Embracing the Uncertain: 40 Devotions for Unsteady Times
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About this ebook
Just turning on the news lets us know we are living in uncertain times. Economic instabilities, eruption of violence, and natural catastrophes can alter the lives and landscapes of entire communities. Our individual lives are often just as unsteady: relationships can break, plans can falter, and confidence can fail.
Uncertainty can definitely be uncomfortable. Many of us prefer stability and a predictable future to an unknown fate. We are wired to want to control our destiny.
The reality is that in our fast-changing, unpredictable world there are few guarantees in life. It's those who are willing to embrace uncertainty and make the risky decision to follow Jesus despite the many "unknowns" who will reap the greatest rewards.
Embracing the Uncertain invites readers this Lent to engage and wrestle with life's uncertainties, not ignore them.
This 40-day devotional journey is the perfect companion piece to the book and includes Scripture, reflections, and prayers for each day to help you renew your heart during Lent.
Magrey deVega
Magrey R. deVega is the Senior Pastor at Hyde Park United Methodist Church in Tampa, Florida. He is the author of several books, including The Bible Year, Savior, Almost Christmas, Embracing the Uncertain, One Faithful Promise, and Songs for the Waiting. Magrey is a graduate of United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, and Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida, and the father of two daughters, Grace and Madelyn.
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Embracing the Uncertain - Magrey deVega
INTRODUCTION
I am a creature of routine, particularly in the mornings. I do my best to wake up at the same time each day, fix breakfast for my two daughters, pack their lunches, and get myself ready. We are generally out the door and in the car at the same time every morning, driving the same route every day to school, to the point where I can visualize every landmark and every turn in my mind. Familiarity breeds predictability, which in turn produces reliability.
And reliability brings comfort.
The season of Lent is for many of us a lot like a well-worn morning routine. Many of us have heard these stories so many times that we know the destination before we even begin the journey. It’s true that Ash Wednesday and Lent move around from year to year, but the essential path through Lent is the same. As we begin to retrace the post-Transfiguration stories in the Gospels, we know we are heading toward Jerusalem. We anticipate the throngs of Hosanna-shouting masses on Palm Sunday. We have been to the upper room to witness the drama of Maundy Thursday. We are veterans of many Good Fridays past, and we know what to expect on Easter morning.
The challenge, then, is to try to discover something new and compelling about the stories of Lent this time around, particularly when our lives feel so uncertain. These passages may be familiar, and the rhythm of the season so reliable, but we know that our futures are anything but. These stories are timeless, but as our situations change from year to year, we find ourselves living on tectonic plates of shifting change within us and around us.
Embracing the Uncertain: 40 Devotions for Unsteady Times invites you to take a fresh look at these familiar stories and to discover new truths amid the uncertainty of your life. The daily devotions follow a timeline of events, beginning with the descent of Jesus and the disciples from the Transfiguration and ending with the passion of Holy Week and the glory of Easter.
On some days, you will be asked to read the same story as recorded by more than one Gospel writer, so that you can see the similarities and differences in their perspectives. Each entry will conclude with a question for your own personal reflection or perhaps group discussion. You may find that your Lenten journey will be greatly enhanced if you undertake it with other trusted companions along the way.
This devotional can also integrate with the weekly study, Embracing the Uncertain: A Lenten Study for Unsteady Times, which goes further in depth into stories not covered by this devotional. Between these two books, you will be able to read and study all the major post-Transfiguration stories from all four Gospels.
Ultimately, I hope that this Lenten season will be much more than a retracing of familiar territory. May you find new insights in these stories that will illuminate the current situations you face, and may God draw you further along a path of commitment that will lead to your full obedience and surrender to Jesus Christ.
It is my prayer that this Lenten season will be a blessed one for you, even amid your uncertainties.
Welcome to the journey.
DAY 1
Mark 9:2-13
YOU SHOULDN’T STAY AND SHOULDN’T GO NOW
The transfiguration of Jesus is the pivot point in the Gospel story. From here on, Jesus is no longer simply the miracle healer or the prolific teacher. He turns his face to the cross and marches into his mission to be the Messiah, who gives himself up to be arrested, tortured, and put to death.
These matters are all lost on the disciples, of course; you can tell by their reaction when Jesus is transformed on the mountain.
Jesus, this is great!
Peter said, in a manner of speaking. This is awesome! I have an idea, let’s stay here on this mountain forever! We’ll set up three tents, one each for you, Elijah, and Moses. Imagine it! A veritable amusement park of faithful heroes! People will stream in from everywhere to catch a glimpse, get an autograph, and take a selfie. Move over, Comic Con, this will be the place where everyone will want to be. Let’s stay here!
But that was not Jesus’ desire. He knew they weren’t going to stay forever.
The disciples might have assumed then that Jesus was thinking in the opposite direction. Well, great, then let’s go share this story with the whole world,
they may have thought. "The people in Capernaum aren’t going to believe this! The Nazareth Chronicle Times will eat this story up, and the Bethlehem Bugle is going to love it too. We’ll book an agent, go on a speaking tour, and maybe—if we’re lucky—we’ll get to go on Oprah! The whole world must know about this. Let’s go!"
