Wednesday, August 26, 2020
Sunday Could Just As Well Be Monday: A Prayer
O Lord, Sunday could just as well be Monday,
schedules so askew
for so many,
so many
working at home,
schooling at home,
staying at home,
so some days
not sure if it’s Sunday or Monday (or is it Friday?),
no Sunday schedule
saying it’s Sunday,
no schedule at all,
even those still going to work
not sure,
one day blurring into another.
And time,
time racing by,
time crawling by,
depending;
for me,
flying by.
Is it Wednesday already?
Is it really almost September?
What happened to July?
And June, June
somehow lost along the way.
And
has it really been five months
since the pews were
peopled with plenty of people and not
taped with tape,
one person here, one there?
And the shutdown,
the shutdown shutting down
more than businesses,
more than schools,
shutting down emotions,
not feeling what would normally feel,
death
somehow not death,
no funeral (maybe later),
as if death delayed, or
funeral online,
visitation online,
grief online,
feelings feeling strangely unfelt
(maybe later?).
And the fog,
fogging up my head some days,
thoughts not sharp,
thick thoughts slowly thought,
a dullness dulling everything,
listening but not listening
(What did you say?),
hearing but not sure what heard
(Come again?),
seeing but not remembering what seen,
driving through downtown
not remembering I drove through downtown
(How’d I get here?)
And the moods,
Great American Scream Machine time,
up and down and around we go,
climbing high with hope one day,
plummeting toward despair the next,
hanging on for dear life,
exhilarating,
terrifying,
exhausting,
some days screaming (but silently).
O Lord, so much not normal
now normal,
the abnormal
become far too
normal,
fear now normal,
anger now normal,
anxiety now normal,
depression and despair as well,
no longer sure
what normal feels like,
looks like,
is like.
Scary.
O Lord, be our normal,
the normal we so need,
the normal
that will
see us through.
In a culture, at a time,
when having faith is anything but normal,
grace us
with the strength
to put our faith in you
and trust that all shall be well;
in a culture, at a time,
when love is anything but normal,
grace us
with the strength
to be kind,
to be thoughtful,
to be compassionate;
in a culture, at a time,
when hope is anything but normal,
grace us
with the strength
to place our hope in you,
and know a hope that does not fail.
And grant us
the discipline to
schedule our days,
schedule you into our days,
schedule a schedule that gives purpose to our days;
the discipline to
be aware of the time,
the time we have,
the time we may not have, and
live each day as if it was the first day
or last day
of our lives,
live the truth that this day is the only day we have
and the last thing you say to someone
this day
just may be the last thing you say
to that someone;
the discipline to
not shut down
when everything else is shut down,
keep feeling,
not go numb,
remember what others must be feeling,
allow our hearts to break,
feeling the feelings return;
the discipline to
focus our minds on what matters,
fix our hearts on you,
force ourselves forward until
free of the fog that befogs us;
the discipline to
take responsibility for our moods,
get off the Scream Machine, and
hold on to you
for dear life.
And Lord, let us never grow weary of praying for
those battling the coronavirus,
those caring for them,
those mourning the loss of someone to the virus,
and for
those in danger of losing their homes,
those in need of food and medicine,
those looking for work.
Heal them! Sustain them! Comfort them! And
move us to do what we can, and
remind the politicians that this isn’t about
politics but
people,
and get off of it and get on with it and get to serving people.
And for those in the path of Hurricane Laura,
for calm in the streets,
for protests to remain peaceful,
and that the action of some
not undo the work of many
for justice.
O Lord, be our normal,
so that
no matter how abnormal things may be,
we will always know
what day it is,
that it is the day
you have made,
and we can
rejoice
and be glad
in it!
Amen.