It means much to the British that those who defend others
are by their Monarch defended.
With a surreal metallic rustling of the twenty-three
pound Supertunica upon the Abbey floor, the Queen was making her way to
the Altar once again. Still bare-headed, she was bringing the beautiful,
sparkling Jewelled Sword, back to the Lord.
It lay flat and glittering upon the open palms of her
upturned hands; her concentration seemed divine and fierce and childlike, all
at the same moment. A Monarch, a Queen, a woman . . . a young woman . . .
covered from her neck to the floor in the coat of silk, each thread
wrapped in gold, bearing the Sword of the Offering, the Monarch's personal
sword, back to the Altar of God.
It could not remain there. The Marquess of Salisbury
stepped forward once more. In his hand was an embroidered bag, tied
tight. In it were 100 newly minted shillings, for the Sword had to be
redeemed. He who had borne the Sword of State now bore the Queen's own
Sword. He would, according to royal tradition, "carry it naked
before her Majesty during the rest of the solemnity." The 100
shillings would become an everlasting treasure belonging to those who serve
Abbey Westminster, and the Sword, redeemed from the altar, spoke for the
nation: “We will guard and watch over the gift God has given us in this woman,
for she guards us before Him.”
The Kingdom of God must be fought for, and aggressively, but not with earthly
swords. Through perseverance in
faith and prayer, love and worship, speaking the truth of the finished work of
Jesus Christ, we obtain a heavenly victory. In Matthew 11:12 Jesus said that, from the days of John the
Baptist to that moment, the Kingdom of heaven had been suffering violence,
allowing violence, and that the violent were taking it by force. For all that we may not understand
about this verse, we know that each of us cut away our sin, our pride, and our
old nature in order to have all that is ours in Christ Jesus . . . forgiveness,
peace, reconciliation with God, purity of heart and soul. For many it was a violent upheaval, for we loved that which
hated us and we feared the God Who loves us. His love triumphed, and the mighty Sword of His Word
plundered our defenses, and we were free!
Her Sword, presented to her from the Altar of God, at the
hand of God's representative. Her Sword, returned by her to the Altar of
God, in tunic of humility and garments of majesty, with uncovered head. Our
lives, given to us by God, our power and strength, needed redemption. We required redemption.
God-given sovereignty is guarded by those whom sovereignty
guards! It is a bit of a dance, but we understand. We guard our
will by the watchfulness and the power that gave us liberty to act upon
righteous decision and purpose.
Each of us has a sovereign will, and each may guard it by
the Sword which goes before us, the Word of God. Beyond price, beyond calculation, is the beauty and the
glory of guarding every gift and power of God that has been redeemed on the
Altar of God, honoring one another, bearing unsheathed the defense of the
majesty of all, the power given to each to become a son of God.
Photo credit:
Rotherham Web, the Sword of the Offering

My favorite so far. "For we loved what hated us and feared the God who loved us" -- a summation of the human condition. Also loved, "God given sovereignty is guarded by those whom sovereignty guards".
ReplyDeleteYou know that I love that you like it! God bless you in it, Lady DiYaya!
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