knitternun

Monday, December 31, 2007

Reading for Dec 31, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

May 1, August 31, December 31
Chapter 73: On the Fact That the Full Observance of Justice Is Not Established in This Rule

Now we have written this Rule
in order that by its observance in monasteries
we may show that we have attained some degree of virtue
and the rudiments of the religious life.

But for those who would hasten to the perfection of that life
there are the teaching of the holy Fathers,
the observance of which leads to the height of perfection.
For what page or what utterance
of the divinely inspired books of the Old and New Testaments
is not a most unerring rule for human life?
Or what book of the holy Catholic Fathers
does not loudly proclaim
how we may come by a straight course to our Creator?
Then the Conferences and the Institutes
and the Lives of the Fathers,
as also the Rule of our holy Father Basil --
what else are they but tools of virtue
for right-living and obedient monks?
But for us who are lazy and ill-living and negligent
they are a source of shame and confusion.

Whoever you are, therefore,
who are hastening to the heavenly homeland,
fulfill with the help of Christ
this minimum Rule which we have written for beginners;
and then at length under God's protection
you will attain to the loftier heights of doctrine and virtue
which we have mentioned above.

Some Thoughts:

With today's reading, we conclude this pass through the Rule of St. Benedict. Are you made as hopeful as I by such phrases as " attained some degree of virtue" and "rudiments"? At the end we find "minimum Rule which we have written for beginners". Does it comfort you as it does me to read on New Year's Eve that it is ok not to have it altogether? This is not to be understood as an excuse for sinning. But I so appreciate it that Benedict appreciates our humanness and our limitations as creatures.

Perhaps some of us are making our New Year's Resolutions. Could we do better than to take Father Benedict's suggestion and perhaps plan daily time to read our Bibles and plan a course of reading in the Fathers and Mothers of the Church? I don't mean anything so strenuous that it is a burden. A psalm and bits from the Testaments, a paragraph or two from one of the sources Benedict mentions above. He tells us this would "hasten the perfection of that life". "Unerring rule for human life", would that we trusted it to be so.

In fact and I really did not set out to turn this into a plug for the Daily Meditation LOL but it does in fact offer daily Scripture and various paragraphs from some great Christian writers. The Daily Meditation is offered as a Chinese menu, a buffet, for folk to pick and choose. Feel free to share any thoughts that come up on either of the following lists:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/KnitternunMeditation/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MereBenedictines/

Benedict does recommend that we read and mediate. For those of us unfamiliar with the practice of Lectio Divina, there is an excellent article about it in our links: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MereBenedictines/links/

As for me, I intend, and feel free to hold me accountable, to prayerfully read a book on a subject with which I need a LOT of divine intervention: _Humility Matters: The Practice of the Spiritual Life_ by Sister Mary Margaret Funk . Personally I feel I could well profit from a yearly re-read of her other 2 books: _Thoughts Matter: The Practice of the Spiritual Life_ and _ Tools Matter For Practicing The Spiritual Life.



Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


This last chapter of the rule leaves us with a reading list for future spiritual development: the Bible, the Mothers and Fathers of the Church and their commentaries on scripture, and the classic contributions of other writers on the monastic life. But Benedict does not believe that the simple reading or study of spiritual literature is sufficient. He tells us to keep this rule, its values, its concepts, its insights. It is not what we read, he implies, it is what we become that counts. Every major religious tradition, in fact, has called for a change of heart, a change of life rather than for simply an analysis of its literature. The Hasidim, for instance, tell the story of the disciple who said to the teacher, "Teacher, I have gone completely through the Torah? What must I do now?"

And the teacher said, "Oh, my friend, the question is not, have you gone through the Torah. The question is, has the Torah gone through you?"

Even at the end of his rule, Benedict does not promise that we will be perfect for having lived it. What Benedict does promise is that we will be disposed to the will of God, attuned to the presence of God, committed to the search for God and just beginning to understand the power of God in our lives. Why? Because Benedictine simplicity gentles us into the arms of God. Benedictine community supports us on the way to God. Benedictine balance makes a wholesome journey possible. Monastic prayer, rooted in scripture lights the way. It is a way of life, a spirituality that makes the humdrum holy and the daily the stuff of high happiness. It is a way of life that lives life to the fullest offering, as this final chapter promises, that even more of the meaning of life is there for our taking if we will only follow this simple but profoundly life-altering way.

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Daily Meditation 12/31/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Let Your goodness Lord appear to us, that we
made in your image, conform ourselves to it.
In our own strength
we cannot imitate Your majesty, power, and wonder
nor is it fitting for us to try.
But Your mercy reaches from the heavens
through the clouds to the earth below.
You have come to us as a small child,
but you have brought us the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal love
Caress us with Your tiny hands,
embrace us with Your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with Your soft, sweet cries.

St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153)



"O God, all holy one, you are our Mother and our Father and we are your children. Open our eyes and our hearts so that we may be able to discern your work in the universe. And be able to see Your features in every one of Your children. May we learn that there are many paths but all lead to You. Help us to know that you have created us for family, for togetherness, for peace, for gentleness, for compassion, for caring, for sharing.

May we know that You want us to care for one another as those who know that they are sisters and brothers, members of the same family, Your family, the human family. Help us to beat our swords into ploughshares and our spears into pruning hooks, so that we may be able to live in peace and harmony, wiping away the tears from the eyes of those who are less fortunate than ourselves. And may we know war no more, as we strive to be what You want us to be: Your children, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."

Desmond M. Tutu Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, South Africa



Collect

Almighty God, you have poured upon us the new light of your incarnate Word: Grant that this light, enkindled in our hearts, may shine forth in our lives; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 46, 48
1 Kings 3:5-14; James 4:13-17;5:7-11; John 5:1-15
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Psalm 46. The LORD of hosts is with us.

It's the end of another (secular) year, filled with triumphs, losses, pain, healing, great joys and great sorrows. Tomorrow we switch over to 2008, imagining that we can take on new virtues with the new year and hoping that the hardships of the old are really past.


I once made ambitious New Year's resolutions, sweeping in their scope and optimism. These days, I don't bother. I know what will happen: sooner rather than later, they'll slip away, unfulfilled.


Instead, I make small promises as I go along. Today I will pray the Daily Office; today I'll find time to do something special with my children. Today I will exercise; today I'll tidy up the clutter around my chair. Today I will call my parents; today I'll ask a colleague out for coffee.


Most of all, I'll look for God in all that I do and all whom I meet. I'll remember to thank God for all my blessings-and to look for the blessings that aren't as obvious as they might be. I'll remember that God is present in all things and all events, today and always. Amen.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Zululand (South Africa)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

lvester.
St Sylvester was a Pope. You may have noticed that all Bishops and Popes
have coats of arms with mottos (even if they are not in the least
aristocratic!) Pope Benedict's motto is Cooperatores Christi - Co-workers of
Christ.

Archbishop Gardin, a Franciscan, has the lovely motto, Enthralled with the
beauty of God.

A bishop who is a Claresharer and who will be reading this has as his motto
Duc in altum - put out into the deep.

Chose your motto for the coming year - any language will do.
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 7th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 7, December 31
Seven Swans A-swimming
The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: 1) prophecy, 2) ministry, 3) teaching, 4) exhortation, 5) giving, 6) leading, and 7) compassion (Romans 12:6-8; cf. 1 Corinthians 12:8-11)



From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam, Erasmus (1466 - 1536), canon regular of Saint Augustine, was a prolific writer during his time and had a great influence in all fields of knowledge.



The Light Has Come

John 8:12 (NKJV) Then Jesus spoke to them again, saying, "I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life."

It happened when I was only 12 years old. I was a paperboy who won a subscription sales contest-a trip to Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. Wow, three days and nights without mom, dad, brothers or sister to bother me. Fantastic!

Upon arrival the park ranger sat us all down for an orientation. The ranger warned us not to go out on the trails after dark. "It's too dangerous," he said.

We went on a trail to the cave. Then we took a boat ride through part of the cave having to carry the boat over certain spots. We ate supper around a campfire before heading to bed for the night.

I was awakened around 2:00am by a beautiful full moon that sent light into my cabin room. I disregarded the park ranger's warning and slipped quietly out onto one of the trails. It was a cool evening just right for hiking on a trail. The moonlight assured my safety, I reasoned, as I hiked deeper and deeper into the woods. I was having so much fun I didn't notice that the trees were forming a canopy that light couldn't penetrate. Nor did I see the clouds that would soon conceal the full moon.

Before I knew it I was surrounded by darkness. The trail that only moments earlier seemed so wide had vanished. I panicked! Wiping tears from my eyes I began running desperately in an attempt to find the trail and my way back to safety. The harder I ran the more lost I became. It was hopeless!

But then I noticed a glimmer of light in the distance. I also heard a faint voice calling out, "Mark! Mark! Where are you?" Running as hard as I could towards the light I called back, "Here! I'm over here!"

Realizing how adventurous 12 year old boys are, the park ranger had done a bed check at 2:30am. When I wasn't found in bed a search party was organized and sent out. Soon I was united with my savior, the park ranger. When I was returned to my cabin I never ventured back out onto the trail.

God did a bed check on His creation. He found people lost in the darkness of sin. The situation seemed hopeless. So God sent out a search party. Jesus came to rescue us from the darkness! The light of the world came. The first of the coming light was called the Star of Bethlehem. It came on that first Christmas so long ago. It's light signaled the coming of a greater light, Jesus. The light has come. He has saved us from the darkness. Now He calls upon all Christians to shine the light of their faith into the darkness of the world so the lost can find their way back to God.

Thank you Lord for rescuing us. Thank you for being our Savior. Thank you for allowing us to light the way for others.

~ Mark S. Armstrong
Ardmore, Oklahoma, USA

Lord Jesus,

Your beloved disciple calls you the Light of the World. Even with all the storms of doubt and fear You are still the one who gives us the ability to find our way. And, not only back to You, but You show us the paths that our efforts should follow each day. We need You. We've tried living without You and we confess that it did not work. Help us to remember that, and to always ask for Your guidance. A new year is about to begin. Remind us to carry our Light!

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Not much time left

Daily Reading for December 31 • The Eve of the Holy Name

Something about this time of year makes us resolve to do all manner of things better. Almost all our good intentions will be history in a week or two. But there is also that other aspect of this time of year, the part that taps us on the shoulder and whispers that our lives are speeding away, faster and faster, evaporating as we speak. That there is not much time left. That soon we will be gone.

At the end of the year we remember the other years. Look at photos of people who are gone. See our young selves—they, too, are gone. We marvel at them. Was that party really sixty years ago? Was I ever that young?

Yes, comes the answer from the pictures. You were. You still are. I’m still here, inside you, your eighteen-year-old self. But remember, we are leaving soon. Good-bye, good-bye.

The only remedy for that sorrow is a life well lived now. “Love well that which thou must leave ere long,” Shakespeare wrote, and he was right.

Don’t let a day of the new year pass without marking it, because it will be gone when it is over. Put into your days the things you want there—no one else will fill them for you. Anything we have can be taken from us at a moment’s notice. Some of the people in our old photographs are dead already, and one day we will be, as well, and no one knows when.

But today is ours.

From Let Us Bless the Lord, Year One: Meditations on the Daily Office, Advent through Holy Week by Barbara Cawthorne Crafton. Copyright © 2004. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Perhaps it would be a good idea, fantastic as it sounds, to muffle every telephone and halt all activity for an hour some day to give people a chance to ponder for a few moments on what it is all about, why they are living, and what they really want.
— James Truslow Adams in the nineteenth century quoted in The Time Is Now by Daniel S. Wolk

To Practice This Thought: Unplug your telephone, or leave your cell phone behind, for one hour. Ask yourself one of the really big questions.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

In my Little Way there are only very ordinary things.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Strive as well as you can to enter deeply with the heart into the
church reading and singing and to imprint these on the tablets of
the heart.

Abbot Nazarius
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

God's Imagination

So much of our energy, time, and money goes into maintaining distance from one another. Many if not most of the resources of the world are used to defend ourselves against each other, to maintain or increase our power, and to safeguard our own privileged position.

Imagine all that effort being put in the service of peace and reconciliation! Would there be any poverty? Would there be crimes and wars? Just imagine that there was no longer fear among people, no longer any rivalry, hostility, bitterness, or revenge. Just imagine all the people on this planet holding hands and forming one large circle of love. We say, "I can't imagine." But God says, "That's what I imagine, a whole world not only created but also living in my image."
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

I Am Yours
December 31st, 2007
NEW YEAR’S EVE
Monday’s Reflection

GOD, IN THIS NEW YEAR, may I no longer be my own but yours. Put me to what you will; rank me with whom you will. Put me to doing; put me to suffering. Let me be employed for you or laid aside for you, exalted for you or brought low for you. Let me be full; let me be empty. Let me have all things; let me have nothing. I freely and heartily yield all things to your pleasure and disposal. And now, O glorious and blessed God — Creator, Redeemer, and Inspirer — you are mine, and I am yours. May this promise that I hereby make on earth be ratified in heaven. Amen.

- W. Paul Jones
An Adaptation of Wesley’s Watchnight Vows
An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful

From p. 438 of An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful by W. Paul Jones. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


Seduced Into Solidarity

Pope John Paul II says many good things in his encyclical Laborem Exercens. He says the best name today for agape love, for perfect Christian love, is solidarity. We thought solidarity was being nice and affirming, but ultimately it's to stay in there with brokenness and let it lead you where it will, and to be willing to pay the price. It led Jesus to the cross.

I think solidarity with pain, with weakness, even with the signs of death in society might be the best name for love in the world today, especially for masculine love, a side of love expressed by both men and women. None of us would choose to be nailed to the cross, or freely take the side of the victims in society. Circumstances will unwittingly trap us there, and finally there will be no noble way out.

We're not converted willingly; we're converted in spite of ourselves. Step by step, God seduces and draws us into solidarity.

from from A Man's Approach to God
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of December 31, 2007

For the "new man" everything is new. Even the old is transfigured in the Holy Spirit and is always new. There is nothing to cling to, there is nothing to be hoped for in what is already past-it is nothing. The new man is he who can find reality where it cannot be seen by the eyes of the flesh-where it is not yet- where it comes into being the moment he sees it. And would not be (at least for him) if he did not see it. The new man lives in a world that is always being created and renewed. He lives in this realm of renewal and creation. He lives in Life.

Thomas Merton. "A Search for Solitude." Journals, Volume 3. Lawrence S. Cunningham, editor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1997: 269

Thought to Remember:

There is in all visible things an invisible fecundity, a dimmed light, a meek namelessness, a hidden wholeness. This mysterious Unity and Integrity is Wisdom, the Mother of all, Natura naturans.

Thomas Merton. "Hagia Sophia" in The Collected Poems of Thomas Merton. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1978: 363.
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

YESTERDAY


"The God of Israel will be your rereward." Isaiah 52:12

Security from Yesterday. "God requireth that which is past." At the end of the year we turn with eagerness to all that God has for the future, and yet anxiety is apt to arise from remembering the yesterdays. Our present enjoyment of God's grace is apt to be checked by the memory of yesterday's sins and blunders. But God is the God of our yesterdays, and He allows the memory of them in order to turn the past into a ministry of spiritual culture for the future. God reminds us of the past lest we get into a shallow security in the present.

Security for To-morrow. "For the Lord will go before you." This is a gracious revelation, that God will garrison where we have failed to. He will watch lest things trip us up again into like failure, as they assuredly would do if He were not our rereward. God's hand reaches back to the past and makes a clearing-house for conscience.

Security for To-day. "For ye shall not go out with haste." As we go forth into the coming year, let it not be in the haste of impetuous, unremembering delight, nor with the flight of impulsive thoughtlessness, but with the patient power of knowing that the God of Israel will go before us. Our yesterdays present irreparable things to us; it is true that we have lost opportunities which will never return, but God can transform this destructive anxiety into a constructive thoughtfulness for the future. Let the past sleep, but let it sleep on the bosom of Christ.

Leave the Irreparable Past in His hands, and step out into the Irresistible Future with Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

May 1, August 31, December 31
Chapter 73: On the Fact That the Full Observance of Justice Is Not Established in This Rule

Now we have written this Rule
in order that by its observance in monasteries
we may show that we have attained some degree of virtue
and the rudiments of the religious life.

But for those who would hasten to the perfection of that life
there are the teaching of the holy Fathers,
the observance of which leads to the height of perfection.
For what page or what utterance
of the divinely inspired books of the Old and New Testaments
is not a most unerring rule for human life?
Or what book of the holy Catholic Fathers
does not loudly proclaim
how we may come by a straight course to our Creator?
Then the Conferences and the Institutes
and the Lives of the Fathers,
as also the Rule of our holy Father Basil --
what else are they but tools of virtue
for right-living and obedient monks?
But for us who are lazy and ill-living and negligent
they are a source of shame and confusion.

Whoever you are, therefore,
who are hastening to the heavenly homeland,
fulfill with the help of Christ
this minimum Rule which we have written for beginners;
and then at length under God's protection
you will attain to the loftier heights of doctrine and virtue
which we have mentioned above.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


This last chapter of the rule leaves us with a reading list for future spiritual development: the Bible, the Mothers and Fathers of the Church and their commentaries on scripture, and the classic contributions of other writers on the monastic life. But Benedict does not believe that the simple reading or study of spiritual literature is sufficient. He tells us to keep this rule, its values, its concepts, its insights. It is not what we read, he implies, it is what we become that counts. Every major religious tradition, in fact, has called for a change of heart, a change of life rather than for simply an analysis of its literature. The Hasidim, for instance, tell the story of the disciple who said to the teacher, "Teacher, I have gone completely through the Torah? What must I do now?"

And the teacher said, "Oh, my friend, the question is not, have you gone through the Torah. The question is, has the Torah gone through you?"

Even at the end of his rule, Benedict does not promise that we will be perfect for having lived it. What Benedict does promise is that we will be disposed to the will of God, attuned to the presence of God, committed to the search for God and just beginning to understand the power of God in our lives. Why? Because Benedictine simplicity gentles us into the arms of God. Benedictine community supports us on the way to God. Benedictine balance makes a wholesome journey possible. Monastic prayer, rooted in scripture lights the way. It is a way of life, a spirituality that makes the humdrum holy and the daily the stuff of high happiness. It is a way of life that lives life to the fullest offering, as this final chapter promises, that even more of the meaning of life is there for our taking if we will only follow this simple but profoundly life-altering way.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.


Monday, December 31, 2007 The
Venerable Theophylact of Ochrid
6th Vigil Nativity: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 Epistle: James 2:14-26
Gospel: St. Mark 12:13-17

The Kingdom of God: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 LXX, especially vs. 44: "And
in the days of those kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which
shall never be destroyed, nor shall its sovereignty be left to another
people." St. Mark reports that, in the aftermath of the arrest of St.
John the Forerunner, "Jesus came into Galilee preaching the Gospel of
the Kingdom of God" (Mk. 1:14), which caught the attention of God's
ancient People who were looking for a kingdom which [would] never be
destroyed" (Dan. 2:44). They hoped, therefore, that Jesus would end the
People's long domination by great empires - their condition ever since
Daniel's time.

Briefly, under the Maccabees, there had been self-rule for the People,
but then the pagan Romans came - yet another empire to dominate them.
Jesus' message of God's Kingdom was electrifying. Was the promised
Kingdom at hand? The People knew the prophecy: a Kingdom that God would
introduce would "break in pieces all these kingdoms" under which they
had lived and would "bring them to an end" in a Divine Kingdom that
would "stand for ever" (vs. 44). The Baptizer even foretold the coming
of the Messiah, God's ruler, Who would take "His winnowing fan...in His
hand, and...thoroughly clean out His threshing floor and gather His
wheat into the barn" (Mt. 3:12). The Messiah would usher in the great
Kingdom of God. Did He not?!

Beloved of the Lord, as the People united to Christ both as King and
God, you should understand that we are living in the age of the Kingdom
of God. Hopefully you understand what the Lord Jesus meant when He said
that the Kingdom is "at hand" (Mk. 1:15), for we experience the working
of the Kingdom in our lives at present, even as we look for it to be
fully realized in the future. We are blessed with both retrospect and
prospect. We know in retrospect what the Lord stated clearly: "My
kingdom is not of this world" (Jn. 18:36), yet in prospect we also pray
as He taught us, "Thy Kingdom come...on earth as it is in heaven" (Mt.
6:10).

This present reading is the prophecy of the Kingdom of God which the
Lord Jesus actually initiated. The Prophet Daniel received the first
hint of the coming Kingdom from God in the time of Nebuchadnezzar, king
of Babylon (605-562 BC). It happened this way: the Babylonian monarch
had a troubling, strange dream that none could interpret until God
disclosed its meaning to Daniel, after which the Prophet was able to
explain its interpretation to the king (Dan. 2:31-36,44-45). Daniel
drew from the imagery of the dream to illumine its historical
implications. God would bring an end to the succession of human
kingdoms with His own Kingdom. His Kingdom would be introduced without
human agency, like a stone "cut from a mountain by no human hand" (vs.
45), and thereafter it would stand forever.

Here is the marvel of the Kingdom of God. Already it has a two thousand
year history. We can see that it continues effectively in this world
because its dominion is not subject to the limitations of space and
time. It has broken many earthly kingdoms in pieces, letting the wind
of history carry them away, "so that not a trace of them [can] be found"
(vs. 35). But the reign of Christ remains, defying human control. His
Church, "a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own
special People" (1 Pet. 2:9), continues to hold dual citizenship in the
Kingdom of God while living in a succession of many nations down through
time.

The great Feast of the Lord's Nativity is also a celebration for each of
us that we have "a visa" from the "holy nation" of the King of kings and
Lord of lords. "The dream is certain, and its interpretation sure"
(Dan. 2:45), for Christ is "born on earth in Bethlehem for our
salvation."

Today, the Beginningless doth begin, and the Word becometh Incarnate.
Let us shout ceaselessly, crying, Glory to God in the highest and on
earth peace, good-will towards men.

Daily Meditation 12/31/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Let Your goodness Lord appear to us, that we
made in your image, conform ourselves to it.
In our own strength
we cannot imitate Your majesty, power, and wonder
nor is it fitting for us to try.
But Your mercy reaches from the heavens
through the clouds to the earth below.
You have come to us as a small child,
but you have brought us the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal love
Caress us with Your tiny hands,
embrace us with Your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with Your soft, sweet cries.

St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153)



"O God, all holy one, you are our Mother and our Father and we are your children. Open our eyes and our hearts so that we may be able to discern your work in the universe. And be able to see Your features in every one of Your children. May we learn that there are many paths but all lead to You. Help us to know that you have created us for family, for togetherness, for peace, for gentleness, for compassion, for caring, for sharing.

May we know that You want us to care for one another as those who know that they are sisters and brothers, members of the same family, Your family, the human family. Help us to beat our swords into ploughshares and our spears into pruning hooks, so that we may be able to live in peace and harmony, wiping away the tears from the eyes of those who are less fortunate than ourselves. And may we know war no more, as we strive to be what You want us to be: Your children, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."

Desmond M. Tutu Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, South Africa



Collect

Almighty God, you have poured upon us the new light of your incarnate Word: Grant that this light, enkindled in our hearts, may shine forth in our lives; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 46, 48
1 Kings 3:5-14; James 4:13-17;5:7-11; John 5:1-15
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Psalm 46. The LORD of hosts is with us.

It's the end of another (secular) year, filled with triumphs, losses, pain, healing, great joys and great sorrows. Tomorrow we switch over to 2008, imagining that we can take on new virtues with the new year and hoping that the hardships of the old are really past.


I once made ambitious New Year's resolutions, sweeping in their scope and optimism. These days, I don't bother. I know what will happen: sooner rather than later, they'll slip away, unfulfilled.


Instead, I make small promises as I go along. Today I will pray the Daily Office; today I'll find time to do something special with my children. Today I will exercise; today I'll tidy up the clutter around my chair. Today I will call my parents; today I'll ask a colleague out for coffee.


Most of all, I'll look for God in all that I do and all whom I meet. I'll remember to thank God for all my blessings-and to look for the blessings that aren't as obvious as they might be. I'll remember that God is present in all things and all events, today and always. Amen.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Zululand (South Africa)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
++++++++++

From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

lvester.
St Sylvester was a Pope. You may have noticed that all Bishops and Popes
have coats of arms with mottos (even if they are not in the least
aristocratic!) Pope Benedict's motto is Cooperatores Christi - Co-workers of
Christ.

Archbishop Gardin, a Franciscan, has the lovely motto, Enthralled with the
beauty of God.

A bishop who is a Claresharer and who will be reading this has as his motto
Duc in altum - put out into the deep.

Chose your motto for the coming year - any language will do.
+++++++++++++++

Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 7th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 7, December 31
Seven Swans A-swimming
The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: 1) prophecy, 2) ministry, 3) teaching, 4) exhortation, 5) giving, 6) leading, and 7) compassion (Romans 12:6-8; cf. 1 Corinthians 12:8-11)



From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam, Erasmus (1466 - 1536), canon regular of Saint Augustine, was a prolific writer during his time and had a great influence in all fields of knowledge.



The Light Has Come

John 8:12 (NKJV) Then Jesus spoke to them again, saying, "I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life."

It happened when I was only 12 years old. I was a paperboy who won a subscription sales contest-a trip to Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. Wow, three days and nights without mom, dad, brothers or sister to bother me. Fantastic!

Upon arrival the park ranger sat us all down for an orientation. The ranger warned us not to go out on the trails after dark. "It's too dangerous," he said.

We went on a trail to the cave. Then we took a boat ride through part of the cave having to carry the boat over certain spots. We ate supper around a campfire before heading to bed for the night.

I was awakened around 2:00am by a beautiful full moon that sent light into my cabin room. I disregarded the park ranger's warning and slipped quietly out onto one of the trails. It was a cool evening just right for hiking on a trail. The moonlight assured my safety, I reasoned, as I hiked deeper and deeper into the woods. I was having so much fun I didn't notice that the trees were forming a canopy that light couldn't penetrate. Nor did I see the clouds that would soon conceal the full moon.

Before I knew it I was surrounded by darkness. The trail that only moments earlier seemed so wide had vanished. I panicked! Wiping tears from my eyes I began running desperately in an attempt to find the trail and my way back to safety. The harder I ran the more lost I became. It was hopeless!

But then I noticed a glimmer of light in the distance. I also heard a faint voice calling out, "Mark! Mark! Where are you?" Running as hard as I could towards the light I called back, "Here! I'm over here!"

Realizing how adventurous 12 year old boys are, the park ranger had done a bed check at 2:30am. When I wasn't found in bed a search party was organized and sent out. Soon I was united with my savior, the park ranger. When I was returned to my cabin I never ventured back out onto the trail.

God did a bed check on His creation. He found people lost in the darkness of sin. The situation seemed hopeless. So God sent out a search party. Jesus came to rescue us from the darkness! The light of the world came. The first of the coming light was called the Star of Bethlehem. It came on that first Christmas so long ago. It's light signaled the coming of a greater light, Jesus. The light has come. He has saved us from the darkness. Now He calls upon all Christians to shine the light of their faith into the darkness of the world so the lost can find their way back to God.

Thank you Lord for rescuing us. Thank you for being our Savior. Thank you for allowing us to light the way for others.

~ Mark S. Armstrong
Ardmore, Oklahoma, USA

Lord Jesus,

Your beloved disciple calls you the Light of the World. Even with all the storms of doubt and fear You are still the one who gives us the ability to find our way. And, not only back to You, but You show us the paths that our efforts should follow each day. We need You. We've tried living without You and we confess that it did not work. Help us to remember that, and to always ask for Your guidance. A new year is about to begin. Remind us to carry our Light!

Amen
+++++++++++

Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Not much time left

Daily Reading for December 31 • The Eve of the Holy Name

Something about this time of year makes us resolve to do all manner of things better. Almost all our good intentions will be history in a week or two. But there is also that other aspect of this time of year, the part that taps us on the shoulder and whispers that our lives are speeding away, faster and faster, evaporating as we speak. That there is not much time left. That soon we will be gone.

At the end of the year we remember the other years. Look at photos of people who are gone. See our young selves—they, too, are gone. We marvel at them. Was that party really sixty years ago? Was I ever that young?

Yes, comes the answer from the pictures. You were. You still are. I’m still here, inside you, your eighteen-year-old self. But remember, we are leaving soon. Good-bye, good-bye.

The only remedy for that sorrow is a life well lived now. “Love well that which thou must leave ere long,” Shakespeare wrote, and he was right.

Don’t let a day of the new year pass without marking it, because it will be gone when it is over. Put into your days the things you want there—no one else will fill them for you. Anything we have can be taken from us at a moment’s notice. Some of the people in our old photographs are dead already, and one day we will be, as well, and no one knows when.

But today is ours.

From Let Us Bless the Lord, Year One: Meditations on the Daily Office, Advent through Holy Week by Barbara Cawthorne Crafton. Copyright © 2004. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Perhaps it would be a good idea, fantastic as it sounds, to muffle every telephone and halt all activity for an hour some day to give people a chance to ponder for a few moments on what it is all about, why they are living, and what they really want.
— James Truslow Adams in the nineteenth century quoted in The Time Is Now by Daniel S. Wolk

To Practice This Thought: Unplug your telephone, or leave your cell phone behind, for one hour. Ask yourself one of the really big questions.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

In my Little Way there are only very ordinary things.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Strive as well as you can to enter deeply with the heart into the
church reading and singing and to imprint these on the tablets of
the heart.

Abbot Nazarius
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

God's Imagination

So much of our energy, time, and money goes into maintaining distance from one another. Many if not most of the resources of the world are used to defend ourselves against each other, to maintain or increase our power, and to safeguard our own privileged position.

Imagine all that effort being put in the service of peace and reconciliation! Would there be any poverty? Would there be crimes and wars? Just imagine that there was no longer fear among people, no longer any rivalry, hostility, bitterness, or revenge. Just imagine all the people on this planet holding hands and forming one large circle of love. We say, "I can't imagine." But God says, "That's what I imagine, a whole world not only created but also living in my image."
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

I Am Yours
December 31st, 2007
NEW YEAR’S EVE
Monday’s Reflection

GOD, IN THIS NEW YEAR, may I no longer be my own but yours. Put me to what you will; rank me with whom you will. Put me to doing; put me to suffering. Let me be employed for you or laid aside for you, exalted for you or brought low for you. Let me be full; let me be empty. Let me have all things; let me have nothing. I freely and heartily yield all things to your pleasure and disposal. And now, O glorious and blessed God — Creator, Redeemer, and Inspirer — you are mine, and I am yours. May this promise that I hereby make on earth be ratified in heaven. Amen.

- W. Paul Jones
An Adaptation of Wesley’s Watchnight Vows
An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful

From p. 438 of An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful by W. Paul Jones. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


Seduced Into Solidarity

Pope John Paul II says many good things in his encyclical Laborem Exercens. He says the best name today for agape love, for perfect Christian love, is solidarity. We thought solidarity was being nice and affirming, but ultimately it's to stay in there with brokenness and let it lead you where it will, and to be willing to pay the price. It led Jesus to the cross.

I think solidarity with pain, with weakness, even with the signs of death in society might be the best name for love in the world today, especially for masculine love, a side of love expressed by both men and women. None of us would choose to be nailed to the cross, or freely take the side of the victims in society. Circumstances will unwittingly trap us there, and finally there will be no noble way out.

We're not converted willingly; we're converted in spite of ourselves. Step by step, God seduces and draws us into solidarity.

from from A Man's Approach to God
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of December 31, 2007

For the "new man" everything is new. Even the old is transfigured in the Holy Spirit and is always new. There is nothing to cling to, there is nothing to be hoped for in what is already past-it is nothing. The new man is he who can find reality where it cannot be seen by the eyes of the flesh-where it is not yet- where it comes into being the moment he sees it. And would not be (at least for him) if he did not see it. The new man lives in a world that is always being created and renewed. He lives in this realm of renewal and creation. He lives in Life.

Thomas Merton. "A Search for Solitude." Journals, Volume 3. Lawrence S. Cunningham, editor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1997: 269

Thought to Remember:

There is in all visible things an invisible fecundity, a dimmed light, a meek namelessness, a hidden wholeness. This mysterious Unity and Integrity is Wisdom, the Mother of all, Natura naturans.

Thomas Merton. "Hagia Sophia" in The Collected Poems of Thomas Merton. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1978: 363.
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

YESTERDAY


"The God of Israel will be your rereward." Isaiah 52:12

Security from Yesterday. "God requireth that which is past." At the end of the year we turn with eagerness to all that God has for the future, and yet anxiety is apt to arise from remembering the yesterdays. Our present enjoyment of God's grace is apt to be checked by the memory of yesterday's sins and blunders. But God is the God of our yesterdays, and He allows the memory of them in order to turn the past into a ministry of spiritual culture for the future. God reminds us of the past lest we get into a shallow security in the present.

Security for To-morrow. "For the Lord will go before you." This is a gracious revelation, that God will garrison where we have failed to. He will watch lest things trip us up again into like failure, as they assuredly would do if He were not our rereward. God's hand reaches back to the past and makes a clearing-house for conscience.

Security for To-day. "For ye shall not go out with haste." As we go forth into the coming year, let it not be in the haste of impetuous, unremembering delight, nor with the flight of impulsive thoughtlessness, but with the patient power of knowing that the God of Israel will go before us. Our yesterdays present irreparable things to us; it is true that we have lost opportunities which will never return, but God can transform this destructive anxiety into a constructive thoughtfulness for the future. Let the past sleep, but let it sleep on the bosom of Christ.

Leave the Irreparable Past in His hands, and step out into the Irresistible Future with Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

May 1, August 31, December 31
Chapter 73: On the Fact That the Full Observance of Justice Is Not Established in This Rule

Now we have written this Rule
in order that by its observance in monasteries
we may show that we have attained some degree of virtue
and the rudiments of the religious life.

But for those who would hasten to the perfection of that life
there are the teaching of the holy Fathers,
the observance of which leads to the height of perfection.
For what page or what utterance
of the divinely inspired books of the Old and New Testaments
is not a most unerring rule for human life?
Or what book of the holy Catholic Fathers
does not loudly proclaim
how we may come by a straight course to our Creator?
Then the Conferences and the Institutes
and the Lives of the Fathers,
as also the Rule of our holy Father Basil --
what else are they but tools of virtue
for right-living and obedient monks?
But for us who are lazy and ill-living and negligent
they are a source of shame and confusion.

Whoever you are, therefore,
who are hastening to the heavenly homeland,
fulfill with the help of Christ
this minimum Rule which we have written for beginners;
and then at length under God's protection
you will attain to the loftier heights of doctrine and virtue
which we have mentioned above.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


This last chapter of the rule leaves us with a reading list for future spiritual development: the Bible, the Mothers and Fathers of the Church and their commentaries on scripture, and the classic contributions of other writers on the monastic life. But Benedict does not believe that the simple reading or study of spiritual literature is sufficient. He tells us to keep this rule, its values, its concepts, its insights. It is not what we read, he implies, it is what we become that counts. Every major religious tradition, in fact, has called for a change of heart, a change of life rather than for simply an analysis of its literature. The Hasidim, for instance, tell the story of the disciple who said to the teacher, "Teacher, I have gone completely through the Torah? What must I do now?"

And the teacher said, "Oh, my friend, the question is not, have you gone through the Torah. The question is, has the Torah gone through you?"

Even at the end of his rule, Benedict does not promise that we will be perfect for having lived it. What Benedict does promise is that we will be disposed to the will of God, attuned to the presence of God, committed to the search for God and just beginning to understand the power of God in our lives. Why? Because Benedictine simplicity gentles us into the arms of God. Benedictine community supports us on the way to God. Benedictine balance makes a wholesome journey possible. Monastic prayer, rooted in scripture lights the way. It is a way of life, a spirituality that makes the humdrum holy and the daily the stuff of high happiness. It is a way of life that lives life to the fullest offering, as this final chapter promises, that even more of the meaning of life is there for our taking if we will only follow this simple but profoundly life-altering way.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.


Monday, December 31, 2007 The
Venerable Theophylact of Ochrid
6th Vigil Nativity: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 Epistle: James 2:14-26
Gospel: St. Mark 12:13-17

The Kingdom of God: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 LXX, especially vs. 44: "And
in the days of those kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which
shall never be destroyed, nor shall its sovereignty be left to another
people." St. Mark reports that, in the aftermath of the arrest of St.
John the Forerunner, "Jesus came into Galilee preaching the Gospel of
the Kingdom of God" (Mk. 1:14), which caught the attention of God's
ancient People who were looking for a kingdom which [would] never be
destroyed" (Dan. 2:44). They hoped, therefore, that Jesus would end the
People's long domination by great empires - their condition ever since
Daniel's time.

Briefly, under the Maccabees, there had been self-rule for the People,
but then the pagan Romans came - yet another empire to dominate them.
Jesus' message of God's Kingdom was electrifying. Was the promised
Kingdom at hand? The People knew the prophecy: a Kingdom that God would
introduce would "break in pieces all these kingdoms" under which they
had lived and would "bring them to an end" in a Divine Kingdom that
would "stand for ever" (vs. 44). The Baptizer even foretold the coming
of the Messiah, God's ruler, Who would take "His winnowing fan...in His
hand, and...thoroughly clean out His threshing floor and gather His
wheat into the barn" (Mt. 3:12). The Messiah would usher in the great
Kingdom of God. Did He not?!

Beloved of the Lord, as the People united to Christ both as King and
God, you should understand that we are living in the age of the Kingdom
of God. Hopefully you understand what the Lord Jesus meant when He said
that the Kingdom is "at hand" (Mk. 1:15), for we experience the working
of the Kingdom in our lives at present, even as we look for it to be
fully realized in the future. We are blessed with both retrospect and
prospect. We know in retrospect what the Lord stated clearly: "My
kingdom is not of this world" (Jn. 18:36), yet in prospect we also pray
as He taught us, "Thy Kingdom come...on earth as it is in heaven" (Mt.
6:10).

This present reading is the prophecy of the Kingdom of God which the
Lord Jesus actually initiated. The Prophet Daniel received the first
hint of the coming Kingdom from God in the time of Nebuchadnezzar, king
of Babylon (605-562 BC). It happened this way: the Babylonian monarch
had a troubling, strange dream that none could interpret until God
disclosed its meaning to Daniel, after which the Prophet was able to
explain its interpretation to the king (Dan. 2:31-36,44-45). Daniel
drew from the imagery of the dream to illumine its historical
implications. God would bring an end to the succession of human
kingdoms with His own Kingdom. His Kingdom would be introduced without
human agency, like a stone "cut from a mountain by no human hand" (vs.
45), and thereafter it would stand forever.

