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Mar 10, 2025 107 Karen Eberts
Encounter

The Cross Before Me

Soon, I realized I am never alone when I face the crosses in my life…

Returning to my seat after venerating the Cross at our solemn Good Friday commemoration, the choir’s haunting yet lyrical chant provided a background for my own prayer. In the stillness of the moment, I found myself observing other congregants expressing reverent devotion. Some were genuflecting with their eyes cast down, others were kissing the burnished wood, yet others were pausing in adoration of our Savior.

A young father followed his son as they approached the Cross. At three, or maybe four years old, the boy walked forward agreeably in line, then suddenly balked. It’s clear he was not willing to go any further. Was it fear that stopped him? The realization that all eyes would be on him, watching how he responded when it was his turn at the foot of the Crucified One?

When the father looked down, he saw his son’s hesitation, and quickly whispered a few words to the child. The boy nodded his head and within seconds, they clasped hands and walked together side by side. Approaching the Cross, the father dropped to one knee, lowered his head, and bowed respectfully. Brushing his lips across the smooth surface, he rose and returned to his pew, his son snuggled against his side.

A Glimpse Into the Past

Emotion welled up within me, and my chest soon started heaving. I was unable to hold back the tears. Remembering myself as a parent of young children, it meant everything to me that my children would come to know the love of Jesus as I had as a young adult. He had changed my life, and I didn’t want my children to miss one moment of awareness of the joy of following Jesus that I had experienced again and again once I came to know the comfort of His presence.

Watching this parent caused me to wonder if I had offered my children this gift with as much acceptance as this young man demonstrated to his child. Did the fervent desire for my children to encounter the Lord in their youth cause me to present opportunities more as an expectation than the invitation that had been offered to me so freely and full of grace?

This loving dad’s response to his son’s discomfort revealed no insistence on obedience nor any discipline threatened. Instead, his son’s apprehension was met with loving concern and understanding. It was clear the boy knew he had a choice to approach or not, and if he did, he wouldn’t be doing it alone. He would be accompanied by the outstretched hand of the very one who loved him most in this world. Together, they would walk toward the Cross.

You Are Not Alone

In that moment, I recognized that I had been given a portrait of my adult life. There was never a time when I was by myself, alone in facing a cross, hardship, overwhelming obstacles, or real suffering. Jesus came near each time, put His hand in mine, and walked with me to and through it all. Often, His Holy Spirit reveals His presence or words to me; other times, one of His followers becomes the vessel through which His face is revealed. He uses every step in my life to lead me to the next, making them more and more sure-footed over time.

When my feet become dusty or encrusted with dirt from the journey, Jesus gently washes them. He left us an example while using a basin and a towel with the disciples at the Last Supper, offering nourishment at the table even to the one who would deny Him. As the substance of bread was changed into His body then, it continues to be so today. By consuming His body and being consumed by His heart, we experience a metamorphosis, a transformation. The substance of who we are gradually begins to reflect Jesus more and more over time as we allow His Spirit to dwell within us. So, we ponder and pray…May it be so in me, Lord; may my life reflect the power of the gospel of Jesus. As the prophet Isaiah says: “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!”

I strode past the pews, opened the door, and committed once again to walk in the way of love I’d just seen demonstrated by this father and son. The words of a song from long ago lilt through my mind…

I have decided to follow Jesus. (x3)

No turning back, no turning back.

Though none go with me, still I will follow. (x3)

No turning back, no turning back.

The cross before me, the world behind me. (x3)

No turning back, no turning back.

This song is based on the last words of Nokseng, a martyr from the Garo tribe of Assam in India, as his family and then he himself died. Today, it is the song of the Garo people.

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Karen Eberts

Karen Eberts is a retired Physical Therapist. She is the mother to two young adults and lives with her husband Dan in Largo, Florida

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