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							 During a season that is often associated with 
							the desert wilderness, perhaps the last thing we’d 
							expect to find are the stones we are tempted to turn 
							into bread covered with snow. But, here we are, one 
							full week into the journey of discovery. By now the 
							Ashes have been washed away and our practices are 
							becoming more of a routine…or we are at the point 
							where the temptation to return to former habits is 
							stronger than the hope we have in our hearts.
 Perhaps just one week into it we have already given 
							up what we have taken on, or we have taken on again 
							what we committed to giving up. On the 8th day of 
							Lent we may feel as if these 40 days of wandering 
							are going to last 40 years. In fact, rather than 
							seeing past our brokenness we might become too 
							familiar with it again.
 
 And that may leave you, as it has me before, feeling 
							lonely and isolated. And in the wilderness, that is 
							one feeling we don’t want to be left alone with.
 
 Today’s daily lectionary reading is from Mark 
							1.29-40
							
							[click here to read the text]. Having just 
							called his disciples, Jesus now finds himself on the 
							streets and in the homes of those he shares life 
							with. I began to notice how the healings take place 
							in Mark’s first chapter. Rather than Jesus going up 
							to people and asking, “Do you want to be healed?” 
							the people come to him:
 
 “Now Simon’s mother-in-law was in bed with a fever, 
							and they told him about her at once. He came and 
							took her by the hand and lifted her up. Then the 
							fever left her, and she began to serve them.” (Mark 
							1.31)
 
 A few lines later we read…
 
 “A leper came to him begging him, and kneeling he 
							said to him, ‘If you choose, you can make me clean.” 
							Moved with pity, Jesus stretched out his hand and 
							touched him, and said to him, “I do choose. Be made 
							clean.” Immediately the leprosy left him, and he was 
							made clean.” (Mark 1.40,41)
 
 Often the church collectively focuses so much on 
							extending itself as a helping hand, that we 
							sometimes forget to reach out and ask for help when 
							we find ourselves in need. While this is more of a 
							struggle for some of us than others, if there is 
							anything the stories of our scripture teach us, it 
							is that God is always mindful of us, and wants to 
							bring healing to God’s people.
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			Sometimes, this simply means we need to ask other people for help.
 Today I was reminded of this as I was walking the neighborhood 
			surrounding First Presbyterian Church. As the snow fell softly, I 
			heard in the distance the bells chiming. While I do not remember the 
			hymn it played, I do remember the thought that came to mind: the 
			church is a respite for us during the season of wilderness 
			discovery. On Sunday mornings we come to gather corporately to pray 
			and to sing, to listen and to offer our lives back to God in 
			worship. The bells of the church reminded me that God is good, that 
			we belong entirely to God, and that our lives are rooted in God’s 
			love.
 
 The bells do not merely say, “Be good, come to church.” They do not 
			merely say, “Keep the commandments,” but rather, they say, “come 
			with us, the way to Love is not hard, God’s has made it easy. You 
			are not alone in this season, this city, or in this life.”
 
 Week one into the wilderness and we are covered in snow, but in our 
			hearts we know, we aren’t alone.
 
 
 See you Sunday at 301 Pekin Street!
 
 [Adam Quine, pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Lincoln]
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