Here is the marvel of the Kingdom of God. Already it has a two thousand
year history. We can see that it continues effectively in this world
because its dominion is not subject to the limitations of space and
time. It has broken many earthly kingdoms in pieces, letting the wind
of history carry them away, "so that not a trace of them [can] be found"
(vs. 35). But the reign of Christ remains, defying human control. His
Church, "a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own
special People" (1 Pet. 2:9), continues to hold dual citizenship in the
Kingdom of God while living in a succession of many nations down through
time.

The great Feast of the Lord's Nativity is also a celebration for each of
us that we have "a visa" from the "holy nation" of the King of kings and
Lord of lords. "The dream is certain, and its interpretation sure"
(Dan. 2:45), for Christ is "born on earth in Bethlehem for our
salvation."

Today, the Beginningless doth begin, and the Word becometh Incarnate.
Let us shout ceaselessly, crying, Glory to God in the highest and on
earth peace, good-will towards men.

Daily Meditation 12/31/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Let Your goodness Lord appear to us, that we
made in your image, conform ourselves to it.
In our own strength
we cannot imitate Your majesty, power, and wonder
nor is it fitting for us to try.
But Your mercy reaches from the heavens
through the clouds to the earth below.
You have come to us as a small child,
but you have brought us the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal love
Caress us with Your tiny hands,
embrace us with Your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with Your soft, sweet cries.

St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153)



"O God, all holy one, you are our Mother and our Father and we are your children. Open our eyes and our hearts so that we may be able to discern your work in the universe. And be able to see Your features in every one of Your children. May we learn that there are many paths but all lead to You. Help us to know that you have created us for family, for togetherness, for peace, for gentleness, for compassion, for caring, for sharing.

May we know that You want us to care for one another as those who know that they are sisters and brothers, members of the same family, Your family, the human family. Help us to beat our swords into ploughshares and our spears into pruning hooks, so that we may be able to live in peace and harmony, wiping away the tears from the eyes of those who are less fortunate than ourselves. And may we know war no more, as we strive to be what You want us to be: Your children, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."

Desmond M. Tutu Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, South Africa



Collect

Almighty God, you have poured upon us the new light of your incarnate Word: Grant that this light, enkindled in our hearts, may shine forth in our lives; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
++++++++++

Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 46, 48
1 Kings 3:5-14; James 4:13-17;5:7-11; John 5:1-15
++++++++++

From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Psalm 46. The LORD of hosts is with us.

It's the end of another (secular) year, filled with triumphs, losses, pain, healing, great joys and great sorrows. Tomorrow we switch over to 2008, imagining that we can take on new virtues with the new year and hoping that the hardships of the old are really past.


I once made ambitious New Year's resolutions, sweeping in their scope and optimism. These days, I don't bother. I know what will happen: sooner rather than later, they'll slip away, unfulfilled.


Instead, I make small promises as I go along. Today I will pray the Daily Office; today I'll find time to do something special with my children. Today I will exercise; today I'll tidy up the clutter around my chair. Today I will call my parents; today I'll ask a colleague out for coffee.


Most of all, I'll look for God in all that I do and all whom I meet. I'll remember to thank God for all my blessings-and to look for the blessings that aren't as obvious as they might be. I'll remember that God is present in all things and all events, today and always. Amen.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Zululand (South Africa)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
++++++++++

From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

lvester.
St Sylvester was a Pope. You may have noticed that all Bishops and Popes
have coats of arms with mottos (even if they are not in the least
aristocratic!) Pope Benedict's motto is Cooperatores Christi - Co-workers of
Christ.

Archbishop Gardin, a Franciscan, has the lovely motto, Enthralled with the
beauty of God.

A bishop who is a Claresharer and who will be reading this has as his motto
Duc in altum - put out into the deep.

Chose your motto for the coming year - any language will do.
+++++++++++++++

Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 7th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 7, December 31
Seven Swans A-swimming
The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: 1) prophecy, 2) ministry, 3) teaching, 4) exhortation, 5) giving, 6) leading, and 7) compassion (Romans 12:6-8; cf. 1 Corinthians 12:8-11)



From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam, Erasmus (1466 - 1536), canon regular of Saint Augustine, was a prolific writer during his time and had a great influence in all fields of knowledge.



The Light Has Come

John 8:12 (NKJV) Then Jesus spoke to them again, saying, "I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life."

It happened when I was only 12 years old. I was a paperboy who won a subscription sales contest-a trip to Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. Wow, three days and nights without mom, dad, brothers or sister to bother me. Fantastic!

Upon arrival the park ranger sat us all down for an orientation. The ranger warned us not to go out on the trails after dark. "It's too dangerous," he said.

We went on a trail to the cave. Then we took a boat ride through part of the cave having to carry the boat over certain spots. We ate supper around a campfire before heading to bed for the night.

I was awakened around 2:00am by a beautiful full moon that sent light into my cabin room. I disregarded the park ranger's warning and slipped quietly out onto one of the trails. It was a cool evening just right for hiking on a trail. The moonlight assured my safety, I reasoned, as I hiked deeper and deeper into the woods. I was having so much fun I didn't notice that the trees were forming a canopy that light couldn't penetrate. Nor did I see the clouds that would soon conceal the full moon.

Before I knew it I was surrounded by darkness. The trail that only moments earlier seemed so wide had vanished. I panicked! Wiping tears from my eyes I began running desperately in an attempt to find the trail and my way back to safety. The harder I ran the more lost I became. It was hopeless!

But then I noticed a glimmer of light in the distance. I also heard a faint voice calling out, "Mark! Mark! Where are you?" Running as hard as I could towards the light I called back, "Here! I'm over here!"

Realizing how adventurous 12 year old boys are, the park ranger had done a bed check at 2:30am. When I wasn't found in bed a search party was organized and sent out. Soon I was united with my savior, the park ranger. When I was returned to my cabin I never ventured back out onto the trail.

God did a bed check on His creation. He found people lost in the darkness of sin. The situation seemed hopeless. So God sent out a search party. Jesus came to rescue us from the darkness! The light of the world came. The first of the coming light was called the Star of Bethlehem. It came on that first Christmas so long ago. It's light signaled the coming of a greater light, Jesus. The light has come. He has saved us from the darkness. Now He calls upon all Christians to shine the light of their faith into the darkness of the world so the lost can find their way back to God.

Thank you Lord for rescuing us. Thank you for being our Savior. Thank you for allowing us to light the way for others.

~ Mark S. Armstrong
Ardmore, Oklahoma, USA

Lord Jesus,

Your beloved disciple calls you the Light of the World. Even with all the storms of doubt and fear You are still the one who gives us the ability to find our way. And, not only back to You, but You show us the paths that our efforts should follow each day. We need You. We've tried living without You and we confess that it did not work. Help us to remember that, and to always ask for Your guidance. A new year is about to begin. Remind us to carry our Light!

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Not much time left

Daily Reading for December 31 • The Eve of the Holy Name

Something about this time of year makes us resolve to do all manner of things better. Almost all our good intentions will be history in a week or two. But there is also that other aspect of this time of year, the part that taps us on the shoulder and whispers that our lives are speeding away, faster and faster, evaporating as we speak. That there is not much time left. That soon we will be gone.

At the end of the year we remember the other years. Look at photos of people who are gone. See our young selves—they, too, are gone. We marvel at them. Was that party really sixty years ago? Was I ever that young?

Yes, comes the answer from the pictures. You were. You still are. I’m still here, inside you, your eighteen-year-old self. But remember, we are leaving soon. Good-bye, good-bye.

The only remedy for that sorrow is a life well lived now. “Love well that which thou must leave ere long,” Shakespeare wrote, and he was right.

Don’t let a day of the new year pass without marking it, because it will be gone when it is over. Put into your days the things you want there—no one else will fill them for you. Anything we have can be taken from us at a moment’s notice. Some of the people in our old photographs are dead already, and one day we will be, as well, and no one knows when.

But today is ours.

From Let Us Bless the Lord, Year One: Meditations on the Daily Office, Advent through Holy Week by Barbara Cawthorne Crafton. Copyright © 2004. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Perhaps it would be a good idea, fantastic as it sounds, to muffle every telephone and halt all activity for an hour some day to give people a chance to ponder for a few moments on what it is all about, why they are living, and what they really want.
— James Truslow Adams in the nineteenth century quoted in The Time Is Now by Daniel S. Wolk

To Practice This Thought: Unplug your telephone, or leave your cell phone behind, for one hour. Ask yourself one of the really big questions.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

In my Little Way there are only very ordinary things.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Strive as well as you can to enter deeply with the heart into the
church reading and singing and to imprint these on the tablets of
the heart.

Abbot Nazarius
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

God's Imagination

So much of our energy, time, and money goes into maintaining distance from one another. Many if not most of the resources of the world are used to defend ourselves against each other, to maintain or increase our power, and to safeguard our own privileged position.

Imagine all that effort being put in the service of peace and reconciliation! Would there be any poverty? Would there be crimes and wars? Just imagine that there was no longer fear among people, no longer any rivalry, hostility, bitterness, or revenge. Just imagine all the people on this planet holding hands and forming one large circle of love. We say, "I can't imagine." But God says, "That's what I imagine, a whole world not only created but also living in my image."
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

I Am Yours
December 31st, 2007
NEW YEAR’S EVE
Monday’s Reflection

GOD, IN THIS NEW YEAR, may I no longer be my own but yours. Put me to what you will; rank me with whom you will. Put me to doing; put me to suffering. Let me be employed for you or laid aside for you, exalted for you or brought low for you. Let me be full; let me be empty. Let me have all things; let me have nothing. I freely and heartily yield all things to your pleasure and disposal. And now, O glorious and blessed God — Creator, Redeemer, and Inspirer — you are mine, and I am yours. May this promise that I hereby make on earth be ratified in heaven. Amen.

- W. Paul Jones
An Adaptation of Wesley’s Watchnight Vows
An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful

From p. 438 of An Eclectic Almanac for the Faithful by W. Paul Jones. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


Seduced Into Solidarity

Pope John Paul II says many good things in his encyclical Laborem Exercens. He says the best name today for agape love, for perfect Christian love, is solidarity. We thought solidarity was being nice and affirming, but ultimately it's to stay in there with brokenness and let it lead you where it will, and to be willing to pay the price. It led Jesus to the cross.

I think solidarity with pain, with weakness, even with the signs of death in society might be the best name for love in the world today, especially for masculine love, a side of love expressed by both men and women. None of us would choose to be nailed to the cross, or freely take the side of the victims in society. Circumstances will unwittingly trap us there, and finally there will be no noble way out.

We're not converted willingly; we're converted in spite of ourselves. Step by step, God seduces and draws us into solidarity.

from from A Man's Approach to God
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of December 31, 2007

For the "new man" everything is new. Even the old is transfigured in the Holy Spirit and is always new. There is nothing to cling to, there is nothing to be hoped for in what is already past-it is nothing. The new man is he who can find reality where it cannot be seen by the eyes of the flesh-where it is not yet- where it comes into being the moment he sees it. And would not be (at least for him) if he did not see it. The new man lives in a world that is always being created and renewed. He lives in this realm of renewal and creation. He lives in Life.

Thomas Merton. "A Search for Solitude." Journals, Volume 3. Lawrence S. Cunningham, editor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1997: 269

Thought to Remember:

There is in all visible things an invisible fecundity, a dimmed light, a meek namelessness, a hidden wholeness. This mysterious Unity and Integrity is Wisdom, the Mother of all, Natura naturans.

Thomas Merton. "Hagia Sophia" in The Collected Poems of Thomas Merton. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1978: 363.
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

People of peace

Did the angels sound military trumpets when Christ was born? The Jews, who were permitted war, heard the sound of such trumpets; they were allowed to hate their enemies. The angels of peace sing a different song to the people of peace. They do not call men to war. They proclaim peace and the oracles of the prophets. They proclaim peace, not to murderers and warmongers, but to those who in good will are inclined to concord.

Let people pretend what they will about their own injuries. If they did not love war, they would not war continually among themselves. What did Christ teach besides peace? What did he express himself on besides peace? He saluted his disciples with, Peace be with you. He prescribed it as the only worthy form of greeting for Christians. The apostles, mindful of this, begin the epistles with wishes of peace to all and to those whom they particularly love. Whoever wishes for good health desires an excellent thing; but whoever wishes for peace desires the very totality of happiness.

Erasmus of Rotterdam
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

YESTERDAY


"The God of Israel will be your rereward." Isaiah 52:12

Security from Yesterday. "God requireth that which is past." At the end of the year we turn with eagerness to all that God has for the future, and yet anxiety is apt to arise from remembering the yesterdays. Our present enjoyment of God's grace is apt to be checked by the memory of yesterday's sins and blunders. But God is the God of our yesterdays, and He allows the memory of them in order to turn the past into a ministry of spiritual culture for the future. God reminds us of the past lest we get into a shallow security in the present.

Security for To-morrow. "For the Lord will go before you." This is a gracious revelation, that God will garrison where we have failed to. He will watch lest things trip us up again into like failure, as they assuredly would do if He were not our rereward. God's hand reaches back to the past and makes a clearing-house for conscience.

Security for To-day. "For ye shall not go out with haste." As we go forth into the coming year, let it not be in the haste of impetuous, unremembering delight, nor with the flight of impulsive thoughtlessness, but with the patient power of knowing that the God of Israel will go before us. Our yesterdays present irreparable things to us; it is true that we have lost opportunities which will never return, but God can transform this destructive anxiety into a constructive thoughtfulness for the future. Let the past sleep, but let it sleep on the bosom of Christ.

Leave the Irreparable Past in His hands, and step out into the Irresistible Future with Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

May 1, August 31, December 31
Chapter 73: On the Fact That the Full Observance of Justice Is Not Established in This Rule

Now we have written this Rule
in order that by its observance in monasteries
we may show that we have attained some degree of virtue
and the rudiments of the religious life.

But for those who would hasten to the perfection of that life
there are the teaching of the holy Fathers,
the observance of which leads to the height of perfection.
For what page or what utterance
of the divinely inspired books of the Old and New Testaments
is not a most unerring rule for human life?
Or what book of the holy Catholic Fathers
does not loudly proclaim
how we may come by a straight course to our Creator?
Then the Conferences and the Institutes
and the Lives of the Fathers,
as also the Rule of our holy Father Basil --
what else are they but tools of virtue
for right-living and obedient monks?
But for us who are lazy and ill-living and negligent
they are a source of shame and confusion.

Whoever you are, therefore,
who are hastening to the heavenly homeland,
fulfill with the help of Christ
this minimum Rule which we have written for beginners;
and then at length under God's protection
you will attain to the loftier heights of doctrine and virtue
which we have mentioned above.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


This last chapter of the rule leaves us with a reading list for future spiritual development: the Bible, the Mothers and Fathers of the Church and their commentaries on scripture, and the classic contributions of other writers on the monastic life. But Benedict does not believe that the simple reading or study of spiritual literature is sufficient. He tells us to keep this rule, its values, its concepts, its insights. It is not what we read, he implies, it is what we become that counts. Every major religious tradition, in fact, has called for a change of heart, a change of life rather than for simply an analysis of its literature. The Hasidim, for instance, tell the story of the disciple who said to the teacher, "Teacher, I have gone completely through the Torah? What must I do now?"

And the teacher said, "Oh, my friend, the question is not, have you gone through the Torah. The question is, has the Torah gone through you?"

Even at the end of his rule, Benedict does not promise that we will be perfect for having lived it. What Benedict does promise is that we will be disposed to the will of God, attuned to the presence of God, committed to the search for God and just beginning to understand the power of God in our lives. Why? Because Benedictine simplicity gentles us into the arms of God. Benedictine community supports us on the way to God. Benedictine balance makes a wholesome journey possible. Monastic prayer, rooted in scripture lights the way. It is a way of life, a spirituality that makes the humdrum holy and the daily the stuff of high happiness. It is a way of life that lives life to the fullest offering, as this final chapter promises, that even more of the meaning of life is there for our taking if we will only follow this simple but profoundly life-altering way.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.


Monday, December 31, 2007 The
Venerable Theophylact of Ochrid
6th Vigil Nativity: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 Epistle: James 2:14-26
Gospel: St. Mark 12:13-17

The Kingdom of God: Daniel 2:31-36, 44-45 LXX, especially vs. 44: "And
in the days of those kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which
shall never be destroyed, nor shall its sovereignty be left to another
people." St. Mark reports that, in the aftermath of the arrest of St.
John the Forerunner, "Jesus came into Galilee preaching the Gospel of
the Kingdom of God" (Mk. 1:14), which caught the attention of God's
ancient People who were looking for a kingdom which [would] never be
destroyed" (Dan. 2:44). They hoped, therefore, that Jesus would end the
People's long domination by great empires - their condition ever since
Daniel's time.

Briefly, under the Maccabees, there had been self-rule for the People,
but then the pagan Romans came - yet another empire to dominate them.
Jesus' message of God's Kingdom was electrifying. Was the promised
Kingdom at hand? The People knew the prophecy: a Kingdom that God would
introduce would "break in pieces all these kingdoms" under which they
had lived and would "bring them to an end" in a Divine Kingdom that
would "stand for ever" (vs. 44). The Baptizer even foretold the coming
of the Messiah, God's ruler, Who would take "His winnowing fan...in His
hand, and...thoroughly clean out His threshing floor and gather His
wheat into the barn" (Mt. 3:12). The Messiah would usher in the great
Kingdom of God. Did He not?!

Beloved of the Lord, as the People united to Christ both as King and
God, you should understand that we are living in the age of the Kingdom
of God. Hopefully you understand what the Lord Jesus meant when He said
that the Kingdom is "at hand" (Mk. 1:15), for we experience the working
of the Kingdom in our lives at present, even as we look for it to be
fully realized in the future. We are blessed with both retrospect and
prospect. We know in retrospect what the Lord stated clearly: "My
kingdom is not of this world" (Jn. 18:36), yet in prospect we also pray
as He taught us, "Thy Kingdom come...on earth as it is in heaven" (Mt.
6:10).

This present reading is the prophecy of the Kingdom of God which the
Lord Jesus actually initiated. The Prophet Daniel received the first
hint of the coming Kingdom from God in the time of Nebuchadnezzar, king
of Babylon (605-562 BC). It happened this way: the Babylonian monarch
had a troubling, strange dream that none could interpret until God
disclosed its meaning to Daniel, after which the Prophet was able to
explain its interpretation to the king (Dan. 2:31-36,44-45). Daniel
drew from the imagery of the dream to illumine its historical
implications. God would bring an end to the succession of human
kingdoms with His own Kingdom. His Kingdom would be introduced without
human agency, like a stone "cut from a mountain by no human hand" (vs.
45), and thereafter it would stand forever.

Here is the marvel of the Kingdom of God. Already it has a two thousand
year history. We can see that it continues effectively in this world
because its dominion is not subject to the limitations of space and
time. It has broken many earthly kingdoms in pieces, letting the wind
of history carry them away, "so that not a trace of them [can] be found"
(vs. 35). But the reign of Christ remains, defying human control. His
Church, "a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own
special People" (1 Pet. 2:9), continues to hold dual citizenship in the
Kingdom of God while living in a succession of many nations down through
time.

The great Feast of the Lord's Nativity is also a celebration for each of
us that we have "a visa" from the "holy nation" of the King of kings and
Lord of lords. "The dream is certain, and its interpretation sure"
(Dan. 2:45), for Christ is "born on earth in Bethlehem for our
salvation."

Today, the Beginningless doth begin, and the Word becometh Incarnate.
Let us shout ceaselessly, crying, Glory to God in the highest and on
earth peace, good-will towards men.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Daily Reading December 30, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 30, August 30, December 30
Chapter 72: On the Good Zeal Which They Ought to Have

Just as there is an evil zeal of bitterness
which separates from God and leads to hell,
so there is a good zeal
which separates from vices and leads to God
and to life everlasting.
This zeal, therefore, the sisters should practice
with the most fervent love.
Thus they should anticipate one another in honor (Rom. 12:10);
most patiently endure one another's infirmities,
whether of body or of character;
vie in paying obedience one to another --
no one following what she considers useful for herself,
but rather what benefits another;
tender the charity of sisterhood chastely;
fear God in love;
love their Abbess with a sincere and humble charity;
prefer nothing whatever to Christ.
And may He bring us all together to life everlasting!

Some Thoughts

If only every Christian practised this. If each of us put the other's welfare ahead of our own, we wouldn't have to worry for ourselves because someone else would be attending to our needs. None of that heretical "looking our for numero uno" nonsense. The whole point of this mutual dependence is to allow us to prefer nothing whatever to Christ.

I'll be honest, there is much that I often prefer to Christ. How about you?




Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Here is the crux of the Rule of Benedict. Benedictine spirituality is not about religiosity. Benedictine spirituality is much more demanding than that. Benedictine spirituality is about caring for the people you live with and loving the people you don't and loving God more than yourself. Benedictine spirituality depends on listening for the voice of God everywhere in life, especially in one another and here. An ancient tale from another tradition tells that a disciple asked the Holy One:
"Where shall I look for Enlightenment?"
"Here," the Holy One said.
"When will it happen?"
"It is happening right now," the Holy said.
"Then why don't I experience it?"
"Because you do not look," the Holy said.
"What should I look for?"
"Nothing," the Holy One said. "Just look."
"At what?"
"Anything your eyes alight upon," the Holy One said.
"Must I look in a special kind of way?"
"No," the Holy One said. "The ordinary way will do."
"But don't I always look the ordinary way?"
"No," the Holy One said. "You don't."
"Why ever not?" the disciple demanded.
"Because to look you must be here," the Holy One said. "You're mostly somewhere else."

Just as Benedict insisted in the Prologue to the rule, he requires at its end: We must learn to listen to what God is saying in our simple, sometimes insane and always uncertain daily lives. Bitter zeal is that kind of religious fanaticism that makes a god out of religious devotion itself. Bitter zeal walks over the poor on the way to the altar. Bitter zeal renders the useless invisible and makes devotion more sacred than community. Bitter zeal wraps us up in ourselves and makes us feel holy about it. Bitter zeal renders us blind to others, deaf to those around us, struck dumb in the face of the demands of dailiness. Good zeal, monastic zeal, commits us to the happiness of human community and immerses us in Christ and surrenders us to God, minute by minute, person by person, day after day after day. Good zeal provides the foundation for the spirituality of the long haul. It keeps us going when days are dull and holiness seems to be the stuff of more glamorous lives, of martyrdom and dramatic differences. But it is then, just then, when Benedict of Nursia reminds us from the dark of the sixth century that sanctity is the stuff of community in Christ and that any other zeal, no matter how dazzling it looks, is false. Completely false.

Labels: ,

Daily Meditation 12/30/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Blessed are those for whom Easter is...
not a hunt, but a find;
not a greeting, but a proclamation;
not outward fashions, but inward grace;
not a day, but an eternity.

Collect

Almighty God, you have poured upon us the new light of your incarnate Word: Grant that this light, enkindled in our hearts, may shine forth in our lives; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Old Testament
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 93, 96; PM Psalm 34
1 Sam. 1:1-2,7b-28; Col. 1:9-20; Luke 2:22-40
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 1:1-18. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

The first phrases of the Gospel of John offer some of the most beautiful and meaningful writing in the Bible. Poetic, inspired, and evocative, it's very different from the relatively dry openings of the other three gospels. Hearing those words read aloud sends chills down my spine.


In just a few short months each year, we go through all the known highlights of Jesus' life: from the Nativity to the Epiphany to his baptism to the beginning of his public ministry, from his suffering and crucifixion to the glories of his resurrection and ascension.


But these words from John give us the essential fact of Jesus Christ. He is God incarnate. He is the one through whom all creation came to be, from blazing stars to atoms, from microbes to human beings. God is infinite, as far above us in complexity as we are above an amoeba. Yet Jesus took on our form and lived as one of us, for our salvation. What more evidence of God's love could we possibly require?
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Zonkwa (Abuja, Nigeria)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

30th December
Today's gospel, Luke 2:36-40, tells the story of a wonderful old lady called
Anna.
Visit a grandparent or other elderly person today and give them a surprise.
If this isn't possible write their names down and stick them on your fridge
door after asking God for a special blessing for them.
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 6th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 6, December 30
Six Geese A-laying
The six days of creation that confesses God as Creator and Sustainer of the world (Genesis 1).

30 December

The first thought to cross my mind when assigned this day was, "Oh, no! Of all days . . .", not being too sure of my ability to handle this, the first anniversary of being without my husband, Danny. But then, I decided the Lord allowed this day out of five weeks to be assigned to none but me for His own reasons, and accepted it as from Him realizing I'm not alone in experiencing a "first Christmas without" a spouse or some loved one.

Upon reading some of the Scriptures for this day [from Year 1 Readings], I noted in them that the Lord, whose birthday we celebrated just a few days ago, not only brought to us salvation [Isaiah 25:9], but He will also "swallow up death forever (and) the Sovereign LORD will wipe away the tears from all faces . . ." [Isaiah 25:8].

We may not understand now why many of us did not receive our miracle in the form of a loved one being healed while on this earth, yet "in perfect faithfulness (He has) done marvelous things, things planned long ago" [Isaiah 25:1]. Yes, what we cannot see as His "marvelous things" or as being done "well" [Mark 7:37], when trusting Him "who is, and who was, and who is to come," will be accepted by Him as "sacrifice . . . burnt offering" [Psalm 20:3].

Life's canvas colors we may not choose, and
Sometimes God paints with the darker hues.
Tho' we don't understand the reasons why,
And may never till the 'bye and bye' . . .

Yet, we will believe what his Word doth tell . . .
In His LOVE, "He doeth all things well." -- gjs, 1/98, [Mark 7:37]

So, in spite of what kind of year this may have been for some of us, let us all anticipate the New Year that is nearly upon us "trust[ing] in the name of the LORD our God" [Psalm 20:7b], with this prayer for each other:

"May he give you the desire of your heart, and make all your plans succeed." Psalm 20:4

~ Gina Stevenson
Phoenix, Arizona, USA

Oh, Dear Father,

You never promised that there would be no pain, but You give us grace in spite of the pain we endure. Our loss is close, so very close, to Your heart. You understand our hearts. You have become as vulnerable as we are through the life of Your Son. "Your heart is touched with our grief." Thank You for Your boundless love and care. We don't like the pain but we are thrilled each time Your presence is made known.

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

God of good news

Daily Reading for December 30 • The First Sunday after Christmas Day

God of good news,
today you begin again to reshape our lives and communities.
You do not start from the outside, but from within.
You begin in the hidden place.
Behind the inn. Before the marriage. At the wrong time.
You invite a handful of guests into your company.
Shepherds. Local children perhaps. Maybe some animals.
You join the community of the invisible ones.
The homeless and hopeless. Refugees, fleeing a tyrant king.
Later, you find fisherfolk. And a tax collector. More children.
The small. The unimportant. The forgotten. The frightened.
These are the people you choose,
as little by little you start sharing
the secrets of a kingdom that will change the whole world.
From within. From the hidden place.

God of good news:
as we celebrate worldwide the tidings of your birth,
as we set the heavens echoing with angel songs,
as we contemplate a new year and pray for peace on earth. . .
remind us of the hidden places, of the forgotten people,
of the starting-points and the time it takes,
of the pace of the slowest and the dreams of the children
and the human scale and the soul of our towns
and the freedom to create secret dens.
Remind us that the great joy promised to the whole people
starts with those who need it most, in places where they hide.
Remind us, with all our seasonal cheer and tinsel,
that some people are left out in the cold;
that it is there, with them, that you are being born into the world again;
that it is there, through them, that you will change the world.

God of good news,
help us to find you again
in the hidden place.
Amen.

From Advent Readings from Iona by Brian Woodcock and Jan Sutch Pickard (Wild Goose Publications, 2000).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

The Prophet said, "Let him groan, for groaning is one of the Names of God in which the sick man may find relief."
— Muhammad quoted in Merton and Sufism edited by Rob Baker and Gray Henry

To Practice This Thought: Don't hesitate to express all your feelings to God.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php


In giving us His Son, His only Word (for He possesses no other), God spoke everything to us at once in this sole Word - and He has no more to say ... because what He spoke before to the prophets in parts, He has now spoken all at once by giving us the All who is His Son.
St John of the Cross
Romances
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

The man who follows Christ in solitary mourning is greater than he
who praises Christ amid the congregation of men.

St. Isaac the Syrian
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Letting Go of Old Hurts

One of the hardest things in life is to let go of old hurts. We often say, or at least think: "What you did to me and my family, my ancestors, or my friends I cannot forget or forgive. ... One day you will have to pay for it." Sometimes our memories are decades, even centuries, old and keep asking for revenge.

Holding people's faults against them often creates an impenetrable wall. But listen to Paul: "For anyone who is in Christ, there is a new creation: the old order is gone and a new being is there to see. It is all God's work" (2 Corinthians 5:17-18). Indeed, we cannot let go of old hurts, but God can. Paul says: "God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not holding anyone's fault against them" (2 Corinthians 5:19). It is God's work, but we are God's ministers, because the God who reconciled the world to God entrusted to us "the message of reconciliation" (2 Corinthians 5:19). This message calls us to let go of old hurts in the Name of God. It is the message our world most needs to hear.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Thirty - The Three Notes

The humility, love and joy which mark the lives of Tertiaries are all God given graces. They can never be obtained by human effort. They are gifts of the Holy Spirit. The purpose of Christ is to work miracles through people who are willing to be emptied of self and to surrender to him. We then become channels of grace through whom his mighty work is done.
Valid CSS!
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

In the Mystery
December 30th, 2007
FIRST SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS
Sunday’s Reflection

IN THE FACE of this central Christian mystery, we may be inclined only to stop and adore. But nowhere in the Gospels does Jesus urge us to adore him.

Rather, he calls us to follow him and thereby to partake of his life, his energy, his spirit — living the divine life here and now by participating in the mystery of the Incarnation.

- Michael Downey
Weavings Journal

From p. 29 of Weavings Journal, November/December 1999. Copyright © 1999 by The Upper Room. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


The Feast of the Word Becoming Flesh

In Jesus, God achieved the perfect synthesis of divine and human. God gave humanity the vision of the whole and assured us that we could be at home within that vision. The incarnation of Jesus demonstrates that God meets us where we are. It assures us that we do not have to leave the world or relinquish our humanity in order to know God, but simply that we must turn from evil. In the birth of the God-man, we have been "consecrated in truth," so we are sent into the world to continue the saving pattern of embodiment.

We tend to fear incarnation precisely because it makes religion so real, so particular, so worldly. We prefer to keep religion on the level of word, yet the Jesus-pattern is word- becoming-flesh. The great lie is that redemption can happen apart from incarnation. Annie Dillard called it "the scandal of particularity." For the Christian, power is always hidden in powerlessness, just as God was hidden in a poor baby.

We may want the spiritual without the fleshly; we may want the cosmic without the concrete. But if the Word is ever to be loved and shared, we must risk embodiment, which is always concrete and ordinary. There God is both perfectly hidden and perfectly revealed.

from New Covenant, "The Incarnation"

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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

The Lord of all stooped down to our level

To prevent the wickedness of men and women causing the entire race to be destroyed a second time, one man was singled out. He was to be called the father of believers; from him would issue both the promise of a kingdom and the seed of its eternal king. Subsequently multiplied by the faith of the Gentiles, that seed came to its term in Christ, who had appeared to the patriarchs and was foreshadowed by the law. After speaking through the prophets, he came in person to fulfill both law and prophecy, bringing the remedy by his grace that the prescriptions of the law had been powerless to confer, since by that time sin had so infected the whole body, that is to say the entire human race, that the disease was now too firmly entrenched for cure; it was beyond all human remedy.

And so, conforming himself to our humble bodily condition in order to form us afresh on the model of his own glorified body, there came the one who is to come again. He came in person, because only the craftsman is master of his work, only the potter has the right to decide what to make of his clay.

Paulinus of Nola
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

"AND EVERY VIRTUE WE POSSESS"


"All my fresh springs shall be in Thee." Psalm 87:7 (P.B.V.)

Our Lord never patches up our natural virtues, He re-makes the whole man on the inside. "Put on the new man," i.e., see that your natural human life puts on the garb that is in keeping with the new life. The life God plants in us develops its own virtues, not the virtues of Adam but of Jesus Christ. Watch how God will wither up your confidence in natural virtues after sanctification, and in any power you have, until you learn to draw your life from the reservoir of the resurrection life of Jesus. Thank God if you are going through a drying-up experience!

The sign that God is at work in us is that He corrupts confidence in the natural virtues, because they are not promises of what we are going to be, but remnants of what God created man to be. We will cling to the natural virtues, while all the time God is trying to get us into contact with the life of Jesus Christ which can never be described in terms of the natural virtues. It is the saddest thing to see people in the service of God depending on that which the grace of God never gave them, depending on what they have by the accident of heredity. God does not build up our natural virtues and transfigure them, because our natural virtues can never come anywhere near what Jesus Christ wants. No natural love, no natural patience, no natural purity can ever come up to His demands. But as we bring every bit of our bodily life into harmony with the new life which God has put in us, He will exhibit in us the virtues that were characteristic of the Lord Jesus
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Chesterton Day by Day
http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~mward/gkc/books/gkcday/gkcday.html
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 30, August 30, December 30
Chapter 72: On the Good Zeal Which They Ought to Have

Just as there is an evil zeal of bitterness
which separates from God and leads to hell,
so there is a good zeal
which separates from vices and leads to God
and to life everlasting.
This zeal, therefore, the sisters should practice
with the most fervent love.
Thus they should anticipate one another in honor (Rom. 12:10);
most patiently endure one another's infirmities,
whether of body or of character;
vie in paying obedience one to another --
no one following what she considers useful for herself,
but rather what benefits another;
tender the charity of sisterhood chastely;
fear God in love;
love their Abbess with a sincere and humble charity;
prefer nothing whatever to Christ.
And may He bring us all together to life everlasting!

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Here is the crux of the Rule of Benedict. Benedictine spirituality is not about religiosity. Benedictine spirituality is much more demanding than that. Benedictine spirituality is about caring for the people you live with and loving the people you don't and loving God more than yourself. Benedictine spirituality depends on listening for the voice of God everywhere in life, especially in one another and here. An ancient tale from another tradition tells that a disciple asked the Holy One:
"Where shall I look for Enlightenment?"
"Here," the Holy One said.
"When will it happen?"
"It is happening right now," the Holy said.
"Then why don't I experience it?"
"Because you do not look," the Holy said.
"What should I look for?"
"Nothing," the Holy One said. "Just look."
"At what?"
"Anything your eyes alight upon," the Holy One said.
"Must I look in a special kind of way?"
"No," the Holy One said. "The ordinary way will do."
"But don't I always look the ordinary way?"
"No," the Holy One said. "You don't."
"Why ever not?" the disciple demanded.
"Because to look you must be here," the Holy One said. "You're mostly somewhere else."

Just as Benedict insisted in the Prologue to the rule, he requires at its end: We must learn to listen to what God is saying in our simple, sometimes insane and always uncertain daily lives. Bitter zeal is that kind of religious fanaticism that makes a god out of religious devotion itself. Bitter zeal walks over the poor on the way to the altar. Bitter zeal renders the useless invisible and makes devotion more sacred than community. Bitter zeal wraps us up in ourselves and makes us feel holy about it. Bitter zeal renders us blind to others, deaf to those around us, struck dumb in the face of the demands of dailiness. Good zeal, monastic zeal, commits us to the happiness of human community and immerses us in Christ and surrenders us to God, minute by minute, person by person, day after day after day. Good zeal provides the foundation for the spirituality of the long haul. It keeps us going when days are dull and holiness seems to be the stuff of more glamorous lives, of martyrdom and dramatic differences. But it is then, just then, when Benedict of Nursia reminds us from the dark of the sixth century that sanctity is the stuff of community in Christ and that any other zeal, no matter how dazzling it looks, is false. Completely false.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Sun., Dec. 30, 2007 Joseph the Betrothed; David, Prophet and King; &
James, Brother of the Lord
(Tone 6)
4th Vigil Nativity: Isaiah 11:1-10 Epistle: Galatians
1:11-19 Gospel: St. Matthew 2:13-23

A New Beginning: Isaiah 11:1-10 LXX, especially vs. 10: "And in that day
there shall be a root of Jesse, and He that shall arise to rule over the
Gentiles; in Him shall the Gentiles trust, and His rest shall be
glorious." St. Cyril of Alexandria directs attention to the newsworthy
significance of the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ: "since, through
the mercy of God it was necessary for us to be made worthy of the Spirit
again by being restored to our earlier condition, then the Only-Begotten
Word of God was made man. He was free from sin so that in His unique
triumph of sinlessness the nature of mankind, now crowned once more,
might be enriched with the Holy Spirit, and thus by sanctification it
was refashioned for God....For He was constituted the first
new-beginning of the race since, as God, He anointed all those who
believe in Him."

A new beginning has been released into the pool of the human race, that
we might be enriched with the Holy Spirit and refashioned for God.
There's a news bulletin! Mankind has real access to God! It is now
possible to be restored to our earlier condition before sin and death
wreaked universal havoc in creation, corrupted our hearts and souls, and
made human life wretched. To shepherds tending their flocks near
Bethlehem, Angels announced the birth of God as man, a Divine bulletin
of unimaginable, but worldwide importance. Further statements
concerning the significance of this great reversal in the human
condition were released in Galilee and other regions of Palestine.
Evidence of the operation of this refashioning continue to be reported
on a worldwide basis, via communiques from all continents and nations.

God released advance information through the Prophet Isaiah about this
great upheaval or new beginning and three of its major effects: 1) the
Virgin-born, Only-Begotten Word of God would not function on the basis
of limited knowledge, but with Divine perception and precision; 2) He
would advance the cause of the lowly on a worldwide basis, punishing the
earthly-minded, and destroying "the ungodly one" by righteousness and
truth, and 3) the impact of His rule internationally would have a
transforming effect on the predatory, poisonous, and violent elements of
society, turning people into gentle, caring, innocent persons.

The Holy Spirit rested upon the Lord Jesus as a man. He was filled with
"the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and
strength, the Spirit of knowledge and godliness," and "the Spirit of the
fear of God" (vss. 2,3). And while the Spirit accompanied the Lord
Jesus as His Equal, Christ our God has made it possible for the same
Spirit to come into men, that "after Christ...a Comforter should not be
lacking unto us," as St. Gregory the Theologian states it. Thus as
Christ did not "judge according to appearance, nor reprove according to
report," but with Divine acuity, so also His holy ones, through the
Spirit, are being enabled to see and speak with insight and accuracy
that defies mere human perception.

As you know from the Gospels, the Lord Jesus advanced the "cause of the
lowly" (vs. 4) by healing, teaching truth, and loving sinners. At the
same time, He punished the earthly-minded and began the destruction of
"the ungodly one" (vs. 4). And He continues that work through His
Church, so that we may share in this transformation until He completes
it supremely at the end.