But Jesus said no; he told them not to tell anybody until after he had risen from the dead (Mark 9:9).
So, let’s get this straight, Jesus. We can’t stay on the mountain and keep the story to ourselves. We can’t leave the mountain and tell other people. What do you want us to do? We can’t stay, we can’t leave. What, then?!
That is the question we ask on the cusp of Lent. The answer we find in this story is the reason the Transfiguration account is so important. Jesus’ transformation not only reminds us of our past and refocuses us on our future; it also invites us to incorporate this one critical ingredient into our daily spiritual lives: the practice of watching.
Jesus wanted his disciples to watch.
You’re not yet ready to share this story, Jesus would tell them, because you have not yet seen all there is to see. Not until you see the cross, and not until you see God’s divine love revealed through death and resurrection, will you be able to understand all the mysteries of the faith.
The reminder here for you and me as we enter these special, sacred forty days is to watch—to carefully attune our attention to the Spirit of God at work in our lives.
For most of us, that is precisely the missing ingredient, the one thing that is preventing our good life from being a deep life. It’s what prevents a successful life, a prosperous life, and a life of achievement from being a life of real purpose and eternal significance.
What many of us are missing is the disciplined practice of constant attention to spiritual things, watching and listening and praying for God’s best aims for us and for the world.
You see, a lot of times we are like the disciples. We may say, Lord, it is good for us to be here
and wish to stay in the past. We dwell on the glory days and never really let go of the things that have already happened. Or we may want to rush into the future, saying, I’ve got it, God. I know what I’m supposed to do with my life: my job, my family, my school, my career, my future. I know.
We rush on ahead, charging forward, eager and energized.
Neither of these is the way that leads to deep significance and eternal impact. Instead, we have to watch. That means praying. And a lot of asking. And a lot of listening. We must pray, asking God to reveal to us how we are to live and behave and talk and relate to each other, and we must be willing to listen patiently for God’s response.
And yes, it means going to a cross. It means going to a place where our old patterns of behavior and our old perspectives and prejudices—our old selves—can be put to death.
Over these next forty days, we will follow Jesus down from the mountain and walk the paths where he leads us. As we trace the post-Transfiguration stories of the Gospels, we’ll pay attention to the cadence of his steps and watch his footprints, so that we don’t scurry ahead of him or lag behind.
Along the way, listen up. Pay attention. Watch. Discover the work of the Holy Spirit within you, pointing out parts of your life that you would much rather ignore. Receive encouragement and affirmation from the most unsuspecting sources, which is one of God’s favorite ways to relate to us.
The entire time, ask God the same question the disciples asked of Jesus in the wake of his Transfiguration: What does it mean to rise from the dead?
God, help me to walk in your path and follow your lead. Teach me not to rush ahead of you and not to lag behind. Teach me to watch. Amen.
In what ways are you fixated on your past, either reliving past hurts or clinging to past achievements?
DAY 2
Matthew 17:14-21; Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-43
PRAYER IS SIMPLE BUT NOT EASY
I will admit that there are many statements Jesus made that I have yet to understand completely. One of them is in Mark 9:29. The presenting story is of the father who came to Jesus and the disciples so that his demon-possessed son could be healed. The deeper story is in why the disciples were not able to heal him.
After Jesus healed the boy, the disciples were left wondering why they could not cast the demon out themselves (Mark 9:28). They were doing everything right, or so they thought. They said the right words, performed the right motions, and followed the formulas to the letter. But apparently, they couldn’t do what Jesus could do.
The answer Jesus gives is that they weren’t praying: Throwing this kind of spirit out requires prayer
(Mark 9:29).
That is a good response, to a certain degree. Prayer, we have learned, involves our surrender to God, an invocation of the power of the Holy Spirit, and a declaration of belief that God can do what we cannot do. Because we are followers of Jesus, every action, thought, and aspect of our being ought to be centered and grounded in a spirit of prayer. It should not surprise us that Jesus answers the question in this way.
But it doesn’t make his answer any easier to understand. It seems like he’s saying prayer alone would guarantee success in spiritual endeavors. If the disciples had only prayed, they could have cast the demon out.
Back in 2000, acclaimed sports columnist Rick Reilly reflected on two separate accidents involving famous NFL football players Isaac Bruce and Derrick Thomas. Bruce’s car flipped over, but he was able to walk away unscathed. Thomas’s car accident, however, resulted in Thomas being paralyzed, and he ultimately passed away a few weeks later.
In the February 7, 2000, issue of Sports Illustrated, Reilly interviewed Isaac Bruce, before Derrick Thomas died:
Do you ever think about Thomas and say, ‘That could be me’?
I ask Bruce.
Oh, no, not at all,
Bruce says.
Why not?
I ask.
Because as I was flipping, I threw my hands off the wheel and called Jesus’ name.
"Does that