Wednesday, February 26, 2020

“Turn Back, Choose Life” by Beth DeCristofaro


“Turn Back, Choose Life” by Beth DeCristofaro

Thursday after Ash Wednesday

I have set before you life and death, the blessing and the curse. Choose life, then, that you and your descendants may live, by loving the LORD, your God, obeying his voice, and holding fast to him. (Deuteronomy 30:19-20)

Then he said to all,  “If anyone wishes to come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will save it. (Luke 9:23-24)

Piety

Study
Repent, turn back, choose life, are some of the phrases that resonate with me as we begin Lent. Take up your cross and follow. These words always reverberate in my heart. In Lent’s forty days, reminding us of the 40-year journey of the Chosen People saved from slavery, I think of them taking up their burdens to follow their God. Constant whining and straying are still petty, human, and personal. God sent manna and quail to feed them in the barrenness of the Sinai Peninsula, yet I can picture myself grumbling as I, an Israelite woman, might have groped for my slippers in the pre-dawn darkness to go gather up the day’s nutrition. “Why is it my job to always be doing this?” “What chicken (quail) again for dinner?” Taking up crosses is not my first choice. But during Lent, we focus on Jesus, who takes up his cross right along with me. I am not alone; I do not have to go it alone.

Considering the invitation to return, to repent helps me reframe the idea of bearing a cross. The bearing can become turning back to ask for the grace and strength to bear a cross and choose life.  

For example, living with a chronic illness is an opening to take care of myself appropriately and to accept limitations without forcing my needs on others or acting defeated. Completing the daily chores of my comfortable, middle-class life I can view as occasions to thank God for my blessings and practice stewardship of what I have been given rather than lament the fact that again, I seem to be the only one in the family who knows where to put clean dishes away or take out the garbage. If stuck in a dead-end job, I can take the occasion to thank God that I am employed and be alert to the moments of grace when I successfully finish a task (whether acknowledged or not), learn a new skill, meet a new potential friend in Christ among my colleagues. I can refrain from deadly gossip or tearing down management.  

Some crosses are almost too big to bear alone, and turning back to the light of Christ might be all the bearing one can do. Depression, addiction, hate might leave us no option but to cry out to Jesus, who was a friend to the Good Thief. These are not choices I make, but Jesus chooses to be with me, closer to me than I might dare hope on the darkest of days. Bearing these crosses with him turns me back to him. It is a choice for life. I am never alone.

Action
What cross am I bearing? How might I see it anew and use it as a way to turn back, repent, choose life this Lent?


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