Using the imagery of wild and domestic animals, the Prophet revealed
what the Lord does in restoring human personality: builds up meekness,
tenderness, simplicity, and humility (vss. 6-9). Theodoret of Cyrus
notes: "we see the accomplishment of the prophecy in the churches:
emperors...soldiers, artisans, servants, and beggars partake together at
the Holy Table."

Listen, O mountains and hills and the regions about Judah: for Christ
cometh to save man whom He did create; for He is the Lover of mankind.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Reading for Dec 29, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 29, August 29, December 29
Chapter 71: That the Brethren Be Obedient to One Another

Not only is the boon of obedience
to be shown by all to the Abbot,
but the brethren are also to obey one another,
knowing that by this road of obedience they are going to God.
Giving priority, therefore, to the commands of the Abbot
and of the Superior appointed by him
(to which we allow no private orders to be preferred),
for the rest
let all the juniors obey their seniors
with all charity and solicitude.
But if anyone is found contentious,
let him be corrected.

And if any brother,
for however small a cause,
is corrected in any way by the Abbot or by any of his Superiors,
or if he faintly perceives
that the mind of any Superior is angered or moved against him,
however little,
let him at once, without delay,
prostrate himself on the ground at his feet
and lie there making satisfaction
until that emotion is quieted with a blessing.
But if anyone should disdain to do this,
let him undergo corporal punishment
or, if he is stubborn, let him be expelled from the monastery.

The concept of mutual obedience is such a stark contrast to our modern "who do you think you are to tell me what I should do" way of thinking, isn't it? I confess I am very mucha product of my times, as much as I hate to admit it, and when someone tells me what to do, I have a rude response, at least mentally.

I have an example... I am very sorry to say that on the day of Christmas Arts (our major fundraiser at my church for our outreach programs) I thought I'd lend a hand by putting away the janitorial style mop and bucket not realizing that it had dirty water in it. Pushed it through the room, got the the hallway and the bucket tipped over having come to grief on the metal strip where the carpeting in the hall starts and the tile floor of the parish hall ends. I am very sorry to report that I bellowed (no other word for it) a four letter scatological word beginning with 's'. Then as I tried to fix, in a much quieter voice I cursed myself out and the 'f' word predominated this monologue. Some people came and helped me and i apologized over and over and over again.

Coupla days later I received an email from someone who had not been there but whose children were. I had noticed the presence of the kids, but sad to say, I was so lost to place and occasion and so wrapped up in the horrible mess i had made on such an important day at such such a bad time, that i doubt very much it would have made a difference. The gentleman wrote to me in very judgemental terms but even so all i could do was nod my head because, expressed judgementally or not, he was right. i was with him 100%, I agreed with everything he said, no matter how unflatteringly expressed. Didn't even hurt because he was so right.

And then he lost me. He wrote that he "demanded that I never use such language in front of his children again." I fear I did not respond well to the word "demand". He had written at length about self-control, remembering where I was, my responsibility under the baptismal covenant to the children of the parish, the hypocrisy of a nun using that language and on and on. As I said, I agreed with everything he said until the "demand".

My response, I fear, was first of all apologize once again, to tell him how right he was etc. And then in a new paragraph, I quoted back to him everything he said to me about self-control, remembering where I was etc, only I framed it in terms of him and ended it with a demand that he and his girl friend, their friends and their children stop treating the Lord's ouse as if it were a party zone having such audible conversations before and during the service because it interfered with the prayers of others.

This all happened at the very beginning of the month and within 2 days, I realized how very wrong i had been to write this way, that as much as i disliked his use of the word "demand" that maybe he was right to use it. I even emailed him and said so, apologizing for my response, confessing that it was sinful of me to have written that way and asking his forgiveness. I've never heard from him again.

So I have been ruminating long and hard about my preference for a "who do you think you are" response instead of one that better reflects my vows as a nun, the RB upon which i claim to base my life and the very real mutual interdependence of all of us in the Body of Christ and my own ego and lack of humility.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


Into a democratic country and a highly individualistic culture, into a society where personalism approaches the pathological and independence is raised to high art, the rule brings a chapter on listening and wisdom. The rule says that we are not our own teachers, not our own guides, not our own standard setters, not a law unto ourselves. In addition to the "officials" in our lives--the employers, the supervisors, the lawgivers and the police--we have to learn to learn from those around us who have gone the path before us and know the way. It is a chapter dedicated to making us see the elderly anew and our colleagues with awe and our companions with new respect. In a society that depends on reputation to such a degree that people build themselves up by tearing other people down, the chapter on mutual obedience turns the world awry. Monastic spirituality says that we are to honor one another. We are to listen to one another. We are to reach across boundaries and differences in this fragmented world and see in our differences distinctions of great merit that can mend a competitive, uncaring and foolish world.
The Tao teaches:
If you want to become whole,
let yourself be partial.
If you want to become straight,
let yourself be crooked.
If you want to become full,
let yourself be empty.

What monastic spirituality wants among us is respect and love, not excuses, not justification, not protests of innocence or cries of misunderstandings. The rule wants respect for the elder and love for the learner. The rule wants a human response to the mystery of misunderstanding--not stand-offs, not pouting, not rejection, not eternal alienation. The rule wants relationships that have been ruptured to be repaired, not by long, legal defenses but by clear and quick gestures of human sorrow and forgiveness. The question in the rule is not who is right and who is wrong. The question in the rule is who is offended and who is sorry, who is to apologize and who is to forgive. Quickly. Immediately. Now.

The rabbi of Sassov, the Hasidic masters tell us, once gave away the last money he had in his pocket to a man of ill repute who quickly squandered it all. The rabbi's disciples threw it up to him. He answered them: "Shall I be more finicky than God, who gave it to me?" What monastic spirituality teaches in this paragraph of the Rule is that we must all relate to one another knowing our own sinfulness and depending on the love we learn from one another.

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Daily Meditation 12/29/07, On the 5th Day of Christmas, Feast of St Thomas Becket

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]


Nativity Prayer of St. Augustine

Let the just rejoice,
for their justifier is born.
Let the sick and infirm rejoice,
For their saviour is born.
Let the captives rejoice,
For their Redeemer is born.
Let slaves rejoice,
for their Master is born.
Let free men rejoice,
For their Liberator is born.
Let All Christians rejoice,
For Jesus Christ is born.

St. Augustine of Hippo (AD 354-440)


Collect

O God, our strength and our salvation, you called your servant Thomas Becket to be a shepherd of your people and a defender of your Church: Keep your household from all evil and raise up among us faithful pastors and leaders who are wise in the ways of the Gospel; through Jesus Christ the shepherd of our souls, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 18:1-20; PM Psalm 18:21-50
2 Samuel 23:13-17b; 2 John 1-13; John 2:1-11
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

2 John 1-13. Let us love one another....This is the commandment just as you have heard it from the beginning--you must walk in it.

Who's in charge here? We all know the answer: God.


We give ready lip service to the idea, but in practical terms, we have trouble coming to grips with it. Too many things seem to get in the way, from illness to injustice, from natural disasters to natural-born bullies. Confronted with difficulties in the here and now, our tendency is to forget God's promises for the future.


In a way, it's like traveling, like walking versus flying. In the air, we see the path clearly, and where it ends. Slogging along on foot, we focus on what's directly before us, on the potholes and rocks in the road, on loose dogs that threaten us and foul weather that makes the way more difficult. We can't see over the next hill, or beyond the next curve in the road. It's easy to conclude that we'll never make it to our destination.


God has given us a map and directions. Following them isn't always easy; we want to wander off onto interesting byways or get confused about where to turn. But if we follow God's path in love, we will return home at last.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Thomas a Becket
Psalm 126
2 Esdras 2:42-48; Matthew 10:16-22

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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Zanzibar (Tanzania)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

29th December
St Thomas Becket
He was a Prime Minister of Great Britain. He was a martyr.

Think of one good thing your political leader/head of state has done (if you
can) and add it to your collection on the fridge door.
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html



On the Fifth Day of Christmas
« Thread Started on Jan 2, 2007, 2:29pm » [Quote] [Modify] [Delete]
Collect:
Purify our conscience, Almight God, by your daily visitation, that your Son Jesus Christ, at his coming, may find in us a mansion prepared for himself; who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.

Readings:
AM Psalm 18:1-20; PM Psalm 18:21-50
Isa. 12:1-6; Rev. 1:1-8; John 7:37-52

Collect for Thomas a Becket:
O God, our strength and our salvation, who called your servant Thomas Becket to be a shepherd of your people and a defender of your Church: Keep your household from all evil and raise up among us faithful pastors and leaders who are wise in the ways of the Gospel; through jesus christ the shepherd of our souls, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God for ever and ever. Amen.

Thomas a Becket
www.newadvent.org/cathen/14676a.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Becket
Psalm 126
2 Esdras 2:42-48; Matthew 10:16-22

From Forward Day by Day:
Revelation 1:1-8. Blessed is the one who reads aloud the words of the prophecy, and blessed are those who hear and who keep what is written in it; for the time is near.

The prophecies come to us in many ways; stories in Sunday school, sermons, and watching Christians live. Family members made sure I attended church and participated. But it wasn't until about 25 years ago I personally started really reading the word, meditating on the message, and keeping what is written.


Forward Day by Day was on display at church. I brought it home and put it in the place I might have a few minutes to read. There I started reading one page each day, then reading the passages listed, then came the interest in study, then the calling to serve, and then the way to serve.


We each have our own journey. We each will come to our own call, but if we don't ever start, we will never discover what that might be.


The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my deliverer, my God, my rock in whom I take refuge, my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.

--Psalm 18:2



Anglican Cycle of Prayer: Leicester - (Canterbury, England)


From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.:

A love that desires to see God

In all the events we have recalled, the flame of divine love enkindled human hearts and its intoxication overflowed into the senses. Wounded by love, people longed to look upon God with their bodily eyes. Yet how could our narrow human vision apprehend God, whom the whole world cannot contain? But the law love follows has no regard for what will happen, what ought to happen, or what can happen. Love does not reflect; it is unreasonable and knows no moderation. Love refuses to be consoled when its goal proves impossible, despises all hindrances to the attainment of its object. Love destroys lovers if they cannot obtain what they love; love follows its own promptings and does not think of right and wrong. Love inflames desire which impels it toward things that are forbidden. But why continue?

It is intolerable for love not to see the object of its longing. That is why whatever reward they merited was nothing to the saints if they could not see the Lord. A love that desires to see God, even though it has no right to this, is proof of filial devotion.

Peter Chrysologus, Peter Chrysologous (400 - 450), bishop of Ravenna, was above all a pastor and preached many sermons to his people.



Advent calendar: Ways to Move Systems -- like businesses and governments -- Toward Sustainability:
3. Protest and boycott. Help: "Boycott News," www.boycotts.org

Advent Calendar: Open Wide the Doors To Christ by Elizabeth Bookser Barkley
(Is 7:10-14; Lk 1:26-38) Be an agent for good. Mary’s "Let it be done to me as you say" could imply a passive attitude toward the inevitable in life. Troubled by the messenger’s announcement, Mary questioned, then cooperated with the plan for salvation. Not passivity but contemplation allowed her to declare herself a free agent of the Lord. Like Mary, we are called to hear and reflect on the word of God, then to act on it.


From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community

29th December
St Thomas Becket
He was a Prime Minister of Great Britain. He was a martyr.

Think of one good thing your political leader/head of state has done (if you
can) and add it to your collection on the fridge door.




On the 5th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 5, December 29
Five Gold Rings
The first Five Books of the Old Testament, known as the Torah or the Pentateuch: 1) Genesis, 2) Exodus, 3) Leviticus, 4) Numbers, and 5) Deuteronomy, which gives the history of humanity's sinful failure and God's response of grace in the creation of a people to be a light to the world.

EMMANUEL

God Incarnate
God in the flesh
God with us
GOD WITH ME!!

That is, after all, what this season is all about. He’s not just some all-powerful being out there somewhere, speaking universes into existence, holding worlds in orbit, designing the intricacies of the human body.

He is here!
He is with me!
He is in me!

The obvious question is: "Why?"

What was it that drew Him here, and at such a price?

And that’s where the miracle takes place. It was me! He chose to come to this world, begin as a baby, grow up, and give up His life on the cross, rather than spend eternity without me. He loves me. It’s as simple, yet as profound as that.

Have you ever longed for someone to love you? Have you ever cried yourself to sleep at night, aching with loneliness? It doesn’t have to be that way! Emmanuel is here. He loves you with a love that cost Him everything.

"Everything." That is your worth to God. Is it any wonder that He pursues you so relentlessly? You are so valuable to Him that He gave up His life just so He could be with you forever. His name says it all:

EMMANUEL
GOD WITH US
GOD WITH YOU!

Debi Peck
Tucson, Arizona, USA

Lord,

You love, this I know, not only because the Bible tells me so, but because You are constantly drawing me close and letting me know how precious I am to You. You go everywhere with me, and while sometimes that is sort of a scary thought, when I find that I am in trouble, it is wonderful to know that You are already there. I have no idea why I am that precious to You. But, thank you much for Your total expenditure on my behalf. I sure hope You get Your money's worth.

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

On love alone

Daily Reading for December 29 • Thomas Becket, 1170

The Child we seek
doesn’t need our gold.
On love, on love alone
he will build his kingdom.
His piercéd hand will hold no scepter,
his haloed head will wear no crown;
his might will not be built
on your toil.
Swifter than lightning
he will soon walk among us.
He will bring us new life
and receive our death,
and the keys to his city
belong to the poor.

Amahl and the Night Visitors by Gian Carlo Menotti (G. Schirmer, 1950).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Human beings are not our enemy. Our enemy is not the other person. Our enemy is the violence, ignorance, and injustice in us and in the other person. When we are armed with compassion and understanding, we fight not against other people, but against the tendency to invade, to dominate, and to exploit.
— Thich Nhat Hanh in Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames

To Practice This Thought: Meditate upon the manifestations of violence, ignorance, and injustice in our world.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

If you would progress a long way on this road and ascend to the Mansions of your desire, the important thing is not to think much but to love much; do then, whatever most arouses your love.
St Teresa of Jesus
Interior Castle, IV.1
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

For to despise the present age, not to love transitory things,
unreservedly to stretch out the mind in humility to God and our
neighbor, to preserve patience against offered insults and, with
patience guarded, to repel the pain of malice from the heart, to
give one's property to the poor, not to covet that of others, to
esteem the friend in God, on God's account to love even those who
are hostile, to mourn at the affliction of a neighbor, not to
exult in the death of one who is an enemy, this is the new
creature whom the Master of the nations seeks with watchful eye
amid the other disciples, saying:"If, then, any be in Christ a new
creature, the old things are passed away. Behold all things are
made new" (2 Cor. 5:17).

St. Gregory the Great
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

A Ministry that Never Ends

Reconciliation is much more than a one-time event by which a conflict is resolved and peace established. A ministry of reconciliation goes far beyond problem solving, mediation, and peace agreements. There is not a moment in our lives without the need for reconciliation. When we dare to look at the myriad hostile feelings and thoughts in our hearts and minds, we will immediately recognize the many little and big wars in which we take part. Our enemy can be a parent, a child, a "friendly" neighbor, people with different lifestyles, people who do not think as we think, speak as we speak, or act as we act. They all can become "them." Right there is where reconciliation is needed.

Reconciliation touches the most hidden parts of our souls. God gave reconciliation to us as a ministry that never ends.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Nine - The Third Note, cont'd

This joy is a divine gift, coming from union with God in Christ. It is still there even in times of darkness and difficulty, giving cheerful courage in the face of disappointment, and an inward serenity and confidence through sickness and suffering. Those who possess it can rejoice in weakness, insults, hardship, and persecutions for Christ's sake; for when we are weak, then we are strong.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Thanks Living
December 29th, 2007
Saturday’s Reflection

LOVING GOD,
we thank you for the goodness
and acts of kindness
that surround our lives.
May our thanksgiving
be thanks living. Amen.

- Richard Morgan
Settling In

From p. 117 of Settling In: My First Year in a Retirement Community by Richard Morgan. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

A love that desires to see God

In all the events we have recalled, the flame of divine love enkindled human hearts and its intoxication overflowed into the senses. Wounded by love, people longed to look upon God with their bodily eyes. Yet how could our narrow human vision apprehend God, whom the whole world cannot contain? But the law love follows has no regard for what will happen, what ought to happen, or what can happen. Love does not reflect; it is unreasonable and knows no moderation. Love refuses to be consoled when its goal proves impossible, despises all hindrances to the attainment of its object. Love destroys lovers if they cannot obtain what they love; love follows its own promptings and does not think of right and wrong. Love inflames desire which impels it toward things that are forbidden. But why continue?

It is intolerable for love not to see the object of its longing. That is why whatever reward they merited was nothing to the saints if they could not see the Lord. A love that desires to see God, even though it has no right to this, is proof of filial devotion.

Peter Chrysologus
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

DESERTER OR DISCIPLE?


"From that time many of His disciples went back, and walked no more with Him." John 6:66


When God gives a vision by His Spirit through His word of what He wants, and your mind and soul thrill to it, if you do not walk in the light of that vision, you will sink into servitude to a point of view which Our Lord never had. Disobedience in mind to the heavenly vision will make you a slave to points of view that are alien to Jesus Christ. Do not look at someone else and say - Well, if he can have those views and prosper, why cannot I? You have to walk in the light of the vision that has been given to you and not compare yourself with others or judge them, that is between them and God. When you find that a point of view in which you have been delighting clashes with the heavenly vision and you debate, certain things will begin to develop in you - a sense of property and a sense of personal right, things of which Jesus Christ made nothing. He was always against these things as being the root of everything alien to Himself. "A man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things that he possesseth." If we do not recognize this, it is because we are ignoring the undercurrent of Our Lord's teaching.

We are apt to lie back and bask in the memory of the wonderful experience we have had. If there is one standard in the New Testament revealed by the light of God and you do not come up to it, and do not feel inclined to come up to it, that is the beginning of backsliding, because it means your conscience does not answer to the truth. You can never be the same after the unveiling of a truth. That moment marks you for going on as a more true disciple of Jesus Christ or for going back as a deserter.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 29, August 29, December 29
Chapter 71: That the Brethren Be Obedient to One Another

Not only is the boon of obedience
to be shown by all to the Abbot,
but the brethren are also to obey one another,
knowing that by this road of obedience they are going to God.
Giving priority, therefore, to the commands of the Abbot
and of the Superior appointed by him
(to which we allow no private orders to be preferred),
for the rest
let all the juniors obey their seniors
with all charity and solicitude.
But if anyone is found contentious,
let him be corrected.

And if any brother,
for however small a cause,
is corrected in any way by the Abbot or by any of his Superiors,
or if he faintly perceives
that the mind of any Superior is angered or moved against him,
however little,
let him at once, without delay,
prostrate himself on the ground at his feet
and lie there making satisfaction
until that emotion is quieted with a blessing.
But if anyone should disdain to do this,
let him undergo corporal punishment
or, if he is stubborn, let him be expelled from the monastery.


Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


Into a democratic country and a highly individualistic culture, into a society where personalism approaches the pathological and independence is raised to high art, the rule brings a chapter on listening and wisdom. The rule says that we are not our own teachers, not our own guides, not our own standard setters, not a law unto ourselves. In addition to the "officials" in our lives--the employers, the supervisors, the lawgivers and the police--we have to learn to learn from those around us who have gone the path before us and know the way. It is a chapter dedicated to making us see the elderly anew and our colleagues with awe and our companions with new respect. In a society that depends on reputation to such a degree that people build themselves up by tearing other people down, the chapter on mutual obedience turns the world awry. Monastic spirituality says that we are to honor one another. We are to listen to one another. We are to reach across boundaries and differences in this fragmented world and see in our differences distinctions of great merit that can mend a competitive, uncaring and foolish world.
The Tao teaches:
If you want to become whole,
let yourself be partial.
If you want to become straight,
let yourself be crooked.
If you want to become full,
let yourself be empty.

What monastic spirituality wants among us is respect and love, not excuses, not justification, not protests of innocence or cries of misunderstandings. The rule wants respect for the elder and love for the learner. The rule wants a human response to the mystery of misunderstanding--not stand-offs, not pouting, not rejection, not eternal alienation. The rule wants relationships that have been ruptured to be repaired, not by long, legal defenses but by clear and quick gestures of human sorrow and forgiveness. The question in the rule is not who is right and who is wrong. The question in the rule is who is offended and who is sorry, who is to apologize and who is to forgive. Quickly. Immediately. Now.

The rabbi of Sassov, the Hasidic masters tell us, once gave away the last money he had in his pocket to a man of ill repute who quickly squandered it all. The rabbi's disciples threw it up to him. He answered them: "Shall I be more finicky than God, who gave it to me?" What monastic spirituality teaches in this paragraph of the Rule is that we must all relate to one another knowing our own sinfulness and depending on the love we learn from one another.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Sat., Dec. 29, 2007 Orthodox Christians Who Died from Hunger,
Thirst, the Sword, & Freezing
3rd Vigil Nativity: Micah 4:6-7; 5:2-4 Epistle: 1 Timothy
6:11-16 Gospel: St. Matthew 12:15-21

A New Day: Micah 4:6-7; 5:2-4 LXX, especially vs. 7: "I will make her
that was bruised a remnant, and her that was rejected a mighty nation:
and the Lord shall reign over them in Mount Zion from henceforth, even
for ever." It is a curious role that God cast for His Prophets. They
appear to us today hazily, as figures behind a screen upon which God
broadly sketched His message. We rarely see much of them at all as they
utter, "saith the Lord" (vs. 6). The present Prophecy is from the Lord;
but it was first spoken to men by Micah, God's Prophet from Moresheth in
southern Judah sometime between 750 BC to 680 BC.

God spoke through His servant Micah concerning a future day. Look at
the wording: "In that day...I will gather...and will receive....And I
will make...and the Lord shall reign" (vss. 6,7). Ah, but that new day
has come! Christ is born! Glorify Him all the earth! Illumined by
grace of the Holy Spirit, the Prophet put voice to the Lord's forecast,
and reveals its import for the Church today. God's future moment is
upon "her that is bruised" (vs. 6), Who is now "gathered" into the
pasture of the Lord, Who is "beside the water of rest" and nurtured (Ps.
22:2 LXX). She was "cast out," seemingly "rejected" by the Lord (Mic.
4:6), but now is received at His table, filled from His cup, anointed
with oil, to dwell in His house (Ps. 22:5,6 LXX).

At the dawn of the new day, the Lord Jesus' Apostolic remnant was tiny,
"a brand plucked out of the fire" (Amos 4:11 LXX) by the firm hand of
the Lord. Today, the Church is a torch that burns, but is not
consumed. She gives saving light to all nations. Today, we are "a
mighty nation" (Mic. 4:7) within every nation, desiring to claim no land
of our own, but pleased to live before the final, end-time of the
Kingdom of God while the Lord reigns over us "from henceforth, even for
ever" within the Church that is called "Mount Zion" (vs. 7).

As the new day began, "with one accord in prayer and supplication with
the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers....the
number of names was [only] about a hundred and twenty" (Acts 1:14,15)!
Yet, look at us now, spread over every continent. Yes, we are not well
received in some nations, but at least we are known in every land. The
bruising, the casting out, and the rejection continue in every
generation - now here, now there. But in the Church it is all Christ
Jesus, gathering the bruised, upholding the rejected, extending His
reign over us in this new day, whenever we gather and wherever.

Those of us in the Church who reside in certain places, where at this
moment we are allowed to live relatively quiet and peaceful lives,
should realize that our respite is temporary. The norm for God's People
is bruising, casting out, and rejection. To realize what is the norm
for Christians in this present life is what makes this message of the
new day so special for Orthodox Christians now living under Islam, eking
out their existence in countries ravaged by, and still recovering from,
militant Marxist atheism, or clinging to each other in lands where
active warfare, bombing, sudden death, looting, rapine, and murder are
commonplace.

Perhaps your life is difficult while others beside you enjoy
prosperity. Then the message of this new day is especially for you as
you endure bruising, casting out, and rejection. Before His birth in
time, the Lord promised to address the diminishing conditions that mark
this fallen world. Then, He came as one of us, bruised, cast out, and
rejected; but trampling down these deaths by death. Now, His Body and
His Blood are for you, whoever you are, however you are hurting; for in
the Church, in Mt. Zion, He reigns, henceforth, now, and forever.
Christ is Born!

Be Thou entreated for the sake of the sufferings of Thy Saints which thy
endure for Thee, O Lord, and do Thou heal all our pains, we pray, O
Friend of Man!

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Friday, December 28, 2007

Reading for Dec 28, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 28, August 28, December 28
Chapter 70: That No One Venture to Punish at Random

Every occasion of presumption
shall be avoided in the monastery,
and we decree that no one be allowed
to excommunicate or to strike any of her sisters
unless the Abbess has given her the authority.
Those who offend in this matter
shall be rebuked in the presence of all,
that the rest may have fear.

But children up to 15 years of age
shall be carefully controlled and watched by all,
yet this too with all moderation and discretion.
All, therefore, who presume
without the Abbess' instructions
to punish those above that age
or who lose their temper with them,
shall undergo the discipline of the Rule;
for it is written,
"Do not to another what you would not want done to yourself" (Tobias 4:16).

Some thoughts

Must admit, my mind reels with all that I could say. Hard to distil out just one or 2. It is so very easy, all too easy, to think of entirely too many examples when a person or a group of people have taken upon themselves to right what they perceive as wrongs: vigilantes; those who commit hate crimes; people we run into every single day who are unable to mind their own business and go around correcting people.

Something else that comes to mind is appropriate boundaries and limits. Of course, that is also part of minding one's own business. Seems to me the use of the "should/would/could" language is a very clear indication of when we have exceeded appropriate boundaries and limits and have started to mind someone else's business. "So and so should..." "If only X would" "You could..."

Of course, we are not always intrusive buttinskis when we use these words. But all too often we are. All we have to do is reflect on how we feel when we are on the receiving end to know how someone else feels when we say this stuff to them.

End of Sr. Gloriamarie's thoughts

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

This chapter of the rule is not about fist fighting. This chapter is about the arrogant usurpation of authority and the legitimization of violence. Even in a culture that routinely disciplined its young or unlettered with physical whippings, Benedict simply does not allow a culture of violence. Benedictine spirituality depended on personal commitment and community support, not on intimidation and brutality. Benedict makes it clear that the desire for good is no excuse for the exercise of evil in its behalf. This is an important chapter, then, for people whose high ideals lead them to the basest of means in the name of the achievement of good. To become what we hate-- as mean as the killers, as obsessed as the haters--is neither the goal nor the greatness of the spiritual life.

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Daily Meditation 12/28/07 On the 4th Day of Christmas; Feast of Holy Innocents

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Collect

We remember today, O God, the slaughter of the holy innocents of Bethlehem by King Herod. Receive, we pray, into the arms of your mercy all innocent victims; and by your great might frustrate the designs of evil tyrants and establish your rule of justice, love, and peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 2, 26; Isaiah 49:13-23; Matthew 18:1-14
PM Psalm 19, 126; Isaiah 54:1-13; Mark 10:13-16
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Jeremiah 31:15-17. Keep your voice from weeping, and your eyes from tears; for there is a reward for your work.

I long maintained a basic faith that if I followed the rules, did my homework, wore sunscreen, brushed my teeth, did unto others as I would have them do unto me, and said my prayers, all would be well.


Well, it ain't necessarily so. Sometimes the problem is untrustworthy people. Sometimes it's bodily weakness (even with sunscreen). Sometimes a series of exterior events comes together to crush us. Pain and disappointment are part of the human condition.


When we get clobbered, it's easy to give in to disappointment, to cast blame and withdraw, to dwell on hurts-and even easier to overlook our own parts in these debacles.


What's hard is to admit that we made mistakes and try to rectify them, to acknowledge that saying our prayers does not indemnify us against problems, to keep going with the things we should be doing. Sometimes it's almost more than we can do-but it's necessary. It's easy to have faith when everything's going well, but it's the tested faith that gets us through the rocky times.
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Today we remember: The Holy Innocents
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yukon (British Columbia and the Yukon, Canada)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

28th December
Feast of the Holy Innocents
A day for children and fools! This day used to be called the feast of fools!
It is the day of remembrance for the little children of Bethlehem and the surrounding area who were killed by King Herod at the time of Jesus' birth.
Recall a happy childhood memory of Christmas. Thank God for it (it was his gift).
Sum it up in no more than 3 words and yes, stick it up on your fridge door.
Remember all suffering children and the unborn who do not live to see the
light of day.
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 4th day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 4, December 28
Four Calling Birds
The Four Gospels: 1) Matthew, 2) Mark, 3) Luke, and 4) John, which proclaim the Good News of God's reconciliation of the world to Himself in Jesus Christ.

The Fourth Day of Christmas
The Four Gospels (four calling birds)

There has been an injustice done. Only one.

The only absolutely sinless man to ever live has died. Just four days ago we celebrated his birth. Mary gave birth to God’s only begotten son.

We rejoiced.

We sang carols.

We feasted.

We gave.

We received.

What a celebration it was. We thought about it late into the night.

This is considered the fourth day of Christmas. On the fourth day of Christmas my true love (God) gave to me -- Four calling birds (The four gospels).

What are they calling? They are telling us the story of the injustice.

A story of a virgin giving birth to a son. A son who never needed punished his whole life. I believe we have recorded the only possible scolding Jesus ever received when he was twelve years old.

It is a story of a love being the absolute perfection of 1 Corinthians 13. It is a story of one who had the favor of all the common people. One who taught like no other could. One who was totally obedient to the Father.

Then disaster. Injustice. Death to the only innocent man to ever live.

We look at all the hurts in this world. We see Adam and Eve disobeying God. We see Cain killing Abel. And we would have liked to have been able to prevent it.

We see a president shot and killed. We see a bomb dropped on a city that wiped out all the living for miles around. We see a Challenger space shuttle explode, one of the passengers a beloved school teacher, her students watching the explosion.

We say, "What an injustice!" "What an atrocity!" We want to change it. We want to go back and correct it. We all feel the pain. We want to justify it in our own thinking and for all who have gone through the pain of it.

But as unfair as we see it, as much pain as there is by it happening, it is the result of missing the mark. Not being perfect. Making the wrong choices. All the way from the choice of Adam and Eve.

Yes, as unfair as it seems it will never compare to the death of Jesus on the cross. He did not make wrong choices. He did not sin. He could never deserve death for the life he lived.

The rest of us do. We say the means of death is sometimes brutal, but it is appointed unto man once to die and after that the judgement.

Jesus had no judgement to face. He did not deserve death. Yet, he died. It was finished. There is no reversing it. A true injustice has been done and it is the result of our lives and choices. There is no restitution for such an injustice. No way to make it right. It is an infinite injustice and the gospels tell us about it.

But that is not the end of the story. The injustice was not the final. The grave could not hold him. Death could not get a grip. He overcame and because he has gone through the same suffering we go through. Because he died as we deserve. Because such an infinite injustice was done he has paid the price that makes all of those who will receive the gift from him free from our sin and death. He is the sympathetic high priest. He can say to the Father, “My death was unjust and will never be made right. Even if you put the sins of the whole world on me, they are not my sins so I can toss them off and free the sinner.” He holds the key. He calls us brothers. He was the perfect sacrifice that can never be reversed. Whose blood will never lose its power. The blood of Abel calls out to us as does the death of so many who have had a horrible death, but the blood of Christ does more than call out to us. It cleanses us completely.

Jesus, thank you for the calling of your blood as described in the four gospels. I cannot begin to comprehend how you lived a sinless life on this earth, but you deserve every praise and honor, the highest respect, the greatest majesty, the gift of ourselves to live such a life, as you enable us to, for you. All things have been given to you and rightfully so.

Amen

~ Ron Pruitt
Sarasota, Florida, USA

Lord Jesus,

Thank You for bringing us good news, God spell, Gospel. We have never needed anything else so greatly. You warned of days of wars and rumors of war. All through history and even today such concerns abound. But, in You we have the victory. You have won the battle and the enemy IS defeated. You have paid the great price for our freedom, our salvation, our deliverance. And all you asked is that we keep Your commands. Help me, Brother, to love.

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Disruption at work

Daily Reading for December 28 • The Holy Innocents

Sorting through the stack of cards that arrived at our house last Christmas, I note that all kinds of symbols have edged their way into the celebration. Overwhelmingly, the landscape scenes render New England towns buried in snow, usually with the added touch of a horse-drawn sleigh. On other cards, animals frolic: one card shows an African lion reclining with a foreleg draped affectionately around a lamb. Inside, the cards stress sunny words like love, good-will, cheer, happiness, and warmth. It is a fine thing, I suppose, that we honor a sacred holiday with such homey sentiments. And yet when I turn to the gospel accounts of the first Christmas, I hear a very different tone, and sense mainly disruption at work. . . .

The earliest events in Jesus’ life give a menacing preview of the unlikely struggle now under way. Herod, King of the Jews, enforced Roman rule at the local level, and in an irony of history we know Herod’s name mainly because of the massacre of the innocents. I have never seen a Christmas card depicting that state-sponsored act of terror, but it too was a part of Christ’s coming. Although secular history does not refer to the atrocity, no one acquainted with the life of Herod doubts him capable. Five days before his death he ordered the arrest of many citizens and decreed that they be executed on the day of his death, in order to guarantee a proper atmosphere of mourning in the country. For such a despot, a minor extermination procedure in Bethlehem posed no problem. . . .

As I read the birth stories about Jesus I cannot help but conclude that though the world may be tilted toward the rich and powerful, God is tilted toward the underdog. Growing up, Jesus’ sensibilities were affected most deeply by the poor, the powerless, the oppressed—in short, the underdogs. Today theologians debate the aptness of the phrase “God’s preferential option for the poor” as a way of describing God’s concern for the underdog. Since God arranged the circumstances in which to be born on planet earth—without power or wealth, without rights, without justice—his preferential options speak for themselves.

From The Jesus I Never Knew by Philip Yancey (Zondervan, 1995)
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

It is not in our power to explain either the prosperity of the wicked or the sufferings of the righteous.
— Joseph Telushkin in Jewish Wisdom

To Practice This Thought: Respect the mysteries of both good and evil.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

I understood that love comprised all vocations, that love was everything, that it embraced all times and places, in a word, that it was eternal! ... O Jesus, my Love ... my vocation, at last I have found it, my vocation is love! ...in the heart of the Church, my Mother, I shall be Love.
St Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Blessed is he who always has before his eyes that "the earth is
the Lord's and the fulness thereof" (Ps. 23:1), and keeps in mind
that God is powerful to arrange for His servants as is pleasing to
Him.

St. Barsanuphius
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Being Safe Places for Others

When we are free from the need to judge or condemn, we can become safe places for people to meet in vulnerability and take down the walls that separate them. Being deeply rooted in the love of God, we cannot help but invite people to love one another. When people realise that we have no hidden agendas or unspoken intentions, that we are not trying to gain any profit for ourselves, and that our only desire is for peace and reconciliation, they may find the inner freedom and courage to leave their guns at the door and enter into conversation with their enemies.

Many this happens even without our planning. Our ministry of reconciliation most often takes place when we ourselves are least aware of it. Our simple, nonjudgmental presence does it.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Eight - The Third Note -

Joy

Tertiaries, rejoicing in the Lord always, show in our lives the grace and beauty of divine joy. We remember that they follow the Son of Man, who came eating and drinking, who loved the birds and the flowers, who blessed little children, who was a friend of tax collectors and sinners, and who sat at the tables of both the rich and the poor. We delight in fun and laughter, rejoicing in God's world, its beauty and its living creatures, calling nothing common or unclean. We mix freely with all people, ready to bind up the broken-hearted and to bring joy into the lives of others. We carry within them an inner peace and happiness which others may perceive, even if they do not know its source.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Listen!
December 28th, 2007
Friday’s Reflection

LISTEN for the Lord is very near! May the sound of his voice draw you closer and closer in obedient love — coming and going, waiting and watching, now and forever. Amen.

- Pamela C. Hawkins
Simply Wait: Cultivating Stillness in the Season of Advent

From p. 89 of Simply Wait: Cultivating Stillness in the Season of Advent by Pamela C. Hawkins. Copyright © 2007 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html

Those at the Edge Hold the Secret

Those at the edge, ironically, always hold the secret for the conversion of every age and culture. They always hold the projected and denied parts of our soul, the parts of ourselves that we are ashamed of, that we hate and deny, that we're afraid of in ourselves. Only as the People of God receive the stranger and the leper, those who don't play our game, do we discover not only the hidden and hated parts of our own souls, but the Lord Jesus himself. That's how we say, "Come, Lord Jesus." In letting go, we make room for the Other. The church is always converted when the outcasts are reinvited into the temple.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr

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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Christ continues to be born in us

Those who lived before the incarnation approached their noble task differently from those who lived after it, but even so Christ was born to all who lived to one and the same faith. Yet what is more amazing is that Christ continues to be borne to us today. Daily he allows himself to be brought forth by every believing soul. What virginity accomplished physically in the mother of the Lord when she gave birth, a conscience purified from sin and full of merits accomplishes spiritually in our inmost being. Whenever anyone is incorporated into Christ's body in the womb of holy Mother Church, becoming one of his members, that person by reason of his or her faith becomes Christ's brother or sister; as he himself says through the psalmist: I will declare your name to my brethren.

So it is that what we revere in the Lord we also can become if we follow in his footsteps. If in our minds we bind ourselves to the head himself, it is fitting that we should make every effort to be united also to his members; I mean, to those servants of God, who, as I said before, bore witness that the Son of God would come in the flesh. When we hear of their virtues, remember them, and practice them ourselves, we bring Christ down from heaven into the world.

Sedatus of Béziers
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

CONTINUOUS CONVERSION


"Except ye be converted, and become as little children. . . ." Matthew 18:3

These words of Our Lord are true of our initial conversion, but we have to be continuously converted all the days of our lives, continually to turn to God as children. If we trust to our wits instead of to God, we produce consequences for which God will hold us responsible. Immediately our bodies are brought into new conditions by the providence of God, we have to see that our natural life obeys the dictates of the Spirit of God. Because we have done it once is no proof that we shall do it again. The relation of the natural to the spiritual is one of continuous conversion, and it is the one thing we object to. In every setting in which we are put, the Spirit of God remains unchanged and His salvation unaltered, but we have to "put on the new man." God holds us responsible every time we refuse to convert ourselves, our reason for refusing is wilful obstinacy. Our natural life must not rule, God must rule in us.

