Thursday, January 31, 2008
The new monasticism
Then check out the movement's website and the 12 marks of the movement.
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Lead on
-- James Martineau
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
you
but do you know your heart as well?
Monday, January 28, 2008
living with Jesus
but becoming like Jesus is a long process of living with the living Jesus,
living in the living Jesus,
and letting Jesus live in your life.
-- Juris Rubenis Finding God in a Tangled World
Sunday, January 27, 2008
going to church
SCREAMING, OH GOD!
DOES NOT CONSTITUTE
GOING TO CHURCH
-- First Baptist Church
the power of prayer
Litany of Humility
From the desire of being esteemed,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being loved,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being extolled,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being honored,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being praised,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being preferred to others
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being consulted,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being approved,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being humiliated,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being despised,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of suffering rebukes,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being calumniated,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being forgotten,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being ridiculed,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being wronged,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being suspected,
-Deliver me, Jesus.
That others may be loved more than I,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be esteemed more than I,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That, in the opinion of the world,
others may increase and I may decrease,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be chosen and I set aside,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be praised and I unnoticed,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be preferred to me in everything,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may become holier than I, provided that I may become as holy
as I should,
-Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
Amen
Rafael Cardinal Merry del Val
Saturday, January 26, 2008
technology
Friday, January 25, 2008
Who likes Jesus?
"I don't want to be crucified. I want all people to love me."
"That's not possible," God replied.
"Not all people do the will of God.
Those who do not do the will of God are never going to like you."
-- Juris Rubenis Finding God in a Tangled World
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
enjoy the coffee
When all the students had a cup of coffee in hand, the professor said: "If you noticed, all the nice looking expensive cups were taken up, leaving behind the plain and cheap ones. While it is normal for you to want only the best for yourselves that is the source of your problems and stress. Be assured that the cup itself adds no quality to the coffee. In most cases it is just more expensive and in some case even hides what we drink. What all of you really wanted was coffee, not the cup, but you consciously went for the best cups... And then you began eyeing each other's cups. Now consider this: Life is the coffee; the jobs, money and position in society are the cups. They are just tools to hold and contain Life, and the type of cup we have does not define, nor change the quality of Life we live. Sometimes, by concentrating only on the cup, we fail to enjoy the coffee God has provided us."
"God brews the coffee, not the cups.... Enjoy your coffee!
"The happiest people don't have the best of everything. They just make the best of everything."
-- Dr. Jamie Higley, D.C.
thank you, Karen
Monday, January 21, 2008
one reason why I return to Blue Cloud Abbey
Let's keep returning to our solitude.
-- Henri Nouwen Society
Sunday, January 20, 2008
more from Blue Cloud Abbey
Saturday, January 19, 2008
we're back
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Blue Cloud Abbey
Saturday, January 12, 2008
extraordinary
are quite extraordinary.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
the path to God
In Jesus the two paths come together.
-- Juris Rubenis Finding God in a Tangled World
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
God's pace
like a shadow that cannot separate itself from us.
When we dance, God dances.
When we weep, God weeps.
When we run, God runs with us.
Whenever we say:
"It is enough, I am weary and can go no further,"
God tenderly sits and waits for us
until we are renewed and ready to continue the journey.
God moves at our pace.
-- Edwina Gateley A Mystical Heart
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
alone
-- K.Rahner
Monday, January 07, 2008
C. S. Lewis -- fundamentalist?
I have been suspected of being what is called a Fundamentalist. That is because I never regard any narrative as unhistorical simply on the ground that it includes the miraculous. Some people find the miraculous so hard to believe that they cannot imagine any reason for my acceptance of it other than a prior belief that every sentence of the Old Testament has historical or scientific truth. But this I do not hold, any more than St. Jerome did when he said that Moses described Creation “after the manner of a popular poet” (as we should say, mythically) or than Calvin did when he doubted whether the story of Job were history or fiction. The real reason why I can accept as historical a story in which a miracle occurs is that I have never found any philosophical grounds for the universal negative proposition that miracles do not happen.
I have to decide on quite other grounds (if I decide at all) whether a given narrative is historical or not. The Book of Job appears to me unhistorical because it begins about a man quite unconnected with all history or even legend, with no genealogy, living in a country of which the Bible elsewhere has hardly anything to say; because, in fact, the author quite obviously writes as a story-teller not as a chronicler.
I have therefore no difficulty in accepting, say, the view of those scholars who tell us that the account of Creation in Genesis is derived from earlier Semitic stories which were Pagan and mythical. We must of course be quite clear what “derived from” means. Stories do not reproduce their species like mice. They are told by men. Each re-teller either repeats exactly what his predecessor had told him or else changes it. He may change it unknowingly or deliberately. If he changes it deliberately, his invention, his sense of form, his ethics, his ideas of what is fit, or edifying, or merely interesting, all come in. If unknowingly, then his unconscious (which is so largely responsible for our forgettings) has been at work. Thus at every step in what is called–a little misleadingly–the “evolution” of a story, a man, all he is and all his attitudes, are involved. And no good work is done anywhere without aid from the Father of Lights. When a series of such retellings turns a creation story which at first had almost no religious or metaphysical significance into a story which achieves the idea of true Creation and of a transcendent Creator (as Genesis does), then nothing will make me believe that some of the re-tellers, or some one of them, has not been guided by God.
