Monday, 16 February 2026

Life Where Death Has Spoken

A sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church

22 February 2026

 

Detail from The Raising of Lazarus by Eduard von Gebhardt, 1896

Isaiah 25.6-9; 26.19
John 11.1-44

We’re told that Jesus loved Lazarus,
            and that he loved his sisters, Mary and Martha,
            and that he loved the village of Bethany.

That love is evident in every moment of this story,
            a story that is both deeply human and profoundly divine.

It’s a story about grief, about delay, about doubt and hope,
            and ultimately about life breaking through where death seems final.

It’s a story that speaks to us particularly in Lent,
            a season when we confront mortality, name our losses,
            and face the places in our lives that feel like tombs.

Lent is also a season when we are reminded that God is the God of life,
            even when life seems absent and death appears to have the last word.

In this story, we meet a family in despair.
            Lazarus is dead, and his sisters are in mourning.

And Jesus does something unexpected: he delays.
            Verse 6 tells us that he stays two days longer where he was.
He doesn’t rush to the scene.
            For Martha, Mary, and the disciples,
            this delay must have seemed bewildering, even cruel.

Why does God wait when someone we love is suffering?
            And yet, the delay is not abandonment.
Jesus knows that this moment, painful as it is,
            will reveal the glory of God in a way that immediate action could not.

The disciples, too, are confused.
            Thomas, ever honest, says, “Let us also go, that we may die with him.”
They don’t yet understand that God’s life
            often works through the tension
            between human expectation and divine timing.

But even in their fear and misunderstanding,
            Jesus moves toward the place of death,
because that is precisely where God’s life is revealed most powerfully.

When Jesus arrives in Bethany,
            Lazarus has been in the tomb for four days.

Martha approaches him first,
            and she speaks with a remarkable mixture of grief and faith.

“Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died,” she says.

She names the despair, the longing, and the confusion
            we all feel when God seems absent.

But she also expresses trust:
            “But even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask.”
Her faith is not naive;
            it is honest, raw, and rooted in the midst of grief.

Grief is one of the most universal human experiences,
            yet it is also deeply personal.

Each of us encounters it in different ways,
            and no two experiences are the same.

Psychologists often speak of “stages of grief”
            —denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance—
but these are meant as descriptive tools,
            not prescriptive rules.

They are helpful for recognising the variety of responses we may have,
            but they are not checklists to measure whether we are grieving correctly.

In John 11, we can see reflections of all these stages,
            lived out with honesty and rawness by those who loved Lazarus.

Martha expresses bargaining and doubt
            when she says, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”

There is an attempt to reason with God,
            to imagine that perhaps things could have been different.
This is a familiar human impulse:
            we try to negotiate, to understand,
            to imagine a path that could have spared our loss.

Her words also carry an undercurrent of anger and frustration,
            not aimed at Jesus personally but at the reality of death itself.

She voices the question that so often rises in our own grief:
            why did this happen?
            Where was God when we needed them?

Mary’s grief, by contrast, expresses sorrow and despair
            in a more immediate and visceral way.

She falls at Jesus’ feet and weeps.
            The mourners around her also weep,
            and Jesus is moved by this communal expression of loss.

In her tears, we recognise depression and deep sorrow
            —those moments when grief feels heavy and overwhelming,
            when it presses down and refuses to be ignored.

Yet in this despair there is also honesty.
            There is no attempt to hide the pain,
            no pressure to appear composed.
Grief, in its fullness, demands to be acknowledged.

Even the disciples’ fear and hesitation reflect another aspect of grief
            —the paralysis that can come when confronted with death.

Thomas’ words, “Let us also go, that we may die with him,”
            capture both fear and resignation.

Sometimes grief leaves us unsure what action to take,
            unsure whether to face reality or retreat.

And yet, all these responses
            —bargaining, anger, despair, fear—
are present within this story
            and are met with compassion by Jesus.

He does not chastise, correct, or rush them.
            Instead, he enters into their pain, validates it, and then offers hope.

This passage reminds us that grief is not a linear process,
            and it is not something to be “fixed” quickly.

It can be messy and unpredictable.
            We may move back and forth between despair and hope,
                        between anger and acceptance.
            We may experience grief in ways that are quiet or loud,
                        communal or private.

