(Inspired by our Sunday sermon about Moses)
In the
wasteland where no life should grow
Sat a single,
thirsty bush, roots weak in the dry soil.
Rain was
only a burden, a crushing flood of sorrows
And so,
brought no relief to the fragile, lonely bush.
The desert
sands roughly scathed the frail, thin branches
And no one
sought protection from the sun there.
But not
water, or calm days nor new grass was the answer.
Inconceivably,
the thing to make the bush grow was fire,
Relentlessly
hungry, consuming passionately all in its path,
And so it
came upon the bush in a raging fury.
And yet,
though burning brightly, the bush was not consumed.
The fire
grew brighter as though fueled, but the bush was whole,
Standing
firm and unharmed by the powerful flame.
But it
certainly was affected, simply not on the outside;
Inside, the
sap ran and bubbled, spawning new life within.
Growth was
only then achieved by the fierce scalding,
The
destruction of every irrelevant, outside influence.
Then, in the
empty desert, dross removed, the bush flourished,
Consumed
within and without with passionate, burning life.
What was
once nothing is now a representation of hope.
And so we are, and can be.
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