The hindrance in our spiritual life is that we will not be continually converted, there are wadges of obstinacy where our pride spits at the throne of God and says - I won't. We deify independence and wilfulness and call them by the wrong name. What God looks on as obstinate weakness, we call strength. There are whole tracts of our lives which have not yet been brought into subjection, and it can only be done by this continuous conversion. Slowly but surely we can claim the whole territory for the Spirit of God.
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Chesterton Day by Day
http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~mward/gkc/books/gkcday/gkcday.html

HOLY INNOCENTS' DAY

THAT little urchin with the gold-red hair (whom I have just watched toddling past my house), she shall not be lopped and lamed and altered; her hair shall not be cut short like a convict's. No; all the kingdoms of the earth shall be hacked about and mutilated to suit her. The winds of the world shall be tempered to that lamb unshorn. All crowns that cannot fit her head shall be broken; all raiment and building that does not harmonize with her glory shall waste away. Her mother may bid her bind her hair, for that is natural authority; but the Emperor of the Planet shall not bid her cut it off. She is the human and sacred image; all around her the social fabric shall sway and split and fall; the pillars of society shall be shaken and the roofs of ages come rushing down; and not one hair of her head shall be harmed.

'What's Wrong with the World.'
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 28, August 28, December 28
Chapter 70: That No One Venture to Punish at Random

Every occasion of presumption
shall be avoided in the monastery,
and we decree that no one be allowed
to excommunicate or to strike any of her sisters
unless the Abbess has given her the authority.
Those who offend in this matter
shall be rebuked in the presence of all,
that the rest may have fear.

But children up to 15 years of age
shall be carefully controlled and watched by all,
yet this too with all moderation and discretion.
All, therefore, who presume
without the Abbess' instructions
to punish those above that age
or who lose their temper with them,
shall undergo the discipline of the Rule;
for it is written,
"Do not to another what you would not want done to yourself" (Tobias 4:16).

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

This chapter of the rule is not about fist fighting. This chapter is about the arrogant usurpation of authority and the legitimization of violence. Even in a culture that routinely disciplined its young or unlettered with physical whippings, Benedict simply does not allow a culture of violence. Benedictine spirituality depended on personal commitment and community support, not on intimidation and brutality. Benedict makes it clear that the desire for good is no excuse for the exercise of evil in its behalf. This is an important chapter, then, for people whose high ideals lead them to the basest of means in the name of the achievement of good. To become what we hate-- as mean as the killers, as obsessed as the haters--is neither the goal nor the greatness of the spiritual life.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Friday, December 28, 2007 Venerable Simon, Founder of Simonopetra
on Mount Athos
2nd Vigil Nativity: Numbers 24:2-3, 5-9, 17-18 Epistle: James
2:1-13 Gospel: St. Mark 12:1-12

Balaam's Prophecy: Numbers 24:2-3, 5-9, 17-18 LXX, especially vs. 17: "I
will point to Him, but not now; I will bless Him, but He draws not near:
a star shall rise out of Jacob, a Man shall spring out of Israel."
Israel's years in the wilderness concluded when finally they "encamped
on the west of Moab by Jordan toward Jericho" (Nu. 22:1). Fearful at
the presence of such a great horde, the King and the elders of Moab and
the elders of Midian - the two nations east of the river Jordan - sent
emissaries to the famous Prophet Balaam inviting him to come from his
home in Mesopotamia near the river Euphrates and "curse this
people...since it is stronger than we" (Nu. 22:6). Balaam, after
consulting God, refused to join Balak, but King Balak of Moab persisted,
offering greater honors, after which God said to Balaam, "rise and
follow them; nevertheless the word which I shall speak to thee, it shalt
thou do" (Nu. 22:20). Balaam tried to oblige Balak, but under
inspiration of God he was not able to curse Israel. The present
reading, from the last of four oracles (Nu. 24:2), is a prophecy of the
coming of the Christ.

Balaam declares that "there shall come a Man out of his [Israel's] seed"
(vs. 7 LXX). This word established the expectation that the Messiah
would be a man, which proved true; for "when the time had fully come,
God sent forth His Son" (Gal. 4:4), born of a woman.

The Lord Jesus' future "rule over many nations" also was predicted by
Balaam (Nu. 24:7 LXX). He foresaw that "a Kingdom greater than Gog's
[would] be raised up" (vs. 7 LXX), and the Kingdom of God is greater
than Gog's (one of Scripture's names for Satan).

The Lord Jesus' Kingdom has been "enlarged" or "increased" and will
continue to expand until all nations shall come before Him and worship
Him (vs. 7 LXX).

Although the Prophet did not speak of the flight of Joseph and the
Virgin and the Christ child from Herod's realm, he did foresee that "God
led Him out of Egypt" (vs. 8), a vision given to the Prophet Hosea years
later (Hos. 11:1), and fulfilled when Joseph, in Egypt, obeyed the
angel, "arose and took the young Child and His mother and came into the
land of Israel" (Mt. 2:20).

Balaam likewise prophesied the Lord's power in overcoming nations and
the adversaries of the Gospel: "He shall consume the nations of His
enemies" (Nu. 24:8). This striking prophesy of the advance of the Lord
and His Church over the centuries is steadily being fulfilled.

The Holy Spirit revealed to the Prophet how men would respond to the
Messiah, and also how their responses to Him would affect them in turn:
"They that bless thee are blessed, and they that curse thee are cursed"
(vs. 9). How tragic are those who accept the religions of false gods!

The Prophet foresaw all these things about the Christ Who would come,
but he would only say, "I will point to Him, but not now; I will bless
Him, but He draws not near" (vs. 17), for the coming of the Son of Man
would occur in the age of Rome.

Most wonderfully, Balaam was even given a hint of the star of Bethlehem:
"a star shall come forth out of Jacob" (vs. 17), which, indeed, led the
Magi from the East to the cave!

Balaam's prophecy discloses that the true Messiah of Israel would
"crush" the enemies of the People of God, and all the traditional
enemies of ancient Israel were named - Moab, Edom, and Seir (vss.
17,18). The Church, as the true Israel that worships Christ, is the
living witness to Truth Himself, He Who was born in the cave to the
Virgin Mother. He has dispossessed His enemies and established His
People valiantly. How blessed we are, Beloved, for we do not look ahead
into the future as did Balaam. Christ is Born! Glorify Him!

Let us, therefore, praise and magnify Him, the God born in flesh from
the Virgin, the King born in a cave, the God worshiped by the Magi, Who
hath delivered us from the curse.

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

Reading for Dec 27, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 27, August 27, December 27
Chapter 69: That the Monks Presume Not to Defend One Another

Care must be taken that no monk presume on any ground
to defend another monk in the monastery,
or as it were to take him under his protection,
even though they be united by some tie of blood-relationship.
Let not the monks dare to do this in any way whatsoever,
because it may give rise to most serious scandals.
But if anyone breaks this rule,
let him be severely punished.

Some Thoughts

The other day I babbled a bit about "custody of the senses", the ultimate in minding one's own business. It is helpful for me to view this somewhat problematic passages (for me at least!) as minding my own business. Just think of all the gossip and scandals in our church communities that occur because we would not concentrate on minding our own business.

I also see in this section a challenge to all the dysfunctional patterns that can turn relationships toxic. Such as triangulation... this occurs when instead of speaking to Person B directly, Person A instead talks to Person C, telling C what they ought to be saying to B. C then tells B what A said, B tells A off via C and the next thing we know, it's a mess of miscommunication, misunderstanding and no one getting the facts straight.

We are in the school of the Lord, maybe that is where we should focus our attention.

end of Sister Gloriamarie's thoughts, such as they are.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

"Stay away from your enemies but guard yourself against friends," Ben Sirach wrote in Ecclesiasticus. The rule knows that false friendship is bad for the person and bad for the community as well. In a life dedicated to spiritual growth and direction, there is no room for multiple masters. Friends who protect us from our need to grow are not friends at all. People who allow a personal agenda, our need to be right or their need to shield, block the achievement of a broader vision in us and betray us. Supporters who risk dividing a group into factions over personal tensions rather than to allow individuals to work their way positively through the hard points of life, barter the spirit and peace of the whole community. We are taught in the Rule not to take sides in issues of personal interpretation and spiritual challenge. We are to hold one another up during hard times, Chapter 27 indicates, but we are not to turn personal difficulty into public warfare. The groups that would be better off if individuals had refused to turn differences of opinion into moral irreconciliables are legion. The Desert Monastics say that one of the disciples asked Abba Sisoes one day, "If I am sitting in the desert and a barbarian comes to kill me and if I am stronger than he, shall I kill him?" The old man said to him, 'No, leave him to God. In fact whatever the trial is which comes to a person, let them say,"This has happened to me because of my sins," and if something good comes say, "This has happened to me because of the providence of God."

Life is not perfect; some of life just is. A great deal of mental, psychological and spiritual health comes from learning to endure the average heat of the average day and to wear both its banes and its blessings with a tempered heart. No warfare. No armies mobilized on the plain. No identification of enemies. Just life.

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Daily Meditation 12/27/07 On the 3rd day of Christmas; Feast of St. John the Evangelist

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]


motley crew

what a motley crew
to welcome you into the world!

a horse stamping its feet
to keep warm;
a cow murmuring
because you've disturbed her calf;
a dog whimpering and twitching,
chasing, in his dreams,
the cat in the corner of the barn,
who stares wondering
what all the fuss is about.

(of course, it's no surprise
they are there, at that moment:
since they sprang from this Child's imagination
at creation's birth)

and then the folks
who show up from
Bethlehem's welcome wagon?

loners
(why else do they spend their nights
on cold, rocky hillsides);
introverts
(who else enjoys a job where
you never meet another person);
the strong, silent type
(why else would would they want to spend
all their time with sheep?!?)

and yet, there they go:
running and grabbing everyone
like they are best friends,
almost shouting:

"You won't believe who we just met!"

(c) 2006 Thom M. Shuman

Collect

Shed upon your Church, O Lord, the brightness of your light, that we, being illumined by the teaching of your apostle and evangelist John, may so walk in the light of your truth, that at length we may attain to the fullness of eternal life; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM: Psalm 97, 98; Proverbs 8:22-30; John 13:20-35
PM: Psalm 145; Isaiah 44:1-8; 1 John 5:1-12
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

1 John 1-9. God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.

On a rich, full day (zipping from one appointment to the next, never quite catching up or catching my breath, always just a minute or two late) I sank into a chair across from my spiritual director. "Where have you seen God in your life this past week?" she asked.


It was a week overloaded with work, with family matters, and with a minor medical emergency. It was a week in which I had less time than usual for reflection, organized prayer, and just listening.


And yet it took only a glance over those days to reveal gleaming flashes of God's presence in the interstices, a golden pattern in the frieze of my life. Surely God was working through those who swiftly fit me into crowded schedules, the medical specialists who saw and aided me, and the colleagues and friends who helped out. And I have no doubt that God was working to bring together my daughters and me, nudging us closer.


Looking back, I found myself overwhelmed not by the stress, but by the grace of that week, and by the light of God's presence.

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Today we remember: St. John the Evangelist
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Ysabel (Melanesia)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

27th December
St. John the Evangelist
Read the first chapter of John's gospel.
Write out the sentence that strikes you most. Stick it up on your fridge
door.
If you only get as far as the first line that will do!!!
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 3rd day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 3, December 27
Three French Hens
The Three Theological Virtues: 1) Faith, 2) Hope, and 3) Love (1 Corinthians 13:13)

Faith, Hope and Love

These three remain: Faith, Hope, and Love; even after the Christmas gifts are all unwrapped and we clear the paper and ribbons away and stash the decorations in the attic.

At this time of year, it's Hope that stirs so strongly in my heart. The winter solstice is past and each day is slightly longer than the last. There is hope for the return of bright, sunny mornings and late summer evenings.

Seed catalogs appear in my mailbox with their colorful promises of brilliant flowers and mouth-watering produce. In just a few weeks, amid days of snow and cold, it will be time to claim the promise of spring by setting seed trays in a sunny window or under a light.

More bright rays of hope come with the new calendar. Like lined paper waiting to be filled with writing, the days of the new year spread out in front of me and Hope springs to my side unbidden to announce that this year things will be different.

I've heard many people claim to make no New Year's resolutions because they always fail to keep them anyway. Their assessment is so much more realistic than mine. I tell myself, I should give up these dreams of doing better tomorrow. Yet I find Hope to be unquenchable in my heart. The joy of reaching even the smallest goal has me hooked on setting more.

I admit it: I make New Year's resolutions. Yes, I determine to exercise more, eat less, and be a better wife and mother. Those are the obvious goals. But I also try to spend time in prayer and allow God to focus the hope within me into spiritual goals. Usually, it's a matter of verbalizing to myself the direction in which I sense God moving me. It's so satisfying to assign a label, such as transparency or spiritual risk-taking, to the lessons I'm learning and to embrace those lessons as paths to being more like Christ.

Hope and Joy come together. Both provide breathtaking views as our spirits soar high above the harsh rocks of Reality borne by the wings of the Spirit of God. Faith lets us relax and enjoy the ride. And Love is so evident in the patience of God as He guides us gently on to become the persons He wants us to be.

~ Marsha Lynn
Odon, Indiana, USA

Lord,

Thank you for letting the rush subside. And yet, on this Your day, let me not forget the promises I have made through the journey I began at Advent. May the love and hope that I have rekindled also stir my faith into activity. Not only a faith that believes, but a faithfulness that with Your grace makes me become a better person; an easier person to live with. Oh Father, I believe, help me in my times of unbelief.

Amen
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FEAST OF ST. JOHN DOE

As is the case with so many people in the Bible, there may be a little confusion as to who St. John is. He might not be the person who wrote the gospel named for him -- maybe it was someone else by the same name. Or someone else entirely, who knows?

Another person he might not be is the Beloved Disciple -- that person, who is never named, is designated as the BD only in the gospel of John, and the popular reasoning has always been that he must be the author himself, modestly refraining from identifying himself by name. Who knows?

He also might not have written the Book of Revelation or the three little letters named for him and might never even have heard of the island of Patmos, let alone lived there -- parts of those books seem to arise from a time after John the disciple lived. Unless he lived a very, very long time.

Does this trouble you, this uncertainty about the specifics? Does it seem to call the whole religious enterprise into question, if we don't know all the facts? Can't even control the chain of evidence for our own sacred books?

It's okay. There is more than one way to read the Bible. There is much more to it than just the things that happen in it. There is even more to it than the context and the intention of its writers -- the beginnings of things aren't the whole of them: I don't know the whole story of your marriage just because I attended your wedding. Stuff happened after that. Some of it was known by many: the children you had, where you lived. Other things were known to you alone. Some things in your marriage were not as they appeared from outside it. And some things looked different years after they happened, even to you, from the way they looked when you were going through them.

The Bible is like that. It is alive, even now, old as it is. The Bible isn't just its writers -- the Bible is also its readers. It always has been. We bring ourselves to it when we read it. We interact with it. We even argue with it, as one does with the living and cannot do with the dead.

It is said that St. John once drank a cup of poisoned wine and was none the worse for having done so. You won't find that in the Bible -- it's a story that came along later, one of those tales you are liable to hear at a family gathering or at a wake, one of those stories that get a little more interesting with each telling. Perhaps they are not facts, but that doesn't make them lies.

What they are is stories. Ponderings. Poems, even -- take another look at the opening of the fourth gospel. Read them for what they are. Let them remind you of things in your life, or of things you wish were in your life. Let them make you wonder who God is, what it meant to whoever penned the lines that God loved the world enough to give an only Son for it, and what it might mean for you today. Let it mean nothing or everything, but tell your truth as you see it now, and then strive to remain open to your own growth and change.

More than that we cannot do.


Copyright © 2006 Barbara Crafton - http://www.geraniumfarm.org
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

John's icon of Jesus

Daily Reading for December 27 • St. John, Apostle and Evangelist

The icon of Jesus painted by John is his gospel is not a naturalistic rendering. The other gospel writers also created distinctive impressions of Jesus with an artistry wholly unlike modern biography or journalism. But John has taken the boldest steps away from reportage into the creative realm, using distortion and selectivity and elaboration with shocking freedom. What we recognize as some of the most emphatic features of John’s portrait of Jesus are, I believe, the very features that we ourselves will acquire through conversion. John has Jesus continually return to certain themes so that we can see as in a mirror the new features of our own converted lives.

Three very prominent characteristics of John’s portrait of Jesus are as instantly recognizable as the elongations and storminess of an El Greco painting. The first is an intense awareness of being sent by God. The theme of phrases such as “this is the will of the One who sent me” resound again and again. But the intensity and saturation of this coloring of all Jesus’ words and actions with the sense of “sentness” is not meant to separate us from him, and thus degrade our discipleship by comparison. The opposite is true. The believer in Jesus gains in conversion exactly the same conviction of having been given life and of being brought into the world to fulfill a mission from God. The new vision that comes with conversion brings with it the gift of a sense that one’s life is purposeful, that one has been given a mission, a life-task for God.

The second and intimately related feature of John’s icon of Jesus is agency. Jesus knows what he is doing and when it is time to do it, and he knows that he is doing it. We can be pretty sure that this is based on actual memories of Jesus. All the way through, Jesus’ words emphasize his own authority and responsibility for his actions. Now it is just this sense of agency and responsibility that comes as a gift from God in the converted life. In profane life, human beings suffer from a sense that not only are their lives accidental, but the fate to which they must resign themselves is that of being forever pushed around, manipulated, and dictated to. In the converted life, we are endowed with responsibility and with power.

The third feature of John’s gospel, which blends into the other two, is that of centeredness. The Jesus of John’s gospel can say “I am” so powerfully because he is totally understood and known by God. He is so known by God that he is in the Father and the Father is in him. And this is the authority that comes to us as converted believers. If I know myself to be utterly known, utterly known and completely loved, then I am. I really am. I really exist. I mean everything to God and therefore my life has meaning.

From “The Converted Life” in Nativities and Passions: Words for Transformation by Martin L. Smith (Cowley Publications, 1995).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

God is in the prepositions -- beyond, among, within, beneath.
— Sharon Daloz Parks quoted in Plain Living by Catherine Whitmire

To Practice This Thought: When you are reading and come across one of these words, pause to remember God.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

I should like to respond by spending my earthly life as Our Lady did ... I unite myself to the soul of the Virgin at the moment in which the Father was covering her with His shadow, while the Word was taking flesh within her and the Holy Spirit came upon her to accomplish this great mystery.
Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

As a pilot calls on winds and a storm-tossed mariner looks
homeward, so the times call on you to win your way to God. As
God's athlete, be sober; the stake is immortality and eternal
life.

St. Ignatius the God-bearer
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

A Nonjudgmental Pressure

To the degree that we accept that through Christ we ourselves have been reconciled with God we can be messengers of reconciliation for others. Essential to the work of reconciliation is a nonjudgmental presence. We are not sent to the world to judge, to condemn, to evaluate, to classify, or to label. When we walk around as if we have to make up our mind about people and tell them what is wrong with them and how they should change, we will only create more division. Jesus says it clearly: "Be compassionate just as your Father is compassionate. Do not judge; ... do not condemn; ... forgive" (Luke 6:36-37).

In a world that constantly asks us to make up our minds about other people, a nonjudgmental presence seems nearly impossible. But it is one of the most beautiful fruits of a deep spiritual life and will be easily recognized by those who long for reconciliation.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Seven - The Second Note, cont'd

The Third Order is Christian community whose members, although varied in race, education, and character, are bound into a living whole through the love we share in Christ. This unity of all who believe in him will become, as our Lord intended, a witness to the world of his divine mission. In our relationship with those outside the Order, we show the same Christ-like love, and gladly give of ouselves, remembering that love is measured by sacrifice.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Good News of Great Joy
December 27th, 2007
Thursday’s Reflection

THE ANGEL SAID TO THEM, “Do not be afraid; for see — I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.”
- Luke 2:10-11

Loving Creator,
We give thanks for the birth of joy
in our lives at Christmas.
Let us go forth as messengers
of the good news
of great joy for all people.
Amen.

- Alive Now

From p. 52 of Alive Now, November/December 1999. Copyright © 1999 by The Upper Room. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html

Good Friends Help Us to Remember

It takes a prophet of sorts, one who has traveled the highway before and remembers everything, to guide us beyond our blind, selective remembering. Choose your friends carefully and listen to those who speak truth to you, who help you remember all things, "so that you may value the things that really matter, up to the very day of Christ" (Philippians 1:10).

Ask the Lord for companions (sometimes Jesus alone!) who will walk the highway of remembering with you, mentors in the Spirit who can help you fill in the valleys and level the mountains and hills, making the winding ways straight and the rough ways smooth. People are going to support groups for those spiritual friends because we have too often failed them in the churches. When the soul is ready, the teacher will be found.

from Sojourners, "The Energy of Promise"
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

This wonder fills me with amazement

In what way was the Lord with her, who soon afterward came forth from her? As a craftsman upon finding some suitable material fashions a beautiful vessel, so Christ upon finding a virgin holy both in body and soul fashioned for himself a living temple. There, in the way he willed, he formed the human nature in which he clothed himself and this day came forth, unashamed of that nature's deformity. For him it was no cause for shame to put on what he himself had made, and for his creature it was a great glory to become the cloak of her Creator. As in the first creation the human race could not be founded until the clay came into his hand, so now our corruptible nature could not be transformed until it had become the garment of its Maker.

How can I put this into words, how express it? This wonder fills me with amazement. The Ancient of Days becomes a child, he who sits upon the throne, high and exalted, is laid in a manger. He who has broken the bonds of sin is wrapped in swaddling-bands, for this is his will. He wills opprobrium to become honor, disgrace to be clothed in glory, and the most outrageous abuse to demonstrate the extent of his goodness.

John Chrysostom
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

WHERE THE BATTLE'S LOST AND WON


"If thou wilt return, 0 Israel, saith the Lord. . . ." Jeremiah 4:1

The battle is lost or won in the secret places of the will before God, never first in the external world. The Spirit of God apprehends me and I am obliged to get alone with God and fight the battle out before Him. Until this is done, I lose every time. The battle may take one minute or a year, that will depend on me, not on God; but it must be wrestled out alone before God, and I must resolutely go through the hell of a renunciation before God. Nothing has any power over the man who has fought out the battle before God and won there.

If I say, "I will wait till I get into the circumstances and then put God to the test," I shall find I cannot. I must get the thing settled between my self and God in the secret places of my soul where no stranger intermeddles, and then I can go forth with the certainty that the battle is won. Lose it there, and calamity and disaster and upset are as sure as God's decree. The reason the battle is not won is because I try to win it in the external world first. Get alone with God, fight it out before Him, settle the matter there once and for all.

In dealing with other people, the line to take is to push them to an issue of will. That is the way abandonment begins. Every now and again, not often, but sometimes, God brings us to a point of climax. That is the Great Divide in the life; from that point we either go towards a more and more dilatory and useless type of Christian life, or we become more and more ablaze for the glory of God - My Utmost for His Highest.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 27, August 27, December 27
Chapter 69: That the Monks Presume Not to Defend One Another

Care must be taken that no monk presume on any ground
to defend another monk in the monastery,
or as it were to take him under his protection,
even though they be united by some tie of blood-relationship.
Let not the monks dare to do this in any way whatsoever,
because it may give rise to most serious scandals.
But if anyone breaks this rule,
let him be severely punished.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

"Stay away from your enemies but guard yourself against friends," Ben Sirach wrote in Ecclesiasticus. The rule knows that false friendship is bad for the person and bad for the community as well. In a life dedicated to spiritual growth and direction, there is no room for multiple masters. Friends who protect us from our need to grow are not friends at all. People who allow a personal agenda, our need to be right or their need to shield, block the achievement of a broader vision in us and betray us. Supporters who risk dividing a group into factions over personal tensions rather than to allow individuals to work their way positively through the hard points of life, barter the spirit and peace of the whole community. We are taught in the Rule not to take sides in issues of personal interpretation and spiritual challenge. We are to hold one another up during hard times, Chapter 27 indicates, but we are not to turn personal difficulty into public warfare. The groups that would be better off if individuals had refused to turn differences of opinion into moral irreconciliables are legion. The Desert Monastics say that one of the disciples asked Abba Sisoes one day, "If I am sitting in the desert and a barbarian comes to kill me and if I am stronger than he, shall I kill him?" The old man said to him, 'No, leave him to God. In fact whatever the trial is which comes to a person, let them say,"This has happened to me because of my sins," and if something good comes say, "This has happened to me because of the providence of God."

Life is not perfect; some of life just is. A great deal of mental, psychological and spiritual health comes from learning to endure the average heat of the average day and to wear both its banes and its blessings with a tempered heart. No warfare. No armies mobilized on the plain. No identification of enemies. Just life.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Thursday, December 27, 2007 The
Proto-Martyr Stephen the Archdeacon
1st Vigil Nativity: Genesis 1:1-13 Apostle: Acts 6:8-15; 7:1-5,
47-60 Gospel: St. Matthew 21:33-42

Our Creator: Genesis 1:1-13, especially vss. 1-3: "In the beginning God
created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void,
and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirit of God was
moving over the face of the waters. And God said, 'Let there be light,'
and there was light." The joyous Feast of the Nativity of Our Lord
Jesus Christ is come! In the Divine Liturgy as we celebrate His birth,
we will affirm our belief in "the Holy, Consubstantial, Life-giving, and
Undivided Trinity." As we join with the Church and take our part in the
prayers and hymns and actions of the Liturgy, commit yourself also to
God. Child of God, make the words of the Nicene Creed your own!
Declare your allegiance to your "Father Almighty, Maker...of all things
visible and invisible," for you are His visible and invisible creation.
Acknowledge your "Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God...by Whom all things
were made," for He not only created you, but took your nature as His
own. As you take the Name of "the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of
Life" on your lips, meet Him in your heart for He lives in all your
senses. Without Him, you would know neither Jesus Christ nor your
Father in Heaven.

In the Nativity Liturgy you come face to face with the great mystery of
the birth of Jesus Christ, your Creator Who lies in the cave of your
soul, divested of the glory of His heavenly majesty, having "made
Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and coming
in the likeness of men" (Phil. 2:7). Think of the immensity of the
universe to the extent that men have researched and described it. Can
you receive the immensity of the Divine embrace of God limiting Himself
to your finite comprehension, imperfect speech, and limited thought?

"In the beginning was the Word" (Jn. 1:1), God the Word, saying, "'Let
there be light;' and there was light" (Gen. 1:3). The choosing by God
the Father, the uttering of God the Word, and the moving of God the
Spirit, yielded creation: "there was light," and water and earth, and
living plants - this beautiful planet. And you exist also because He
chooses, utters, and moves. Delicacy and intricacy blend with enormous
forces, massive materials, and immense powers, all of which God speaks
into existence. Be in awe. And then, bow before the manger.

How humbling, that God the Word would choose to become one with you and
me in an elemental way - a babe born of a mother into the flux of
history at a moment that split time in two. There was time before the
Christ and there are the years of our Lord, BC and AD, respectively.
Creation spans both segments of time. See, touch, taste, smell, and
handle the world around you. At this moment, you feel at home here,
settled in. At other times are you not overwhelmed in your tiny self?
You and I only see, touch, taste, smell, or handle the very smallest
pieces of the universe immediately before us. But take heart! Declare
that "God created the heavens and the earth" (Gen. 1:1). Glory in the
Highest, for He became one of us and that staggers the mind.
How do you approach the overwhelming mystery of your Creator? Try this:
go back to the tangible bits and pieces of the ordinary life that He
made. Touch and handle Him every day, and adore Him in these
commonplace, approachable, and understandable realities.

"Come, ye believers, let us see where Christ was born. Let us follow
the star whither it goeth with the Magi, kings of the east; for there
angels praise Him ceaselessly, and shepherds raise their voices in a
worthy song of praise, saying, Glory in the highest to the One born
today in a cave from the Virgin Theotokos in Bethlehem of Judea. Since
God willeth, the order of nature is overcome, as it hath been written,
Christ hath been born of the Virgin in Bethlehem of Judea."

Thy Nativity, O Christ our God, hath given rise to the light of
knowledge in the world, for from the east of the Highest Thou didst
come, O Lord. Glory to Thee.

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Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Reading for Dec 26, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 26, August 26, December 26
Chapter 68: If a Sister Is Commanded to Do Impossible Things

If it happens
that difficult or impossible tasks are laid on a sister,
let her nevertheless receive the order of the one in authority
with all meekness and obedience.
But if she sees that the weight of the burden
altogether exceeds the limit of her strength,
let her submit the reasons for her inability
to the one who is over her
in a quiet way and at an opportune time,
without pride, resistance, or contradiction.
And if after these representations
the Superior still persists in her decision and command,
let the subject know that this is for her good,
and let her obey out of love,
trusting in the help of God.

Some Thoughts

Something that always surprises me when I read this bit is that deals solely with the monastic's physical abilities. There is no provision for a monastic's possible crisis of conscience. We are very fond of holding out in case of a conscience problem. People pick and choose among the tenets of Christian faith citing their conscience. Obviously, Benedict doesn't plan for the possibility that the monastic would ever be asked to do something that went against the conscience.

The monastery is a school for the Lord, as Benedict writes in an earlier chapter. The Christians who enter therein are presupposed to be thought willing to submit to all God has laid out in Scripture. The Rule is, after all, 95% Scripture. No picking and choosing among aspects of the Christian faith. One embraces it all.

Are we as willing as St. Benedict's monks to embrace it all?


Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


An old Jewish proverb teaches, "When you have no choice, don't be afraid." A modern saying argues, "There's no way out but through." The straight and simple truth is that there are some things in life that must be done, even when we don't want to do them, even when we believe we can't do them. Is the rule cruel on this point? Not if there is any truth in experience at all. The reality is that we are often incapable of assessing our own limits, our real talents, our true strength, our necessary ordeals. If parents and teachers and employers and counselors and prioresses somewhere hadn't insisted, we would never have gone to college or stayed at the party or tried the work or met the person or begun the project that, eventually, changed our lives and made us more than we ever knew ourselves to be. Benedict understood clearly that the function of leadership is to call us beyond ourselves, to stretch us to our limits, to turn the clay into breathless beauty. But, first, of course, we have to allow it to happen.

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Daily Meditation 12/26/07 On the Second Day of Christmas

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]


THE TRUCE OF CHRISTMAS

PASSIONATE peace is in the sky --
And in the snow in silver sealed
The beasts are perfect in the field,
And men seem men so suddenly --
(But take ten swords and ten times ten
And blow the bugle in praising men
For we are for all men under the snn,
And they are against us every one
And misers haggle and madmen clutch
And there is peril in praising much,
And we have the terrible tongues uncurled
That praise the world to the sons of the world).

The idle humble hill and wood
Are bowed about the sacred birth,
And for one little hour the earth
Is lazy with the love of good --
(But ready are you, and ready am I,
If the battle blow and the guns go by;
For we are for all men under the sun,
And they are against us every one;
And the men that hate herd all together,
To pride and gold, and the great white feather,
And the thing is graven in star and stone
That the men who love are all alone).

Hunger is hard and time is tough,
But bless the beggars and kiss the kings,
For hope has broken the heart of things,
And nothing was ever praised enough.
(But hold the shield for a sudden swing
And point the sword when you praise a thing,
For we are for all men under the sun,
And they are against us every one,
And mime and merchant, thane and thrall
Hate us because we love them all,
Only till Christmastide go by
Passionate peace is in the sky).

by G K Chesterton
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Collect

We give you thanks, O Lord of glory, for the example of the first martyr Stephen, who looked up to heaven and prayed for his persecutors to your Son Jesus Christ, who stands at your right hand: where he lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, in glory everlasting.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

Feast of St. Stephen, Deacon and First Martyr

AM: Psalm 28, 30; 2 Chronicles 24:17-22; Acts 6:1-7
PM: Psalm 118; Wisdom 4:7-15; Acts 7:59-8:8
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Acts 6:8-7:2a, 51c-60. You are the ones that received the law as ordained by angels, and yet you have not kept it.

Nobody likes a critic; nobody likes to be told what's wrong or what might be better. The prophets were the first critics, their thumbs-down reviews of the powerful resounding through the Hebrew Bible. John the Baptist paid with his head for his blistering critique of Herod and Herodias's ghastly performances. Today we meet the first critic-and, not coincidentally, the first martyr-in the new Christian movement: the deacon Stephen, stoned to death for being too out spoken. He spoke truth to power, until power bit back.


We are often urged to exercise the "prophetic voice," to call society's dominant individuals and institutions to account, but speaking truth is risky. Power, no matter where it sits, is seldom keen on correction. Stephen, now portrayed in a stained-glass window near you for his witness, paid an awful price to get there.


We are unlikely to be canonized or rendered in paint and gold leaf as icons, but our responsibility to speak the truth remains. Complacency in the face of wrong is not an option.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of York (York, England)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
http://www.poorclarestmd.org/

26th December
St. Stephen's day
Stephen was a deacon. His job was to give out boxes to the poor.
Go and find someone in need and give them something.
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Twelve Days of Christmas
http://www.cresourcei.org/cy12days.html

On the 2nd day of Christmas my true love gave to me...

Day 2, December 26
Two Turtle Doves
The Old and New Testaments, which together bear witness to God's self-revelation in history and the creation of a people to tell the Story of God to the world.

Two Turtle Doves
The Old Testament and The New Testament

God gave His greatest gift to believers, His son Jesus Christ. He also gave us his word, the Christian Holy Bible made up of the Old Testament and the New Testament, communicated by the Holy Spirit, first through the patriarchs and prophets and then through the apostles. The Old Testament was God's covenant with Israel.

Perhaps the simplest statement of the covenant is the sentence, "I will take you for my people, and I will be your God" (Exodus 6:7). The law, a part of the covenant, contains God's rules for behavior and for religious practices. The people witnessed God's goodness, His love, His power, His faithfulness, His righteous anger, yet continued to disobey. Through Old Testament prophecy, the reader catches a glimpse of the New Testament.

"The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. They lived in a land of shadows, but now light is shining on them. You have given them great joy, Lord; you have made them happy. They rejoice in what you have done, as people rejoice when they harvest grain or when they divide captured wealth. For you have broken the yoke that burdened them and the rod that beat their shoulders." (Isaiah 9:2-4a [TEV])

The high point of Jeremiah's prophecies contains the only Old Testament reference to the "new covenant":

"The time is coming," declares the LORD, "when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their forefathers when I took them by the hand to lead them out of Egypt, because they broke my covenant, though I was a husband to them," declares the LORD. "This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time," declares the LORD. "I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, `Know the LORD,' because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest," declares the LORD. "For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more." (Jeremiah 31:31-34 [NIV])

Through the prophet Isaiah the people were told of the coming of the Lord:

"Comfort, comfort my people, says your God. Speak tenderly to Jerusalem, and proclaim to her that her hard service has been completed, that her sin has been paid for, that she has received from the LORD's hand double for all her sins. A voice of one calling: “In the desert prepare the way for the LORD; make straight in the wilderness a highway for our God. Every valley shall be raised up, every mountain and hill made low; the rough ground shall become level, the rugged places a plain. And the glory of the LORD will be revealed, and all mankind together will see it. For the mouth of the LORD has spoken." (Isaiah 40:1-5 [NIV])

So, what is this New Testament, this new covenant? In the biblical books God gave us His word. Through prophecy God revealed His Word, his Son. John reveals the mystery of the Word to us:

"In the beginning was the one who is called the Word. The Word was with God and was truly God. From the very beginning the Word was with God. And with this Word, God created all things. Nothing was made without the Word. Everything that was created received its life from him, and his life gave light to everyone. The light keeps shining in the dark, and darkness has never put it out

The true light that shines on everyone was coming into the world. The Word was in the world, but no one knew him, though God had made the world with his Word. He came into his own world, but his nation did not welcome him. Yet some people accepted him and put their faith in him. So he gave them the right to be the children of God. They were not God's children by nature or because of any human desires. God himself was the one who made them his children.

The Word became a human being and lived here with us. We saw his glory, the glory of the only Son of the Father. From him all the kindness and all the truth of God have come down to us." (John 1: 1-5, 9-14 [CEV]).

So Jesus came, He taught, He performed miracles, and He showed the way that God would have us go in His new covenant with us. And through Christ’s life, death, and resurrection, through the grace of God, we are freely given salvation and eternal life. His promises remain constant and with us today. Jesus himself reveals God’s great Plan:

"Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me. In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am. You know the way to the place where I am going." Thomas said to him, "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?"

Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him." Philip said, "Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us."

Jesus answered: "Don't you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, `Show us the Father'? Don't you believe that I am in the Father, and that the Father is in me? The words I say to you are not just my own. Rather, it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his work. Believe me when I say that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; or at least believe on the evidence of the miracles themselves.

I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father. And I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it. "If you love me, you will obey what I command. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever-- the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you. I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.

Before long, the world will not see me anymore, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. On that day you will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you. Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him." Then Judas (not Judas Iscariot) said, "But, Lord, why do you intend to show yourself to us and not to the world?"

Jesus replied, "If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him. He who does not love me will not obey my teaching. These words you hear are not my own; they belong to the Father who sent me. "All this I have spoken while still with you.

But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you. Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. "You heard me say, `I am going away and I am coming back to you.' If you loved me, you would be glad that I am going to the Father, for the Father is greater than I. I have told you now before it happens, so that when it does happen you will believe. I will not speak with you much longer, for the prince of this world is coming. He has no hold on me, but the world must learn that I love the Father and that I do exactly what my Father has commanded me. "Come now; let us leave." (John 14 [NIV])

Yes, Jesus is God's greatest gift to us. The "two turtle doves", the Old Testament and the New Testament, testify to His goodness and mercy and love. In the end He leaves us with Peace and hope, the knowledge that He will return for us, the promise of eternal life with Him.

Today, the dove, a small white delicate bird, has become identified with Peace. From the first Peace, when the dove returned to Noah’s ark carrying a freshly plucked olive leaf, a sign that Peace between God and man had returned to the earth, to the new Peace, our redemption through the blood of Jesus Christ.

Thank You Lord.

~ Gord Evans
Pefferlaw, Ontario, Canada

God of Revelation,

You have revealed Yourself to us in so many ways. Your creation abounds with the stamp of a Creator who is powerful, resourceful and plentiful. Your Son has given us the means by which we can approach Your Holy Throne in the power of his blood. And yet, You have also given us Your written word in which we find You, and your plan for our reconciliation to You. We are instructed to study, to keep, to learn, to live it. Thank You for yet another way to know You.

Amen
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

St. Stephen

Daily Reading for December 26 • St. Stephen

It is the Feast of St. Stephen, 1983, bitterly cold. The chapel at the Church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields has not warmed up by the time I arrive. The celebrant says he decided not to turn on the heat. “We’ll be done in thirty minutes.” He grins. “Besides, the cold is good for your soul.” We leave our coats on. A third person arrives, the other priest in the parish. She looks stunned by the cold. We stand close to the altar table, as if it were a hearth and we immobile stones.