And yet, even in the midst of all this human suffering,
            God’s life is present.

Jesus meets Martha’s bargaining with gentle challenge,
            Mary’s sorrow with tears,
            and the disciples’ fear with encouragement.

He demonstrates that grief is not incompatible with faith,
            but rather an invitation to encounter God honestly
            in the places where life seems absent.

John 11 shows that our responses to grief, however varied,
            are witnessed and embraced by God.

God does not require us to move through grief
            according to a timetable or a formula.

God meets us in the reality of our emotions
            and calls us forward toward life, step by step.

The story of Lazarus teaches us that even in the depths of mourning,
            when despair feels final, there is hope.

God’s voice calls, and new life is possible.

It is in the meeting of God’s life and human grief that resurrection begins
            —not as a denial of sorrow, but as its transformation,
            as the promise that death does not have the final word.

It is worth noticing that the figure of Lazarus in John’s Gospel
            may carry a deeper significance than we often acknowledge.

Many scholars, and perhaps the author of the Gospel himself,
            hint that Lazarus is the same as the “disciple whom Jesus loved,”
the one who features so prominently
            in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.

In this light, the story of Lazarus is not only about
            a single death and a single miracle.

It is about the intimate experience of resurrection
            extended to all who are close to Jesus,
            all who are drawn into the love and life of God.

Lazarus’ resurrection is not a distant or abstract event;
            it is the living proof of the power of God
            at work in the ordinary lives of those who follow Jesus.

When Jesus calls Lazarus from the tomb,
            it is not simply Lazarus’ body that comes back to life.
It is the entire reality of his being
            —the one who had been silenced, bound, and confined by death—
            restored to full engagement with the community around him.

In a very real sense, Lazarus’ story prefigures the way
            that all disciples can encounter resurrection here and now.

This is what we might call realised resurrection:
            the transformation of our lives in the present.

We often think of resurrection as something that will happen after we die,
            some distant “pie in the sky” reward.

But John’s Gospel consistently challenges this notion.

Jesus’ resurrection life is not deferred;
            it is something that begins in the here and now.

Just as Lazarus steps out of the tomb,
            bound no longer by fear, grief, or death,
so too we are called to step out of the places in our own lives
            where death seems to have the final word.

Our encounters with Jesus,
            the prayers we pray, the love we receive and give,
                        the compassion we enact,
            are all moments in which resurrection is made real
                        in our bodies and communities.

If we read Lazarus as the beloved disciple, the story gains another layer:
            it tells us that resurrection life is personal and relational.

God’s life flowing into human existence is not generic or abstract;
            it is directed toward particular lives,
            experienced in particular communities,
            and shared among those who witness and care.

Every act of love, every step of courage, every instance of compassion
            is a participation in the same life that called Lazarus from the tomb.

We are not simply observing resurrection;
            we are living it.

In this sense, Lazarus’ resurrection is a template for all of us.
            The stones that weigh us down—grief, fear, sin, isolation—
            do not have the last word.

We are called out of these tombs by the voice of Jesus.
            Our lives are restored, unbound, and reoriented
            toward life in God’s presence.

Resurrection begins here, not just in some distant future,
            but in the transformation of our relationships, our choices,
            and our capacity to love.

The story of Lazarus is a reminder that the life God gives
            is not a reward for the next world alone,
but a present reality that demands to be received,
            embodied, and lived today.

And so Jesus responds to Martha not with reproach,
            but with words that are both comforting and challenging:
            “Your brother will rise again.”

Martha, of course, hears this in the framework of her tradition,
            thinking of resurrection at the last day.

But Jesus doesn’t leave it there.
            He makes the defining claim of the passage:

“I am the resurrection and the life.
            Whoever believes in me, even though they die, will live,
            and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.
            Do you believe this?”

This is not a theoretical question.
            It is not about doctrinal correctness.
It is about trust in the one who is life itself,
            especially in the places where death seems to have the final word.

Martha responds with courage and tenderness:
            “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God.”

Her response models for us a faith
            that can confront death honestly
            and still trust in God’s life-giving power.

Then Mary approaches Jesus.
            She weeps at his feet, and the mourners with her weep also.

And Jesus is deeply moved;
            the text simply tells us, “Jesus wept.”

