This story from Luke comes after Jesus has sent out seventy disciples in many different directions with the charge to speak peace to all. The disciples found that they had been widely welcomed on their journeys and returned to Jesus with joy. Then Jesus makes the astonishing statement that, “I watched Satan fall from heaven like a flash of lightning.”
My question is, where did Satan fall to? We don’t talk about Satan a lot in the Episcopal church. Yes, we renounce Satan when we renew our Baptismal Covenant, but after that, not so much. But as I look around me and see anything but peace in our homeland and abroad, I wonder, perhaps we need to be more mindful of that Evil one. Perhaps, beyond renouncing, we should also look for Satan’s presence in our own lives. Insidious Satan can prevent us from attempting something new for fear of failure, can cause us to refuse to apologize simply because of a hardness of heart, or can cause us to be greedy, or judgmental, or to otherwise behave badly. And so we fight our own personal battles with an insidious Satan who steals our joy and our peace while spreading anguish and despair. Today I ask myself where is Satan in my life, and how does that Evil one keep me from reaching and spreading the peace and joy Jesus longs for all of us, His modern disciples, to experience and to share?
-Christina P. Fay, Meditation
-Tim Trapolin, Painting
Musical Reflection
Dies Irae: Requiem - Mozart
|
Login To Leave Comment