Two days from now, I'll get that opportunity again as I lead a group of women from Brentwood Presbyterian church at their annual women's ministries retreat - right here in Santa Barbara at la Casa de Maria. We're looking at the book of Esther - which is the same material I used at the very first retreat I ever led by myself almost 10 years ago. My good friend Karen Jobes has written an incomparable commentary on this marvelous book and I have enjoyed re-reading it the last few weeks. (In case you're wondering...this is the only commentary I have ever read from cover to cover!) Over the course of this weekend, we'll be talking about and reflecting on:
The Hidden Presence of God in Our Story
“...for such a time as this...”
Session One – Friday Evening, January 26, 2007
Making Things CLEAR...
...the need for consent and clarity.
Session Two – Saturday Morning, January 27, 2007
Keeping Things CONGRUENT...
Session Three – Saturday Afternoon, January 27, 2007
Living with COURAGE...
...the need for conviction and commitment.
Session Four – Sunday Morning, January 28, 2007
Responding with CELEBRATION...
...moving through confession to cooperation.
Throughout the course of these sessions, the women will spend some time in individual reflection, some time in small group discussion and some time in large group learning. It is challenging and fun to lay out a series like this, and I am grateful for the opportunity. And I am especially enjoying wrestling through this topic at this particular juncture in my own life and ministry. I gave the leadership team at Brentwood a list of about six topics and this is the one they chose. After listening to a bit of their corporate story of the last several years, I can readily see that it is also a great topic for them to wrestle with for a while.
It's a good and relevant topic precisely because God so often seems hidden to us. There aren't too many miracles to be had, these days. Indeed, I believe that God chooses to work through the ordinary, non-remarkable circumstances of daily life far more often than God chooses to intervene with a miraculous event - and I believe that's true in any day. There are far more stories like Esther's in this life than there are stories like the Exodus. Perhaps a better way to phrase it is that there is more often a "miraculous quality to the ordinary" (a Jobes' phrase) than there is an ordinary quality to the miraculous! The only problem with this truth is, of course, that we so often fail to have 'eyes to see' and 'ears to hear' the wondrous ways in which our God is at work in, around and through the ordinary stuff of life. I am praying that together, the women from Brentwood Pres and I will have our eyes and ears opened in new ways this weekend.