These two short words are packed with meaning.
            Jesus does not come as a distant saviour.
            He enters fully into human sorrow.
            He knows grief intimately and shares it with us.

When Jesus approaches the tomb,
            the stone is heavy and the boundary between life and death is clear.
            He instructs them to take away the stone.

Martha hesitates, practical and realistic:
            “Lord, by now there will be a stench; he has been dead four days.”
            Death is real, and it is not to be glossed over.

But Jesus prays, giving thanks to God for always hearing him,
            and then calls in a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!”

Life answers. Lazarus emerges from the tomb,
            still wrapped in grave clothes,
and Jesus commands the people to unbind him and let him go.

This is not simply a miracle story.
            It is a story about God’s life breaking into places of despair,
            about resurrection entering the midst of grief and doubt.

The call to Lazarus is a call to all of us.
            Each of us carries tombs within our lives
                        —places of death, literal and metaphorical.

Broken relationships, unfulfilled dreams,
            chronic illness, loneliness, fear, sin.

We long for God to act on our timetable,
            to remove the stones immediately,
and yet God’s life often comes through delay,
            through the tension of waiting,
            and through an invitation to trust.

“I am the resurrection and the life,” Jesus says.
            These words call us to a faith that persists in grief,
            a faith that hears God’s life in the midst of Lent,
            a faith that believes life is stronger than death.

We are invited to see God at work
            even in the places that seem most hopeless.

Just as Lazarus had to be unbound to live fully,
            so we too are called into life,
                        called to step out of despair, to enter community,
            and to bear witness to God’s life in the world.

This story also reminds us that Jesus’ delay was not failure;
            it was the moment in which God’s glory was revealed most clearly.

Sometimes our grief cannot be rushed,
            sometimes our questions cannot be answered immediately.

And yet, God’s life will not be stopped.
            It calls us out.
            It breaks through the stones we build.
            It brings hope into despair.

We see this in Martha and Mary, in the mourners,
            in the call to Lazarus, and in Jesus’ tears.

This story is about resurrection not only for Lazarus,
            but for all who trust.

Resurrection for all who sit in grief,
            for all who long for life to break into the places that seem final.

This Lent, we are invited to stand before the stones in our lives,
            to name them, and to let God’s voice call our names.

We are reminded of the Old Testament promise:
            “Your dead shall live; their bodies shall rise.
            You who dwell in the dust, awake and sing for joy!” (Isaiah 26:19)

God calls us out of despair, into new life.

We may be bound by fear, by grief, by the realities of this world,
            but God’s life breaks through.

God calls us to witness, to hope, and to live.

As we hear Jesus’ words today,
            we are invited to answer with Martha’s courage:
            “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God.”

We are invited to bring our grief and doubts to him,
            to be unbound, and to step into resurrection life.

And we are invited to live as bearers of that life in the world.
            The God who raises the dead calls us to love,
                        to care, to serve,
            and to be part of God’s ongoing work of resurrection.

So this Lent, hear the call.
            Hear your name.

Step out of the tomb. And live.

Amen.


Let us pray

Loving God,
            you who wept at the tomb of your friend,
            you who stand with us in the place of loss,
we come to you now carrying the griefs
            that live in our bodies and our memories.

Some of us carry fresh sorrow,
            raw and close to the surface.
Some of us carry older griefs,
            quiet, settled, but still shaping who we are.
Some of us grieve people we have loved and lost.
            Some of us grieve relationships that have fractured.
Some of us grieve hopes that have not come to fruition,
            paths not taken,
            health diminished,
            communities changed.

You know each of these losses.
Nothing is hidden from your compassionate gaze.

In the light of Jesus,
            who wept with Mary and Martha,
            we place our grief before you.
Not to rush it.
Not to deny it.
Not to tidy it away.
            But to let it be held in love.

Where there is anger,
            receive it.
Where there is confusion,
            meet us in it.
Where there is numbness,
            sit patiently beside us.
Where there are tears,
            honour them.

God of resurrection life,
            shine your gentle light into the tombs we carry.
Not with harsh brightness that blinds,
            but with the steady warmth of your presence.
Speak our names as you spoke the name of Lazarus.
Call us, in your time,
            towards life.

