Rise to the Occasion

Hi ~ I thought I would send this a little early as I hope it will be a good reflection for Holy Week. I haven’t had the best Lent. It’s felt a lot like wanting to run but not having the endurance I need. So many stops and starts and even meanderings into driveways to pet random cats that it’s easy to feel like quitting. But one of the things I love about God’s mercy is that it allows us to start again, wherever we find ourselves. So that’s where I am this Holy Week — laying down my failures and preparing my heart for his rising that redeems us all. So if you are like me and huffing and puffing to the finish line ~ keep going. It’s never too late. love~Lara

Sitting on the couch one afternoon, I asked God what his will was for my life. Trying to answer such an important question sometimes feels as amorphous as wondering what life will be like in another millennium or what ice cream flavor best describes my personality. It’s both too big and too maddening to solve.

Besides, I was recovering from a stomach virus and feeling particularly puny so the only answer that kept going through my head to the weighty question of what God’s will was for my life was merely to lie down. It hardly seemed like a directive from God. Even a self-help guru would perhaps find the suggestion counterproductive. After all, we are Americans. We stand up. We work. We get it done. Lying down is not a solid life plan for anyone other than a cat.

Yet when I think of the glory of Jesus’s resurrection, I realize it was only by laying down his life that his miraculous rising was possible. While seemingly paradoxical, I think this is true for us too. By laying down resentment, expectations, estrangement, disappointment, ego, and envy we make life better for ourselves and others. The triumph of Easter was only possible because of the surrender that preceded it.

Since infancy when we balled our tiny hands into fists, it seems like our instinct has always been to hold tight. Conversely, surrender is a radical act of love, none more so than Jesus dying on the cross for our salvation. For many of us, surrender sounds wobbly and weak. Or gazing at the crucifix, it just seems painful. So, I get the great reluctance that surrender invokes. Yet the plain truth is we can’t rise without first laying down what we were never meant to carry. There is so much in life that we hold on to that entombs us. The more we lay down our hurts, put to rest both big and petty grievances, and surrender our whims for God’s Holy Will, the closer we are to our own rising.

Easter reminds us of the hope of new life. It’s a call to rise higher in this life. It’s a chance to add pink to the charcoal-tinted shadows of human despair. God’s message is a universal call to love. We can’t do that while our hands are balled into fists and our hearts are sullied with the detritus of life’s disappointments. It may not always feel like it, but our time on earth is nothing but a rising.  We are enduring people.  Our suffering does not define us. Our injuries do not bind us.  Challenges, adversity, and wounds cannot stop our ascent – unless we let them.  “Do not gloat over me, my enemy! Though I have fallen, I will rise,” (Micah 7:8). The real enemy in life isn’t what hurts us; it isn’t our falls or failures. It’s merely how we hold on to them when it’s past time to lay them down.

Only then do we walk out of the tomb and into the light that’s meant for us. What can be more appealing than a do-over, a chance to start again, to be a little bit better this time around, to do something as revolutionary as forgive and as lavish as unreciprocated kindnesses? Easter offers us that mercy.  May we rejoice as we rise to the occasion.

 

One thought on “Rise to the Occasion

  • March 28, 2024 at 8:05 pm
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    Hi Lara. Your piece really hit home for me, especially the lines: “The real enemy in life isn’t what hurts us; it isn’t our falls or failures. It’s merely how we hold on to them when it’s past time to lay them down.”
    This month (God always loads me down during Lent) I was both laid off and had a romantic relationship end—neither of my doing, of course. I had to laugh at myself c/o God, though, because my job lasted 3 1/2 years and I was over that in a week: let’s find something better!
    It’s the fraught-with-disaster “relationship” I’m mourning now for weeks on end, and it was only four months long—two months too long, in fact! I think I’m burning because I didn’t do it first 🙂
    Anyhow, I am definitely holding onto the pain WAY longer than necessary. So, during Holy Thursday mass tonight, I prayed a good deal for strength to ‘lay them down’. Thank you for the nudge.

    Also, as President of the Guild, I wanted to say two things: 1) candidly, I wish we could have turned out more bodies for your January talk. Attendance just hasn’t been as robust as I’d like for any of our programming lately, but… 2) we have some neat talks planned in the next few months: screenwriting, journaling, technical writing just to name a few. It would be great to have you in the audience.

    Keep up your excellent work!

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