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							As I write this, a spider spins her 
							web. Around and around she goes, methodically, 
							meticulously. She weaves her way the way we walk a labyrinth, the 
							way we pray. The cicadas have silenced. The air 
							conditioners still rumble. Crickets. Tree frogs. And 
							a low grumble from a Tecumseh dog.
 
 In the distance, a train whistle blows. Above me 
							bats flap their wings, eating the very bugs I want 
							to escape. Between the trees, a sliver of the moon 
							plays peek-a-boo. The stars are doing their thing, 
							too.
 
 Did you know you can figure out the temperature by 
							the frequency of cricket chirps?
 
 It is warm out. A little sticky. Another train 
							passes through town. I wonder out loud to Chloe 
							where the passengers are going. Or what the 
							conductor is hauling.
 
 I wonder where we are going.
 
 It has been a hard week for our country. And it is 
							only Tuesday. The stillness of the night is 
							disrupted by a car speeding down Pulaski Street. 
							Crickets.
 
 My prayer, amidst the finger-pointing and 
							politicking, is that of the psalmist:
 
 How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever?
 How long will you hide your face from me?
 2 How long must I bear pain[a] in my soul,
 and have sorrow in my heart all day long?
 How long shall my enemy be exalted over me?
 
 Has God forgotten us? Has the One who created all 
							things good turned Her back on us? Has God given up 
							on us?
 
 
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							I keep praying:
 3 Consider and answer me, O Lord my God!
 Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep the sleep of 
							death,
 4 and my enemy will say, “I have prevailed”;
 my foes will rejoice because I am shaken.
 
 Yes, God, consider our prayers, and answer us! 
							Crickets.
 
 Yes, God, give light to our eyes, or we will sleep 
							the sleep of death. Tree frogs.
 
 Yes, God, we are our enemies. Silence.
 
 I keep praying:
 5 But I trusted in your steadfast love;
 my heart shall rejoice in your salvation.
 6 I will sing to the Lord,
 because he has dealt bountifully with me.
 
 Right, God. Everywhere in the Bible poets and 
							prophets, shepherds and bakers, those who climb 
							sycamore trees and those who live by the sword, 
							always…Always…ALWAYS…receive the promise of hope, 
							the promise of a new creation, the promise of your 
							steadfast love in this moment.
 
 The spider is gone now. She has reclused to her 
							chamber. Tomorrow her web will be gone, destroyed by 
							a rambunctious puppy or the dew from the rising sun. 
							Still, she will return with her courage to begin 
							again. Moving from the outside in, and then from the 
							inside out. Her work, like ours, is always beginning 
							in a moment like this one.
 
 Adam Quine, First 
							Presbyterian Church in Lincoln
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