As a teenager growing up in the town I lived in, West Yorkshire, I had access to some beautiful moorland countryside and the wonderful Yorkshire Dales. Nowadays, as I did when I was younger, I like to take time away from the city to walk and enjoy the peace nature can offer in so many places. I appreciate being beside water or roaming through trails in woodlands, but I also find some of the more rugged places have a sort of peace and tranquility that can rarely be found elsewhere. In this Lenten period, it is good to find time when you can be alone with God in a different setting and take yourself to a place that can help you think about your life more meaningfully.
One of the things that fascinates me about living here in Indiana is how human intervention has opened up the possibilities for this type of exercise and activity. Areas that were once wholly unsuitable or inaccessible have been ‘reclaimed’ to become places of retreat for people like me who enjoy the guided walk of a pathway or trail. It is a reminder of our Christian life, as the first Letter of Peter states,
‘You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people who God has set apart so that you may declare the goodness of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once, you were not a people – now you are the people of God; once you had not obtained forgiveness, you have received mercy.” (1 Peter 2:9-10).
By His grace, God has reclaimed you from the inaccessible barren wastelands of your past life and renamed you as part of his chosen people, and he is constantly at work within you to help reshape and redirect your life. It is a lifelong process as we continuously seek to resist the pressure to go our own way. Yet, thanks be to God, though we must play our part; the final victory is not down to us but to him. So why not take time this Lent to ask yourself in what way is God still trying to reclaim, reshape, and redirect you? Are there areas where the old nature is holding back his purpose? Let this Lent be a time for God’s reclamation process to work in your life. Perhaps this can be your prayer.
Loving God, I give you praise and thanks for the way you have been at work in my life: the way you have offered me a new beginning, a new identity, and a new sense of purpose, constantly working within me to reclaim, refashion, and redeem me. Remind me that despite my weakness, you are able to take and use me far beyond my expectations. Amen.
Shalom to you,
Pastor Andrew