Meditate | What To Do When We're Down
Friday, August 15, 2014
New Church Perspective in Chelsea Rose Odhner, Mcolumn

Meditate is a monthly column in which insights gained from meditating on the Word are shared. We welcome your insights, too, in the form of comments or even your own article. Contact us if you'd like to write a submission for this column. -Editor

I read some of the book of Joel recently and had the opportunity to meditate on what I read. What stuck with me is a short list of things to do when I find myself in a spiritual rut, a time when it feels like “joy has withered away” (1:12). It may not only feel like I have no joy, I may feel utterly devastated, with no will for what my life requires of me and a severe lack of supportive thoughts running through my mind—“the new wine is dried up, the oil fails” (1:10). In this kind of a barren state, I’m probably not feeling like I have much of a supply of creative ways of making something of my situation, in fact, it may feel like I was handling things well for awhile but now I’ve fallen out of touch with what had been motivating me—“the harvest of the field has perished” (1:11). The language and imagery in Joel gets much worse, describing a time when I go from feeling not just like things, ahem, suck, but that my life is being all-out attacked! Okay, so at this point, in Joel, the Lord chimes in and says what to do: “Turn to Me” and “rend your heart, and not your garments” (2:12-13). Next, Joel lists a few of the Lord’s core qualities, that He is “gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness” (2:13) before giving the following commands:


”Blow the trumpet in Zion,
Consecrate a fast,
Call a sacred assembly;
Gather the people,
Sanctify the congregation,
Assemble the elders,
Gather the children and nursing babies;
Let the bridegroom go out from his chamber,
And the bride from her dressing room.
Let the priests, who minister to the Lord, weep” (2:15-17).

In meditation, I let myself first settle into a sense of the Lord’s mercy, graciousness, and kindness, and then it struck me that each of the items in the list above translates fairly effortlessly into a piece of practical advice for my life when things feel as horrible as they are described in the first chapter of Joel. This is simply my personal interpretation; these renderings are in no way comprehensive meanings. They are simply what came to me when I contemplated this list with regard to my own life; perhaps the ideas will bear their own unique fruit with regard to yours:

So what happens when I choose to follow these commands? The rest of chapter 2 in Joel makes it pretty clear:


"The Lord will answer and say to His people,
'Behold, I will send you grain and new wine and oil,
And you will be satisfied by them'...
Be glad then, you children of Zion,
And rejoice in the Lord your God;
For He has given you the former rain faithfully,
And He will cause the rain to come down for you—
The former rain,
And the latter rain in the first month.
The threshing floors shall be full of wheat,
And the vats shall overflow with new wine and oil...
'Then you shall know that I am in the midst of Israel:
I am the Lord your God
And there is no other'" (2:19,23-24,27).

Chelsea Rose Odhner

Chelsea lives with her husband and three children in Willow Grove, PA. She enjoys making music, doing yoga, talking and writing about spiritual topics, and living life overall.

Article originally appeared on New Church Perspective (http://www.newchurchperspective.com/).
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