EDITOR’S ARIA
PROBABLY AROUND THE TIME YOU ARE READING THIS, the solar eclipse of 2024 will have come and gone. The corner of northwest Pennsylvania where I live is in the “path of totality.”
Preparations have been taking place since last year. We are being told to get gas and groceries before April 8. The police are asking locals to limit their travel so first responders can get to any emergency. Interstate highways are expected to be jammed. Schools and businesses are closing. Hotels have been sold out for months. Cell phone service may be limited.
Parties and gatherings are planned all over the region. I am fortunate that I don’t have to drive to see the eclipse. I will sit on my front steps or walk to the lake and probably watch through a homemade pinhole viewer (which really works!)
At the least, this rare, major natural event will be awe inspiring and perhaps a spiritual experience, even for nonbelievers. We will be caught up in the sight of something too big, a phenomenon we can’t control, that will strike us with awe. . . A sight that gives us a glimpse of the wonders and beauty of God. The power and simplicity of the solar eclipse will be refreshing and inspiring, perhaps even a brief respite from the struggle and confusion we experience on earth.
All creation waits to be transformed by the power of God. Because, as Flannery O’Connor believed, “the central Christian mystery” is “for all its horror,” the world has been “found by God to be worth dying for.” (Mystery and Manners, Sally and Robert Ferguson, editors. See note p. 4)
Feels like I am heading into a much bigger reflection . . . but I must leave that thought for now, and will finish in the Summer 2024 issue. I will “see” you all then!
Lora Homan Zill, Editor