Sunday, September 25, 2016

Godspeak

 by Bud Cassiday

The writers’ group at First Central Congregational UCC has been contributing to the liturgy—components of the Sunday-morning service such as the invocation and call to worship. Bud presented the following reading on September 4, 2016. The theme for the service was “Words.”

God speaks in many languages. The Word of God can be heard when children laugh. The word of God can be heard in whispering leaves, rushing water, and distant thunder. A baby’s cry might be God speaking. A coyote’s howl in the night might be God speaking. A cold winter wind might be God speaking. The music 0f a busker on the corner playing a saxophone for coins might be God speaking. The raucous noise of an urban Saturday night might be God speaking. A hot summer breeze might be God speaking. Rattling dishes in the cupboard from an earthquake in Oklahoma oil country might be God speaking. The drip, drip, drip of melting glaciers might be God speaking. We should listen to gentle rain, and squawking geese, and honking horns of traffic jams. We should listen to wind and rain and distant thunder and music and poetry and the creative spirits we hear all around us. We should listen to sunny days and dark nights, spring mornings and winter evenings. For if we do not, we may miss those words of God.

Bud Cassiday is an artist, educator, and musician who lives in Omaha, Nebraska. View his blog or visit his website to see his paintings, read his essays, and learn about his band, "Happy Together."







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