Fourth Sunday in Lent, March 15, 2026
There is a place in Southwestern Virginia
that has been home
to members of my extended family
for generations.
The tiny, isolated community
of Possum Creek, VA,
sits in a hollow in rural Scott County.
While I am sure
there must be some other entrance and exit
to this cleft in the rock
I have only ever been in and out the same way.
First you go to Shelton’s Store,
named for my mother’s mother’s family.
If you go past the store,
you’ll come to the only place
my father’s father lived
as long as I knew him.
Across the two-lane highway from here
was a grassy hill
topped by a cemetery,
accessible only by foot or ATV,
that was the final resting place
of distant and long deceased cousins
with anglicized German surnames.
Turing back to the store,
the road narrows to one lane
as it approaches a tunnel
whose keystone bears the inscription
“1910”.
The tunnel is short and narrow
and curved,
meaning that you cannot see the other end.
The local custom is to switch on the headlights,
lay on the horn,
and proceed with caution.
And when you emerge again in the daylight
it is dimmer than before.
The steep slope and high peaks
of the surrounding mountains
obstruct the daylight,
giving morning and afternoon
a shade of twilight.
These mountain walls
also block the sounds of modern life,
with the train,
the ubiquitous sounds of low humming electricity,
bustling commercial centers,
and multi-lane boulevards packed with impatient drivers,
on the other end of that tunnel,
leaving only the rustling of trees,
the singing of birds,
and one’s own thoughts.
When I was visiting in the 80s and 90s,
most homes were on private wells for water,
which flowed a muddy brown.
Cable TV was not available then,
and most folks couldn’t afford satellite.
The newspaper was from across the state line
in Kingsport, Tennessee.
Visiting Possum Creek
was like visiting another world,
or a different time.
Culture, language, even modernity
seemed to progress more slowly.
It is easy to lose perspective
in such isolated conditions.
Passing back through that tunnel
to the rest of the bright, buzzing world
is overstimulating.
It’s somehow easier to remain in the holler.
In my experience,
the Valley of the Shadow of Death
is just like this holler.
Any time we experience change or sorrow or loss
we pass from this bright, busy, modern reality
through the small, dark passage way of our broken heart
into a dimmer, lonelier place
immune to cultural evolution
and the passage of terrestrial time.
That short, narrow, curved tunnel
brings us into this holler of grief
and with one way in and out,
we would rather not pass that way again.
It is easier to stay here,
to tune out the outside world,
to dwell on bygone eras
and anachronistic ways of living.
It is easier to choose not to see
what we must face
if we were to leave this holler,
to be led back through our grief and loss,
back to the bright, buzzing present.
As I read through the lectionary this week,
the Lord’s question to Samuel
arrested my attention
as though it had grabbed me by the lapels
and given me a sharp shake.
“How long will you grieve?”
How long, beloved,
will you dwell on the past?
How long, All Saints,
will you hide in the holler of grief?
How long will you grieve for youth programs
full pews, long-gone leaders and friends,
and modes of being the church
that do not meet the needs of our neighbors?
How long will we be blind to
to what God is doing
in the bright, buzzing present
because we are beholden to
“the way we have always done it”?
We may have lost quite a lot.
But Jesus wants to lead us through it.
Psalm 23 starts in green pastures and still waters
and ends with dwelling in the house of the Lord
forever.
But the path from green pastures to
the house of the Lord
is the short, narrow, curved tunnel of grief.
We can give thanks for the dim light of the holler,
for the loss of perspective,
the high mountain walls that protected us
in our pain from the bright, buzzing present.
God is still at work in the holler.
But God in Christ is calling us out.
Jesus is the light by which we can see
the way out.
When Samuel comes to Jesse
to anoint a new king,
David in is the valley
and God sends for him.
When the man born blind cannot see Jesus,
and isn’t looking to be healed,
Jesus sees him.
When the Pharisees can’t see the miracle
because it didn’t happen the way they would have preferred,
Jesus teaches the teachers.
God is still at work.
The path from green pastures and still waters
to banquets and overflowing cups
in the house of the Lord
leads through the valley of the shadow of death,
leads through the short, narrow, curved tunnel
to the bright, buzzing present.
We have known green pastures and still waters.
We long to dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
But we have lost our perspective in the dim light
of the shadow of death.
Jesus, our shepherd,
God’s anointed,
is the light by which we see.
Turning our attention to Jesus
will light our path
out of this dark, lonely holler
to the bright, buzzing present.
And if we will let our eyes
and our hearts
adjust to this reality,
if we will let Jesus change our perspective,
we will find that surely goodness and mercy
have always followed us
and to follow Jesus
is to dwell in the house of the Lord,
now and forever.
Amen.