Give us courage to remove the stones that seal us in.
Give us companions who will help unbind us.
Give us trust that your love is deeper than death,
            stronger than despair,
            and wider than our fear.

We do not ask for quick fixes or easy answers.
We ask for your presence.
We ask for hope that is honest.
We ask for the grace to live, even with grief,
            and to discover that resurrection is already at work among us.

Hold our dead in your eternal love.
Hold our wounded hearts in your tender care.
And hold this community together,
            that we may bear one another’s burdens
            and so reflect the life of Christ in this world.

We entrust all that we are,
            and all that we mourn,
            into your faithful hands.

Amen.

 

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Unless You See Signs and Wonders

A Sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
Racial Justice Sunday, 8 February 2026

John 4.46–54
2 Kings 5.1–19a

There is something almost deceptively understated about our gospel story for today,
            as we continue our journey through John’s gospel.

John doesn’t present it as a public confrontation or a dramatic display.
            No crowds gather. No controversy erupts.
            There are no raised voices, no visible opponents.

Instead, the story unfolds quietly, almost privately,
            as though we have been allowed to overhear an encounter
            rather than witness a performance.

Jesus has returned to Cana of Galilee,
            the place where water once became wine.

And it’s hard not to hear the echo of that earlier sign.
            That first miracle had been about abundance,
                        about joy arriving unnoticed at the edge of a celebration,
                        about quiet transformation rather than spectacle.

Now Jesus is back in the same place, but the mood is different.
            This time the air is heavy with fear.

And a royal official comes to Jesus because his son is dying.

John gives us just enough information to complicate our response.
            This is not a desperate peasant with nowhere else to turn.

This man is part of Herod’s administration, close to power,
            embedded in a compromised system of rule
            that maintained order through violence and inequality.
He represents privilege, authority, and proximity to empire.

And yet none of that matters now.

Because power cannot protect a child from death.
            Status cannot bargain with mortality.
            And influence cannot command life to stay.

When a son is at the point of death, every hierarchy collapses.
            All the leverage that usually works for this man has failed him.
So he does the only thing left to him.
            He travels.

The journey from Capernaum to Cana is around twenty miles,
            uphill most of the way.
This is not a casual visit.
            It’s a journey shaped by urgency, anxiety, and hope.

He comes because he has heard something.
            Perhaps a story circulating beyond official channels.
            Maybe a rumour that this Galilean teacher
                        can do what no court physician can manage.

And he begs Jesus to come down with him. To be present.
            To do what healers are supposed to do.
            To stand at the bedside. To intervene directly.

But Jesus doesn’t comply.
            Instead he offers theology rather than healing:

“Unless you see signs and wonders, you will not believe.”
            At first hearing, these words sound abrupt, even unkind.

But perhaps Jesus isn’t dismissing the man
            so much as naming something
            that runs deeper than this one encounter.

Jesus exposes an instinct that shapes human life again and again.
            We want proof before we trust.
            We want certainty before we commit.
            We want to see before we will believe.

The official does not argue theology.
            He does not debate signs.
He simply presses his need.
            “Sir, come down before my child dies.”

And then Jesus does something unexpected.
            He refuses to go.

He withholds the thing the man thinks he needs most.
            There is no journey, no healing touch.
            No visible intervention.

Instead, Jesus offers only a word.
            “Go,” He says, “Your son will live.”

This is the moment everything hinges on.
            John tells us, almost quietly,
            that the man believed the word Jesus spoke
            and started on his way.

He leaves Cana with nothing tangible in his hands.
            No proof. No confirmation.
            Just a promise spoken by someone he barely knows.

The reassurance comes later.
            And it comes through his servants, who meet him on the road.
            Through the careful matching of times and hours.
            Through the slow realisation that the healing happened
                        at the exact moment Jesus spoke.

In this story, belief precedes evidence.
            Trust comes before explanation.

That matters, because John is never interested in miracles for their own sake.
            This isn’t about supernatural power on display.

Rather, this is about what belief looks like when certainty is withheld.
            It’s about what kind of faith reshapes a life.

John even tells us that the whole household comes to believe.
            And that detail is easy to skim past, but it’s crucial.
Households were not just private units of affection.
            They were economic units, social units,
            places where patterns of life were formed and reinforced.
Faith here is not a private conviction.
            It is a reordering of daily life.

