart, a new purpose, a new creation –
something brought forth from nothing;
life brought forth from death;
light into
darkness.
“For it is God who commanded light to shine out of darkness,
who has shone into our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” 2
Cor. 4:6
My silence was shattered with peace, love and
forgiveness. A silence, a darkness, I
could not break myself. It reminds me of the silence that was broken over 2,000
years ago. Four hundred years of
silence, finally God spoke. An angel appeared and shattered the silence
with,
“Do not be afraid” (Luke 1:13)
Those are not words of a fierce, spiteful god with a
punishing rod watching from the sky.
Those are words of a
father to a child;
a protector to one exposed to harm;
a redeemer to one in need of redemption.
Four hundred years of silence was broken by a gentle, humble
reassurance.
The promise was coming, the Dawn was on the horizon,
bursting forth to a people living in darkness; a people trying to find
their way, their own way on their own wisdom, by their own hands, but
completely unable to bridge a void the size of eternity.
There was one who could make a way, who could bridge a void
the size of eternity, and He did it for
love.
“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.”
John 3:16
“Unto the upright there arises light in the darkness; He is
gracious, and full of compassion, and righteous.” Ps. 112:4
To be continued......
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