Monday's Meditation: His Fresh Mercy
Monday, March 14, 2011 at 10:40AM
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases;
his mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
~ Lamentations 3: 22-23
Is there anything quite like the aroma of baking bread? Without overpowering the house it permeates the air with an invitation to come and eat. If you were lucky enough to grow up in a home that celebrates each morning with fresh biscuits, you woke up to the scent of goodness in the morning.
Perhaps because I’ve never met a carbohydrate I didn’t like, or perhaps because God served fresh biscuits to the people of Israel in the desert wilderness every morning for forty years, I’ve come to expect the smell of his goodness every morning. I’ve begun to train myself to discover his lovingkindness day by day.
Hidden midway through suffering poems of lament is the revelation of God’s constant and faithful provision for each one of us. In part, the lesson of these verses calls us to look for his mercies daily, to sniff them out, because regardless of our circumstances he is present and overflowing with mercy. If the weeping poet of Lamentations became convinced of God’s daily mercies can we not discover the same?
We were made to eat fresh bread. We do not have to live off of aging mercy. Who would be satisfied to breakfast upon biscuits three days old, or those frozen and served a month later? No. The Heavenly Father is a better parent than that. Amazingly, the poet of Lamentations suggested that even when life is at its most difficult stages, we can be assured of God’s constant and daily care.
What if we determined to discover the reality of this revelation? What if each day were a hunt to discover the mercies which he prepared this morning? What if Monday’s Meditation is not simply a good idea, but the grace to restore our senses, heal our eyes and enable us to see his goodness? What if we engaged in the discipline of searching out and identifying his fresh mercy?
This week’s meditation is could be more than a meditation. If we choose, it can move us to daily action, to search for--and discover--the gifts he has placed in our path. Where will you discover the table he has set today?
Reader Comments (4)
"We were made to eat fresh bread. We do not have to live off of aging mercy." ~ Brilliant!
Thanks so much, Kathleen.
"Hidden midway through suffering poems of lament is the revelation of God’s constant and faithful provision for each one of us."
Did you look into my head and heart this morning before writing this post? I ask that in jest, but of course God *has* looked into our hearts, which is why the Bible is full of fresh bread in the midst of lament. Beautiful.
"We were made to eat fresh bread. We do not have to live off of aging mercy." ~ Brilliant!