By: Rev. Dr. Cheryl A. Lindsay, Minister for Worship and Theology, UCC National
Isaiah 61 speaks to a people who live in the tension of promised possibility and the challenges of making it a reality. The end of suffering is imminent yet the hard work of rebuilding what has been destroyed could lead to debilitating discouragement. Yet, Isaiah provides a vision of compassion leading to restoration.
Compassion means “to suffer with,” and that definition can, at times, encourage us to be satisfied with feeling bad about our neighbor’s circumstances. Instead, the prophet insists that the Spirit of God does not limit our companionship to an emotional response. Spirit calls us to act with a response that alleviates suffering and transforms it into joy. When we cultivate compassion in our approach to harm reduction, we dare to believe transformation is possible and to claim redemption and liberation as our collective hope.
Later, Jesus quotes this passage in the temple while proclaiming themself to be the fulfillment of the prophetic promise. When we engage in harm reduction with compassion instead of condemnation, trust instead of suspicion, and hope instead of fatalism, we fulfill the prophetic vision, respond to the Spirit’s call, and give glory to the God who comes to us demonstrating the way to come to one another.
By Cole Arthur Riley, Black Liturgies
God of Shalom,
here we are dangling one another from the precipice without care or concern for our collective fate.
We have lost sight of our own faces, risking our humanity in favor of supremacy.
Guide us away from the edge of our undoing.
Show us what it means to be people of deep and abiding reverence
for the beauty and connectedness of everything everywhere…
May any honor we have withheld from one another be doubled in the presence of reparation and forgiveness.
We won’t get free alone. Keep us human. Amen.
Music: “Deep Down Inside of Me” composer unknown
Offered by: Denise Griebler
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Learn more from the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health, Tlaleng Mofokeng, about how harm reduction strategies encourage us to lean into compassion and affirm the inherent dignity and human rights of all people
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