On the journey home yesterday from where we had been to where we were going, exits were made several times from the hurried way to the softer and gentler places where real people lived. Two homes became a haven filled with blessing. First, there was a surprise visit with two friends known as college classmates back in the '60. The welcome was so warm it felt like the journey had already ended at home. It was clear that we were in sacred space where live had been and was still being lived,
The second trip down the exit ramp was planned. No sooner had we arrived than we were taken to a table filled with food that settled our hunger and conversation so real and rich that we felt as if we were lingering around a table that was indeed a foretaste of glory divine. It, too, was a wonderful moment that in some ways seemed almost sacramental, in the sense, that together as host and guest we were inside a precious holy moment.
Before these moments of blessing, there was another. It came shortly after our departure from where we had been. Stopped at a traffic light, there came into view a man on the corner with a sign pleading for help. As I rolled down the window and pulled out some cash from my billfold, he grabbed a walking stick that looked as ancient as did he and hobbled over to the open window. As I handed him the money, my wife took a cup of ice given to us by my daughter for the journey and passed it to me to give to him. It was hot afternoon full of humidity, the rain had not yet come, and it seemed he was more grateful for my wife's cup of ice than my folded cash. Little did I know at the beginning of the journey, that a stranger and old friends would bring heaven crashing down among us.