Reflections for Lent 2026: Hearing the Divine by Another Name

Published On: March 9, 2026

A Lenten Reflection Series

Torah scripture

“This Lenten season, I invite us to loosen our grip on the need to capture, control, or fully comprehend the Divine. What if the most profound truth is that the Sacred is beyond our ability to fully name and too infinite to capture in syllables and words?” The Rev. Dr. Sharad Creasman

 

By Rev. Dr. Sharad Creasman, Brevard College

I sat quietly but attentively near the podium of a Jewish synagogue in the mountains of Western North Carolina, as Emily, a faithful member of the congregation, waited patiently for the Torah scroll to be unrolled and laid gently on the podium.

Once the scroll was in place, Emily stepped forward to read, and the sound of Hebrew wafted through the air like the smoke of a freshly lit incense stick. The words were rhythmic and ancient, yet alive. But when she reached four letters – yod, heh, vav, heh – she whispered the name Adonai instead, meaning “My Lord.”

An inquisitive onlooker asked, “Why did you pause while reading?”

Emily’s face beamed with excitement. “Adonai is a reverent substitute for the sacred name we do not pronounce or fully know. Sometimes we say Hashem, which means ‘the Name,’ but we recognize and accept that some things are just too vast and too holy to be captured in sounds or words.”

The Name

YHWH comes from the Hebrew verb “to be.” It highlights more than a name. It is existence itself. When Moses asked the name of the Eternal at the burning bush, he received an answer: “I AM WHO I AM.” Not a name, but a declaration: I am more than a name. I am presence itself.

An Invitation

This Lenten season, I invite us to loosen our grip on the need to capture, control, or fully comprehend the Divine. What if the most profound truth is that the Sacred is beyond our ability to fully name and too infinite to capture in syllables and words? This is not about secrecy; it is about humility. It’s about what we don’t fully know yet faithfully recognize.  It’s about honoring the mystery in an age that demands detailed explanations.

As we walk through this Lenten season, may we learn to sit with the unknowing. May we resist the urge to reduce God to formulas and certainties. May we whisper our hopes, dreams, and prayers with trembling reverence, knowing that the One who hears us is both closer than our breath and vaster than the universe itself. May we trust that the Sacred dwells in the silence between syllables, in the pause before we speak, in the mystery we cannot name – and declares, “I AM WHO I AM.”

Prayer

Holy One, whose name is beyond our understanding, help us sit with mystery, let go of our need to know everything, and rest in your presence. Ase and Amen.

The Rev. Sharad Creasman

Rev. Dr. Sharad Creasman
Dean for Spiritual and Religious Life
Brevard College, Brevard, North Carolina

Related Posts

  • Monday Reflections: Metamorphosis
    Published On: April 8, 2026

    Easter! In the Christian tradition, the season of Easter (or Eastertide) begins on Easter Sunday and runs for 50 days ending on the Sunday after Pentecost. For me, this is good news. For the 40 days of Lent, we have been in self-examination, often finding ways in which we fall short. Eastertide is also filled with self-reflection, but as a celebration of who we have become. Eastertide is a celebration of transformation.

  • General Secretary Highlights Urgent Call to Peace in Spring Report
    Published On: April 8, 2026

    Roland Fernandes addresses the Global Ministries and Higher Education and Ministry boards of directors in their spring meeting held in Nairobi, Kenya.

  • United Methodist Support Helps Philander Smith Build Health Programs and Hope
    Published On: April 2, 2026

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — For Philander Smith University President Dr. Maurice Gipson, support from The United Methodist Church, its General Board of Higher Education and Ministry (GBHEM), and the Black College Fund is essential. “I look at those funds as our version of state support,” Gipson said. “Without the support, there would be critical infrastructure activity we’d be unable to do.”