The Mass begins, and we are still. The celebrant prays, “We offer you these gifts. Sanctify them by your Holy Spirit to be for your people the Body and Blood of your Son, the holy food and drink of new and unending life in him. Sanctify us also. . . .”

Stephen also calls on this same Spirit. I think about his stoning. His claim to see Jesus at God’s right hand leads directly to his death. The stones break his body, spill his blood.

When the celebrant raises and breaks the consecrated bread, we look up at it. There is a moment of profound silence. We are frozen in time, locked in that space, enlightened. The Holy Spirit arrives abruptly. It is as if someone has flung open the door and burst into the room bringing all the cold of heaven. We are blown away, as Stephen is blown away. We yield our spirits, pass the bread and then the wine to each other. This presence enfolds the room so that our breath no longer crystallizes. All is changed, and we are changed. We are the Body and Blood, a consecrated people.

In the parish hall, holding hot cups of coffee, we say nothing for a while. Then one of the priests asks, “Did you feel it?”

We nod. We felt it.

From On the Way: Vocation, Awareness, and Fly Fishing by Kenneth Arnold. Copyright © 2000. Used by permission of Church Publishing Incorporated, New York, NY. www.churchpublishing.org
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Those of us who aspire to meditation need only become like a rock. A rock is stable. It knows how to meditate.
— Deng Ming-Dao quoted in The Tao of Elvis by David Rosen

To Practice This Thought: Identify a natural object that is or could be a spiritual guide to you.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

I open the Scriptures... then all appears clear, full of light... holiness appears easy.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Why do you increase your bonds? Take hold of your life before your
light grows dark and you seek help and do not find it. This life
has been given to you for repentance; do not waste it in vain
pursuits.

St. Isaac the Syrian
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Claiming our Reconciliation

How do we work for reconciliation? First and foremost by claiming for ourselves that God through Christ has reconciled us to God. It is not enough to believe this with our heads. We have to let the truth of this reconciliation permeate every part of our beings. As long as we are not fully and thoroughly convinced that we have been reconciled with God, that we are forgiven, that we have received new hearts, new spirits, new eyes to see, and new ears to hear, we continue to create divisions among people because we expect from them a healing power they do not possess.

Only when we fully trust that we belong to God and can find in our relationship with God all that we need for our minds, hearts, and souls, can we be truly free in this world and be ministers of reconciliation. This is not easy; we readily fall back into self-doubt and self-rejection. We need to be constantly reminded through God's Word, the sacraments, and the love of our neighbours that we are indeed reconciled.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Five - The Second Note -

Love

Jesus said, "I give you a new commandment: love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35) Love is the distinguishing feature of all true disciples of Christ who wish to dedicate themselves to him as his servants.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

The Gift of Love
December 26th, 2007
Wednesday’s Reflection

HOLY INFANT,
we treasure you
and the gift of love
that you bring
to us today.
Amen.

- Beth A. Richardson
Child of the Light

From p. 89 of Child of the Light: Walking through Advent and Christmas by Beth A. Richardson. Copyright © 2005 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html

Remember Everything

Jerusalem, take off your robe of mourning and misery; put on the splendor of glory from God forever: Wrapped in the cloak of justice from God, bear on your head the mitre that displays the glory of the eternal name. For God will show all the earth your splendor: you will be named by God forever the peace of justice, the glory of God's worship. Up Jerusalem! Stand upon the heights; Look to the east and see your children gathered from the east and the west at the word of the Holy One, rejoicing that they are remembered by God. (Baruch 5:1–5, NAB) Our remembrance that God remembers us will be the highway into the future, the straight path of the Lord promised by John the Baptizer (Luke 3:4). Memory is the basis of both pain and rejoicing: We cannot have one without the other.

Do not be too quick to heal all of those memories, unless that means also feeling them deeply and taking them all into your salvation history. God calls us to suffer the whole of reality, to remember the good along with the bad. Perhaps that is the course of the journey toward new sight and new hope. Memory creates a readiness for salvation, an emptiness to receive the love and a fullness to enjoy it.

Strangely enough, it seems so much easier to remember the hurts, the failures and the rejections. In a seeming love of freedom, God has allowed us to be very vulnerable to evil. And until we have learned how to see, evil comes to us easily and holds us in its grasp.

Yet only in an experience and a remembering of the good do we have the power to stand against death. As Baruch tells Jerusalem, you must "rejoice that you are remembered by God." In that remembrance we have new sight, and the evil can be absorbed and blotted out.

from Sojourners, "The Energy of Promise"
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

The first martyr

Yesterday we kept the feast of Christmas, the day the King of martyrs was born into the world. Today we celebrate the birthday of Stephen, the day the first of all the martyrs left this world. The immortal one had first to assume our flesh so that mortals might undergo death for his sake. The Lord was born to die for his servant, so that his servant would not fear to die for him. Christ was born on earth so that Stephen might be born in heaven.

Christ prayed for those who crucified him. Stephen also prayed for those who stoned him. The Lord Jesus prayed, nailed to the cross; Stephen prayed on bended knee. He stood to commend his spirit to the Lord; he knelt to pray for the sin of his attackers. He spoke to the Lord as he would to a friend, entreating him for his enemies.

Let us turn to the younger persecutor Saul to see how powerful was the prayer of the holy martyr Stephen. If Stephen had not prayed for his enemies, the Church today would have had no Paul. Let us then commend ourselves to Stephen. If his prayers for those who stoned him were heard, much more will they now be heard for those who venerate him.

Augustine of Hippo
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

PLACED IN THE LIGHT


"If we walk in the light, as He is in the light the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin." 1 John 1:7

To mistake conscious freedom from sin for deliverance from sin by the Atonement is a great error. No man knows what sin is until he is born again. Sin is what Jesus Christ faced on Calvary. The evidence that I am delivered from sin is that I know the real nature of sin in me. It takes the last reach of the Atonement of Jesus Christ, that is, the impartation of His absolute perfection, to make a man know what sin is.

The Holy Spirit applies the Atonement to us in the unconscious realm as well as in the realm of which we are conscious, and it is only when we get a grasp of the unrivalled power of the Spirit in us that we understand the meaning of 1 John 1:7, "the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin." This does not refer to conscious sin only, but to the tremendously profound understanding of sin which only the Holy Ghost in me realizes.

If I walk in the light as God is in the light, not in the light of my conscience, but in the light of God - if I walk there, with nothing folded up, then there comes the amazing revelation, the blood of Jesus Christ cleanses me from all sin so that God Almighty can see nothing to censure in me. In my consciousness it works with a keen poignant knowledge of what sin is. The love of God at work in me makes me hate with the hatred of the Holy Ghost all that is not in keeping with God's holiness. To walk in the light means that everything that is of the darkness drives me closer into the centre of the light.
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Chesterton Day by Day
http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~mward/gkc/books/gkcday/gkcday.html

CHRISTMAS DAY

THERE fared a mother driven forth
Out of an inn to roam
In the place where she was homeless
All men are at home.
The crazy stable close at hand,
With shaking timber and shifting sand,
Grew a stronger thing to abide and stand
Than the square stones of Rome.

For men are homesick in their homes,
And strangers under the sun,
And they lay their heads in a foreign land
Whenever the day is done.
Here we have battle and blazing eyes,
And chance and honour and high surprise,
But our homes are under miraculous skies
Where the Yule tale was begun.

A Child in a foul stable,
Where the beasts feed and foam,
Only where He was homeless
Are you and I at home
We have hands that fashion and heads that know,
But our hearts we lost -- how long ago
In a place no chart nor ship can show
Under the sky's dome.

This world is wild as an old wives' tale,
And strange the plain things are,
The earth is enough and the air is enough
For our wonder and our war;
But our rest is as far as the fire-drake swings
And our peace is put in impossible things
Where clashed and thundered unthinkable wings
Round an incredible star.

To an open house in the evening
Home shall all men come,
To an older place than Eden
And a taller town than Rome.
To the end of the way of the wandering star,
To the things that cannot be and that are,
To the place where God was homeless
Amid all men are at home.

The House of Christmas: 'Daily News.'
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 26, August 26, December 26
Chapter 68: If a Sister Is Commanded to Do Impossible Things

If it happens
that difficult or impossible tasks are laid on a sister,
let her nevertheless receive the order of the one in authority
with all meekness and obedience.
But if she sees that the weight of the burden
altogether exceeds the limit of her strength,
let her submit the reasons for her inability
to the one who is over her
in a quiet way and at an opportune time,
without pride, resistance, or contradiction.
And if after these representations
the Superior still persists in her decision and command,
let the subject know that this is for her good,
and let her obey out of love,
trusting in the help of God.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


An old Jewish proverb teaches, "When you have no choice, don't be afraid." A modern saying argues, "There's no way out but through." The straight and simple truth is that there are some things in life that must be done, even when we don't want to do them, even when we believe we can't do them. Is the rule cruel on this point? Not if there is any truth in experience at all. The reality is that we are often incapable of assessing our own limits, our real talents, our true strength, our necessary ordeals. If parents and teachers and employers and counselors and prioresses somewhere hadn't insisted, we would never have gone to college or stayed at the party or tried the work or met the person or begun the project that, eventually, changed our lives and made us more than we ever knew ourselves to be. Benedict understood clearly that the function of leadership is to call us beyond ourselves, to stretch us to our limits, to turn the clay into breathless beauty. But, first, of course, we have to allow it to happen.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Wednesday, December 26 , 2007 The Synaxis
of the Most Holy Theotokos
Prophecy 9th Royal Hour: Isaiah 9:6-7 Epistle: Hebrews
2:11-18 Gospel: St. Matthew 2:13-23

Divine Zeal: Isaiah 9:6-7 LXX, especially vs. 7: "The zeal of the Lord
of hosts will do this." In these two verses Isaiah describes a Divine
action that unites heaven and earth forever - glory enters humiliation.
Eusebios of Caesarea, considering the scope of this action of God,
asked, "What kind of zeal but that zeal, good and befitting Himself, by
which He desired to save all those who were subjected to the devil and
dragged down to godlessness?"

How you and I desperately need this Holy action of God! Consider
just for a moment the sordid daily news flowing in from every corner of
the globe with reports of children aborted; the Divinity of Christ our
God vigorously denied by sophisticated atheists; governments shouldering
arms against governments; Jesus' Name cursed; fallible men taking
counsel with other men as flawed as themselves;, might and power sought
only in weapons, money, and systems; the adulation of the nasty,
sensual, and brutish; increasing regulation, domination, and
corruption. It is the zeal of men assaulting every act of love,
decency, morality, and honor.

These actual conditions are not only "daily news," but also a
factual part of the massive evidence which allows our hearts to say,
"Yes," to St. Nikolai of Zica: that "all that is wonderful, all that is
new, comes to the human race from Him and through Him." The so-called
"daily news" makes the need for Divine action urgent. At the same time,
the daily news reports, when exposed to the light of the star over the
cave in Bethlehem, only add to our awe and wonder at the zeal of the
Lord God. He has zealously undertaken His Divine action for this sad
world that continues on its way generating terrible conditions year by
year, century upon century, from the murder of Cain to the latest grim
dispatch. But glory to God Whose zeal offers the Way to Life!

The Holy Prophet Isaiah said, "The zeal of the Lord....'shall perform
this" (vs. 7), and that holy man saw more than this world. He saw God
"high and lifted up" (Is. 6:1), and the Lord revealed to him, out of
time, from eternity, that "for us a Child is born" (Is. 9:6). Beloved,
you have the privilege of declaring the same truth with the shepherds
and the magi, with the all-pure Birthgiver of God, the Apostles, and all
the Saints, because in His zeal God launched an action in the world two
thousand years ago. "In clear and incontrovertible terms, there is
indicated by the prophecy the dispensation of His humanity," as St.
Gregory of Nyssa affirms. God is so zealous to change this world that
He became man, forever uniting Himself to us.

When Isaiah says, "to us a Son is given" (vs. 6), he also is proclaiming
the Divinity of the Child Who is born to us. Divine zeal cannot be
restrained because the two natures are united. Rather, it is manifest
because the God-man is born, and Wise men gave gifts to the Gift
Himself. Human governance is now in the right hands: the Divine
hands of Christ. Furthermore, we who "were dead in trespasses, [God]
made...alive together with Christ...and raised us up together, and made
us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus" (Eph. 2:5,6).
The government of the whole universe, including our sordid little
planet, is on His shoulders, our "Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, [and] Prince of Peace" (Is. 9:6).

Be sober, but despair not at the conditions of this world. The zeal of
God is now at work in human hearts, minds, and lives. Therefore, "the
increase of His government and of peace there will be no end" (vs. 7).
By the zeal of God, the Divine project is well underway and assured. He
is establishing His kingdom and upholding "it with justice and with
righteousness from this time forth and for evermore" (vs. 7). "The zeal
of the Lord of hosts will [complete] this" (vs. 7).

I shall return to the bliss of paradise from which I was driven away by
reason of iniquity, for the likeness of the Father hath taken the
likeness of a servant for His love of mankind.

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Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Reading for Dec 25, 2007

April 25, August 25, December 25
Chapter 67: On Brethren Who Are Sent on a Journey

Let the brethren who are sent on a journey
commend themselves
to the prayers of all the brethren and of the Abbot;
and always at the last prayer of the Work of God
let a commemoration be made of all absent brethren.

When brethren return from a journey,
at the end of each canonical Hour of the Work of God
on the day they return,
let them lie prostrate on the floor of the oratory
and beg the prayers of all
on account of any faults
that may have surprised them on the road,
through the seeing or hearing of something evil,
or through idle talk.
And let no one presume to tell another
whatever he may have seen or heard outside of the monastery,
because this causes very great harm.
But if anyone presumes to do so,
let him undergo the punishment of the Rule.
And let him be punished likewise who would presume
to leave the enclosure of the monastery
and go anywhere or do anything, however small,
without an order from the Abbot.

Some Thoughts

"Custody of the senses" is a concept that has very much gone out of style. It dealt with protecting one's self from occasions of sin by keeping one's eyes lowered as one walk so one would not see evil, busying one's mind with repetitive prayer so one would not hear evil, tucking one's arms in one's sleeves so one would not touch evil. Basically, a very serious form of minding one's own business so that one would not notice those things which would distract one's self from the Lord.

I don't know about you, but I find custody of the senses almost impossible to practice. Do you feel as bombarded as I with all the temptations present? Do you, as do I, want to talk about it and unburden yourself of the outrage you feel? Ah, but Benedict says to keep our mouths shut. We must bear the burden alone with God.

Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister:


The desert monastic, Samartus, had written in a culture that called material things evil and only spiritual things good: "If we do not flee from everything, we make sin inevitable." This fear of things outside the monastery was clearly still alive in the time of Benedict and well beyond. Monastics who traveled outside, then,--and they did, as we do, for reasons of business and personal need-- were reminded in this paragraph to call themselves consciously into the presence of God and the purpose of their lives before leaving their monasteries. Two things in particular make the paragraph valuable today. In the first place, however they saw the risks of the world in which they lived, they continued to confront them. They did not become less human in their search for the spiritual life. In the second place, however they counted their own commitment, they did not underestimate the lure of lesser things in life, even on them. They begged the prayers of the community while they were away, a practice which is continued to this day, and they kept as close as possible to the prayer schedule of the monastery while they were gone. Then, when the trip was over, they returned to their monasteries alert to the effects of the baubles and bangles of loose living. And they redoubled their efforts at monastic life. They started over again, prostrating themselves on the floor of the oratory as they had at the time of their profession praying to be reconcentrated on the real meaning of life.

The value of the chapter is clear even today: No one lives in a tax-free world. Life costs. The values and kitsch and superficiality of it takes its toll on all of us. No one walks through life unscathed. It calls to us for our hearts and our minds and our very souls. It calls to us to take life consciously, to put each trip, each turn of the motor, each trek to work in God's hands. Then, whatever happens there, we must remember to start over and start over and start over until, someday, we control life more than it controls us.

A Zen story tells of two monks walking down a muddy, rain-logged road on the way back to their monastery after a morning of begging who saw a beautiful young girl standing beside a large deep puddle unable to get across without ruining her clothes. The first monk, seeing the situation, offered to carry the girl to the other side, though monks had nothing whatsoever to do with women. The second monk was astonished by the act but said nothing about it for hours. Finally, at the end of the day, he said to his companion, "I want to talk to you about that girl." And the first monk said, "Dear brother, are you still carrying that girl. I put her down hours ago."

The things we ruminate on, the things we insist on carrying in our minds and heart, the things we refuse to put down, the Rule warns us, are really the things that poison us and erode our souls. We dull our senses with television and wonder why we cannot see the beauty that is around us. We hold on to things outside of us instead of concentrating on what is within that keeps us noisy and agitated. We run from experience to experience like children in a candy store and wonder how serenity has eluded us. It is walking through life with a relaxed grasp and a focused eye that gets us to where we're going. Dwelling on unessentials and, worse, filling the minds of others with them distracts from the great theme of our lives. We must learn to distinguish between what is real and what is not.

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Daily Meditation 12/25/07

On the First day of Christmas



Collects for the Nativity of Our Lord:

O God, you make us glad by the yearly festival of the birth of your only Son Jesus Christ: Grant that we, who joyfully receive him as our Redeemer, may with sure confidence behold him when he comes to be our Judge; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

or this

O God, you have caused this holy night to shine with the brightness of the true Light: Grant that we, who have known the mystery of that Light on earth, may also enjoy him perfectly in heaven; where with you and the Holy Spirit he lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.

or this

Almighty God, you have given your only-begotten Son to take our nature upon him, and to be born [this day] of a pure virgin: Grant that we, who have been born again and made your children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by your Holy Spirit; through our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom with you and the same Spirit be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.



Readings:
Psalm 96
Isaiah 9: 2-7; Titus 2:11-14; Luke 2:1-14(15-20)

or

Psalm 97
Isaiah 62:6-12; Titus 3:4-7; Luke 2:(1-7) 8-20

or

Psalm 98
Isaiah 52:7-10; Hebrews 1:1-4.(5-12); John 1:1-14



From Forward Day by Day:

Luke 2:1-14(15-20). While they were there, the time came for her to deliver a child.

Luke 2:(1-7)8-20. Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!

Each Christmas morning I try to give myself a special gift, the gift of quiet worship. After all the busy-ness of Christmas Eve-after last-minute wrapping, cooking, stage-managing in the pageant, singing in the choir at Midnight Mass, with Santa chores after arriving back home and maternal duties in the too- early morning, I slip away and head back to church.


I love the services of Christmas Eve, but after the noisy, crowded early service (filled with junior wrigglers) and the nonstop musical responsibilities of the late one, this eucharist is peaceful, calm, and quiet. My only duty is to worship God in the beauty of holiness; that, and time to reflect on the miracle of Christ's birth, is just what I need right then.


Our lives are overloaded, and sometimes they demand too much. Even in the busiest of seasons, we need to give ourselves time to reflect, to worship, and to be with God. There is nothing more valuable.


Eternal God, in the stillness of this night you sent your almighty Word to pierce the world's darkness with the light of salvation: Give to the earth the peace that we long for and fill our hearts with the joy of heaven through our Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

When the contrast between the cosmic creation and the little local infancy has been repeated, reiterated, underlined, emphasized, exulted in, sung, shouted, roared, not to say howled, in a hundred thousand hymns, carols, rhymes, rituals, pictures, poems, and popular sermons, it may be suggested that we hardly need a higher critic to draw our attention to something a little odd about it... In the riddle of Bethlehem it was heaven that was under the earth.
--G. K. Chesterton


Anglican Cycle of Prayer: Diocese of Yola (Jos, Nigeria)




From: Christmas CLARESHARE December 2006
Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community
Upper Aston Hall Lane, Hawarden, CH5 3EN WALES GB
Email community@poorclarestmd.org
Website http://www.poorclarestmd.org

We thought you might enjoy a 12 days of Christmas Poor Clare style. We have done it primarily for one of our beloved Fathers, who is on his own in southern Africa, in a hotel, to whom this comes especially but we share it with you all - whatever your faith background, it might be a real bit of Christmas!

25th December: Christmas day
Find a baby and give her/him a special Christmas blessing.
Eat your dinner with thanksgiving.


From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.

Let us celebrate the coming of our salvation from Augustine of Hippo

If God has not been born in time, you would have suffered eternal death. If he had not taken on himself the likeness of sinful flesh, you would never have been freed from it. But for his mercy, you would have experienced everlasting misery; had he not shared your death, you would never have returned to life. Unless he had hastened to your aid, you would have been lost; if he had not come, you would have perished.

Let us then joyfully celebrate the coming of our salvation and redemption, honoring the festive day when he who is the great and everlasting day came from the endless day of eternity into our own brief day of time. He has become our justice, our holiness, and our redemption. And so, as scripture says, let those who boast make their boast in the Lord.




CHRISTMAS MORNING by St. John Chrysostom

St. John Chrysostom’s homily on the nativity was delivered during a period
of great theological pluralism and fierce debate over the identity and work
of Jesus Christ. In this sermon St. John enlists the words of Cyril of
Alexandria (c. a. _382-444) to place us securely before the mystery of the
one who is both fully God and fully human: “Nor yet by any loss of divinity
became He man, nor through increase became He God from man.” This view
would, find normative expression some fifty years after Chrysostom’s death
in the Chalcedonian Formula faith (45IAD.). In our own time of pronounced
theological fluidity, may Chrysostom’s words help us appreciate the
stunning force of the news that “the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.”

BEHOLD a new and wondrous mystery. My ears resound to the Shepherd’s song,
piping no soft melody, but chanting full forth a heavenly hymn. The Angels
sing. The Archangels blend their voice in harmony. The Cherubim hymn
their joyful praise. The Seraphim exalt His glory. All join to praise
this holy feast, beholding the Godhead here on earth, and man in heaven.
He Who is above, now for our redemption dwells here below; and he that was
lowly is by divine mercy raised.

Bethlehem this day resembles heaven; hearing from the stars the singing of
angelic voices; and in place of the sun, enfolds within itself on every
side, the Sun of justice. And ask not how: for where God wills, the order
of nature yields. For He willed, He had the power, He descended, He
redeemed; all things yielded in obedience to God. This day He Who is, is
Born; and He Who is, becomes what He was not. For when He was God, He
became man; yet not departing from the Godhead that is His. Nor yet by any
loss of divinity became He man, nor through increase became He God from
man; but being the Word He became flesh, His nature, because of
impassability, remaining unchanged.

And so the kings have come, and they have seen the heavenly King that has
come upon the earth, not bringing with Him Angels, nor Archangels, nor
Thrones, nor Dominations, nor Powers, nor Principalities, but, treading a
new and solitary path, He has come forth from a spotless womb.

Since this heavenly birth cannot be described, neither does His coming
amongst us in these days permit of too curious scrutiny. Though I know
that a Virgin this day gave birth, and I believe that God was begotten
before all time, yet the manner of this generation I have learned to
venerate in silence and I accept that this is not to be probed too
curiously with wordy speech. For with God we look not for the order of
nature, but rest our faith in the power of Him who works.

What shall I say to you; what shall I tell you? I behold a Mother who has
brought forth; I see a Child come to this light by birth. The manner of
His conception I cannot comprehend.

Nature here rested, while the Will of God labored. O ineffable grace! The
Only Begotten, Who is before all ages, Who cannot be touched or be
perceived, Who is simple, without body, has now put on my body, that is
visible and liable to corruption. For what reason? That coming amongst us
he may teach us, and teaching, lead us by the hand to the things that men
cannot see. For since men believe that the eyes are more trustworthy than
the ears, they doubt of that which they do not see, and so He has deigned
to show Himself in bodily presence, that He may remove all doubt.

Christ, finding the holy body and soul of the Virgin, builds for Himself a
living temple, and as He had willed, formed there a man from the Virgin;
and, putting Him on, this day came forth; unashamed of the lowliness of our
nature’. For it was to Him no lowering to put on what He Himself had made.
Let that handiwork be forever glorified, which became the cloak of its own
Creator. For as in the first creation of flesh, man could not be made
before the clay had come into His hand, so neither could this corruptible
body be glorified, until it had first become the garment of its Maker.

What shall I say! And how shall I describe this Birth to you? For this
wonder fills me with astonishment. The Ancient of days has become an
infant. He Who sits upon the sublime and heavenly Throne, now lies in a
manger. And He Who cannot be touched, Who is simple, without complexity,
and incorporeal, now lies subject to the hands of men. He Who has broken
the bonds of sinners, is now bound by an infants bands. But He has decreed
that ignominy shall become honor, infamy be clothed with glory, and total
humiliation the measure of His Goodness.

For this He assumed my body, that I may become capable of His Word; taking
my flesh, He gives me His spirit; and so He bestowing and I receiving, He
prepares for me the treasure of Life. He takes my flesh, to sanctify me;
He gives me His Spirit, that He may save me.

Come, then, let us observe the Feast. Truly wondrous is the whole
chronicle of the Nativity. For this day the ancient slavery is ended, the
devil confounded, the demons take to flight, the power of death is broken,
paradise is unlocked, the curse is taken away, sin is removed from us,
error driven out, truth has been brought back, the speech of kindliness
diffused, and spreads on every side, a heavenly way of life has been ‘in
planted on the earth, angels communicate with men without fear, and men now
hold speech with angels.

Why is this? Because God is now on earth, and man in heaven; on every side
all things commingle. He became Flesh. He did not become God. He was
God. Wherefore He became flesh, so that He Whom heaven did not contain, a
manger would this day receive. He was placed in a manger, so that He, by
whom all things arc nourished, may receive an infant’s food from His Virgin
Mother. So, the Father of all ages, as an infant at the breast, nestles in
the virginal arms, that the Magi may more easily see Him. Since this day
the Magi too have come, and made a beginning of withstanding tyranny; and
the heavens give glory, as the Lord is revealed by a star.

To Him, then, Who out of confusion has wrought a clear path, to Christ, to
the Father, and to the Holy Ghost, we offer all praise, now and for ever.
Amen.
* How has your life “resembled Bethlehem”—how has Christ been born anew in your life?—- In the lives of your students and staff? * Have you learned new things, or relearned previous lessons about who Christ is? In what ways has your “slavery been ended, the devil confounded, the demons take to flight, the power of death broken, paradise unlocked, the curses taken away, sin removed error driven out, truth brought back, the speech of kindliness diffused and spread on every side, a heavenly way of life implanted on earth, angels communicate with humans without fear and humans now hold speech with angels”? Go through this list and remember—Worship—allow these things to inform your waiting.






'He bowed the heavens and came down...'
The Nativity of Christ (Christmas)

25 December / 7 January:

When the Creator beheld man, whom He had made with His hands, about to perish, He bowed the heavens and came down; and He was endued with man’s nature in very truth, becoming incarnate of a Virgin divinely pure: for He has glorified Himself. [1]

There is no mystery greater than that of the Incarnation of God. In the quiet majesty of an archangel’s salutation, months before in Nazareth, a wonder beyond description was begun; and here, on this night, that wonder will be fully manifest. The great mystery which the holy Virgin, now holy Mother, had for long days stored up and treasured in her heart, the reality hidden but to a select few, is now to shine forth in all the radiance of a heavenly star. Sages shall travel the world to see it, shepherds shall clamour to behold it, a king shall feign to prevent it. But nothing shall thwart this great, salvific act of the One who ‘beheld man, whom He had made with His hands, about to perish’. In the troubled agony of a rushed birth, in the mire of an animals’ dwelling, the miracle that is the foundation of the Christian life takes place. Here God ‘bows the heavens and comes down’ into the full reality of His creation.

Yet, despite our songs, there was no crèche in Bethlehem. The night may have been holy, but it was not silent. Soldiers hunted a mysterious ‘newborn king’ while travellers packed into overcrowded hostelries to appease the census mandates of a new taxation. This will have been a loud night indeed. And in the stable: a squalor, a filth, a stench. Nowhere, here, the serene harmony of our usual vision of the child’s birth. Nor was this but a child. The whole setting of the mystery speaks to us of something different, something abnormal. Something impossible.

Today a Virgin brings forth the Super-substantial, and the earth offers a cavern to the Unapproachable. Angels, together with the shepherds, sing praises; the wise men journey onward with the star. For, for our sakes, God, who is before all the ages, is born a little child. [2]

All the noise of the surroundings, the terrible paradox of the Virgin ‘divinely pure’ stationed in the muddy squalor of the stable, shocks us to consider the full reality of the present moment. One is brought into the substance of human nature who is beyond substance, beyond nature. Magi draw near to Him who cannot be approached. Shepherds gaze upon Him at whom none may look and live. God, who before time fashioned all things, cries and breathes the breath which at first He gave to man, now as an infant child.

This night was not silent, and the shepherds did not merely sing. These gathered at the feet of one most pure (herself a miracle) to behold the human birth of Purity Himself. The shepherds came to the Mother of God to set eye upon the coming of God to man.

This notion of the coming together of God and man is at the heart of the present mystery, and is often hailed in the liturgical texts of the Church. As the shepherds approached the newborn Son, and as later the wise men from the East, so, says the Church, do I:

A mystery strange and most glorious do I behold: The cavern, heaven; the Virgin, the cherubic throne; the manger, the receptacle wherein lies Christ our God, whom nothing may contain. Him, therefore, do we magnify, praising Him in song. [3]

In the glory of the Incarnation, the divine and the worldly are suddenly, triumphantly, united and transformed. This filthy cavern is no more a mere stable, but one stands here in all the radiance of heaven itself. The Mother of God, human even as am I, holds in her arms the pre-eternal Son and is in her material person the divine throne of more honour than the cherubim. The wood of the feeding trough, for all its rancour, is here and now the bed which holds in its embrace the God whom all the heavens and the earth cannot contain. Divine things and human are, in this moment, indistinguishable. Do I behold woman, or throne? Cave, or heaven? Man, or God? The earthly has been brought to the divine and the divine has come to the earthly, and in this most awesome mystery we behold a thing ‘strange and most glorious’. I come and I gaze, but I am struck with awe, for I behold the things of Paradise resting in a cavern [4].

Indeed, it is this mixture of the heavenly and earthly that is the whole point of our chief of mysteries. It is in the union of heaven and earth, of man and God, says the Church, that our salvation takes form. Thus can we cry out to Christ:

O Christ, who has conformed Thyself unto our base, mortal mould, and by that participation in our lowly flesh has imparted unto us a share of the nature divine; who, though Thou didst become earthborn, yet didst remain still God and hast exalted our horn: Holy art Thou, O Lord! [5]

Christ has ‘imparted to us a share of the divine’. We must hear these words a thousand times, receive their wonder anew at each hearing. This feast, this mystery beyond description, is not solely about God becoming man. We are not to be struck with wonder, when gazing into the manger, only in that we behold there the eternally begotten second Person of the holy Trinity—awesome mystery though this truly be. As I approach the cave of the birth on this night, the most terrible, the most wondrous and the most ineffable awe is borne in my heart when I behold in the manger not only God, but me. It is my nature that the Son has taken for Himself in this unspeakable act of love, and I behold today, before mine eyes, this nature imparted the nature of my God. I behold Adam, a mortal, made of clay [6], made perfect in the grace of Christ.

This is the wonder of the Nativity. God comes to us, gives Himself to us, and not only in deed and action. Our very nature is taken up into His, and to our mortal frame is imparted a portion of the divine life. This life, we eagerly remember, is that which conquers all—the life that conquers evil, sin, darkness, even death itself, as we sing with such fervour in the light of Pascha. That this life has, in the Incarnation, become our life, is the source of all our hope, confidence and joy in the Christian faith. It is the motivation for our struggle, for our labour, and it is the light yoke by which we are set free. Our bonds may now be broken. Our slavery may be overturned. Our long bondage to sin and exile from Paradise may now be ended. It is both telling and fitting that the Israelite lament at captivity, enshrined in the Psalm by which we, at another point in our year, enter into the purifying sorrow of Great Lent [7], is deliberately brought to mind in the hymnography of the Nativity:

Grief put aside the instruments of song, for the children of Sion sang no more in alien lands. Yea Christ, in that He hath shone forth in Bethlehem, sets us free from every error, and sets free also the musical harmony of Babylon. Wherefore let us sing the song: Let all creation bless the Lord, and magnify Him unto all the ages! [8]

As human and divine meet in the Incarnation, our captivity at last is ended and the people of Sion again find voice for their song. No longer does our nature dwell exiled in an alien land, separated eternally from its Creator by sin, by the wiles of the Evil One, by any power whatever. The deep-set sorrow of hopeless exile is banished when Christ ‘sets us free from every error’ and unites in His person what is fallen in mine and perfect in His. There is no better refrain of awe at this mystery than the words sung at Vespers on the eve of the feast:

O come, let us rejoice in the Lord as we declare this present mystery: The partition wall of disunion has been destroyed, the flaming sword is turned back, the cherubim withdraw from the Tree of Life, and I partake of the food of Paradise, whence I had been expelled because of disobedience. For the immutable Image of the Father, the Image of His eternity, takes the form of a servant, having come forth of a Mother unwedded, yet having suffered no change. For that which He was, He remains, being very God; and that which He was not, He has assumed, becoming true man because of His love for humankind. Unto Him let us cry aloud: O God, who was born of a Virgin, have mercy upon us! [9]

(Text by M.C. Steenberg, 2003)

NOTES:

[1] Troparion from Canticle 1 of the Matins Canon for the Nativity.
[2] Kontakion of the Matins Canon.
[3] Irmos from Canticle 9 of the Matins Canon.
[4] Cf. the Ikos of the Matins Canon.
[5] Troparion from Canticle 3 of the Matins Canon.
[6] Cf. the troparia from Canticle 2 of the Matins Canon.
[7] Psalm 136 (137 in the Hebrew Bible): ‘By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept, when we remembered Sion […] Those who captured us required of us a song […] but how shall we sing the Lord’s song in an alien land?’ This Psalm is sung first in Lent on the Sunday of the Prodigal Son.
[8] Troparion from Canticle 8 of the Matins Canon.
[9] Sticheron in tone 2, from Vespers on the eve of the Nativity.




Daily Meditation Henri Nouwen

Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen)
The Task of Reconciliation

What is our task in this world as children of God and brothers and sisters of Jesus? Our task is reconciliation. Wherever we go we see divisions among people - in families, communities, cities, countries, and continents. All these divisions are tragic reflections of our separation from God. The truth that all people belong together as members of one family under God is seldom visible. Our sacred task is to reveal that truth in the reality of everyday life.

Why is that our task? Because God sent Christ to reconcile us with God and to give us the task of reconciling people with one another. As people reconcile with God through Christ we have been given the ministry of reconciliation" (see: 2 Corinthians 5:18). So whatever we do the main question is, Does it lead to reconciliation among people?



Richard Rohr:

John the Baptist: Wild Wise Man

For many reasons, we have chosen St. John the Baptist as the patron of our Center for Action and Contemplation. Our feast day is celebrated on June 24, as the sun (reminiscent of John 3:30) agrees to decrease. John the Baptist is the prophet who rejects the system without apology, eats the harsh food of that choice and wears the clothes of rejection. Like our native people here in New Mexico, he goes on his vision quest into the desert where he faces his aloneness, boredom and naked self. He returns with a message, a clarity, a surety of heart that reveals a totally surrendered man. First he listens long and self-forgetfully; then he speaks, acts and accepts the consequences. Surely he is the ultimate wild man! Or is it wise man? He is both.

Always pointing beyond himself, ready to get out of the way, finally beheaded by the powers that be, John represents the kind of liberation and the kind of prophecy that we need in our affluent culture. He is not just free from the system; he is amazingly free from himself. These are the only prophets God can use, the only prophets we can trust.

John is seen by his contemporaries and by Jesus himself as a return and image of Elijah the Prophet. Elijah, of course, is the contemplative on Mount Horeb who met the Holy One "not in the earthquake, not in the fire, but in the sound of a gentle breeze" (1 Kings 19:11–13). He has fled to the prayer of the mountain from the hostility of king and queen, who see him as "the troubler of Israel" (1 Kings 18:17), who makes clear their idolatries.

Who wants to be a troubler? Who would dare to think of himself as a prophet? What did we come out to the desert to see? John the Baptist seems to tell us that it is the only place bare enough, empty enough to mirror our own motives and disguises. The desert is the prophet to the prophet. We had to come here, we had to come to the quiet, we have to trust men like John to begin to trust our own action and contemplation. Trouble us, John! You're our pointing-patron-prophet. We're not wild yet.

from Radical Grace, "Masculine Spirituality"



The Nativity in the Flesh of our Lord, God, and Savior, Jesus
Christ December 25, 2007
Prophecy 6th Royal Hour: Isaiah 7:10-16; 8:1-4, 8-10
Epistle: Galatians
4:4-7
Gospel: St. Matthew 2:1-12

Immanuel: Isaiah 7:10-16; 8:1-4, 8-10 LXX, especially vs. 14: "Therefore
the Lord Himself shall give you a sign; behold, the Virgin shall
conceive in the womb, and shall bring forth a Son, and you shall call
His Name Immanuel." This present passage begins (vs. 10) in the middle
of a conversation (Is. 7:3-9) between God the Almighty, "the Lord of
Hosts" (Is. 7:7), and King Ahaz of Judah. The Lord spoke to the king
through His Prophet Isaiah. It was a time of national crisis, an attack
on the nation of Judah. Rezin, the king of Syria, and Pekah the son of
Remaliah, the king of Israel, had formed a military coalition and come
up "against Jerusalem to war against it" (Is. 7:1). Their intent had
been to remove Ahaz as king of Judah and put "the son of Tabeel" (Is.
7:6) on the throne. They were motivated by the desire to survive the
aggression of the Assyrian empire, actively conquering the entire
region. The Syrian and Ephraimite kings first tried to convince Ahaz to
join them in an anti-Assyrian coalition, but Ahaz refused, and so they
sought to effect a coup d'etat and establish a friendly government in
Jerusalem.

Isaiah reports that the soul of King Ahaz "was amazed, and the soul of
his people, as in a wood a tree is moved by the wind" (Is. 7:2). In
response, God was seeking to reassure the king: "take care to be quiet,
and fear not, neither let your soul be disheartened because of these two
smoking firebrands: for when My fierce anger is over, I will heal
again....This counsel shall not abide" (Is. 7:4,7). However, King Ahaz
was not convinced, and so the Lord invited the nervous king, "ask for
yourself a sign of the Lord your God, in the depth or in the height"
(Is. 7:11). Ahaz, not able to see beyond his fear, evaded the Divine
offer of reassurance with a pious demur: "I will not ask, neither will I
tempt the Lord" (vs. 12).

