This week we’ll find ourselves with one another quite a bit in corporate worship. To dwell together in community as we hear the story of Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection is important as we companion one another in faith.
But in addition to your time in corporate worship, I also invite you to create a practice of your own devotion and prayer this week. Perhaps you already have a daily habit that needs some reinvigoration. Or, if you don’t have a practice that jives with you, consider downloading the Hallow app or the Lectio 365 app for daily readings and prayers. Or, pick up a copy of Christ in Our Home in our narthex, or follow along with the daily lectionary readings.
However you choose to engage with this year’s Holy Week, I pray that you may experience God’s grace anew as the Spirit walks with you as your ever-present companion. Consider praying the following prayer with me this Holy Week as we prepare for the news of Christ’s resurrection this Easter:
Dear Lord, your disciple Peter wanted to know who would betray you. You pointed to Judas but a little later also to him. Judas betrayed, Peter denied you. Judas hanged himself, Peter became the apostle whom you made the first among equals. Lord, give me faith, faith in your endless mercy, your boundless forgiveness, your unfathomable goodness. Let me not be tempted to think that my sins are too great to be forgiven, too abominable to be touched by your mercy. Let me never run away from you but return to you again and again, asking you to be my Lord, my Shepherd, my Stronghold, and my Refuge. Take me under your wing, O Lord, and let me know that you do not reject me as long as I keep asking you to forgive me. Perhaps my doubt in your forgiveness is a greater sin than the sins I consider too great to be forgiven. Perhaps I make myself too important, too great when I think that I cannot be embraced by you anymore. Lord, look at me, accept my prayer as you accepted Peter’s prayer, and let me not run away from you in the night as Judas did.
Bless me, Lord, in this Holy Week, and give me the grace to know your loving presence more intimately. Amen.
-Henri J. Nouwen, from A Prayer for Holy Week