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For many of us the altar is not only a familiar spot, but also a place that pulls us with an astonishing power of attraction. One of our churchgoers once said: I don’t understand what goes on at the altar at all, but my feet bring me there every time again. What makes the altar a place that irresistibly attracts us?
When you realize that for dozens of years countless people have made countless offerings here, week in week out, you begin to understand why this spot has such a power of attraction. For as soon as we make our little offering, the offerings of our predecessors are also evoked—from all true Christians, from all who have died, from all who had not yet Christ. At the altar all sacrificial capacity is bundled, from the visible and the invisible congregation.
A saying from Greek antiquity expresses this in the words: Stronger than an impregnable fortress is an altar. Of course, one did not mean the stone or wooden altar that sooner or later will decay, but what happens at the altar. What is it that makes the altar an impregnable fortress armed against all attacks of the adversary powers?
It is our offerings, which are justified before God. Even though sometimes we have no more to give than our deficient thoughts, our imperfect love, our weak will power—it is irradiated by the offerings of our predecessors, but even more by the Christ sacrifice, which He brings for us to the end of the world. And also when every altar and every temple, also when heaven and earth have passed away, as an impregnable fortress our offering continues to exist.
Rev. Bastiaan Baan, December 10, 2023
These days we all live in two very different worlds, which are more or less separated from each other. The one thrusts itself upon us; the other is less obvious but no less real. We always have to make an effort to recognize that other reality.
A noisy world of power, money, and violence, in which the lie reigns, drowns out the soft forces of truth and love, so that it seems as if the lie has not only the loudest word, but also the last word. The noisier the world around us is, the more silent is that other, hidden world. But these two exist side by side, each with its own reality.
And we—each of us has the choice of the world we want to live in. Here applies the rule: Like recognizes like. The force of attraction of what belongs together enables each one of us to create our own reality, even though we are citizens of two worlds. Thus there is not only a declining, but also a rising world. The New Jerusalem is no fata morgana, no dot on the horizon, but a reality that becomes recognizable for everyone who seeks the truth and generates love.
Before the countenance of God that is the only reality that has a justified existence. An old proverb says: Not noise, but love penetrates to God’s ear.[*] Because just like for human beings, for God it is also true that like recognizes like. For those who seek truth and love with all their heart, He lets Himself be found.
Rev. Bastiaan Baan, November 26, 2023
[*] Non clamor, sed amor sonat in aure Dei.
November, the month of those who have died.
In these days death is omnipresent—not in the lofty rest that often characterizes death, but in the devastating battle that takes place between embittered peoples: hatred facing hatred, revenge facing revenge. The whole world watches with powerless rage or with powerless despair. In such a hopeless fight, taking place before our eyes, how can you still do something to create a counterweight?
These days I have to think of individuals who in similar situations looked annihilation in the eye, and in the depths of despair created a sign of hope. These individuals usually did not appear before the footlights. They did their work in silence. And if they had not left their visible footprints, they would have been long forgotten. Such a person was Etty Hillesum during the Second World War. She became known because of the diaries she left behind after her death. How did she do it—creating a counterweight in a world of death and depravation? She wrote in her diary:
“This is really our only moral task: cultivating great plains of rest in ourselves—ever more rest, so that one can emanate this rest again to others.”
Our apocalyptic time, when the old certainties are taken away from us, faces us with the question: Who can stand up to it?
This one thing we can do: “Cultivating great plains of rest in ourselves—ever more rest, so that one can emanate this rest again to others. The more rest there is in human beings, the more rest there will also be in this excited world.” [*]
Rev. Bastiaan Baan, November 12, 2023
*] Etty Hillesum suffered and died in German concentration camps during World War II. Her diaries were posthumously published: An Interrupted Life, the Diaries 1941-1943.