This is a pretty popular image of God, perhaps what we have been taught to imagine he looks like. It’s impossible to definitively tie down the physical attributes, but I want to turn the image of God round.
When our eldest son was born, the doctor said to me, “You’ll never be able to leave him anywhere, he looks so like you, he is your image”. The family likeness was indisputable and obvious.
I would love to be able to paint. But I can’t, I’ve tried. Whatever I try and recreate looks nothing like what to is meant to be. There is no recognisable likeness.
In your wisdom and goodness you have made all people in your image and likeness
(from the Lent Communion Service in Methodist Worship)
We are made in God’s image. I am made in God’s image. Yet would anyone know? Am I recognisable as such?
Would anyone look at me, and say, “I know who you look like, whose mannerisms you have”? Would they say, “You have captured the likeness perfectly”. Would they look at me and see God? Or have I marred the image, by me, my actions and reactions?
19 You surely know that your body is a temple where the Holy Spirit lives. The Spirit is in you and is a gift from God. You are no longer your own. 20 God paid a great price for you. So use your body to honor God. 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 (CEV)
Lord,
as I look at my life,
and think of you,
what is to be seen?
Am I your image?
A spitting image,
pointing
and illustrating you?
Or am I blurry,
unrecognisable even?
My call in life
is to show You,
your love,
your traits,
your life
in me.
Yet,
I have failed.
It is not so.
I get in the way.
Too much of me
and not enough of you.
And so I come,
seeking forgiveness,
mercy
and love:
longing to be more like you.
If lent is to mean anything,
may I spend time with you,
allowing you to reach me,
to heal me;
allowing myself to
be more like you
and less like me.
Reblogging this from last year – a moment to pause and reflect
Ash Wednesday is a time for reflection, for confession, for honesty before God. It is an opportunity also to seek God’s forgiveness – and receive it, deep into our heart and mind; to know that those things that trouble us, and those we are barely aware of but effect us deeply, can be dealt with by God; and to receive his peace.
Ashes are a way to show sorrow, a physical sign of an inner reality.
Ashes mark penitence and mourning, an acknowledgement of and sorrow at our wrongdoing.
Some years later, Darius the Mede, who was the son of Xerxes, had become king of Babylonia. And during his first year as king, I found out from studying the writings of the prophets that the Lord had said to Jeremiah, “Jerusalem will lie in ruins for seventy years.” 3-4 Then, to show my sorrow, I went without eating and dressed in sackcloth and sat in ashes. I confessed my sins and earnestly prayed to the Lord my God:
Our Lord, you are a great and fearsome God, and you faithfully keep your agreement with those who love and obey you.
We go through life. We think we’re doing ok – not a bad job all things considered. Or we don’t even have time to stop and think about it. We are busy just surviving, getting to the next thing, trying to hold everything together.
But sometimes we are pulled up short. We realise we have got something badly wrong, or just a little bit wrong, and we have to stop and think. We need to apologise, put right what we have got wrong and receive forgiveness. Often the hardest person to forgive is ourselves.
Ash Wednesday is a specific opportunity to do that thinking. To take the time to purposely reflect before God on the reality that is our life.
Burning,
cleansing God,
I come before you today;
I want to take this time
to remember,
to honestly recall,
to examine my life
in your presence;
to ask my self
if I live up to all you ask of me,
day by day,
heartbeat by heartbeat,
in every corner of my life.
2 I am the Lord your God, the one who brought you out of Egypt where you were slaves.
3 Do not worship any god except me.
4 Do not make idols that look like anything in the sky or on earth or in the ocean under the earth. 5 Don’t bow down and worship idols. I am the Lord your God, and I demand all your love. If you reject me, I will punish your families for three or four generations.6 But if you love me and obey my laws, I will be kind to your families for thousands of generations.
7 Do not misuse my name. I am the Lord your God, and I will punish anyone who misuses my name.
8 Remember that the Sabbath Day belongs to me. 9 You have six days when you can do your work, 10 but the seventh day of each week belongs to me, your God. No one is to work on that day—not you, your children, your slaves, your animals, or the foreigners who live in your towns. 11 In six days I made the sky, the earth, the oceans, and everything in them, but on the seventh day I rested. That’s why I made the Sabbath a special day that belongs to me.
12 Respect your father and your mother, and you will live a long time in the land I am giving you.
13 Do not murder.
14 Be faithful in marriage.
15 Do not steal.
16 Do not tell lies about others.
17 Do not want anything that belongs to someone else. Don’t want anyone’s house, wife or husband, slaves, oxen, donkeys or anything else.
Read them slowly, thinking not just about the letter of them, but the spirit too.
Talk honestly to God about where you are with them and with him. How have I lived out what God wants me to do? How have I shown love, his love and mine, to those around me? Not just the lovely people, but those that annoy me too?
I worship God, but are there other gods in my life? Things I do rather than spend time with God or do what he requires of me? Are there things I put in God’s place?
Am I free and easy with God’s name? Do I do or say things that make me sound like I am closer to God than I am; or when I use his name to validate what I say, when it is actually my opinion that I have to say?
Do I make space, real space, for God, for myself and for those I love? Or am I busy cramming my life with things that don’t really matter?
Do I truly respect those that I should? Those who have experience and wisdom that I don’t? Those who have sacrificed much for me and cared for me?
Of course I’ve never murdered anyone, but have I done and said things that have made people die on the inside? Have I wished ill of people?
Am I faithful? Do I always give the honour that is due? Am I focussed, or do other things distract me?
I may not commit robbery, but do I look for short-cuts, loopholes or the cheapest rather than the best way? Do I take others time, take them and all they offer for granted? Am I looking for an easy ride through life, or willing to give as much as I get?
Am I honest in character? Do I stretch the truth when it suits me? Avoid the question?
Am I easily jealous, wanting what others have? Thinking it will answer my problems?
There is so much I do that I shouldn’t do, and don’t do that I should…
Lord,
I come before you in shame,
in penitence,
to say that I am truly sorry.
My life is not what you would have it be,
I have not lived as the person you called me to be,
I have got some things very wrong
As I think of the ashes,
the dirt and the dust,
I see the darkness in my life;
I rub my hands in it
and see and feel the stain
Forgive me,
I pray.
Thank you
that you promise forgiveness
and give it freely.
This day may I go,
marked by you,
forgiven,
restored
and free
147 Shout praises to the Lord! Our God is kind, and it is right and good to sing praises to him. 2 The Lord rebuilds Jerusalem and brings the people of Israel back home again. 3 He renews our hopes and heals our bodies. 4 He decided how many stars there would be in the sky and gave each one a name. 5 Our Lord is great and powerful! He understands everything. 6 The Lord helps the poor, but he smears the wicked in the dirt.
7 Celebrate and sing! Play your harps for the Lord our God. 8 He fills the sky with clouds and sends rain to the earth, so that the hills will be green with grass. 9 He provides food for cattle and for the young ravens, when they cry out. 10 The Lord doesn’t care about the strength of horses or powerful armies. 11 The Lord is pleased only with those who worship him and trust his love.
20 But he has not given his laws to any other nation. Shout praises to the Lord!