Remembering the Day

In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, LORD, make me dwell in safety. Psalm 8:4

Certain events leave an everlasting impression in our memories. Who can forget the day you held your little newborn baby in your arms for the first time?  Can you forget the lump in your throat as you said goodbye to your sons or daughters as they moved out of the house to start their own families?

Life events are often personal but there are also those events that impact the world. These are events that long outlive the calendar day, leaving us with lasting memories. You simply have to ask a person what they were doing or where were they and you get a detailed narrative.  Today is such an event! Today marks the 22nd anniversary of 9/11.

Construction worker John Feal, who lost his foot helping in the rescue, said of the day that “9/11 is the longest day in the history of days. It just has not ended for those that lost loved ones that day, for those who got sick and are still sick, for those who got sick and died.”  (ABC News)

On this “longest day in the history of days,” thousands of people died, many more were injured or permanently disabled and the lingering health effects of that day continue to claim the lives over two decades later.

Fear gripped the homes and lives of people in the United States as well as around the world. Voices cried out and, at that moment, you could almost hear the windows of heaven open as God listened intently to people pleading, “Let the morning bring me word of your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in you. Show me the way I should go.” (Psalm 143:8)

Day after day following 9/11 the churches were overflowing with people coming together as one. Churches were filled with people praying and seeking God.  Yet, just as quickly as we cried out to God for help, the voices grew angry, the hatred intensified, and the days grew darker. Since that eventful day in history, no longer do the voices cry out to God for healing. What we now hear are the shrill voices of anger, distrust, vengeance, and violence.

A comparison can be made between the 9/11 prayer meetings and the sustained prayer movement in a small village in modern-day Germany that changed the world. A group of Moravians had been forced to flee their homes because of religious persecution. Frightened for their lives, these refugees found hospitality and a place of refuge with Count Zinzendorf who allowed them to settle on his estate and build a village.

However, Herrnhut, which means, ‘The Lord’s Watch’ was anything but a place of peace. Over the next five years, the residents squabbled and fought among themselves. Eventually, on  August 13, 1727, Zinzendorf summoned the Moravians and, in the chapel, confronted them and told them to repent. Over the next days as they began to repent and confess their sins, a spiritual wind of revival began to blow through the village.

On August 27, 1727, 24 men and 24 women banded together to pray in pairs around the clock. They replaced their arguing and fighting with prayer.  A prayer movement grew that would span the next hundred years launching a movement of God that spread powerfully outside their tiny village.

“Somehow, this unlikely place became the epicenter of a prayer and missions movement which propelled the gospel to many nations, translated the Scriptures into new languages, planted not just churches but entire villages, and prayed continually for more than a century.” (Brian Heasley from The Lord of the Ring by Phil Anderson)

Driven from their homeland, this small community of Moravians was driven to their knees in prayer until their fervor burned red hot and impacted the world for God. Could there have been a different outcome the day after 9/11 if our voices had continued to pray? What difference would there have been over the last two decades if the voices we heard were raised in prayer instead of in anger and distrust?

“Better a day in your courts than a thousand anywhere else. I would rather stand at the threshold of the house of my God than live in the tents of wicked people. For the LORD God is a sun and shield.” (Psalm 84: 10-11) Will Reagan and United Pursuit in their song, Set A Fire, capture the essence of Psalm 84.

“No place I would rather be

Than here in Your love, here in Your love

Set a fire down in my soul

That I can’t contain and I can’t control

I want more of You, God

I want more of You, God”

On this Remembrance Day of 9/11, we set aside today to remember the tragedy and horrors of that event on September 11, 2001. We recognize the fear that came on that day. We remember the victims of the ruthless attack. However, we also remember those sweet hours of oneness and prayer that followed those dark days.

The words of 16th-century writer Teresa of Avila seem to beautifully sum up this day:

“Let nothing disturb you, Let nothing frighten you,

All things are passing away: God never changes.

Patience obtains all things. Whoever has God lacks nothing:

God alone suffices.”

God is great!

 

1 reply
  1. Samantha
    Samantha says:

    God’s unchanging love was the subject for our worship this week – Hosea was our guide. It is easy to be disappointed by unfaithful people and discouraged by flourishing evil. I was to remind myself of God’s faithful love and mercy.

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