Good
Friday.
The
ground behind the vicarage rises steeply, such that I can stand at my kitchen
window and look out on the hedge that demarcates the boundary between our
family home and the church above and beyond. The hedge is made of many things,
but mostly Pyracantha shot through with bramble, sharp as hell, an encircling
crown of thorns. The longer I am willing to stand and watch, the more I see.
Robins, wrens, sparrows, blue tits, blackbirds, all in their turn darting in
and out. The crown of thorns is a haven, protection from marauding local cats,
a nesting place to nurture young, a living thing of beauty.
The
wounds of Christ are the place where power is made perfect in weakness. For
there is no greater weakness than a man tortured and subjected to public
execution. And there is no greater power than the ability of Love to draw to
those wounds every wound that has ever been inflicted, every wound that has
ever been suffered, and to cleanse them such that what is inflicted is forgiven
and what is endured is beautified.
Such
is the mercy of God, to endure the worst that we inflict and to be one with us
in what we suffer, that we might be one with God in the glory of Life.
The
more we can bear to watch, to hold our gaze and not turn away, the more we will
notice. Such wonder! What mystery!

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