Thus something originally merely natural–the kind of myth that is found amongst most nations–will have been raised by God above itself, qualified by Him and compelled by Him to serve purposes which of itself would not have served. Generalising this, I take it that the whole Old Testament consists of the same sort of material as any other literature–chronicle (some of it obviously pretty accurate), poems, moral and political diatribes, romances, and what not; but all taken into the service of Gods word. Not all, I suppose, in the same way. There are prophets who write with the clearest awareness that Divine compulsion is upon them. There are chroniclers whose intention may have been merely to record. There are poets like those in the Song of Songs who probably never dreamed of any but a secular and natural purpose in what they composed. There is (and it is not less important) the work first of the Jewish and then of the Christian Church in preserving and canonising just these books. There is the work of redactors and editors in modifying them. On all of these I suppose a Divine pressure; of which not by any means all need have been conscious.
The human qualities of the raw materials show through. Naivet, error, contradiction, even (as in the cursing Psalms) wickedness are not removed. The total result is not “the Word of God” in the sense that every passage, in itself, gives impeccable science or history. It carries the Word of God; and we (under grace, with attention to tradition and to interpreters wiser than ourselves, and with the use of such intelligence and learning as we may have) receive that word from it not by using it as an encyclopedia or an encyclical but by steeping ourselves in its tone or temper and so learning its overall message.
To a human mind this working-up (in a sense imperfectly), this sublimation (incomplete) of human material, seems, not doubt, an untidy and leaky vehicle. We might have expected, we may think we should have preferred, an unrefracted light giving us ultimate truth in systematic form–something we could have tabulated and memorised and relied on like the multiplication table. One can respect, and at moments envy, both the Fundamentalists view of the Bible and the Roman Catholics view of the Church. But there is one argument which we should beware of using for either position: God must have done what is best, this is best, therefore God has done this. For we are mortals and do not know what is best for us, and it is dangerous to prescribe what God must have done–especially when we cannot, for the life of us, see that He has after all done it.
We may observe that the teaching of Our Lord Himself, in which there is no imperfection, is not given us in that cut-and-dried, fool-proof, systematic fashion we might have expected or desired. He wrote no book. We have only reported sayings, most of them uttered in answer to questions, shaped in some degree by their context. And when we have collected them all we cannot reduce them to a system. He preaches but He does not lecture. He uses paradox, proverb, exaggeration, parable, irony; even (I mean no irreverence) the “wise-crack”. He utters maxims which, like popular proverbs, if rigorously taken, may seem to contradict one another. His teaching therefore cannot be grasped by the intellect alone, cannot be “got up” as if it were a “subject”. If we try to do that with it, we shall find Him the most elusive of teachers. He hardly ever gave a straight answer to a straight question. He will not be, in the way we want, “pinned down”. The attempt is (again, I mean no irreverence) like trying to bottle a sunbeam.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
dreams
those we dream by night
(from which we wake to find they were not real);
and those we dream by day
(which we can act upon to make possible).
Saturday, January 05, 2008
a good life
Lord make me an instrument of Thy peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love.
Where there is injury, pardon.
Where there is doubt, faith.
Where there is despair, hope.
Where there is darkness, light.
Where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master;
grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
and it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Friday, January 04, 2008
Do we know all about Jesus?
"I am Jesus," he said.
"You can't be," the pastor answered. "Jesus is seated at the right hand of the Father."
"That is true," Jesus continued, "but I have decided to come and take a look at life on earth."
"But Jesus will come in glory with all his angels," the pastor said emphatically.
"True," Jesus said, "but on that occasion there will be no time to talk with me."
"But I have nothing to say to you," the pastor replied. "I know all about you already."
"That's a pity!" Jesus replied, and he returned to the cross.
-- Juris Rubenis, Finding God in a Tangled World
Thursday, January 03, 2008
God's creation
-- John Paul II
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
winter
-- Ruth Stout
resolutions
Jesus' climax at the end of the Beatitudes says exactly this: Stand faithful and do not get blown about by the ideologies of the world. . . . If we lose our distinction from the world's greed, uncaring, self-centeredness, exclusionism, unfaithfulness, and violence, then we have no purpose.
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Christmases past
There is no point in trying to recapitulate Christmas as you knew it when you were, say, seven years old. That way lies sentimentalities unbounded. The alternative, is the way of contemplation, of demanding of oneself the disciplined quiet to explore, and be explored by, the astonishment of God become one of us that we may become one with God.