The Lord's response to King Ahaz touched both the depth of the creation,
that is, the lowly earth and all its inhabitants, as well as the height
of all God's creation, the visible and the invisible. By the power of
God from Heaven, that which is impossible in the depths of earth is to
occur: "the virgin shall conceive in the womb, and shall bring forth a
son" (vs. 14). And thus, the poor, ineffectual, unbelieving, and timid
king of Judah is told of the wondrous Incarnation of God in the flesh.
Further, he is informed of the child's dual nature (being fully God and
fully man), "you shall call his name Immanuel" (vs. 14), that is, to
say, "God with us."

The remainder of the reading focuses on the work of Immanuel - of God
with us. First, the sinlessness of the Lord Jesus is revealed: "before
the child shall know good or evil, He refuses evil, to choose the good"
(vs. 7:16). In this prophetic utterance, the Lord declared centuries in
advance the birth of our Savior that the Apostle affirmed after the
death and Resurrection of Christ our God: "we do not have a High Priest
who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but [One Who] was in all
points tempted as we are, yet without sin" (Heb. 4:15).

Then, God directed His counsel to the immediate circumstances of the
Syro-Ephraimite invasion and the looming threat of Assyria. These were
temporal threats with consequences for the nations of mankind at a
certain point in history, but in no way would their plans disrupt the
counsel of God. Centuries later the counsel of Herod and Pilate would
lead to the crucifixion of Christ and would scatter the Disciples, but
those decisions did "not stand...for God is with us" (Is. 8:10).
"Whatsoever counsel [men] shall take, the Lord shall bring it to nought"
wherever it conflicts with His purpose to give eternal life in Christ
Jesus. "For God did not send [Immanuel] into the world to condemn the
world, but that the world through Him might be saved" (Jn. 3:17).

God is with us, understand, O ye nations, and submit yourselves: for God
is with us. Hear ye unto the ends of the earth, for God is with us (Is.
8:10, as used in Great Compline).

Monday, December 24, 2007

Reading for Dec 24, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 24, August 24, December 24
Chapter 66: On the Porters of the Monastery

At the gate of the monastery
let there be placed a wise old woman,
who knows how to receive and to give a message,
and whose maturity will prevent her from straying about.
This porter should have a room near the gate,
so that those who come may always find someone at hand
to attend to their business.
And as soon as anyone knocks or a poor person hails her,
let her answer "Thanks be to God" or "A blessing!"
Then let her attend to them promptly,
with all the meekness inspired by the fear of God
and with the warmth of charity.

Should the porter need help,
let her have one of the younger sisters.

If it can be done,
the monastery should be so established
that all the necessary things,
such as water, mill, garden and various workshops,
may be within the enclosure,
so that there is no necessity
for the sisters to go about outside of it,
since that is not at all profitable for their souls.

We desire that this Rule be read often in the community,
so that none of the sisters may excuse herself
on the ground of ignorance.


Some Thoughts:

I dunno if I could think of a more perfect reading from the RB for Christmas Eve than this. Could you? We know from the chapter ion Receiving Guests, that all are to be received as if they were Jesus. Who is it who first extends such a welcome but the porter?

When I answer the door to an unexpected knock, i confess my first thought is not "Thanks be to God" or "a Blessing." Is yours? Mine is more apt to be "Is this another solicitor?" Or "who the heck is this interrupting me?" Not exactly receiving this visitor as if they were Christ, now is it?

Come Thou long expected Jesus and may the room you find in our hearts allow us to make room for all cross our path



Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Of all the questions to be asked about the nearly 1500 year old Rule of Benedict, and there are many in the twentieth century, one of the most pointed must surely be why one of the great spiritual documents of the Western World would have in it a chapter on how to answer the door. And one of the answers might be that answering the door is one of the arch activities of Benedictine life. The way we answer doors is the way we deal with the world. Benedict wants the porter to be available, "not roaming around" so that the caller is not left waiting; responsible and "able to take a message," so that the community is properly informed; full of welcome; prompt in responding to people "with the warmth of love"; and actually grateful for the presence of the guest. When the person knocks--whenever the person knocks--the porter is to say, "Thanks be to God" or "Your blessing, please," to indicate the gift the guest is to the community. The porter is to be warmth and welcome at all times, not just when it feels convenient. In the Rule of Benedict, there is no such thing as coming out of time to the monastery. Come in the middle of lunch; come in the middle of prayer; come and bother us with your blessings at any time. There is always someone waiting for you.

The chapter on the porter of the monastery is the chapter on how to receive the Christ in the other always. It is Benedict's theology of surprise.

If there is any chapter in the rule that demonstrates Benedictine openness to life and, at the same time, models a manner of living in the midst of society without being consumed by it, this is surely the one. Guests are welcomed enthusiastically in Benedictine spirituality but, at the same time, life is not to be frittered away on work, on social life, on the public bustle of the day. The community is to stay as self-contained as possible so that centered in the monastery they stay centered in their hearts. More, this balance between public and private, between openness and centeredness, between consciousness of the outside world and concentration on interior growth is to be remembered and rehearsed over and over again: "We wish this rule to be read often," the rule says plaintively so that the monastic never forgets that the role of the committed Christian is always to grow richer themselves so that they can give richly to others. Abba Cassian, a desert monastic, told the following story: "Once upon a time, we two monks visited an elder. Because he offered us hospitality we asked him, "Why do you not keep the rule of fasting when you receive visiting brothers?" And the old monastic answered, "Fasting is always at hand but you I cannot have with me always. Furthermore, fasting is certainly a useful and necessary thing, but it depends on our choice while the law of God lays it upon us to do the works of charity. Thus, receiving Christ in you, I ought to serve you with all diligence, but when I have taken leave of you, I can resume the rule of fasting again."

The person with a monastic heart knows that the Christ and their salvation are not in religious gyrations of our design alone; they are in the other, our response to whom is infinitely more important than our religious exercises.

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Daily Meditation 12/24/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]




Lord Our God
With the birth of Your Son,
your glory breaks on the world.
Through the night hours of the darkened earth
we your people watch for the coming of Your promised Son.
As we wait, give us a foretaste of the joy that
You will grant us
when the fullness of His glory has filled the earth,
who lives and reigns with you for ever and ever.
International Committee on English in the Liturgy (ICEL)


Collect

Purify our conscience, Almighty God, by your daily visitation, that your Son Jesus Christ, at his coming, may find in us a mansion prepared for himself; who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 61, 62; PM Psalm 112, 115
Zeph. 3:14-20; Titus 1:1-16; Luke 1:1-25

Christmas Eve:
PM Psalm 89:1-29
Isa. 59:15b-21; Phil. 2:5-11

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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Isaiah 9:2-7. The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light.

For most of human history, people depended on sunlight or firelight, or on the occasional brightness of the unreliable moon. When the sun went down or the fire sputtered out, darkness reigned, filled with dangers, monsters, and invisible pitfalls.


Even now, behind the artificial brightness that fills our world, there is darkness. There is darkness in the hearts of wrongdoers; there is darkness in the lives of those who live in illness and poverty. There is darkness in the despair that shrouds so many people, regardless of their material wealth.


But like a light that pierces the darkness, Jesus was born to illuminate our hearts and souls. He came, God made human, as the humblest of infants, to experience all the pains and temptations that afflict us.


Tonight church buildings will blaze with light as we celebrate Jesus' nativity with special music and special ceremony. They're a pale reflection of the Light of lights, too intense for us to comprehend now, but glowing with the promise of Christ's redeeming grace for all eternity. Thanks be to God, who has such overwhelming love for us.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yokohama (Japan)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/


Make haste

Daily Reading for December 24 • Christmas Eve

The shepherds who hear of the birth of the Child make haste to see what the angel told them. Notice how the shepherds decide to go together, and quickly.

Advent is a time to make spiritual haste. “Let us go now,” the shepherds say. It is never too late to set out to see Christ. The announcement of the birth to the shepherds came after the Child was born. In the same way, the invitation comes to us today. The Child is born, the promise is fulfilled: we need to go and take part in the ongoing story.

As Christians, we need to bring a certain urgency to how we live out our Christian values. Our urgency comes from a place of love: we are called to go see the helpless, newborn child. The Child, who resembles the weak among us, invites all of us to come and see him—and to see ourselves in him. Where do we encounter weakness in our own hearts? How do we become a neighbor to those who are weak in our society? How well do we represent the visiting and caring presence of God in the world?

When we live lives characterized by love and caring, we model who God is in the world today. Church communities that take seriously their call to model God’s reign offer what secular institutions cannot: devotion to the ideal of unmerited love and care, conscious effort to avoid evil, and an ideal of fruitfulness in which gain is understood through sharing. Following Jesus’ way of life, Christians have a school in which to live differently and better.

Strangely enough, we cannot model a better way of living without first encountering God. Many hear and see the angels, but choose to stay out in the fields. Advent calls us to respond differently. Advent calls us to be outstanding in our field, as opposed to be out standing in the field. To be outstanding in the field is to detach from the things and ways that are not of God and to stand with God.

Today is the day when we need to leave the things that keep us busy to go and see. God has come to us. The time has come. Let us go in haste. Let us go today.

From The Womb of Advent by Mark Bozutti-Jones. Copyright © 2007. Seabury Books, an imprint of Church Publishing. Used by permission of Church Publishing Incorporated, New York, NY. www.churchpublishing.org

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

We need a faith community of friends to inspire, challenge, tease, and call us to be all we can be without unduly embarrassing us for being where we are now.
— Robert J. Wicks in Everyday Simplicity

To Practice This Thought: Touch base with one of your spiritual friends.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

How many remain at the foot of the mountain … who might climb to its summit!
St Teresa of Jesus
Conceptions, 2
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

The Seraph could not touch the fire's coal with his fingers, but
just brought it close to Isaiah's mouth: the Seraph did not hold
it, Isaiah did not consume it, but us our Lord has allowed to do
both.

St. Ephraim the Syrian
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Holding On to the Christ

Life is unpredictable. We can be happy one day and sad the next, healthy one day and sick the next, rich one day and poor the next, alive one day and dead the next. So who is there to hold on to? Who is there to feel secure with? Who is there to trust at all times?

Only Jesus, the Christ. He is our Lord, our shepherd, our rock, our stronghold, our refuge, our brother, our guide, and our friend. He came from God to be with us. He died for us, he was raised from the dead to open for us the way to God, and he is seated at God's right hand to welcome us home. With Paul, we must be certain that "neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nothing already in existence and nothing still to come, nor any power, nor the heights nor the depths, nor any created thing whatever, will be able to come between us and the love of God, known to us in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 8:38-39).
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Four - The First Note, cont'd

The faults that we see in others are the subject of prayer rather than of criticism. We take care to cast out the beam from our own eye before offering to remove the speck from another's. We are ready to accept the lowest place when asked, and to volunteer to take it. Nevertheless, when asked to undertake work of which we feel unworthy or incapable, we do not shrink from it on the grounds of humility, but confidently attempt it through the power that is made perfect in weakness.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Night of Nights
December 24th, 2007
CHRISTMAS EVE
Monday’s Reflection

O HOLY NIGHT,
that deepening darkness above and around,
light-pierced and silence-shrouded,
out of which little children are called in
and seeking shepherds are sent out.
O night of nights,
you spread across heaven
and touch the earth,
surrounding God’s people,
capturing us in a moment of holy time,
like a globe protects a precious flicker of Light.
Come,
draw us in,
hold us together
while we wait for the birth of the Light of lights,
the One who will guide us into the world anew. Amen.

- Pamela C. Hawkins
Simply Wait

From p. 104 of Simply Wait: Cultivating Stillness in the Season of Advent by Pamela C. Hawkins. Copyright © 2007 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of December 24, 2007

Advent for us means acceptance of this totally new beginning. It means a readiness to have eternity and time meet not only in Christ, but in us, in Man, in our life, in our world, in our time. The beginning, therefore, is the end. We must accept the end, before we can begin. Or rather, to be more faithful to the complexity of life, we must accept the end in the beginning both together.
 The secret of the Advent mystery is then the awareness that I begin where I end because Christ begins where I end. In more familiar terms: I live to Christ when I die to myself. I begin to live to Christ when I come to the "end" or to the "limit" of what divides me from my fellow man: what I am willing to step beyond this end, cross the frontier, become a stranger, enter into a wilderness which is not "myself," where I do not breathe the air or hear the familiar, comforting racket of my own city, where I am alone and defenseless in the desert of God.
 The victory of Christ is by no means the victory of my city over "their" city. The exaltation of Christ is not the defeat and death of others in order that "my side" may be vindicated, that I may be proved "right." I must pass over, make the transition (pascha) from my end to my beginning, from my old life which has ended and which is now death to my new life which never was before and which now exists in Christ.

Thomas Merton. "Advent: Hope or Delusion?" in Seasons of Celebration. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1965: 96-97.

Thought to Remember:

Today, eternity enters in time, and time, sanctified, is caught up into eternity. Today, Christ, the Eternal Word of the Father, Who was in the beginning with the Father, in Whom all things were made, by Whom all things consist, enters into the world which He created in order to reclaim souls who had forgotten their identity.

Seasons of Celebration: 102.
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html



I Am Utter Absurdity and Paradox

People are odd creatures: We are at the same time very good and very sinful. These qualities do not cancel each other out. Faith is to live and to hold onto that paradox. Those with room for those two seemingly contradictory truths to coexist are the ones who can recognize the Kingdom of God.

The absurdity of human reality will not shock them: They've already faced it inside themselves. The enemy is not out there, the enemy is us. And when they see the paradox, they stop fighting the world. They stop hating and avoiding the world. They're free to live that threshold existence that we call the Kingdom.

Why call it threshold? Because the threshold is between the house and the outside. We live on the boundary, on the narrow house and the outside. We live on the boundary, on the narrow road that leads to life (Matthew 7:13–14), in between two undeniable truths. Can you live in that in-between? To care, yet not care at all? Those who can will be free to welcome the Kingdom. They are free to pass through because they don't have any turf—whether possessions, identity, reputation or self-image—to protect or maintain. The threshold experience is always getting slammed in the face—with paradox.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr

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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

The shepherds

The simple hasten eagerly to see the newborn king lying in a manger; they find him and acknowledge him; they adore and rejoice and mingle their artless praises with the heavenly hymns. These men and women are the first stones of the ecclesiastical structure: they are the first members of the new Church, and the Shepherd of shepherds at his very birth hired them, men skilled in feeding flocks, to care for his own sheepfold. Because he had determined that he would later on buy a great flock for himself with his own blood, from the outset he hired shepherds to whom he might afterward entrust the care of his sheepfold.

How the Virgin rejoiced at the devotion of these simple folk! How delighted and gladdened she was by their praises! For by his own announcement God had begun to make known to human beings the mystery of divine condescension which had occurred in her womb for their salvation.

Thomas of Villanova, O.S.A.
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

THE HIDDEN LIFE


"Your life is hid with Christ in God." Colossians 3:3

The Spirit of God witnesses to the simple almighty security of the life hid with Christ in God and this is continually brought out in the Epistles. We talk as if it were the most precarious thing to live the sanctified life; it is the most secure thing, because it has Almighty God in and behind it. The most precarious thing is to try and live without God. If we are born again it is the easiest thing to live in right relationship to God and the most difficult thing to go wrong, if only we will heed God's warnings and keep in the light.

When we think of being delivered from sin, of being filled with the Spirit, and of walking in the light, we picture the peak of a great mountain, very high and wonderful, and we say - "Oh, but I could never live up there!" But when we do get there by God's grace, we find it is not a mountain peak, but a plateau where there is ample room to live and to grow. "Thou hast enlarged my steps under me."

When you really see Jesus, I defy you to doubt Him. When He says - "Let not your heart be troubled," if you see Him I defy you to trouble your mind, it is a moral impossibility to doubt when He is there. Every time you get into personal contact with Jesus, His words are real. "My peace I give unto you," it is a peace all over from the crown of the head to the sole of the feet, an irrepressible confidence. "Your life is hid with Christ in God," and the imperturbable peace of Jesus Christ is imparted to you.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 24, August 24, December 24
Chapter 66: On the Porters of the Monastery

At the gate of the monastery
let there be placed a wise old woman,
who knows how to receive and to give a message,
and whose maturity will prevent her from straying about.
This porter should have a room near the gate,
so that those who come may always find someone at hand
to attend to their business.
And as soon as anyone knocks or a poor person hails her,
let her answer "Thanks be to God" or "A blessing!"
Then let her attend to them promptly,
with all the meekness inspired by the fear of God
and with the warmth of charity.

Should the porter need help,
let her have one of the younger sisters.

If it can be done,
the monastery should be so established
that all the necessary things,
such as water, mill, garden and various workshops,
may be within the enclosure,
so that there is no necessity
for the sisters to go about outside of it,
since that is not at all profitable for their souls.

We desire that this Rule be read often in the community,
so that none of the sisters may excuse herself
on the ground of ignorance.



Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Of all the questions to be asked about the nearly 1500 year old Rule of Benedict, and there are many in the twentieth century, one of the most pointed must surely be why one of the great spiritual documents of the Western World would have in it a chapter on how to answer the door. And one of the answers might be that answering the door is one of the arch activities of Benedictine life. The way we answer doors is the way we deal with the world. Benedict wants the porter to be available, "not roaming around" so that the caller is not left waiting; responsible and "able to take a message," so that the community is properly informed; full of welcome; prompt in responding to people "with the warmth of love"; and actually grateful for the presence of the guest. When the person knocks--whenever the person knocks--the porter is to say, "Thanks be to God" or "Your blessing, please," to indicate the gift the guest is to the community. The porter is to be warmth and welcome at all times, not just when it feels convenient. In the Rule of Benedict, there is no such thing as coming out of time to the monastery. Come in the middle of lunch; come in the middle of prayer; come and bother us with your blessings at any time. There is always someone waiting for you.

The chapter on the porter of the monastery is the chapter on how to receive the Christ in the other always. It is Benedict's theology of surprise.

If there is any chapter in the rule that demonstrates Benedictine openness to life and, at the same time, models a manner of living in the midst of society without being consumed by it, this is surely the one. Guests are welcomed enthusiastically in Benedictine spirituality but, at the same time, life is not to be frittered away on work, on social life, on the public bustle of the day. The community is to stay as self-contained as possible so that centered in the monastery they stay centered in their hearts. More, this balance between public and private, between openness and centeredness, between consciousness of the outside world and concentration on interior growth is to be remembered and rehearsed over and over again: "We wish this rule to be read often," the rule says plaintively so that the monastic never forgets that the role of the committed Christian is always to grow richer themselves so that they can give richly to others. Abba Cassian, a desert monastic, told the following story: "Once upon a time, we two monks visited an elder. Because he offered us hospitality we asked him, "Why do you not keep the rule of fasting when you receive visiting brothers?" And the old monastic answered, "Fasting is always at hand but you I cannot have with me always. Furthermore, fasting is certainly a useful and necessary thing, but it depends on our choice while the law of God lays it upon us to do the works of charity. Thus, receiving Christ in you, I ought to serve you with all diligence, but when I have taken leave of you, I can resume the rule of fasting again."

The person with a monastic heart knows that the Christ and their salvation are not in religious gyrations of our design alone; they are in the other, our response to whom is infinitely more important than our religious exercises.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Monday, December 24, 2007 Nativity Fast The Eve of the Nativity
of Christ in the Flesh
3rd Royal Hour: Baruch 3:35-4:4 Epistle: Hebrews 1:
1-12 Gospel: St. Luke 2:1-20

The Incomparable God: Baruch 3:35-4:4 LXX, especially vs. 35: "This is
our God, and there shall none other be accounted of in comparison of
Him." St. Basil the Great speaks of God as the "Master of all, Lord of
heaven and earth, and of all creation both visible and invisible; Who
sittest upon the throne of glory, and beholdest the depths; Who art
without beginning, invisible, incomprehensible, uncircumscript,
immutable, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, our great God and
Savior, our hope, Who is the image of Thy goodness, the seal of equal
type, in Himself showing forth Thee, the Father the Living Word, the
true God, the Wisdom before all ages, the Life, Sanctification, Might,
the true Light, through Whom the Holy Spirit was manifested; the Spirit
of Truth, the Gift of Adoption, the pledge of an inheritance to come,
the first fruits of eternal good things, the life-giving Power, the
fountain of holiness; by Whom enabled, every rational and intelligent
creature doth serve Thee, and send up to Thee perpetual praises...."

Beloved, at this very moment we are in the presence of this great "Lord
of heaven and earth." There is no hiding from Him, not in the depths of
the earth, not in any secret place on this planet, nor even at the
outermost edge of the universe, incalculable light years from this place
and this moment. We are before Him, as are our thoughts, fears, dreams,
hopes, knowledge, and the movement of every cell and fiber of our
being. Nothing escapes His notice.

These verities being the truth of our existence at all times, our
present celebration of Christmas, of the Nativity of "our Lord Jesus
Christ - our great God and Savior, our hope, Who is the image of God's
goodness"- takes on a very special significance. Why? Because this
incomparable God, as the Prophet Baruch shows us, is the source of all
knowledge. He has shown Himself upon this earth, revealing Himself as
the Way, the Truth and the Life with the firm promise that all who keep
His way shall come not just to knowledge, but to Life!

Think closely about the Prophet's declaration that God "hath found out
all the way of knowledge" (vs. 3:36). Does this suggest that God passed
through some infinite course of learning until He found out every
approach to knowledge, until He exhausted the entire process of learning
itself, not only learning everything but discovering every existing
means of acquiring knowledge? Not at all! He is eternally at the
end-point of knowledge. What is there to learn that He does not know
and has not known always? The significance of the statement is that no
matter what avenue to learning that you and I may take, we shall find
the "Master of all" is present there. Pile up your university degrees,
your professional seminars, and all possible learning opportunities, and
God is there, ahead of you, far ahead of you.

How can we say this? Because God hath given this insight and knowledge
"unto Jacob His servant, and to Israel His beloved" (vs. 3:36) - to us!
Those who have united themselves to Him know that there is nothing He
does not know, including all the ways we learn and discover. We set
about learning with confidence and faith, assured that He is there
before us. He alone is all that we need to fear in learning. Hence,
let us not learn what offends Him!

How can you avoid false learning? Here is a Christmas present! He has
shown "Himself upon earth, and conversed with men" (vs. 3:37). We have
the great evangelical record of that Self-revelation, and the living
experience of Him in the life and worship of His Holy Church. Christ is
born! If we will but glorify Him, we shall learn the Way to knowledge
and discover the Truth that undergirds all that is worth knowing, for we
shall know Life Himself (vs. 4:4).

Be mindful, O Lord our God, of all Thy people, and upon them all pour
out Thy rich mercy, granting to all their petitions which are unto
salvation, O Thou Who knowest every man.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Reading for Dec 23, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 23, August 23, December 23
Chapter 65: On the Prior of the Monastery

To us, therefore, it seems expedient
for the preservation of peace and charity
that the Abbot have in his hands
the full administration of his monastery.
And if possible let all the affairs of the monastery,
as we have already arranged,
be administered by deans according to the Abbot's directions.
Thus, with the duties being shared by several,
no one person will become proud.

But if the circumstances of the place require it,
or if the community asks for it with reason and with humility,
and the Abbot judges it to be expedient,
let the Abbot himself constitute as his Prior
whomsoever he shall choose
with the counsel of God-fearing brethren.

That Prior, however, shall perform respectfully
the duties enjoined on him by his Abbot
and do nothing against the Abbot's will or direction;
for the more he is raised above the rest,
the more carefully should he observe the precepts of the Rule.

If it should be found that the Prior has serious faults,
or that he is deceived by his exaltation and yields to pride,
or if he should be proved to be a despiser of the Holy Rule,
let him be admonished verbally up to four times.
If he fails to amend,
let the correction of regular discipline be applied to him.
But if even then he does not reform,
let him be deposed from the office of Prior
and another be appointed in his place who is worthy of it.
And if afterwards he is not quiet and obedient in the community,
let him even be expelled from the monastery.
But the Abbot, for his part, should bear in mind
that he will have to render an account to God
for all his judgments,
lest the flame of envy or jealousy be kindled in his soul.

Some thoughts:

Does anyone else find it worthy of note that Benedict opened this chapter with all the things that could go wrong when someone holds the office of Prior? And that it is not until the second half that we find out he'd prefer there be no Prior at all?

I don't know about you, but I certainly have worked in places where there were a great many prima donas so full of themselves and their own importance that it made it difficult for others to do their jobs. Does it seem to you that Benedict would remind us that in any community, we must all work together at our own assignments, so to speak? That our egos must come out of the equation for the greater good?

My view of the Body of Christ is perhaps simplistic. I figure that by ourselves, no one of us can really do all that much. OTOH, if each one of was faithfully did the itty bitty we can, that collectively we would have accomplished a very great deal.



Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

The problems dealt with in this chapter are the problems of loyalty, honesty, humility and role and their effect on a group. The prior or subprioress in a Benedictine monastery are equivalent to the first assistant of any organization. They act as vicars, representatives, of the abbot or prioress but they do not have any specific role description or authority of their own. Most local constitutions of Benedictine communities to this day, in fact, say simply that the subprioress or prior are appointed by the prioress or abbot to "do whatever the abbot bids them to do." The point is that every community has one, single, ultimate authority, the abbot or prioress, and that any other arrangement or assumption is not only incorrect, it is dangerous to the unity and formation of the community.

Underlying the theological and organizational considerations, however, is the dark warning that the temptation to use a position, any position--vice-principal, vice-president, assistant, department director--to wrest authority away from the center or to promote our own careers by undermining the legitimate leader in order to make ourselves look good, is a sin against community. It uses a group for personal gain instead of for the good of the group. It is the story of a Rasputin or a Lucretia Borgia. It is a grasp at power for its own sake. It corrodes what we say we support. It eats like acid at anything in us that we say is real. It is cheap popularity and expensive advancement because, eventually, it will destroy what we say we value, the very community for which we are responsible.

The Tao Te Ching teaches: "Shape clay into a vessel; It is the space within that makes it useful." Every group has a distinct structure and history but without a single driving spirit,it may lack the heart to make a common impact. In Benedictine spirituality the abbot and prioress are the center of the community. They are the one voice, the one light, the one heart that the entire community can trust to act always in its true and total interest. In every group, in fact, it is that inspiriting space within that gives it energy. Destroy the axis, stop the heart, collapse the core of a world and the world shrivels or shatters or disintegrates in space. That's what rivalry between the leaders of a group does to a community. That's what divergence between husband and wife does to the family. That's what tension between idols does to a world. Benedictine spirituality sees the community as something to mold us, not something to be used for the interests and vanity and power struggles of a few. It is a life dedicated to the spirit, not enmeshed in the agendas of the political. Where the authority of the abbot or prioress is constantly contested, routinely ignored, mockingly ridiculed or sharply questioned, then the eye of the soul is taken off of the Center of the life and shifted instead to the multiple minor agendas of its members. At that moment, the mystical dimension of the community turns into just one more arm wrestling match among contenders. At that point, the Rule says, get rid of the people who lower the purpose of the group to the level of the mundane, making light of the great enterprise of life and diminishing its energy.

It is good advice in any human endeavor whose higher purpose is being fed to the appetites of the immature and the selfish to rid itself of those who have given over the lode star of the group to a lesser direction.

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Daily Meditation 12/23/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]

Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus

Come, Thou long expected Jesus
Born to set Thy people free;
From our fears and sins release us,
Let us find our rest in Thee.
Israel's Strength and Consolation,
Hope of all the earth Thou art;
Dear Desire of every nation,
Joy of every longing heart.

Born Thy people to deliver,
Born a child and yet a King,
Born to reign in us forever,
Now Thy gracious kingdom bring.
By Thine own eternal Spirit
Rule in all our hearts alone;
By Thine all sufficient merit,
Raise us to Thy glorious throne.
Words: Charles Wesley



Collect

Purify our conscience, Almighty God, by your daily visitation, that your Son Jesus Christ, at his coming, may find in us a mansion prepared for himself; who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 24, 29; PM Psalm 8, 84
Gen 3:8-15; Rev. 12:1-10; John 3:16-21
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Matthew 1:18-25. When Joseph awoke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded him.

The account of Jesus' birth found in the Gospel of Matthew focuses on Joseph, and is rather legalistic. Joseph was engaged to Mary, which meant they had a legally binding contract. When Mary turned up pregnant, he naturally assumed she had been unfaithful.


Joseph "planned to dismiss her quietly." But on learning how Mary's child had been conceived, Joseph went through with the marriage; when the boy was born, he named him, legitimizing him and adopting him into Joseph's family and line.


One website had this to say about Joseph: "Noted for his willingness to immediately get up and do what God told him." I like that phrase. It's as down to earth and practical as, well, basic carpentry.


How many of us are noted for our willingness to immediately get up and do what God tells us? Granting that God's messages to us today are less likely to involve angelic visions, I suspect that most of us could still do better. I know I could.


No one wants to know about your faith or unbelief. Your orders are to perform the act of obedience on the spot.
-Dietrich Bonhoeffer (d. 1945)
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yirol (Sudan)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

O Virgin of virgins

Daily Reading for December 23 • The Fourth Sunday of Advent

O Virgin of virgins, tell us how shall this be? For neither before you was any like you nor shall there be after. Daughters of Jerusalem, why do you marvel at me? The thing which you behold is a divine mystery.

Although this antiphon, unlike the others, is not addressed to Christ, it is nevertheless an attempt on our part to know and understand that which we worship. It is as though we are asking for a sharing into Mary's human insight and intuition in order to help us understand. But when all is said and done, God's incarnation must remain for us a mystery beyond human comprehension. We can imagine such love, but only imagine, for the depth and breadth of God's love for us is immeasurable—inestimable—by any standards that we have.

Perhaps, by drawing close to Mary, the God-bearer—Theotokos in Greek: she who gave birth to God—we will understand. But no, even then our "knowing" and "understanding" will always remain and require a leap of faith. God with us remains a divine mystery!

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).


Framed in light,
Mary sings through the doorway.
Elizabeth’s six-month joy
jumps, a palpable greeting,
a hidden first encounter
between son and Son.

And my heart turns over
when I meet Jesus
in you.

“Salutation,” based on Luke 1:39-45, in Accompanied by Angels: Poems of the Incarnation by Luci Shaw (Eerdmans, 2006).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

The roots of love sink down and deep and strike out far, and they are arteries that feed our lives, so we must see that they get the water and sun they need so they can nourish us. And when you put something good into the world, something good comes back to you.
— Merle Shain in Hearts That We Broke Long Ago

To Practice This Thought: Recall a time when you felt nourished by the love of others.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

How can I fear a God who is nothing but mercy and love.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

I pray Thee, compassionate Lord, do not allow me to be condemned
because of the unworthy and ungrateful manner in which I
contemplate the great mysteries that Thou hast revealed to Thy
saints and through them to me, a sinner and Thy unworthy servant.
For see, Lord, Thy servant stands before Thee, idle in everything,
speechless, as one who is dead; and I do not dare to say anything
more or to presumptuously contemplate further. But as always I
fall down before Thee, crying from the depths of my soul. . .

St. Peter of Damascus
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

The Heart of Jesus

Jesus is the vulnerable child, the humble preacher, the despised, rejected, and crucified Christ. But Jesus also is "the image of the unseen God, the first-born of all creation, ... [who] exists before all things and in him all things hold together" (Colossians 1:15,17). Jesus is the King, ridiculed on the cross and reigning from his throne in the heavenly Jerusalem. He is the Lord riding into the city on a donkey, and the Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End. He is cursed by the world but blessed by God.

Let's always look at Jesus, because in his crucified and glorified heart we will see ourselves called to share in his suffering as well as in his glory.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Three - The First Note, cont'd

Humility confesses that we have nothing that we have not received and admits the fact of our insufficiency and our dependence upon God. It is the basis of all Christian virtues. Saint Bernard of Clairvaux said, "No spiritual house can stand for a moment except on the foundation of humility." It is the first condition of a joyful life within any community.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Liberating God
December 23rd, 2007
FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT
Sunday’s Reflection

THE LORD will give you a sign.
Look, the young woman
is with child and shall bear a son,
and shall name him Immanuel.

Liberating God,
teach us
how to refuse the evil
and choose the good. Amen.

- Alive Now

From p. 53 of Alive Now, November/December 2007. Copyright © 2007 by The Upper Room. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html



Loving the Lover

Sit by the stream, on the edge. Don't let the ego try to fix, to control, categorize or ensure any of your experience. The ego wants to ensure that things are significant, that events make us important. Our activities become little righteousness trips, and we stand on our certitude.

"I've done 'this much' in my life," we say. "I was faithful to my husband; I raised my children; I sent them to a Catholic school; I paid my bills." But these are often self- serving kinds of duty and responsibility. Much religion is using God to bolster our own self-image. True religion is not attached to self-image, but to God.

Christian life has little to do with me doing anything right. It has everything to do with falling in love with a Lover who does everything right. What I love is that Lover and not my own accomplishments.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr

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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Don't shut out Christ

The divine Word, coming and knocking at the door of our soul, challenges our indolence and rouses us from slumber. His desire is always to enter and make his home with us. It is our own fault, therefore, if he does not always do so, or if, having once entered, he does not always stay with us.

Let your door stand open to receive him, unlock your soul to him, lay bare the hidden recesses of your mind. Show him the coffers of innocence, the treasure house of peace; let him see how beautiful his grace has made you. Throw wide the gate of your heart, run toward the sun whose unfailing light shines on every human being. That true light shines for everyone, but those who close their windows deprive themselves of its eternal radiance. If you shut the door of your mind you shut out Christ. Though he has the power to enter, he does not care to burst in uninvited or to force himself upon us against our will.

Born of a virgin, Christ came forth from the womb to shed his light over the whole world, so that everything might be illumined by his rays. His light is received by all who long to see the splendor of that everlasting glory which no darkness can ever dim. Here, the sun of our daily experience is succeeded by the darkness of night; but the sun of holiness knows no setting, since wisdom can never give place to evil.

Guerric of Igny
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/


HOW CAN I PERSONALLY PARTAKE IN THE ATONEMENT?


"But God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of Our Lord Jesus Christ." Galatians 6:14

The Gospel of Jesus Christ always forces an issue of will. Do I accept God's verdict on sin in the Cross of Christ? Have I the slightest interest in the death of Jesus? Do I want to be identified with His death, to be killed right out to all interest in sin, in worldliness, in self - to be so identified with Jesus that I am spoilt for every thing else but Him? The great privilege of discipleship is that I can sign on under His Cross, and that means death to sin. Get alone with Jesus and either tell Him that you do not want sin to die out in you; or else tell Him that at all costs you want to be identified with His death. Immediately you transact in confident faith in what Our Lord did on the Cross, a supernatural identification with His death takes place, and you will know with a knowledge that passeth knowledge that your "old man" is crucified with Christ. The proof that your old man is crucified with Christ is the amazing ease with which the life of God in you enables you to obey the voice of Jesus Christ.

Every now and again, Our Lord lets us see what we would be like if it were not for Himself; it is a justification of what He said - "Without Me ye can do nothing." That is why the bedrock of Christianity is personal, passionate devotion to the Lord Jesus. We mistake the ecstasy of our first introduction into the Kingdom for the purpose of God in getting us there; His purpose in getting us there is that we may realize all that identification with Jesus Christ means.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 23, August 23, December 23
Chapter 65: On the Prior of the Monastery

To us, therefore, it seems expedient
for the preservation of peace and charity
that the Abbot have in his hands
the full administration of his monastery.
And if possible let all the affairs of the monastery,
as we have already arranged,
be administered by deans according to the Abbot's directions.
Thus, with the duties being shared by several,
no one person will become proud.

But if the circumstances of the place require it,
or if the community asks for it with reason and with humility,
and the Abbot judges it to be expedient,
let the Abbot himself constitute as his Prior
whomsoever he shall choose
with the counsel of God-fearing brethren.

That Prior, however, shall perform respectfully
the duties enjoined on him by his Abbot
and do nothing against the Abbot's will or direction;
for the more he is raised above the rest,
the more carefully should he observe the precepts of the Rule.

If it should be found that the Prior has serious faults,
or that he is deceived by his exaltation and yields to pride,
or if he should be proved to be a despiser of the Holy Rule,
let him be admonished verbally up to four times.
If he fails to amend,
let the correction of regular discipline be applied to him.
But if even then he does not reform,
let him be deposed from the office of Prior
and another be appointed in his place who is worthy of it.
And if afterwards he is not quiet and obedient in the community,
let him even be expelled from the monastery.
But the Abbot, for his part, should bear in mind
that he will have to render an account to God
for all his judgments,
lest the flame of envy or jealousy be kindled in his soul.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

The problems dealt with in this chapter are the problems of loyalty, honesty, humility and role and their effect on a group. The prior or subprioress in a Benedictine monastery are equivalent to the first assistant of any organization. They act as vicars, representatives, of the abbot or prioress but they do not have any specific role description or authority of their own. Most local constitutions of Benedictine communities to this day, in fact, say simply that the subprioress or prior are appointed by the prioress or abbot to "do whatever the abbot bids them to do." The point is that every community has one, single, ultimate authority, the abbot or prioress, and that any other arrangement or assumption is not only incorrect, it is dangerous to the unity and formation of the community.

Underlying the theological and organizational considerations, however, is the dark warning that the temptation to use a position, any position--vice-principal, vice-president, assistant, department director--to wrest authority away from the center or to promote our own careers by undermining the legitimate leader in order to make ourselves look good, is a sin against community. It uses a group for personal gain instead of for the good of the group. It is the story of a Rasputin or a Lucretia Borgia. It is a grasp at power for its own sake. It corrodes what we say we support. It eats like acid at anything in us that we say is real. It is cheap popularity and expensive advancement because, eventually, it will destroy what we say we value, the very community for which we are responsible.

The Tao Te Ching teaches: "Shape clay into a vessel; It is the space within that makes it useful." Every group has a distinct structure and history but without a single driving spirit,it may lack the heart to make a common impact. In Benedictine spirituality the abbot and prioress are the center of the community. They are the one voice, the one light, the one heart that the entire community can trust to act always in its true and total interest. In every group, in fact, it is that inspiriting space within that gives it energy. Destroy the axis, stop the heart, collapse the core of a world and the world shrivels or shatters or disintegrates in space. That's what rivalry between the leaders of a group does to a community. That's what divergence between husband and wife does to the family. That's what tension between idols does to a world. Benedictine spirituality sees the community as something to mold us, not something to be used for the interests and vanity and power struggles of a few. It is a life dedicated to the spirit, not enmeshed in the agendas of the political. Where the authority of the abbot or prioress is constantly contested, routinely ignored, mockingly ridiculed or sharply questioned, then the eye of the soul is taken off of the Center of the life and shifted instead to the multiple minor agendas of its members. At that moment, the mystical dimension of the community turns into just one more arm wrestling match among contenders. At that point, the Rule says, get rid of the people who lower the purpose of the group to the level of the mundane, making light of the great enterprise of life and diminishing its energy.

