On the DisciplesWorld website there is an article about a light bulb that has been burning almost non-stop for close to 100 years. The best guess is the bulb was placed into a socket and the switch flipped on around 1914. It was an outside porch light, left on day and night, at a home in Norfolk, Virginia. When the family sold the house some 30 years later, they told the new owners about the light bulb and its longevity. So, the incoming occupants left the light on.
Over the following quarter-century, the light was switched off only once, during World War II, when an air marshal told the family it could not remain on that night. In 1967, the house again was sold, and a family member took the light, installed it in a hallway lamp, switched it on, and let it burn. For 40 years.
Earlier this year, the bulb was passed along to another family member, who is keeping it on in his house.
I thought that was a remarkable story, and when I read about the 2007 International Day of Prayer for Peace on September 21, sponsored by the World Council of Churches, well, a light bulb appeared over my head.
The way our faith is handed down across generations is like the image of a light bulb that keeps burning hour after hour, year after year, decade after decade. People, events, trends, and so much else, come and go, but the shining presence of faith in God through Jesus Christ remains. With it, hope remains, as do new possibilities for life.
The 2007 International Day of Prayer for Peace is a by-product of the constant light of that faith. Maybe every day could be used as a Day of Prayer for Peace.
God knows the world needs it, and maybe the light would make visible a path to the peace God desires for us.
Updated: Friday, 31 August 2007 1:19 PM EDT
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