 

And then, at this point in the story, John quietly widens the lens.

Having told us that the whole household came to believe,
            he then moves on, as though that were self-explanatory.

But it isn’t. Not really.

In the ancient world, a household was not just a family gathered around a table.
            It was a web of relationships.
Kin and servants. Dependants and labourers.
            People with very different degrees of power,
            bound together under one roof and one authority.

When John says that the household believes,
            he’s not describing a moment of collective piety.
            He is describing a change in the shape of everyday life.

The royal official’s authority doesn’t disappear.
            But it is now exercised differently.
His power is no longer the final word in the house.
            It’s been relativised by a promise he didn’t control
            and a healing he didn’t manage.

Belief, in this sense, is not simply
            about adding a religious layer to an existing structure.
Rather, it’s about allowing the structure itself to be questioned.

And this matters for us,
            because we are also part of households.

Not just domestic ones, but institutional ones.
            Congregations, workplaces, universities, neighbourhoods.
Each with their own hierarchies, habits, and unspoken rules
            about who is listened to and who is overlooked.

If belief reshapes households,
            then it asks uncomfortable questions of us.

How is authority exercised among us.
            Whose experience carries weight.
            Who is expected to adapt, and who is assumed to be the norm.

This is where the gospel quietly becomes political.
            Not in slogans or party allegiance,
            but in the patient reordering of relationships.
In the slow work of learning to live differently together.

The healing of one child becomes the beginning of a new social reality.
            Not because everything is suddenly perfect,
            but because something decisive has shifted.

A word has been trusted.
            A journey has been taken.
            And life has entered the house in a new way.

This becomes even clearer when we place this story
            alongside our Old Testament reading from 2 Kings,
            the story of Naaman the Syrian.

Another powerful man. Another military leader.
            Another figure accustomed to being obeyed.

And again, another man whose healing
            depends on voices he is tempted to ignore.

Naaman’s story turns on the word of an enslaved girl,
            taken from her homeland by violence.

It turns on servants who dare to speak truth to power.
            It turns on a prophet who refuses to come out and perform.

Naaman expects drama.
            He expects recognition.
            He expects healing to arrive in a form proportionate to his status.

Instead, he receives a message carried by others,
            a simple instruction that feels almost insulting in its ordinariness.

And like the royal official encountering Jesus,
            Naaman must decide whether he will trust a word that unsettles his pride.

In both stories, healing does not reinforce hierarchy.
            It disrupts it.

It’s worth also noticing that in both these stories,
            healing does not arrive without cost.

We often imagine healing as pure gain.
            As something added.
            As an uncomplicated good.

But for both Naaman and the royal official,
            healing comes alongside a kind of loss.

Naaman is healed of his disease,
            but he is also stripped of his illusions.

He loses the fantasy that power can command grace.
            He loses the assurance that his status will be honoured.

He must submit to a process that feels humiliating
            before it becomes life-giving.

The royal official, too, gains his son’s life,
            but he loses something else along the way.
He loses control.
            He loses the ability to manage the outcome.
He must entrust the most precious thing in his life
            to a word spoken by someone outside his world of influence.

In both cases, healing destabilises as much as it restores.

And that is important,
            because it names something we often prefer not to acknowledge.

Justice, like healing, can feel like loss
            to those who have benefitted from the way things are.

When hierarchies are disrupted,
            those who have lived comfortably within them
            may experience that change as disorientation.
                        As uncertainty.
                        As the unsettling sense that familiar patterns no longer hold.

But this does not mean the healing is wrong.
            It means it is real.

Racial justice work often falters at precisely this point.
            Not because people disagree with equality in principle,
            but because the emotional cost of change is underestimated.

It can feel like ground shifting under our feet.
            Like authority being questioned.
            Like a loss of innocence about how our institutions function.

The gospel does not deny that discomfort.
            It names it.
But it refuses to make comfort the measure of faithfulness.

Neither Naaman nor the royal official
            is asked to feel good about the process.
They are asked to trust it.

And perhaps that is a word some of us need to hear.

That the unease we feel
            when long-standing assumptions are challenged
            is not necessarily a sign that something has gone wrong.

It may be evidence that something truthful is taking place.

Healing that leaves everything exactly as it was is not healing.
            It is maintenance.