It is good advice in any human endeavor whose higher purpose is being fed to the appetites of the immature and the selfish to rid itself of those who have given over the lode star of the group to a lesser direction.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.


Sunday before the Nativity of Christ: Holy Fathers Nativity Fast
Tone 5 Dec. 23, 2007
1st Royal Hour: Micah 5:2-4 Epistle: Hebrews 11:9-10, 17-23,
32-40 Gospel: St. Matthew 1:1-25

What to Expect: Micah 5:2-4 LXX, especially vs. 2: "And thou, Bethlehem,
house of Ephratha, art few in number to be reckoned among the thousands
of Judah; yet out of thee shall One come forth to Me, to be a ruler of
Israel." In the centuries before Jesus' birth, God planted intimations
throughout the Old Testament of what was in store for His People. Thus,
by the time Jesus was born, a general consciousness existed that One
anointed of God, the Messiah (the Christos in Greek), would come and
improve Israel's standing in the world. This prophecy through Micah is
one of the most important of those early prophecies. It gave ancient
Israel seven signs that they should expect; but today, the Church is
enjoying all of them in Christ.

First, Israel was to expect that, as God set about restoring His fallen
creature Man to Himself, He would select a specific person: early there
had been Noah "who found grace before" Him (Gen. 6:9). Of Noah's three
sons, Shem was the grandsire of Abraham to whom God promised that "all
the tribes of the earth be blessed" (Gen 12:3) through his seed. And
from Abraham the blessing descended to one of Jacob's twelve sons, Judah
- One of whose grandsons should be "the expectation of nations" (Gen.
49:10). Clearly, through the Prophet Micah, God told the tribe of Judah
to expect that "out of thee shall One come forth to Me" (Micah 5:2). We
are blessed to worship the King of Judah, God the Word, Who for our
salvation became man.

Second, they were to expect that the One would come from Bethlehem of
Judah, as Jesus did. St. Augustine notes that ancient Israel knew
"where the Christ was to be born." It was like a milestone - "in
Bethlehem of Judah;" yet while it "showed the way, [they] were incapable
of walking along it." We are blessed to go to Him in the cave and even
worship at His Birthplace.

Third, Israel expected the Messiah to be the centerpiece of God's plan
for them, and He is, "for Eden hath verily been opened at the coming
forth of God," He opened it for us all!

Fourth, God intimated that the Incarnate One would be Divine, "His
goings forth were from the beginning, even from eternity" (vs. 2).
Notice, in verse two, the shift of tense in the verbs from future -
"shall...come forth" - to a past, even before the beginning of time -
"were...from eternity." To the Jews this was "a stumbling block and to
the Greeks, foolishness" - but now the Church knows "the power of God
and the wisdom of God" (1 Cor. 1:23).

Fifth, the Lord blessed Micah to warn ancient Israel to expect "travail"
(Mic. 5:3), pain most certainly, as a result of their sins, but the
specific pain of birthgiving, which would bring forth to a remnant of
their brethren One Who would usher in the return of mankind to God.
What can we say? "Christ is born, Glorify Him!" They expected; today,
we make ready, "for the Tree of Life hath blossomed forth in the
cave....whereof eating we shall live and not die."

Sixth, Micah told them to expect a "remnant of their brethren [to]
return" (vs. 3). In Adam and in Noah, all men are brethren. Now a
remnant of Israel's brethren is returning. The gentiles, the peoples of
the earth, are flooding into Israel for the gate opened by the Child of
Bethlehem. "The Maker of the entire creation [is] the Grantor of Great
mercy to the world."

Seventh, from Micah they learned that "the Lord [would] stand, and see,
and feed His flock with power, and they [would] dwell in the glory of
the Name of the Lord their God" (vs. 4). Indeed, "let us go before, O
nations, and celebrate the Nativity of Christ," singing "Rejoice, O
honored Prophet [Micah], who did organize well the law of the Lord, and
appeared as [a] stable, unshakeable [pillar] of faith," mediating "the
New Covenant of Christ." Christ is born!

Wherefore, O Holy Prophet Micah, having been translated to heaven, plead
with Christ to grant safety to the world and to save our souls.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Daily Meditation 12/22/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]





Collect

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 55; PM Psalm 138, 139:1-17(18-23)
Zech. 8:9-17; Rev. 6:1-17; Matt. 25:31-46
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Matthew 25:31-46. "Truly, I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me."

For months, we've been barraged with advertisements that play on our desire to please: Buy her this expensive piece of jewelry to show her how much you love her; buy him these expensive golf clubs; shower the children with toys and games; don't leave anyone out. You're judged by the money you spend.


This weekend brings the final push. The roads leading toward our local shopping mall, that Mecca of Mammon, will be impassable; drivers will crawl through the parking lots searching for a space, lines will be long, and frayed tempers will snap.


Think about pulling back just a bit. Try buying fewer presents that mean more. Try showing your love with time and attention, sincere words and helpful deeds. And think about doing something to help someone in need, whether nearby or far away.


Most presents will be forgotten before the credit card bills come due. But helping the widow, the orphan, the lonely, the sick, the prisoner-these are the gifts that will last.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yewa (Lagos, Nigeria)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/


O Emmanuel

Daily Reading for December 22

O Emmanuel, our King and Lawgiver, the Expected of the nations and the Savior of them all: Come and save us, O Lord our God.

When we pray, O come, O come Emmanuel, we are asking that God will indeed come to us in human flesh, that Christ’s incarnation will be made real for us. This is a petition of hope and for deliverance. It is a prayer that, had God not made the first move toward us, we would not be able to utter. God does not remain distant from us, but actually enters into our joys and sufferings. In the words of a popular Christmas carol, “And he feeleth for our sadness, And he shareth in our gladness. . . .”

Rather than ask why the innocent suffer or where God is when there is suffering, we need to ask ourselves how it is that we cause the innocent to suffer and what we can do to alleviate suffering. How much can we share of our own brokenness so that someone else can endure the otherwise unendurable? The way people know God is through us—we are here to make God’s kingdom known to other people.

And it is only because Christ is Emmanuel—God with us—that Israel, and in fact all of us, are able to rejoice! It is when Christ comes as Emmanuel that the importance, vocation and dignity of every person will be restored.


O God with us,
Emmanuel,
whose law and life and rule are love;
You are, in fact, our only hope.
Greed and injustice
in the justice of the nations
discover us deep into poverty,
starvation, corruption and war.
And into our homes sneak silent abuse
and assault,
incest and injury—
a polite and private life of poverty,
starvation, corruption and war.
Make no mistake—we
don’t know the slightest
what we’re asking you: to be saved
will be a costly bargain—
and one we hadn’t rully reasoned on or planned.
Nevertheless,
you are our only hope,
O God with us,
Emmanuel.

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

The sun is new again, all day.
— Heraclitus quoted in Fragments: The Collected Wisdom of Heraclitus translated by Brooks Haxton

To Practice This Thought: Rejoice and give thanks for this stunning miracle.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

He is within me at each moment; He is guiding and inspiring me with what I must say and do.
St Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

At the Last Judgment the righteous will be recognized only by
their humility and their considering themselves worthless, and not
by good deeds, even if they have done them. This is the true
attitude.

Holy New Hieromartyr Barlaam

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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Light in the Darkness

We walk in a "ravine as dark as death" (Psalm 23:4), and still we have nothing to fear because God is at our side: God's staff and crook are there to soothe us (see Psalm 23:4). This is not just a consoling idea. It is an experience of the heart that we can trust.

Our lives are full of suffering, pain, disillusions, losses and grief, but they are also marked by visions of the coming of the Son of Man "like lightning striking in the east and flashing far into west" (Matthew 24:27). These moments in which we see clearly, hear loudly, and feel deeply that God is with us on the journey make us shine as a light into the darkness. Jesus says, "You are the light of the world. Your light must shine in people's sight, so that, seeing your good works, they may give praise to your Father in heaven" (Matthew 5:14-16).
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty Two - The First Note -

Humility

We always keep before us the example of Christ, who emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, and who, on the last night of his life, humbly washed his disciples' feet. We likewise seek to serve one another with humility.

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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Wreath of Love
December 22nd, 2007
Saturday’s Reflection

WE ARE LOVED before we can even utter the desire to be worthy. We do not earn the cloak of beauty that is wrapped around our souls or the wreath of love that God gives each of us.

- Stephanie Ford
Kindred Souls

From p. 30 of Kindred Souls: Connecting through Spiritual Friendship by Stephanie Ford. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


Crossing a Line

The Scriptures very clearly have a "bias toward action." Simply put, the word of God tells us that if you don't do it, you in fact have not heard it and do not believe it (see Matthew 21:28–32; James 1:22–25).

The only way that we become convinced of our own sense of empowerment and the power of the Spirit and the truth of the Gospel is by crossing a line—a line of decision, testing, risking, doing and owning the consequences.

It has a certain degree of "non-sensical-ness," of "unprovability" to it: That's why we call it faith. When we cross that line, we act in a new way based on what we believe the Kingdom values are. Walking is probably a lot more important than talking, even if we walk the wrong way for a while.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr

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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Magnificat

You magnify him because amid this world's darkness, being more luminous than the sun, more beautiful than the moon, more fragrant than the rose, and whiter than snow, you reveal more fully the splendor of God.

You magnify him, not by giving him an increase of his boundless magnitude, but by bringing, amid the world's darkness, the light of the true divinity. You magnify him when you are raised to so high a dignity that you receive the fullness of grace; when you merit to receive the visit of the Holy Spirit; and when, becoming the Mother of God, while remaining an inviolate Virgin, you give birth to a Savior for a world that is being lost.

But whence do you get the power to do this? From the fact that the Lord is with you, the Lord who makes his gifts become your merits. That is why it is said that you "magnify" him so much more to the extent that you are more magnified in and by him.

Your soul, then, magnifies the Lord only in the sense that you yourself are magnified by him, even to receiving magnificently the fullness of grace and reaching the magnificence of a unique glory. For you are the receptacle of the Word, the cellar of the new wine which inebriates the sobriety of believers. You are the Mother of God!

Adam of Perseigne
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

THE DRAWING OF THE FATHER


"No man can come to Me, except the Father which hath sent Me draw him." John 6:44

When God draws me, the issue of my will comes in at once - will I react on the revelation which God gives - will I come to Him? Discussion on spiritual matters is an impertinence. Never discuss with anyone when God speaks. Belief is not an intellectual act; belief is a moral act whereby I deliberately commit myself. Will I dump myself down absolutely on God and transact on what He says? If I will, I shall find I am based on Reality that is as sure as God's throne.

In preaching the gospel, always push an issue of will. Belief must be the will to believe. There must be a surrender of the will, not a surrender to persuasive power, a deliberate launching forth on God and on what He says until I am no longer confident in what I have done, I am confident only in God. The hindrance is that I will not trust God, but only my mental understanding. As far as feelings go, I must stake all blindly. I must will to believe, and this can never be done without a violent effort on my part to disassociate myself from my old ways of looking at things, and by putting myself right over on to Him.

Every man is made to reach out beyond his grasp. It is God who draws me, and my relationship to Him in the first place is a personal one, not an intellectual one. I am introduced into the relationship by the miracle of God and my own will to believe, then I begin to get an intelligent appreciation and understanding of the wonder of the transaction.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 22, August 22, December 22
Chapter 65: On the Prior of the Monastery

It happens all too often that the constituting of a Prior
gives rise to grave scandals in monasteries.
For there are some who become inflated with the evil spirit of pride
and consider themselves second Abbots.
By usurping power
they foster scandals and cause dissensions in the community.
Especially does this happen
in those places where the Prior is constituted
by the same Bishop or the same Abbots
who constitute the Abbot himself.
What an absurd procedure this is
can easily be seen;
for it gives the Prior an occasion for becoming proud
from the very time of his constitution,
by putting the thought into his mind
that he is freed from the authority of his Abbot:
"For," he will say to himself, "you were constituted
by the same persons who constitute the Abbot."
From this source are stirred up envy, quarrels, detraction,
rivalry, dissensions and disorders.
For while the Abbot and the Prior are at variance,
their souls cannot but be endangered by this dissension;
and those who are under them,
currying favor with one side or the other,
go to ruin.
The guilt for this dangerous state of affairs
rests on the heads of those
whose action brought about such disorder.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Saturday, December 22, 2007 Nativity Fast Great-Martyr
Anastasia & Chrysogonos
Kellia: Numbers 20:22-29 Epistle: Galatians
3:8-12 Gospel: St. Luke 13:18-29

Foreshadows ~ VI * The Extraordinary One: Numbers 20:22-29 LXX,
especially vs. 24: "Let Aaron be added to his people; for ye shall
certainly not go into the land which I have given the children of
Israel, because ye provoked Me at the water of strife." When the angel
of the Lord appeared to Joseph, the betrothed of the Virgin Theotokos,
he directed Joseph to take Mary to himself as his wife, for he explained
to Joseph that she would bear an extraordinary son Whom Joseph was to
name Jesus, "for He will save His people from their sins" (Mt. 1:21).
By a conception "of the Holy Spirit" beyond nature, this promised child
was born (Mt. 1:20) and grew into the incomparable man, Jesus of
Nazareth. This same Jesus was "attested by God...by miracles, wonders
and signs which God did through Him," Whom God also "raised up...being
exalted to the right hand of God" and made "both Lord and Christ" (Acts
2:22,32-33,36).

Beloved, through this unique man, our Lord and Christ, God has provided
something extraordinary for us (Heb. 11:40): "a kingdom which cannot be
shaken...[and] grace by which we may serve God acceptably with reverence
and godly fear" (Heb. 12:28). Let us understand further: this man,
Jesus Christ, because He also is fully God as well as fully a man, is
"the same yesterday, today and forever" (Heb. 13:8). Christ, therefore,
enabled the fallible man, Aaron, to receive this same "kingdom which
cannot be shaken" (Heb. 12:28), even though Aaron lived centuries before
Jesus, even though he "provoked God at the water of strife" (Nu. 20:24),
and even though in his lifetime Aaron was denied entrance into the Holy
Land.

The glorious Nativity we are preparing to celebrate soars with power and
meaning not only above those who live in this century, but above all men
in all history, exactly because of the extraordinary One Who was born,
Jesus Christ. Recall the Apostolic message concerning this unique Child
and Man Whom we call our Savior and Lord. They declare that "God was in
Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing their trespasses
to them" (2 Cor. 5:19).

Hence, exclusion from the land, which God imposed on Aaron, as it turns
out, was trifling in comparison with that which Aaron receives now
together with us. Still, Aaron's failure is a warning not to approach
the great Feast of the Nativity frivolously, looking only for brightly
wrapped joys in this life, for we, like Aaron, also shall have to appear
before "the dread Judgment Seat" of this same Jesus Christ and answer
for our rebellion against His commands.

Let us humbly confess how easily disobedience overtakes us, remembering
what occurred when the wandering People of God came to Kadesh in the
wilderness of Zin. "There was no water there" and "they assembled
themselves against Moses and against Aaron" (Nu. 20:2). Humbly, Moses
and Aaron "fell on their faces. And the glory of the Lord appeared to
them" (Nu. 20:6). Then the Lord told Moses to take his rod, "call ye
the assembly, thou and Aaron thy brother, and speak ye to the rock
before them, and it shall give forth its waters" (Nu. 20:8). And the
two brothers gathered the assembly together and they said to the People,
"Hear me ye disobedient ones; must we bring you water out of this rock?"
(Nu. 20:10). And Moses "lifted up his hand and struck the rock with his
rod twice; and much water came forth" (Nu. 20.11).

Moses and Aaron rebelled in three ways: 1) Moses spoke alone - not with
Aaron, 2) he spoke to the People and not the rock, and 3) he struck the
rock instead of speaking to it. They did not follow God's orders.
Finding them disobedient, God said to them, "Because ye have not
believed Me...therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the
land" (Nu. 20:12).

What shall we render to Thee, O Christ, for that Thou didst appear on
earth as a man for our sake? Wherefore, O God before the ages, help us
to be obedient and have mercy on us.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Reading for Dec 21, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 21, August 21, December 21
Chapter 64: On Constituting an Abbess

Once she has been constituted,
let the Abbess always bear in mind
what a burden she has undertaken
and to whom she will have to give an account of her stewardship,
and let her know that her duty is rather to profit her sisters
than to preside over them.
She must therefore be learned in the divine law,
that she may have a treasure of knowledge
from which to bring forth new things and old.
She must be chaste, sober and merciful.
Let her exalt mercy above judgment,
that she herself may obtain mercy.
She should hate vices;
she should love the sisterhood.

In administering correction
she should act prudently and not go to excess,
lest in seeking too eagerly to scrape off the rust
she break the vessel.
Let her keep her own frailty ever before her eyes
and remember that the bruised reed must not be broken.
By this we do not mean that she should allow vices to grow;
on the contrary, as we have already said,
she should eradicate them prudently and with charity,
in the way which may seem best in each case.
Let her study rather to be loved than to be feared.

Let her not be excitable and worried,
nor exacting and headstrong,
nor jealous and over-suspicious;
for then she is never at rest.

In her commands let her be prudent and considerate;
and whether the work which she enjoins
concerns God or the world,
let her be discreet and moderate,
bearing in mind the discretion of holy Jacob, who said,
"If I cause my flocks to be overdriven,
they will all die in one day."
Taking this, then, and other examples of discretion,
the mother of virtues,
let her so temper all things
that the strong may have something to strive after,
and the weak may not fall back in dismay.

And especially let her keep this Rule in all its details,
so that after a good ministry
she may hear from the Lord what the good servant heard
who gave the fellow-servants wheat in due season:
"Indeed, I tell you, he will set that one over all his goods" (Matt. 24:27).

Some Thoughts

There is no doubt a very great deal to be said about this passage. I am not the one to say it. I have a couple of questions, though. When called upon to lead something, do you demonstrate these qualities?

What would it be like if our elected officials had to match up to these requirements?

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

At the end of an entire series of injunctions and prescriptions, Benedict suddenly reintroduces a description of the kind of abbot or prioress whom he believes should guide a Benedictine community. He is, in other words, giving us a theology of authority or parenting or leadership. The Talmud reads "Happy is the time where the great listen to the small, for in such a generation the small will listen to the great." In the Rule of Benedict the prioress and abbot are told to display the good like a blazing fire but always to "let mercy triumph over judgment" and to "strive to be loved rather than feared." Authority in Benedictine spirituality is not an end in itself nor is it an excuse to oppress the people for whom all law is made. Law is simply a candle on the path of life to lead us to the good we seek. Any authority that makes the law the end rather than the path are themselves worshipping at a lesser shrine.

In the midrash Genesis Rabbah it reads: "A farmer puts a yoke on his strong ox, not on his weak one." The function of Benedictine leadership is not to make life difficult; it is to make life possible for both the strong and the weak. If a leader gives way to moodiness or institutional paranoia, if a leader is not emotionally balanced and spiritually grounded, a whole climate is poisoned. This chapter on the abbot or prioress is an important signal for parents and teachers and superiors everywhere: what we cannot model, we cannot expect, not of children, not of the professionals who work for us, not even of the people who love us enough to marry us. The people around us can only take our emotional battering so long. Then they leave or rebel or batter back. Benedictine leadership models a guidance that is firm but loving; clear but understanding; just but merciful; itself authentically committed to its own principles for, indeed, the rabbis also teach, "A little sin is big when a big person commits it."

In ancient civilizations, the law was the lawgiver's law. Subjects had no rights, only responsibilities. The lawgiver could change the law on a whim or a fancy. In the Roman empire, the pater familia, the Roman father, could do no wrong in his own home. No court of law would try him, no one would convict him. He himself according to the principles of Roman jurisprudence was judge and jury, king and lawgiver. In a climate and culture such as this, the chapter on the abbot or prioress, and this paragraph in particular, are extremely revolutionary. This section issues a clear warning: authority has limits; authority is not a law unto itself; authority is responsible to the persons under it for their welfare and their growth; authority itself is under the law. It is a theology such as this that makes people free and keeps people free because the knee we bow to government must really be bowed only to God.
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Labels: , ,

Daily Meditation 12/21/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]



Creator of the stars of night,
Your people's everlasting light,
O Christ redeemer of us all,
We pray You hear us when we call.

In sorrow that the ancient curse,
Should doom to death a universe,
You came, O savior, to set free,
Your own in glorious liberty.

When this old world drew on toward night,
You came; but not in splendor bright,
Not as a monarch, but the child of Mary,
blameless Mother mild.

At Your great name, O Jesus, now,
All knees must bend, all hearts must bow;
All things on earth with one accord,
Like those in heaven, shall call You Lord.

Come in Your holy might, we pray,
Redeem us for eternal day;
Defend us while we dwell below,
From all assaults of our dread foe.

To God creator, God the Son,
And God the Spirit, Three in One,
Praise honor, might, and glory be,
From age to age eternally.

9th century Latin hymn



Collect

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.

Everliving God, who strengthened your apostle Thomas with firm and certain faith in your Son's resurrection: Grant us so perfectly and without doubt to believe in Jesus Christ, our Lord and our God, that our faith may never be found wanting in your sight; through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 40, 54; PM Psalm 51
Zech. 7:8-8:8; Rev. 5:6-14; Matt. 25:14-30


Today we remember:

St. Thomas
AM: Psalm 23, 121; Job 42:1-6; 1 Peter 1:3-9
PM: Psalm 27; Isaiah 43: 8-13; John 14:1-7

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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 20:24-29. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.

There's a lot of Thomas in me, I'm afraid. I'm prone to questioning, to probing; I go back and forth and think things through before accepting them. I want to be shown.


This does not endear me to authority, which generally prefers to be obeyed instantly and without discussion, even when it abruptly changes its mind. Wanting to know the reason why has cost me dearly at times.


I admire those who have a simple, childlike faith; I wish I could be like them, and embrace whatever comes to me. I pray about it, I consult about it, but I just seem to be built this way. (Lord, I obey; help thou my tendency to say, "Yes, but...")


Fortunately, God has patience with us; Jesus made Thomas an apostle, after all. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe. Blessed be God, who still makes room in the Kingdom for people like Thomas, and like me.


Doubt is not the enemy of faith but its colleague.
-Kenneth Leech (b. 1939)
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yei (Sudan)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/


O Rex Gentium

Daily Reading for December 21 • St. Thomas the Apostle

O King of the nations and the Desire of them all, you are the Cornerstone who makes both one: Come and save the creatures whom you fashioned out of clay.

The figure of ‘the cornerstone’ is particularly apt to describe Christ’s role of reconciliation. The cornerstone is the place where two walls of a building at right angles to each other meet, and as such as a key function in holding the building together. Both St. Paul and St. Peter describe Christians as forming a building of living stones held together by Christ and growing up to maturity in him so that they may be a fit dwelling place for God through his Spirit. A world torn apart by conflicts based on colour, race, religion, inequality of wealth, and many other causes desperately needs the unifying power of Christ. In Christ differences need not be abolished, though injustice must be removed, but they can be combined into a rich and living unity. In that spirit, we pray to Christ, the cornerstone who binds us together, to come and deliver us form sin which separates us from God and each other.

The final words of the antiphon, ‘whom you fashioned out of clay’, have profound and subtle links with those which go before and beautifully round off this prayer to God. The ‘clay’ of our common humanity takes up and reinforces the thought of the universal reconciliation achieved by Christ the King. We are fully part of the material universe and Christ’s redeeming work does not cut us off from our earthly roots but is part of his gathering up of all things into one. Today, when human mastery over nature has advanced so far that we are in danger of destroying our planet, we can see more clearly the connection between human sin and the pollution of the environment.

The antiphon is the cry of humanity, in its earthly state yet longing for union with the divine, to be remade in God’s image and reunited through Christ, the king of the universe, with its source in God.

From O Come Emmanuel: Scripture Verses for Advent Worship by William Marshall. Copyright © 1993. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com


O King—
King and Desire of the Nations,
made one by the cornerstone
of your coming,
of your being.
How can it be?
The cornerstone rejected,
misused as rubble for rocks and stones
to hurl and smash.
They didn’t understand then
(and often we don’t now)
that cornerstones are
for fastening onto,
for building up,
for foundations and transformation.
Come, O King,
Desire of the nations,
Cornerstone.
Save for us, formed of clay,
the opportunity of being transformed by your peace.

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

I recall the story about a man whose path was the act of greeting people. Whenever there was a knock on the door he would say, "The Lord is at the door."
— Donald Altman in Art of the Inner Meal

To Practice This Thought: Use every knock on your door as a cue to greet the Lord in other people.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

For me, prayer means launching out of the heart towards God; it means lifting up ones' eyes, quite simply, to heaven, a cry of grateful love, from the crest of joy or the trough of despair.
St Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

Death's awful mystery comes upon us suddenly, and soul and body
are violently severed, divorced from their natural union by the
will of God. What shall we do at that hour if we have not thought
of it beforehand, if we have not been instructed concerning this
eventuality and find ourselves unprepared?

St. Nil Sorsky
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

An Experience Offered to All

Some people say: "I never had an experience of the fullness of time. ... I am just an ordinary person, not a mystic." Although some people have unique experiences of God's presence and, therefore have unique missions to announce God's presence to the world, all of us - whether learned or uneducated, rich or poor, visible or hidden - can receive the grace of seeing God in the fullness of time. This mystical experience, is not reserved for a few exceptional people. God wants to offer that gift in one way or another to all God's children.

But we must desire it. We must be attentive and interiorly alert. For some people the experience of the fullness of time comes in a spectacular way, as it did to St. Paul when he fell to the ground on his way to Damascus (Acts 9:3-4). But for some of us it comes like a murmuring sound or a gentle breeze touching our backs (1 Kings 19:13). God loves us all and wants us all to know this in a most personal way.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty One - The Three Notes of the Order

Humility, love, and joy are the three notes which mark the lives of Tertiaries. When these characteristics are evident throughout the Order, its work will be fruitful. Without them, all that it attempts will be in vain.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

God’s Comforting Presence
December 21st, 2007
Friday’s Reflection

GOD OF LOVE,
many are lonely and grieving
during this Advent season.
Send your healing Spirit
to all who mourn,
that they may know
your comforting presence with them.
Amen.

- Beth A. Richardson
Child of the Light

From p. 59 of Child of the Light: Walking through Advent and Christmas by Beth A. Richardson. Copyright © 2005 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html



God Is the Only One We Can Surrender To

God is the only one we can surrender to without losing ourselves. It's a paradox. I can't prove it to you, and it sure doesn't feel like that, but I promise you it's true.

When Jesus says those who lose their life will find their life and those who let go of their life will discover their life, obviously he's talking about life in a different way than you and I experience it. We think life is the thing that we've got to protect. He's saying, No, the true self needs no protection; it just is. What we are usually protecting is the repetitive illusions and addictive feelings of the false self.

God is the only one we can surrender to without losing ourselves. The Christian people—the brothers and sisters of God's Son, Jesus—are those who are called to that life of surrender.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Mary's visitation

As soon as Elizabeth heard Mary's greeting the child leapt in her womb and she was filled with the Holy Spirit.

Notice the choice of words and the meaning of each one. Elizabeth was the first to hear Mary's voice, but John was the first to be aware of grace. She heard with the ears of the body; he leapt for joy because of the mystery. She was aware of Mary's presence; he of the Lord's. The woman perceived the presence of a woman; the child that of a child. The women spoke of God's grace while the children gave effect to it within them, revealing to their mothers the mystery of love, and by a double miracle the mothers prophesied under the inspiration of their sons.

The child leapt in the womb; the mother was filled with the Holy Spirit. The mother was not filled before her son, but once he had been filled with the Holy Spirit, he filled his mother too. John leapt for joy and so did the spirit of Mary. When John leapt Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit, but we do not learn that Mary was then filled with the Holy Spirit, but only that her spirit rejoiced. Her son, who is beyond our understanding, was active in his mother in a way beyond our understanding. Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit after conceiving a son; Mary was filled before. You are blessed, said Elizabeth, because you have believed.

Ambrose of Milan
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

EXPERIENCE OR REVELATION


"We have received . . . the spirit which is of God; that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God." 1 Corinthians 2:12

Reality is Redemption, not my experience of Redemption; but Redemption has no meaning for me until it speaks the language of my conscious life. When I am born again, the Spirit of God takes me right out of myself and my experiences, and identifies me with Jesus Christ. If I am left with my experiences, my experiences have not been produced by Redemption. The proof that they are produced by Redemption is that I am led out of myself all the time, I no longer pay any attention to my experiences as the ground of Reality, but only to the Reality which produced the experiences. My experiences are not worth anything unless they keep me at the Source, Jesus Christ.

If you try to dam up the Holy Spirit in you to produce subjective experiences, you will find that He will burst all bounds and take you back again to the historic Christ. Never nourish an experience which has not God as its Source and faith in God as its result. If you do, your experience is anti-Christian, no matter what visions you may have had. Is Jesus Christ Lord of your experiences, or do you try to lord it over Him? Is any experience dearer to you than your Lord? He must be Lord over you, and you must not pay attention to any experience over which He is not Lord. There comes a time when God will make you impatient with your own experience - I do not care what I experience; I am sure of Him.

Be ruthless with yourself if you are given to talking about the experiences you have had. Faith that is sure of itself is not faith; faith that is sure of God is the only faith there is.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 21, August 21, December 21
Chapter 64: On Constituting an Abbess

Once she has been constituted,
let the Abbess always bear in mind
what a burden she has undertaken
and to whom she will have to give an account of her stewardship,
and let her know that her duty is rather to profit her sisters
than to preside over them.
She must therefore be learned in the divine law,
that she may have a treasure of knowledge
from which to bring forth new things and old.
She must be chaste, sober and merciful.
Let her exalt mercy above judgment,
that she herself may obtain mercy.
She should hate vices;
she should love the sisterhood.

In administering correction
she should act prudently and not go to excess,
lest in seeking too eagerly to scrape off the rust
she break the vessel.
Let her keep her own frailty ever before her eyes
and remember that the bruised reed must not be broken.
By this we do not mean that she should allow vices to grow;
on the contrary, as we have already said,
she should eradicate them prudently and with charity,
in the way which may seem best in each case.
Let her study rather to be loved than to be feared.

Let her not be excitable and worried,
nor exacting and headstrong,
nor jealous and over-suspicious;
for then she is never at rest.

In her commands let her be prudent and considerate;
and whether the work which she enjoins
concerns God or the world,
let her be discreet and moderate,
bearing in mind the discretion of holy Jacob, who said,
"If I cause my flocks to be overdriven,
they will all die in one day."
Taking this, then, and other examples of discretion,
the mother of virtues,
let her so temper all things
that the strong may have something to strive after,
and the weak may not fall back in dismay.

And especially let her keep this Rule in all its details,
so that after a good ministry
she may hear from the Lord what the good servant heard
who gave the fellow-servants wheat in due season:
"Indeed, I tell you, he will set that one over all his goods" (Matt. 24:27).

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

At the end of an entire series of injunctions and prescriptions, Benedict suddenly reintroduces a description of the kind of abbot or prioress whom he believes should guide a Benedictine community. He is, in other words, giving us a theology of authority or parenting or leadership. The Talmud reads "Happy is the time where the great listen to the small, for in such a generation the small will listen to the great." In the Rule of Benedict the prioress and abbot are told to display the good like a blazing fire but always to "let mercy triumph over judgment" and to "strive to be loved rather than feared." Authority in Benedictine spirituality is not an end in itself nor is it an excuse to oppress the people for whom all law is made. Law is simply a candle on the path of life to lead us to the good we seek. Any authority that makes the law the end rather than the path are themselves worshipping at a lesser shrine.

In the midrash Genesis Rabbah it reads: "A farmer puts a yoke on his strong ox, not on his weak one." The function of Benedictine leadership is not to make life difficult; it is to make life possible for both the strong and the weak. If a leader gives way to moodiness or institutional paranoia, if a leader is not emotionally balanced and spiritually grounded, a whole climate is poisoned. This chapter on the abbot or prioress is an important signal for parents and teachers and superiors everywhere: what we cannot model, we cannot expect, not of children, not of the professionals who work for us, not even of the people who love us enough to marry us. The people around us can only take our emotional battering so long. Then they leave or rebel or batter back. Benedictine leadership models a guidance that is firm but loving; clear but understanding; just but merciful; itself authentically committed to its own principles for, indeed, the rabbis also teach, "A little sin is big when a big person commits it."

In ancient civilizations, the law was the lawgiver's law. Subjects had no rights, only responsibilities. The lawgiver could change the law on a whim or a fancy. In the Roman empire, the pater familia, the Roman father, could do no wrong in his own home. No court of law would try him, no one would convict him. He himself according to the principles of Roman jurisprudence was judge and jury, king and lawgiver. In a climate and culture such as this, the chapter on the abbot or prioress, and this paragraph in particular, are extremely revolutionary. This section issues a clear warning: authority has limits; authority is not a law unto itself; authority is responsible to the persons under it for their welfare and their growth; authority itself is under the law. It is a theology such as this that makes people free and keeps people free because the knee we bow to government must really be bowed only to God.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Friday, December 21, 2007 Nativity Fast Peter, Metropolitan of
Moscow and All Russia
Kellia: Leviticus 8:1-13 Epistle: Hebrews 11:8,
11-16 Gospel: St. Mark 10:23-32

Foreshadows ~ V * A Great High Priest: Leviticus 8:1-13 LXX, especially
vs. 12: "And Moses poured the anointing oil on the head of Aaron; and he
anointed him and sanctified him." God, through Moses' action, provided
a high priest - a Forerunner of Christ under the Old Covenant - to
preside over the rites and ceremonies of Israel's worship in the desert
tabernacle. The present passage describes the consecration of Moses'
brother, Aaron, who was the first in the long line of Aaronic high
priests. This lineage of men presided for centuries over Israel's
worship, both in the desert tabernacles and later in the temples at
Jerusalem. The line of Aaronic high priests continued to serve until
the third and last temple was destroyed by the Roman legions in AD 70.

In two significant ways, Aaron was a type or foreshadowing of our "great
High Priest Who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God"
(Heb. 4:14). 1) The Lord Jesus was a flesh-and-blood human being like
Aaron. 2) God chose Christ from among men to act as High Priest, for He
did not take the role upon Himself, but was designated by God, just as
Aaron was. In addition, since no type perfectly represents the
fulfillment, there are also three differences between Christ our great
High Priest and the Aaronic high priests. 1) The Lord Jesus had no
earthly father. 2) He was not in the lineage of Aaron. And 3) He never
offered sacrifices for sins in an earthly tabernacle or temple. Rather,
He ushered in the age of the New Covenant, fulfilling the sacrifice for
sins by uniting history and eternity in one final act of Divine
forgiveness.

>From among all the sons of the tribe of Levi, God chose Aaron to be
the first high priest in the long line that continued until shortly
after the Lord's Passion and Resurrection, for as the text says: "the
Lord spoke to Moses, saying, Take Aaron and his sons" (Lev. 8:1,2).
Similarly, as the Apostle teaches, Christ "was appointed by Him Who said
to Him, 'Thou art My Son, today I have begotten Thee" (Heb. 5 :5).
Nevertheless, Jesus was of the same humanity as the high priests of the
Old Covenant, so that we have "a great High Priest Who has passed
through the heavens," yet is a fellow human being Who is able "to
sympathize with our weaknesses... Who in every respect has been tempted
as we are, yet without sin" (Heb. 4:14,15).

The Lord Jesus, as our great High Priest, was chosen by God to share the
same role before God as did the high priests of the Old Covenant: "to
act on behalf of men in relation to God, to offer gifts and sacrifices
for sins" (Heb. 5:1). Notice that when Aaron was led before the
assembly of Israel to be consecrated as high priest, "the calf for the
sin-offering, and the two rams, and the basket of unleavened bread" also
were brought to the ceremony (Lev. 8:2). Why? So that Aaron would have
gifts to offer and a sacrifice for the people's accumulated sins.
Christ, on the other hand, knowing full well that God takes no eternal
pleasure in men's imperfect burnt offerings for sins, came, instead,
truly to accomplish God's eternal perfect will - to offer the one,
unique and ultimate sin offering of Himself, once and for all in His Own
body (Heb. 10:6,10).

Just as Aaron did not present himself to serve as high priest but was
chosen of God (Lev. 8:1,2), so also the Lord Jesus was chosen to do
God's will (Heb. 10:7). Here, however, ends the likenesses between
Aaronic high priests and Christ. Christ is an eternal High Priest,
holding "His priesthood permanently, because He continues for ever"
(Heb. 7:24). Furthermore, our great High Priest's offering for sin was
offered not just on earth (on the Cross), and "not into a sanctuary made
with hands, a copy of the true one, but into heaven itself, now to
appear in the presence of God on our behalf" (Heb. 9:24).

Glory in the highest to God, the One in Trinity, through Whom goodwill
appeared among men to deliver Adam from the ancient curse; for He is the
Lover of mankind!

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Daily Meditation 12/20/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]





Collect

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 50; PM Psalm [59, 60] or 33
Zech. 4:1-14; Rev. 4:9-5:5; Matt. 25:1-13
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Matthew 25:1-13. Five of them were foolish, and five were wise.

It's time to separate the wise from the foolish. Foolish? That would be me.


Once again, my Christmas shopping isn't finished. Once again, I've put off sending the Christmas cards; if my past is any indicator, I won't send them at all. Once again, I underestimate the amount of time it takes to wrap and pack gifts. Once again, I panic at the post office, praying that they'll be more efficient than I am.


It's that time of year when the foolish--and even a few of the wise--say, "I'm stretched to the breaking point; I'm stressed out to the point of exploding; I can't handle it." It can be depressing, especially for the perfectionists among us.


Well, I work full-time, and I have a family and a house, and I have responsibilities at my church. I can't do it all. What's more, it's okay if I can't do it all. I'll decide what really has to be done and let the rest of it slide; I'll delegate more to other members of my family. Most of all, I'll keep my sense of humor--and my sense of proportion--and try to remember the real point of the celebration.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Church of the Province of Myanmar and Diocese of Yangon
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Daily Reading for December 20

O Day-Spring, Brightness of Light everlasting, and Sun of Righteousness: Come and enlighten those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death.

