Something more like dancing

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Wednesday after Epiphany

(click here to listen to or read today’s scriptures)

Something more like dancing

No one has ever seen God. Yet, if we love one another, God remains in us, and his loveis brought to perfection in us.

“There are times when a good struggle comes as one of those strange comforts of the wilderness.” So says poet and artist Jan Richardson.

Really?

“Sometimes we need not to rest but to wrestle, to be stretched to our limits, to reach deep into the reserves we did not know we had.”

There are poetic ways to say this, and Jan’s poem below brings us to the brink along with Jacob as he wrestled the angel (or was it God?). Jacob’s mostly unrepentant life had until now left many dark shadows in his memory, often involving his twin brother Esau. Jacob could have been fighting for his spiritual life on this dark night in the desert. The next morning he would meet Esau and attempt a reconciliation. He was scared. He knew his resources were at an end.

And … the wrestling in the dirt all night is exactly what he needed.

This is how we know that we remain in him and he in us, that he has given us of his Spirit.

Here is Jan’s poem (one of many in her “retreat,” linked above.

Jacob’s Blessing

If this blessing were easy,

anyone could claim it.

As it is,

I am here to tell you

that it will take some work.

This is the blessing

that visits you

in the struggling,

in the wrestling,

in the striving.

This is the blessing

that comes

after you have left

everything behind,

after you have stepped out,

after you have crossed

into that realm

beyond every landmark

you have known.

This is the blessing

that takes all night

to find.

It’s not that this blessing

is so difficult,

as if it were not filled

with grace

or with the love

that lives

in every line.

It’s simply that

it requires you

to want it,

to ask for it,

to place yourself

in its path.

It demands that you

stand to meet it

when it arrives,

that you stretch yourself

in ways you didn’t know

you could move,

that you agree

to not give up.

So when this blessing comes,

borne in the hands

of the difficult angel

who has chosen you,

do not let go.

Give yourself

into its grip.

It will wound you,

but I tell you

there will come a day

when what felt to you

like limping

was something more

like dancing

as you moved into

the cadence

of your new

and blessed name. – Jan Richardson

Jan paints too. She remembered that Jacob was renamed Israel by his wrestling partner.

I began to find my imagination drawn not to the figures locked in their fierce struggle; what drew me instead was the ground. I imagined the tracks and traces left by their feet, the imprint of their bodies on the earth, the map made by their wrestling. I imagined those lines beginning to form the blessing that Jacob receives, twining into the letters of the new name he will bear with him, limping, when morning comes.

We grow old slowly, most of us, and we accept less wrestling than we actually need. I think it’s right to claim whatever territory we’ve been given and to stand up and ask God for more. Not material territory, mind you, we’re not playing RISK. And not the glistening superficiality of achievement. No, I mean the spiritual stuff, the home-bound wisdom that grapples with doubt. And where fear of the unknown wrestles me into the dust, not letting go, but offering me a new name just as the sun is rising.

 (1 John 4, Psalm 72, 1 Timothy 3, Mark 6)

(posted at www.davesandel.net)

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