The stories we are given today invite us into something braver.
            Into a form of faith that allows power to be unsettled,
                        pride to be exposed,
                        and control to be relinquished,
            so that life can break in where it was previously constrained.

God’s life-giving power flows not through status or spectacle,
            but through trust, humility,
            and attentiveness to marginal voices.

And this is where Racial Justice Sunday
            presses in with particular force.

Because racism is not sustained only by overt hostility.
            It is sustained by habits of disbelief.
By systems that decide in advance
            whose testimony is credible
            and whose requires verification.
By assumptions about who needs evidence
            and who is believed by default.

These stories ask an uncomfortable question.
            Whose word do we trust?

There is a subtle temptation here,
            especially in churches like ours.

We value thoughtfulness. We care about nuance.
            We want to get things right.
            We read, we reflect, we discuss.

And yet the instinct Jesus names can still surface among us.

We are reluctant to act unless there is data.
            Unless there is consensus.
            Unless there is reassurance that we will not make mistakes.

And all of those things have their place.
            But they can also become ways of delaying trust,
            of postponing response,
of asking those who experience racial injustice
            to keep telling their stories until we feel sufficiently convinced.

The royal official is not offered that option.
            Jesus does not say, “Stay here while I prove it to you.”
Jesus says, “Go.”

And going involves risk.
            It means acting as though the word is true
            before it has been confirmed by experience.

It asks for something deeper than intellectual agreement.
            It asks for alignment.

In John’s story, belief reshapes a household.
            In our context, belief reshapes communities.

It asks how our shared life might be reorganised
            by the testimonies we hear.

It asks what practices might need to change.
            What voices might need to be centred.
            What comforts might need to be surrendered.

There is another detail that deepens this challenge.
            Jesus heals at a distance.

He doesn’t go to Capernaum.
            He doesn’t see the child.
The healing crosses absence and space.

Which tells us something vital.
            God’s work is not limited by proximity or familiarity.
We do not have to share someone’s experience
            in order to trust their word.

The royal official never witnesses the healing.
            He hears about it later.

John calls this healing a sign.
            Not an ending, but a pointer.

A sign gestures beyond itself,
            towards a world reordered by trust,
            by boundary-crossing grace,
            by life that refuses to be contained by inherited power structures.

On Racial Justice Sunday,
            we are not claiming the work is complete.

We are acknowledging that the sign still points ahead.
            Towards communities where marginalised voices are trusted.
Towards belief that takes the form of costly action.
            Towards life, full and abundant,
            breaking through where it was least expected.

The royal official walks home carrying only a promise.
            Perhaps that is the invitation offered to us as well.

To walk the road of justice
            not because everything is settled,
            but because we have trusted the word that life is possible,
            and have chosen to begin the journey.

Amen.

Let us pray:

God of life,
            we come before you carrying many words,
some we have spoken aloud,
            and others that have lodged quietly within us.

We thank you for the stories we have heard through our lives,
            for journeys taken in fear and hope,
for promises trusted before they were proven,
            for healing that crossed distance and expectation.

We confess that we often want reassurance
            before we are willing to trust,
clarity before we are willing to act,
            and certainty before we are willing to change.

We confess that we are shaped by habits we did not choose,
            by systems that advantage some and silence others,
by assumptions about whose voices carry weight
            and whose stories need extra proof.

Forgive us when we demand signs and wonders
            before we will listen well.
Forgive us when discomfort becomes an excuse for delay.
Forgive us when we cling to control
            rather than entrusting ourselves to your word of life.

Teach us what it means to believe
            not only with our thoughts,
but with our steps,
            our shared life,
and the way we order our relationships.

Give us courage to walk the road
            before everything is resolved.
Give us humility to hear testimony
            that unsettles our assumptions.
Give us patience to stay open
            when healing feels costly.

We pray for households, communities, and institutions,
            that they may be reshaped by justice,
softened by truth,
            and opened to voices long ignored.

Where there is fear, speak life.
            Where there is silence, release truth.
            Where there is weariness, renew hope.

And as we prepare to leave this place,
            send us out carrying not certainty,
            but trust.
Not control,
            but commitment.

So that life, full and abundant,
            may take root among us,
and your healing work
            may continue on the road ahead.

Amen.