Daily Reflection
March 9, 2017

Thursday of the First week in Lent
Lectionary: 227
Barbara Dilly

I love Psalm 51. I grew up singing:
“create in me a clean heart O’ God, and renew a right spirit within me. 
Cast me not away from your presence, and take not your Holy Spirit from me. 
Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with your free Spirit”

at the time the offering was presented at the altar. In the readings for today, we find it prayed before the reading of the Gospel message. In the first instance, I was thinking about Psalm 51 in terms of presenting our gifts to God out of a spirit of humility and repentance. Today we are asked to think about receiving God’s gifts to us in the spirit of humility and repentance. And further, what does humility and repentance have to do with turning our mourning into gladness and our sorrows into wholeness? Queen Esther speaks these poetic words out of great anguish and a trusting faith that demonstrates great humility. Esther trusts that God will give her the words to speak that will deliver her and her people from their enemies. Like Esther, we too know the stories of our forefathers in the faith and how they were given the strength and courage to prevail in the midst of their enemies. 

But I don’t think the Old Testament is about triumph over enemies. Nor do I think that we should see God’s kindness and truth in our own lives as a winning streak or a sense of being in the right. If so, we should repent of our self-righteousness and arrogance. When God answers us, as we read again in Psalm 138, I think it is to strengthen our faith. It seems to me that God gives us strength to restore our confidence in God’s kindness and truth, and in the joy of our salvation. When God answers us, God renews a right spirit within us. And, allowing ourselves to be changed and renewed is an act of humility and repentance. 

As I reflect on all the anguish diaries of the Old Testament, I see a common pattern that I find instructive to my own faith. The faithful in these accounts are not praising God for victories over or escapes from their enemies, although there is plenty of that. Rather, they are praising God for the kindness and truth of God’s greatness. In Psalm 138, we read that David was so certain of God’s greatness to complete what God had done for him, that he saw the answer to his prayer in God’s enduring kindness and truth in his life.

Jesus also reminds us in the Gospel of Mark that whenever we ask for anything, we should ask it with faith in God’s enduring kindness. We can ask for anything because God is kind to us as God’s children. But Jesus quickly turns this lesson to a stern admonishment. If God loves us more than we love our own children, and we certainly know how to given them good gifts, why can’t we do the same for others? Are they not also the children of God? Did not Jesus die for all of God’s children? Praying for a clean heart and a renewed spirit as I reflect on this Gospel message is a good Lenten discipline for me. I pray that we may all be restored in the joy of our salvation and upheld by the Holy Spirit as God creates in us a clean heart and renews a right spirit within us.

Barbara Dilly

Professor Emerita of Cultural and Social Studies

I came to Creighton in 2000 and retired in 2020. My twenty years of teaching, research and service in the Jesuit tradition enhanced my own life. It was an exciting time of celebration. I loved teaching and interacting with Creighton students because they responded so eagerly to the Ignatian pedagogical emphasis on the development of the whole person. It is this spirit of whole person development and celebration of life that I hope to infuse in my reflection writings.

My academic background is eclectic, preparing me well for the Liberal Arts academic environment at Creighton. I earned my BA in World Arts and Cultures from UCLA in 1988 and my Ph.D. in Comparative Cultures from the University of California, Irvine in 1994. My research focused on rural communities in the American Midwest, Latin America, and Australia. I taught Environmental Anthropology, Qualitative Research Methods, Social and Cultural Theory, and Food Studies courses.

I retired to Shell Rock, a small rural community in Northeast Iowa where I enjoy gardening, cooking, quilting, driving my 65 Impala convertible an my 49 Willys Jeepster. I have lots of fun playing my guitars with friends from the Cedar Valley Acoustic Guitar Association. But most importantly, I am still working to make my community and rural America a better place. I host a community quilt studio and serve on the Mission Board of my church. I also serve as the Climate Committee Chair and on the Executive Board of the Center for Rural Affairs.