Tuesday 28 November 2023

Keep on seeing


 Matthew 25:42-45

for I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not give me clothing, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’ Then they also will answer, ‘Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?’ Then he will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.’


We saw you…

in the eyes of the homeless guy who sits near the ATM

as we made our transaction

and he pleaded for enough spare change

to pay for a night in the hostel


We saw you…

In those queued outside the cafe

that allows folk to pay it forward

a queue that silently waits

for the dregs we leave behind


We saw you…

in the harried mum

who is desperately trying to keep her child from kicking off

on the over-crowded train that is proving too much

for her child’s neuro-diverse world

knowing her parenting is being judged and found wanting


We saw you…

Even as we frowned and tutted

at the one who stumbled on approaching the communion rail

not noticing how you greeted them with outstretched arms

as you would any long lost friends

and in the woman with learning difficulties

who can barely read the liturgy

but who knows grace when she sees it

in the bread and the wine


We saw you, Lord…

And you see us

You call us today

not to fix the brokenness of the world

but to keep on seeing you

hunkered amidst the pain and the hurt

choking in the dust and the rubble

and not to look away

to offer a hand

or a cup of cool water 

for all of “the least of these.”


Liz Crumlish November 2023



4 comments:

  1. A bit too much like ‘The Waltons’ for me to be honest Liz like a John boy/Olivia litany demonstrating so how perceptive we are ....do we see Jesus? Do we really? Or...do we see that it is a society we live in that ought, at its state of progression, have moved on from belittling the poor, the downtrodden, the rejected and the frustrated? And...where does the fact that this is all still prevalent leave us? I think we need also to see Jesus in the smug, the rich, the entitled, the uncaring, the overburdened and the self-proclaimed atheist for we are ALL , by design wether we like it / approve of it/ proclaim it or not - part of God by our design engrafted into ‘God’ it is almost biologically wired into us.

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    1. Thanks, Cathy. Not clear about your Walton's analogy. What I am clear about is that there is a piece of the divine in all of us. This reflection shares just some of the places I've noticed it recently.
      In all the brokenness of the world today, knowing that God is present and seeing God at work is vital.

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  2. Thanks Liz ...the Waltons analogy is this ‘goodie two-shoes’ thing that is sometimes prevalent in church, basically virtue signalling ....the ‘doing to others needy of ‘help’ with the Waltons swiffering in.’ . Alan Watts is interesting on this sifting. God is everywhere in everything as part of us and we part of HIM/HER. As you have written...it is all in the gestalt, the perception, our historical relativism while GOD is ahistorical and also culturally appropriated by church and its outworking in our daily interaction of salt/light bringing and challenging the smug, rich , entitled to also be all they can be by their design. Maybe that will help to explain...maybe not?

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Cathy, that is helpful - I appreciate your response.

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