Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Valerie SchultzOctober 03, 2023
Photo from Unsplash.

A Reflection for Tuesday of the Twenty-sixth Week in Ordinary Time

A friend has filed her paperwork for a divorce. She is moving away from the town where she has made a home with her former spouse, taking a job in another city and renting a one-bedroom apartment. As I help her move in, I am struck by her bravery in starting over, but also by the sense of community in the tall building where she will now live. Her fellow city-dwellers are friendly, a diverse group of folks who all seem to be devoted dog owners, as is my friend. I know the next several months (or years) will be hard for her in so many ways, but as I unpack her cardboard boxes, I feel at peace, knowing she is landing in a safe and sociable space.

My friend’s move into the unknown reminds me of the multi-national and multi-lingual peoples in today’s reading from Zechariah. Moreover, it reminds me of the prediction that they will seek to join a nation where, as they say, “we have heard that God is with you.” Who wouldn’t want the same for themselves and their families, to be where God is? Don’t we all “implore the favor of the Lord?”

Wherever we go, God is with us, but we do not always have the means or the strength to remain conscious of that.

We humans are a tribal people. We feel the need to belong somewhere, to make our home among our kin. We build settlements, form societies and create culture because we are hard-wired to do so. We live together, we worship together, we work and play together, sometimes harmoniously and sometimes in strife. But we are more likely to establish a community of peace and justice when we remember that God is with us.

Wherever we go, God is with us, but we do not always have the means or the strength to remain conscious of that. We may, like Jesus and his disciples on their way to Jerusalem, feel unwelcome in villages that are not our own. We may have to keep traveling to the next village for the sake of our safety and well-being. We may, like my friend, need to leave a comfortable house that we have called home and begin to grow shaky roots elsewhere. But no matter our situation or our trials, we can have faith that God is still with us. Even when we are physically between residences, displaced or unhoused or shunned, our beating hearts have a home. “My home is within you,” sings the Psalmist, acknowledging our spiritual abode with God, teaching us anew that home is so much more than a dwelling place.

More: Scripture

The latest from america

Displaced Palestinian children run past tents at the Islamic University of Gaza compound amid the ongoing war in Gaza, Sunday, April 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)
The Israeli military began perhaps its most aggressive ground offensive so far in the war to root out what is left of Hamas, maintaining an almost daily pace of incursions and airstrikes. The results have been devastating.
Kevin ClarkeApril 11, 2025
Roosevelt understood, as few American presidents had before him, that there was no inherent separation between Christian charity and democratic citizenship.
Connor HartiganApril 11, 2025
In this image provided by Senate Television, Sen, Cory Booker, a Democrat from New Jersey, speaks on the Senate floor on April 1, 2025. The speech lasted 25 hours and four minutes, a record for the U.S. Senate. (Senate Television via AP)
Cory Booker and the Hands Off protesters prove that words still have power. But only if we accompany them with action.
Kathleen BonnetteApril 11, 2025
photo of the outside of the New York Armory during the New York International Antiquarian Bookfair 
At the New York International Antiquarian Book Fair, you are guaranteed to find the following: a signed first edition of your favorite book, a celebrity (or two) and Bibles.
Mazie JonesApril 11, 2025