Lord, you have been our refuge
from one generation to another.
Before the mountains were brought forth,
or the land and the earth were born,
or the land and the earth were born,
from age to age you are God.
--Psalm 90:1-2
Here as our church year
winds toward its last month, this Sunday we will be treated to Psalm 90, which was
traditionally attributed to Moses as a prayer and meditation as he faced the
end of his days. Although our reading from Deuteronomy will remind us that in
all of time there was no one like Moses, still at the end of his life this
psalm depicts Moses as praising God even through the memories of adversities
and afflictions to which no one is immune, even the greatest prophet to ever
live.
Even in my everyday life, as
the autumn days grow shorter, and yet there is so much to cram into each hour. The
busy days flow past, one after the other, each one full, yet telescoping away
from me I cannot remember when I did what. Yet when I feel breathless and
overwhelmed, the psalmist who composed Psalm 90 has provided me a little
reminder right at the start that each day is not ours but a gift from God, who
is and was and shall be.
Now is the time some of us
need that reminder. The sky overhead just this week has turned leaden, and chill
winds send yellow leaves swirling down gravity’s well as if possessed of a mind
of their own. Summer will not endure forever, as much as the Midwestern weather
tries to convince us otherwise, with spikes of heat lingering well into October
this year. Overnight, it seems, those leaves changed from a dull green to a
mustard yellow and they remind us of how soon things can change.
Yet Lord, You have been and
will be our refuge, from time before our birth. When we need respite from the
thoughts that swirl like leaves through the doorway of our minds, You are with
us, and the gentle pressure of your hand upon us bids us to be still and quiet.
Yes, each moment is fleeting, but it is part of the tapestry into which all our
lives are woven. My dear friend and mentor Clint McCann reminded me once that
Isaac Watts’s version of Psalm 90 sings out the assurance and trust that we can
take from this knowledge of God’s promises fulfilled:
O God, our help in ages
past,
Our hope for years to come,
Our shelter from the stormy blast,
And our eternal home….
Our hope for years to come,
Our shelter from the stormy blast,
And our eternal home….
Even Psalm 90’s reminder
that we are dust, and to dust we shall return, is also at the same time a
precious remembrance of our unity with all creation. We are made of dust and
water—the warm seas of creation roll through our veins. Flesh and bones are
made from the same stuff as the stars—and the same as the solid rock that
provides the foundations of the world. As songwriter Beth Nielsen Chapman
sings, “Solid stone is just sand and water, baby—sand and water, and a million
years gone by.” So leaf subsides to leaf, in the image I recall from a snippet
of a poem by Robert Frost. In the end, all things subside into one, and yet
even the stones sing out with the glory of God who shapes them and us with the
same sustaining hand. Each numbered day we receive is a holy day, as long as we
remember that all is a gift from God.
Psalm 90 recognizes that
even as we traverse adversity and are shaped and molded by the trials and
careless wounds that sometimes get inflicted upon us, the refuge of God’s love
and care is always available to us—as close and as precious as a breath. As
winter darkness gathers closer, and at the end of each day, it is God’s
graciousness that is our comfort and promise fulfilled.
Most Merciful
God, we praise and bless You,
remembering
your faithfulness and care for our souls.
Holy Spirit,
abide within us,
and give us
charity toward each other, as you love us.
You are our
refuge,
You who uphold
the stars as they tell their tales,
You who uphold
us in life and in death.
Teach us to
number our days as your holy gift,
that we may
serve You and each other with joy, Lord Christ.
Bless and keep
us, O Redeemer,
and place the
seal of your gracious love upon those for whom we pray.
Amen.
(This was first published on the Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul on October 25, 2017.)
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