There can be few words of such universal significance as ‘light’. It is both a common metaphor and a potent religious symbol. One of the most beautiful prayers in the Hindu scriptures is ‘Lead me from the unreal to the real, lead me from darkness to light, lead me from death to immortality’, words which have been incorporated into the baptismal liturgy of the Church of South India. The Hindu festival of lights, Diwali, which, incidentally, usually falls quite close to Advent, celebrates the hope of returning light when the days are getting shorter. Muslims affirm ‘God is the light of the heavens and earth’ (Qur’an 24:35). The religion of ancient Persia, Zoroastrianism, calls God ‘Ahura Mazda’, Wise Lord and Lord of Light, and the sacred, ever burning fire symbolizes the eternal divine light. The first specific thing which God created, according to the Genesis account, was light (Genesis 1:3).

The universal idea of light as closely related to God finds its fulfillment in the Jewish and Christian scriptures and preeminently in Christ, the light of the world. The Antiphon O Oriens brings out a special aspect of the light of Christ by its use of the word Oriens, rising sun, day-spring, dawn. It is new light, light after darkness, light which has conquered darkness. In some ways the most welcome light of all is the dawn which brings the long, weary night to an end. Jesus is the dawn which we long for above all things. He is the new light that fills us with hope, putting to flight the darkness of despair. The new light also guides us when we have been floundering in the darkness of ignorance, uncertainty and indecision by leading us into the way of peace, the wholeness of communion with God.

From O Come Emmanuel: Scripture Verses for Advent Worship by William Marshall. Copyright © 1993. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com

O Day-Spring,
dawn of day,
bright clearness of the light:
Sometimes, in the very early morning,
I watch for your coming
to unravel the darkness,
to unhide the unknown,
to unmask the shapes and shadows of the night;
And in your sun-brilliant shining
to discover the secrets of righteousness and justice,
to discern and learn that where you are,
there is no shadow,
no darkness,
no death.

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Whales and redwoods both make us feel small and I think that's an important experience for humans to have at the hands of nature. We need to recognize that we are not the stars of the show. We're just another pretty face, just one species among millions more.
— Roger Payne in Talking on the Water

To Practice This Thought: Visit the woods or the zoo. Admire all the pretty faces ther
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Enter within yourself and work in the presence of your Spouse Who is ever present loving you.
St John of the Cross
Spiritual Canticle, 1.8
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

The Holy Spirit often visits us; but if He does not find rest how
can He remain? He departs. Joy is in the hearts of those who are
cleansed and who are able to maintain within themselves the grace
of the Holy Spirit of the All-holy Trinity. There is no greater
joy and happiness for man. I am not able to describe to you how
one feels then.

Elder Ieronymos of Aegina
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Seeing God for Others

The experience of the fullness of time, during which God is so present, so real, so tangibly near that we can hardly believe that everyone does not see God as we do, is given to us to deepen our lives of prayer and strengthen our lives of ministry. Having experienced God in the fullness of time, we have a lifelong desire to be with God and to proclaim to others the God we experienced.

Peter, years after the death of Jesus, claims his Mount Tabor experience as the source for his witness. He says: "When we told you about the power and the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, we were not slavishly repeating cleverly invented myths; no, we had seen his majesty with our own eyes ... when we were with him on the holy mountain" (2 Peter 1:16-18). Seeing God in the most intimate moments of our lives is seeing God for others.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twenty - The Third Way of Service, cont'd

Tertiaries endeavor to serve others in active work. We try to find expression for each of the three aims of the Order in our lives, and whenever possible actively help others who are engaged in similar work. The chief form of service which we have to offer is to reflect the love of Christ, who, in his beauty and power, is the inspiration and joy of our lives.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Calling Up Visions
December 20th, 2007
Thursday’s Reflection

IN JOYOUS ANTICIPATION of her firstborn, Mary sings revolution. Enraptured that God chose her, a maiden of no prominence, a woman with no voice, to bear the world’s savior, her joy calls up visions of the rich tasting the dust of poverty, the powerful limping with the burden of oppression. …

Mary would, I suspect, have us dream dreams and tell tales of hope, the kind of hope that the rich and powerful are too busy and satisfied to entertain, the kind of hope that sustains us in our poverty. That takes knowing our poverty, if not poverty of money, the poverty of intimacy and belonging — the very things our souls need most, the very things that require setting aside possessions and power. Mary’s anger frees us to celebrate her son’s birth. Let her in.

- J. Marshall Jenkins
The Upper Room Disciplines 2006

From p. 365 of The Upper Room Disciplines 2006. Copyright © 2005 by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html



Base Communities

We have a lot to learn from people like Quakers and Mennonites. They're well practiced in being a minority. They don't need to have crowds around them to believe in the truth. They gather in little groupings and share the word of God. Thank God this is also happening now, again, in the Catholic Church, in the base communities.

Out of the people who don't consider themselves experts or theologians comes a special gospel wisdom. It surpasses the wisdom that we ever came to by thinking that white, materially secure celibate males were the group who could best interpret the word of God. Whatever gave us the idea that a select group of overeducated people would best understand what God was saying to all people?

The poor and uneducated are reclaiming the word of God. The word of God is being reclaimed by women, by people of color and by people who still understand community and family relationships, by people who look at life from the side of the victims instead of the victors.

The word of God is being reclaimed by those who haven't been beneficiaries of the system. And we're finding that the word of God is being read with a vitality, with a truth, with a freedom that is frightening and makes some of us wonder if we've ever understood it before.

When we see what the gospel demands of our lives, we may not even want to understand it.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Announcement of the birth of Jesus

There came a deep silence. Everything was still. The voices of prophets and apostles were hushed, since the prophets had already delivered their message, while the time for the apostles' preaching had yet to come. Between these two proclamations a period of silence intervened, and in the midst of this silence the Father's almighty Word leaped down from his royal throne. There is a beautiful fitness here: in the intervening silence the Mediator between God and the human race also intervened, coming as a human being to human beings, as mortal to mortals, to save the dead from death.

I pray that the Word of the Lord may come again today to those who are silent, and that we may hear what the Lord God says to us in our hearts. Let us silence the desires and importunings of the flesh and the vainglorious fantasies of our imagination, so that we can freely hear what the Spirit is saying. Let our ears be attuned to the voice that is heard above the vault of heaven, for the Spirit of life is always speaking to our souls; as scripture says, a voice is heard above the firmament which hangs over our heads. But as long as we fix our attention on other things, we do not hear what the Spirit is saying to us.

Julian of Vezelay
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

THE RIGHT LINES OF WORK


"I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto Me." John 12:32

Very few of us have any understanding of the reason why Jesus Christ died. If sympathy is all that human beings need, then the Cross of Christ is a farce, there was no need for it. What the world needs is not "a little bit of love," but a surgical operation.

When you are face to face with a soul in difficulty spiritually, remind yourself of Jesus Christ on the Cross. If that soul can get to God on any other line, then the Cross of Jesus Christ is unnecessary. If you can help others by your sympathy or understanding, you are a traitor to Jesus Christ. You have to keep your soul rightly related to God and pour out for others on His line, not pour out on the human line and ignore God. The great note to-day is amiable religiosity.

The one thing we have to do is to exhibit Jesus Christ crucified, to lift Him up all the time. Every doctrine that is not imbedded in the Cross of Jesus will lead astray. If the worker himself believes in Jesus Christ and is banking on the Reality of Redemption, the people he talks to must be concerned. The thing that remains and deepens is the worker's simple relationship to Jesus Christ; his usefulness to God depends on that and that alone.

The calling of a New Testament worker is to uncover sin and to reveal Jesus Christ as Saviour, consequently he cannot be poetical, he must be sternly surgical. We are sent by God to lift up Jesus Christ, not to give wonderfully beautiful discourses. We have to probe straight down as deeply as God has probed us, to be keen in sensing the Scriptures which bring the truth straight home and to apply them fearlessly.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 20, August 20, December 20
Chapter 64: On Constituting an Abbess

In the constituting of an Abbess
let this plan always be followed,
that the office be conferred on the one who is chosen
either by the whole community unanimously in the fear of God
or else by a part of the community, however small,
if its counsel is more wholesome.

Merit of life and wisdom of doctrine
should determine the choice of the one to be constituted,
even if she be the last of the order of the community.

But if (which God forbid)
the whole community should agree to choose a person
who will acquiesce in their vices,
and if those vices somehow become known to the Bishop
to whose diocese the place belongs,
or to the Abbots, Abbesses or the faithful of the vicinity,
let them prevent the success of this conspiracy of the wicked,
and set a worthy steward over the house of God.
They may be sure
that they will receive a good reward for this action
if they do it with a pure intention and out of zeal for God;
as, on the contrary, they will sin if they fail to do it.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

April 20, August 20, December 20
Chapter 64: On Constituting an Abbess

In the constituting of an Abbess
let this plan always be followed,
that the office be conferred on the one who is chosen
either by the whole community unanimously in the fear of God
or else by a part of the community, however small,
if its counsel is more wholesome.

Merit of life and wisdom of doctrine
should determine the choice of the one to be constituted,
even if she be the last of the order of the community.

But if (which God forbid)
the whole community should agree to choose a person
who will acquiesce in their vices,
and if those vices somehow become known to the Bishop
to whose diocese the place belongs,
or to the Abbots, Abbesses or the faithful of the vicinity,
let them prevent the success of this conspiracy of the wicked,
and set a worthy steward over the house of God.
They may be sure
that they will receive a good reward for this action
if they do it with a pure intention and out of zeal for God;
as, on the contrary, they will sin if they fail to do it.

The way an abbot or prioress is chosen is, like most other things in the rule, left up to the changing needs of the group. Why an abbot or prioress is chosen is not. As far as the rule is concerned, only "those who show goodness of life and wisdom in teaching" are fit for the position. Fund raisers and business people, efficiency experts and pious ascetics, administrators and philosophers are not ruled out, they are simply not defined in as categories that demand consideration. The implication is that if we choose those good of life and wise of heart then everything else will follow. We, of course, are always tempted to look for short cuts to success: we look for the people who can trim our organizations or shape up our projects or stabilize our ministries. Benedictine spirituality cautions us always to follow only the good and the wise, only those who call us to our best selves, our fullest selves, knowing that if we live according to the scriptures and choose according to the deepest and highest and greatest of human ideals, then life cannot fail for us, whatever its struggles, whatever its cost. "If I do not acquire ideals in my youth, " Maimonides wrote, "when will I? Not in old age."

Benedictine spirituality tells us to choose for ideals at every turn, even at those times when management seems more important than vision.

There is no such thing as a private life in a globalized world. For a monastery, there never was. The monastery is that model of a place where the doors are always open, the environment is always gentle, the rhythm is always ordered and God is always the center of life. A monastery is to be a light to remind all of us how beautiful the world would be if we shaped our own lives out of the same values. A Benedictine monastery is not of the church in the sense that a diocesan seminary or diocesan college is. It is not built by the church or operated by local diocesan officials. But it is definitely in the church and for the church. What happens in a Benedictine monastery should touch the spiritual life of an entire region. For that reason, whatever might erode monastic life--a breakdown of lifestyle, a contrived election, a loss of authenticity--is definitely everybody else's business. And the Rule takes care to guarantee and to maintain that sense of public acknowledgement and accountability. "The voice of the people is as the voice of God," a Jewish midrash writes. In this paragraph, Benedict requires the people to be the voice of God so that the house of God can be saved. If the monastery calls the public to commitment, there is no doubt that Benedict intends the public to call monasteries to authenticity as well so that Benedictine spirituality can continue to permeate the Church. We are all guides for one another.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.

Thursday, December 20, 2007 Nativity Fast Hieromartyr
Ignatios, Bishop of Antioch
Kellia: Exodus 32:1-7, 15-28 Epistle: Hebrews 10:35-11:7
Gospel: St. Mark 10:17-27

Foreshadows ~ IV * Sin and Shame: Exodus 32:1-7, 15-28 LXX, especially
vs. 27: "Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Put every one his sword on
his thigh, and go through and return from gate to gate through the camp,
and slay every one his brother, and everyone his neighbor, and every one
him that is nearest to him." A few idealists have longed to return the
Church of today to the "New Testament Church," an imagined entity of
pure and uncorrupted fellowship and practice. Such longing is fantasy,
springing from confused thinking and failure to read Holy Scripture with
the Church. St. Paul points out "There is none righteous, no, not one"
(Rom. 3:10). Sin plagues us all. Even among those who knew the Lord
Jesus in the flesh, even among the beloved Twelve whom the Lord Himself
chose, there were those "who would betray Him" (Jn. 6:64). And after
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, still there were those who tried to
trouble the Faithful and "pervert the Gospel of Christ" with their own
ideas (Gal. 1:7).

The present passage records one more example from the long history of
the People of God in which men from among the chosen took upon
themselves to fashion the Faith to their own liking. Yes, there have
been heretics and schismatics who have asserted themselves and their
God-given liberty "as an opportunity for the flesh" (Gal. 5:13). Sadly,
sin does arise in the Church and brings shame on God's People and the
Gospel of Christ. Read this present passage carefully and learn how
easily you may be corrupted (Ex. 32:7). Further, pray to God that He
will aid you and all of us to remain honorable members of His Church and
heirs of His Kingdom.

A symptom of which to be wary, one that should alert us to spiritual
danger, is impatience with those whom God has provided to guide the
Church. Let us be cautious within ourselves when we find irritation in
our hearts toward our Bishops or Priests. "When the people saw that
Moses delayed to come down from the mountain, the people gathered
themselves together" (vs. 1). They grew restless waiting for the
Prophet to return, and so they descended on Aaron like a mob, not to
express fears and concerns, but to demand action. Notice the two
imperative verbs, "Arise, make us gods...." (vs. 1). How ready they
were to cast Moses aside rather than to wait until God should send him
to them again (vs. 1). "Be subject unto God, O my soul, for from Him is
my patient endurance....I shall not be moved from hence" (Ps. 61:5,6 LXX).

Next, be attentive to the subtle temptation of making gods in your own
image. There is a special danger in this scientific age to discount the
possibility of falling into idolatry. The action of the Israelites
seems so unsophisticated, demanding "gods who shall go before us" (Ex.
32:1). Yet, the modern mind has proved quite capable of being
captivated by things and ideas and of falling into the trap of giving
persons, programs, movements, or theories the worship and devotion that
is due to God alone. Doing so is idolatry, the making of other gods.
The temptation is especially active as men are inconvenienced, fearful,
or insecure. "Let the peoples give Thee praise, O God, let all the
peoples praise Thee" (Ps. 66:3 LXX).

Finally, in this passage there is a warning against another sin sure to
shame us before God: desiring to have our Faith be nothing but feasting
and dancing, craving only the pleasures, and being unwilling to
undertake any of the efforts required to remain "on the Lord's side"
(Ex. 32:26). What of the four seasons of Fasting, what of
self-examination and confession, what of regular attendance at worship,
what of sacrificial giving? Let us beware of becoming "scattered" to
the "rejoicing" of our "enemies" (vs. 25).

"O Lord, before Thee is all my desire, and my groaning is not hid from
Thee. For in Thee have I hoped, O Lord; Thou wilt hearken unto me, O
Lord, my God" (Ps. 37:9,15 LXX).

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Reading for Dec 19, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 19, August 19, December 19
Chapter 63: On the Order of the Community

The juniors, therefore, should honor their seniors,
and the seniors love their juniors.

In the very manner of address,
let no one call another by the mere name;
but let the seniors call their juniors Brothers,
and the juniors call their seniors Fathers,
by which is conveyed the reverence due to a father.
But the Abbot,
since he is believed to represent Christ,
shall be called Lord and Abbot,
not for any pretensions of his own
but out of honor and love for Christ.
Let the Abbot himself reflect on this,
and show himself worthy of such an honor.

And wherever the brethren meet one another
the junior shall ask the senior for his blessing.
When a senior passes by,
a junior shall rise and give him a place to sit,
nor shall the junior presume to sit with him
unless his senior bid him,
that it may be as was written,
"In honor anticipating one another."

Boys, both small and adolescent,
shall keep strictly to their rank in oratory and at table.
But outside of that, wherever they may be,
let them be under supervision and discipline,
until they come to the age of discretion.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Some thoughts:

As a Baby Boomer, it is perhaps my generation that is most responsible for the demise of respect of one's elders. Now that I am somewhat handicapped, walk with can and am a woman of a certain age, with 0/20 hindsight, I can see that it was perhaps a mistake to fail to trust and respect any one over 30. Mostly because I'd liek to be on the receiving end of respeting one's elders.

Sister Joan and other's may find more profound meaning in today's reading. I find something that calls me to repentance for past errors of judgement and sins of omission and commission.


This paragraph is clearly about the place of respect, experience and wisdom in life. Obviously, the chapter on rank is not meant to grind the community down to its least common denominator. It is not meant to diminish in us the natural respect that differences should bring. Quite the opposite, in fact. This chapter is meant to freshen our eyes so that we can see all the gifts of the human community clearly: the gifts of old peasant farmers and the gifts of young artists, the gifts of young thinkers and the gifts of old keepers of the monastery door. Age, the Rule teaches, does not give us the right to dismiss the values of the young as if they were useless. Social class does not give us the right to overlook the insights of the poor. Education does not give us the right to snub the needs of the simple. We are to call one another by titles of love and respect. We are to care for the needs of the elderly, no matter our own needs or rank or station. We are to teach what we know so that the next generation grows in good air.

Once upon a time, the Zen masters teach, wealthy donors invited Master Ikkyu to a banquet. The Master arrived there dressed in beggar's robes. His host, not recognizing him in this garb, hustled him away: "We cannot have you here at the doorstep. We are expecting the famous Master Ikkyu any moment." The Master went home, changed into his ceremonial robe of purple brocade, and again presented himself at his host's doorstep where he was received with great respect and ushered into the banquet room. There, he took off his stiff robe, sat it upright at the dinner table and said, "I presume that it is my robe you have invited since when I first arrived without it a little while ago, you showed me away." In Benedictine spirituality reverence for the other based on the spark of the divine that is in us all is a gift to be given to a century alive with distinctions it will not admit and an insight into the sacred, scarred and bleeding, which it does not see.

Labels: , ,

Daily Meditation 12/19/07

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]





Collect

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 50; PM Psalm [59, 60] or 33
Zech. 4:1-14; Rev. 4:9-5:5; Matt. 25:1-13
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Psalm 49. My mouth shall speak of wisdom, and my heart shall meditate on understanding.

Each week I lead a service of Morning Prayer at a nearby assisted living residence. I've been doing it since the place opened. Over several years, the group has changed, as the women--and they are almost all women--die or need more specialized care. But we make strong connections in our time together.


They help each other find places to sit, find pillows to prop up backs, find the right page in the booklet. Those who can see well help those who can't to find the right page and say the responses.


They help me, too. I've learned to be more patient, to relax with the liturgy, to slow down and speak up. I've learned something about living gracefully with pain and disability, about recognizing who needs help and who needs to do something on her own.


There is sorrow here as abilities wane, but there is also wisdom, fellowship, and camaraderie, blessings at the end of life. Each week they thank me for coming. Each week I thank them. My life is far richer for praying with them.


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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Yambio (Sudan)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/



O Clavis David

Daily Reading for December 19

O Key of David and Scepter of the house of Israel, you open and no one can close; you close and no one can open: Come and bring captives out of the prison house, those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death.

Only those who have been incarcerated can know fully the isolation and dehumanization of being physically locked in prison—the humiliation of strip searches, the desolation of loneliness, the fear of physical and sexual abuse from officers and other inmates, the terror of nightmares, the often unabated guilt and anger over past mistakes. It is no wonder that the scriptural texts for today’s antiphon refer to prisons as an analogy for darkness and captivity, and then also echo a hope of future release and freedom.

It is only because Christ comes as the Key of David that prison can also be a place of transformation. In his book, Summons to Serve, Richard Atherton shared his vision of one redeeming influence of prison life. Atherton, for many years a prison chaplain in England, knew first hand of the harshness of prison life. “Using the imagery of Scripture, I like to think of prison as a desert; a place where the human spirit may be purified and ennobled but, alas, more easily twisted and damaged; a place that is often threatening and almost always unpredictable; a place where faith is put to the test—the faith of the inmates, but that of their pastor too; a place of loneliness and powerlessness and frustration, where [one] begins to feel . . . the truth of our Lord’s words: ‘Without me you can do nothing’ (John 15:5); and so ultimately a place of encounter with God.”

For those who have not experienced life in an actual prison, there are, nevertheless, other “prison” experiences—prisons that can be rigorously isolating and dehumanizing in their own way. There is a prison of fear and hate, a prison of anger, and a prison of resistance to openness and change; there is a prison of physical limitation and disability, of painful relationships, of difficult employment, and of unemployment. Most often we lock ourselves into these prisons; with Christ, however, even here we can encounter God. And it is this encounter that will begin the unlocking, opening process to freedom.

O Key of David,
come,
unlock my prison of self-distrust and fear,
of secrecy and doubt,
of injustice and unkindness.
Unlock my blindness
to the splendor and glory of your light.
Unlock my deafness
to the melody of the world
and the harmony of the universe.
Unlock my stumbling lameness
to the dance of your life.
Unlock my depression and gloom
to the majesty and gentleness of your love.

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

I believe that the true moral path of the twenty-first century will be very different from the modern era because it will be marked by generosity: not "Everyone for himself (or herself)" but "Who can give away the most?" — the most time, the most of one's gifts, the most of one's dreams and hopes and accomplishments of hands, head and heart.
— Matthew Fox in Sins of the Spirit, Blessings of the Flesh

To Practice This Thought: Give away something — work without compensation, don't take credit for something you've done.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Confidence, nothing but confidence leads to the love of God.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm


I consider those fallen mourners more blessed than those who have
not fallen and are not mourning over themselves; because as a
result of their fall, they have risen by a sure resurrection.

St. John of the Ladder
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

The Mountaintop Experience

At some moments we experience complete unity within us and around us. This may happen when we stand on a mountaintop and are captivated by the view. It may happen when we witness the birth of a child or the death of a friend. It may happen when we have an intimate conversation or a family meal. It may happen in church during a service or in a quiet room during prayer. But whenever and however it happens we say to ourselves: "This is it ... everything fits ... all I ever hoped for is here."

This is the experience that Peter, James, and John had on the top of Mount Tabor when they saw the aspect of Jesus' face change and his clothing become sparkling white. They wanted that moment to last forever (see Luke 9:28-36). This is the experience of the fullness of time. These moments are given to us so that we can remember them when God seems far away and everything appears empty and useless. These experiences are true moments of grace.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Ten - The Third Aim

Day Nineteen - The Third Way of Service - Work

Jesus took on himself the form of a servant. He came not to be served, but to serve. He went about doing good: healing the sick, preaching good news to the poor, and binding up the broken hearted.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Advent Celebrations
December 19th, 2007
Wednesday’s Reflection

WHAT WE CELEBRATE during Advent and Christmas is the completely new way God comes to us in Jesus Christ. We also celebrate the new persons we are becoming because God sent Jesus, God’s own beloved Son, to the world God loved so much. … Our Advent celebrations are based on our hope that God will bring a new heaven and a new earth in which all creatures have everything they need for life and live together in harmony with one another.

- Blair Gilmer Meeks
Expecting the Unexpected

From pp. 16-17 of Expecting the Unexpected by Blair Gilmer Meeks. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html


Let Reality Get at Me

Many of our people create for themselves a permanently maintained happiness in the midst of so much public suffering. That state is based on an illusion about the nature of reality. It can only work if we block ourselves from a certain degree of that reality. That's what's meant by denial.

The Christian, though, is always saying, "Come, Lord Jesus." In other words, "Let reality get at me, the full reality, the Cosmic Christ, all that is."

The Incarnation is the refusal of all denial. It is God saying yes to the muddy, the messy, the partial, the powerlessness of it all.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr

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The Merton Reflection for the Week of December 17, 2007

St. Ambrose [Bishop of Milan, d. 397], in his succinct little tract De Institutione Virginis (On the Education of a Virgin), blends mysticism and humanism together in a manner that merits much more detailed study than we can attempt here. The full maturity of the Christian life is attained in a virginal union with Christ which itself implies the perfect integration of the whole human person. Union with Christ implies His entrance into a personality which is perfectly united in all its three traditional elements of body, soul, and spirit-corpus, anima, spiritus.
 This treatise of St. Ambrose's is particularly interesting for its outspoken defense of women in general. Basing himself on the creation narrative of Genesis and on St. Paul's doctrine of the mystery of Christ typified in the union of Adam and Eve, the mystical humanism of Ambrose declares that man without woman is physically and spiritually incomplete, and that woman is in a very deep sense the "glory" of man, his spiritual completion, his "grace," without whom he cannot fully possess or recover his true being in Christ. . . .
 [T]he beauty of woman's body is a great work of God, meant to be a sign of that far greater interior beauty, the special clarity and loveliness of her spirit. Indeed, St. Ambrose declares, it is quite evident that women are more generous, more virtuous, more self-sacrificing then men. . . . .
 This totally refreshing defense of woman gives us some indication of the depth and reality of patristic humanism. Indeed, how can there be true "humanism" when half of the human race is ignored or excluded? Pagan humanism, the exclusive preserve of man, only exalts his complacency and justifies his selfishness with a veneer of philosophy. A humanism for men only is, as we have seen, nothing but a barbarous falsehood. The light of true humanism is kindled by the Incarnate Word.

Thomas Merton. "Virginity and Humanism" in Mystics and Zen Masters. New York: Dell Publishing Company, 1961: 118-119.

Thought to Remember:

We do not hear the soft voice, the gentle voice, the feminine voice, the voice of the Mother: yet she speaks everywhere and in everything. Wisdom cries out in the market place-"if anyone is little let him come to me."

Thomas Merton. "Turning Toward the World," Journals Volume 3. Victor A. Kramer, editor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1996: 17.
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

Announcement of John the Baptist

There are certain testimonies proclaimed by the Holy Spirit through the mouths of Isaiah and Jeremiah which, though properly referring to the person of our Lord and Savior, are also by the Church's divinely given authority and the consensus of the faithful fittingly applied to the forerunner. But even more clearly has the Holy Spirit borne witness to John. The gospel tells us how John was filled with the Holy Spirit while still in his mother's womb and leapt for joy in the presence of the mother of his Lord, moved by no natural impulse but by the stirring of divine grace. Later John bore witness to Christ the Lord in the words: Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world! and Christ in his own preaching gave testimony to John, saying: Among the sons of women there has never arisen a greater than John the Baptist. Calling him the greatest among those born of women, he drew attention to John's constancy and austere manner of life and declared him to be a prophet and more than a prophet. By his own divine power Christ endowed John with privileges and graces in excess of all others, describing him, through the lips of the prophet Malachi, as the messenger who was to go before him to prepare the path of his salvation.

Odilo of Cluny
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

WHAT TO CONCENTRATE ON


"I came not to send peace, but a sword." Matthew 10:34

Never be sympathetic with the soul whose case makes you come to the conclusion that God is hard. God is more tender than we can conceive, and every now and again He gives us the chance of being the rugged one that He may be the tender One. If a man cannot get through to God it is because there is a secret thing he does not intend to give up - I will admit I have done wrong, but I no more intend to give up that thing than fly. It is impossible to deal sympathetically with a case like that: we have to get right deep down to the root until there is antagonism and resentment against the message. People want the blessing of God, but they will not stand the thing that goes straight to the quick.

If God has had His way with you, your message as His servant is merciless insistence on the one line, cut down to the very root, otherwise there will be no healing. Drive home the message until there is no possible refuge from its application. Begin to get at people where they are until you get them to realize what they lack, and then erect the standard of Jesus Christ for their lives - "We never can be that." Then drive it home - "Jesus Christ says you must." "But how can we be?" "You cannot, unless you have a new Spirit." (Luke 11:13.)

There must be a sense of need before your message is of any use. Thousands of people are happy without God in this world. If I was happy and moral till Jesus came, why did He come? Because that kind of happiness and peace is on a wrong level; Jesus Christ came to send a sword through every peace that is not based on a personal relationship to Himself.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 19, August 19, December 19
Chapter 63: On the Order of the Community

The juniors, therefore, should honor their seniors,
and the seniors love their juniors.

In the very manner of address,
let no one call another by the mere name;
but let the seniors call their juniors Brothers,
and the juniors call their seniors Fathers,
by which is conveyed the reverence due to a father.
But the Abbot,
since he is believed to represent Christ,
shall be called Lord and Abbot,
not for any pretensions of his own
but out of honor and love for Christ.
Let the Abbot himself reflect on this,
and show himself worthy of such an honor.

And wherever the brethren meet one another
the junior shall ask the senior for his blessing.
When a senior passes by,
a junior shall rise and give him a place to sit,
nor shall the junior presume to sit with him
unless his senior bid him,
that it may be as was written,
"In honor anticipating one another."

Boys, both small and adolescent,
shall keep strictly to their rank in oratory and at table.
But outside of that, wherever they may be,
let them be under supervision and discipline,
until they come to the age of discretion.

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html


This paragraph is clearly about the place of respect, experience and wisdom in life. Obviously, the chapter on rank is not meant to grind the community down to its least common denominator. It is not meant to diminish in us the natural respect that differences should bring. Quite the opposite, in fact. This chapter is meant to freshen our eyes so that we can see all the gifts of the human community clearly: the gifts of old peasant farmers and the gifts of young artists, the gifts of young thinkers and the gifts of old keepers of the monastery door. Age, the Rule teaches, does not give us the right to dismiss the values of the young as if they were useless. Social class does not give us the right to overlook the insights of the poor. Education does not give us the right to snub the needs of the simple. We are to call one another by titles of love and respect. We are to care for the needs of the elderly, no matter our own needs or rank or station. We are to teach what we know so that the next generation grows in good air.

Once upon a time, the Zen masters teach, wealthy donors invited Master Ikkyu to a banquet. The Master arrived there dressed in beggar's robes. His host, not recognizing him in this garb, hustled him away: "We cannot have you here at the doorstep. We are expecting the famous Master Ikkyu any moment." The Master went home, changed into his ceremonial robe of purple brocade, and again presented himself at his host's doorstep where he was received with great respect and ushered into the banquet room. There, he took off his stiff robe, sat it upright at the dinner table and said, "I presume that it is my robe you have invited since when I first arrived without it a little while ago, you showed me away." In Benedictine spirituality reverence for the other based on the spark of the divine that is in us all is a gift to be given to a century alive with distinctions it will not admit and an insight into the sacred, scarred and bleeding, which it does not see.
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Dynamis http://groups.yahoo.com/group/orthodoxdynamis/
Dynamis is a daily Bible meditation based upon the lectionary of the Holy Orthodox Church.


Wednesday, December 19, 2007 Nativity Fast Boniface the Merciful,
Bishop of Ferentino
Kellia: Exodus 24:8-14 Epistle: Hebrews
10:1-18 Gospel: St. Mark 10:11-16

Foreshadows ~ III * Sealing the Covenant: Exodus 24:8-14 LXX, especially
vs. 8: "Behold the blood of the covenant, which the Lord has made with
you concerning all these words." Salesmen are trained to "close" the
deal with the buyer's signature on a contract. In high, solemn moments,
people and nations agree in common ventures, unite in helpful
organizations, marry, adopt, or pledge allegiance one to another. Holy
Scripture records a number of different agreements between human beings,
but only a few covenants between God and men. The principal
Divine-human covenants to which Scripture attests are the ancient one
ratified in the life-time of the Prophet Moses (circa 1500 BC), called
the Old Covenant, and the one sealed between the God-man, Jesus Christ
and those united to Him, called the New Covenant.

The present reading is the account in the Old Testament book of Exodus
concerning the initial sealing of the Old Covenant. It will allow you
to examine the essential elements of all Divine-human covenants: sealing
in blood, Divine Self-revelation, a communion meal, and commandments for
living. As we approach the Nativity of the Lord Jesus Christ, may this
passage enrich your appreciation of the joy in the Church of celebrating
the birth of our Savior.

The Child Whose birth we are preparing to worship is He Who says to you
as one of His Faithful ones, "This cup is the New Covenant in My blood"
(1 Cor. 11:25). The reading speaks of the blood used to seal the Old
Covenant, being thrown or sprinkled upon the People (vs. 8). That blood
was taken from oxen sacrificed as peace offerings to the Lord (Ex.
24:5). In the rite of ratifying the Old Covenant, Moses caught the
blood of these animals in basins. First, he sprinkled half of it on the
altar where animals were wholly offered up to God as "whole burnt
offerings" - that is, they were completely consumed by fire. Then, his
second action was to throw the other half on the People, declaring to
them as he did, "Behold the blood of the Covenant, which the Lord has
made with you concerning all these words" (Ex. 24:8).

Why blood? God's reasons for sealing His covenants with His People in
blood are stated in the Book of Leviticus: "for the life of flesh is in
its blood, and I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for
your souls; for its blood shall make atonement for the soul" (Lev.
17:11). The difference between the Old and New Covenants lies in the
blood offered. In the New Covenant it is not animal blood, but "My
Blood" which is "shed for you and for many, for the forgiveness of
sins," as the Priest recites during the Divine Liturgy.

In both covenants, God revealed Himself to the leaders of the People
with whom He made the covenant. In the Exodus account, the leadership
"went up, and...they saw the place where the God of Israel stood" (Ex.
24:9,10). The mystery of the Nativity lies in God's emptying of His
heavenly majesty, gloriously enthroned with "work of sapphire slabs"
under His feet (vs. 10). Instead, Christ became a human child wrapped
in cloths and laid down in a feeding trough.

The Old Covenant and the New Covenant both were completed with a
Communion meal: "they appeared in the place of God, and did eat and
drink" (vs. 11). And you, "enjoy the banquet of the Lord, an immortal
table...receiving with uplifted minds exalted words from the Word."

Finally, note that the Lord laid down laws and commandments for the
instruction of His People (vs. 12) in establishing both of the great
Covenants. The Lord Jesus is very explicit concerning what He expects
of us His followers: that each take up his cross (Mt. 16:24), that you
and I love one another (Jn. 13:34), and that we disciple the nations
(Mt. 28:19).

O Lord, Who was smitten for the sake of mankind, and was not wroth,
deliver our lives from corruption and save us!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Reading for Dec 16, 2007

Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

April 16, August 16, December 16
Chapter 61: How Pilgrim Monks Are To Be Received

But if as a guest she was found exacting or prone to vice,
not only should she be denied membership in the community,
but she should even be politely requested to leave,
lest others be corrupted by her evil life.

If, however, she has not proved to be the kind
who deserves to be put out,
she should not only on her own application be received
as a member of the community,
but she should even be persuaded to stay,
that the others may be instructed by her example,
and because in every place it is the same Lord who is served,
the same King for whom the battle is fought.

Moreover, if the Abbess perceives that she is worthy,
she may put her in a somewhat higher rank.
[And not only with regard to a nun
but also with regard to those in priestly or clerical orders
previously mentioned,]*
the Abbess may establish them in a higher rank
than would be theirs by date of entrance
if she perceives that their life is deserving.

Let the Abbess take care, however,
never to receive a nun from another known monastery
as a member of her community
without the consent of her Abbess or a letter of recommendation;
for it is written,
"Do not to another what you would not want done to yourself" (Tob. 4:16).

Some thoughts

Jumping right to the end... I wonder when this aphorism from Tobit was rewarded as " Do unto others as you would have them do unto you."

But I can't help wondering if wording it in the negative fashion, as quoted, would be more effective?


If a guest is found exacting... so much provision is made for the comfort of guests already that I guess one would have to be really demanding in order to get kicked out.

Wouldn;t it be wonderful to be the sort of person that the monastic community would try to talk into staying? How many of us instruct others by our example? I've often felt what I do wrong speaks much louder than what i do right. It certainly is remembered longer!!

Benedict warns against poaching. Would that more would take this seriously here in our day and age of church shopping. Or how about various Christian groups evangelising each other rather than focusing their attention on non-Christians?

Insight for the Ages: A Commentary by Sr Joan Chittister
http://www.eriebenedictines.org/Pages/INSPIRATION/insights.html

Labels: , ,

Daily Meditation Dec 16, 2007

[PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A "MENU" FROM WHICH TO PICK AND CHOOSE ONE OR MORE MEDITATIONS. PLEASE DO NOT THINK YOU HAVE TO PRAY ALL OF IT. PLEASE THINK OF IT AS A BUFFET OF THE DIFFERENT FLAVORS OF CHRISTIANITY. IT IS HOPED THAT ALL WILL PRAY THE COLLECT, REFLECT ON THE DAY'S SCRIPTURES AND PRAY THE ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER. AFTER THAT, YOUR CHOICE. THANK YOU]



We beseech thee to listen to our prayers, O Lord,
and by the grace of thy coming enlighten our darkened minds:
Thou who livest and reignest with God the Father
in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever. Amen.


O come, Divine Messiah,
The world in silence waits the day
When hope shall sing its triumph,
And sadness flee away.

Dear Savior haste!
Come, come to earth.
Dispel the night and show Thy face,
And bid us hail the dawn of grace.
O come, Divine Messiah,
The world in silence waits the day
When hope shall sing its triumph,
And sadness flee away.

O Thou whom nations sighed for,
Whom priest and prophet long foretold,
Wilt break the captive fetters,
Redeem the long lost fold.

Dear Savior haste!
Come, come to earth.
Dispel the night and show Thy face,
And bid us hail the dawn of grace.
O come, Divine Messiah,
The world in silence waits the day
When hope shall sing its triumph,
And sadness flee away.

Collect

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 63:1-8(9-11), 98; PM Psalm 103
Amos 9:11-15; 2 Thess. 2:1-3,13-17; John 5:30-47

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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm
Matthew 11:2-11. Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?

Two millennia ago, the Jews sought the promised Messiah; things were grim under Roman rule.


Most people expected the Messiah to be a warlord who would lead them to military glory. John the Baptist, himself widely considered a candidate for Messiahship, wasn't so sure. Never diplomatic, John sent followers to ask Jesus: Are you the one? Jesus simply invited him to examine the evidence: the blind see, the lame walk, the sick are healed, the poor hear the good news.


In our day, people are again looking for someone to set things right. They want some new messiah, or Jesus' return. Once again, they seem to be yearning for someone who will enforce their idea of what needs to be done, whether it's yanking all the good people to heaven and leaving the bad behind to suffer, or imposing some sort of dictatorship here on earth.


I suspect that, now as then, God's kingdom will be established not by fighters, but by those who work quietly among the poor, the sick, the despairing. Jesus is here, in every heart that will admit him and that tries to do God's work.

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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Worcester (Canterbury, England)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Advent Calendars online:

Episcopal Diocese of Washington DC: http://www.edow.org/spirituality/advent/index.html

Alternatives Calendar: http://www.simpleliving.org/

St. Mary Margaret, Napierville, IL: http://www.smmp.com/Advent/Advent.htm

Westminsiter, UK City Council: http://www.westminster.gov.uk/libraries/advent/
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

O Sapientia

Daily Reading for December 16 • The Third Sunday of Advent

O Wisdom, you came forth from the mouth of the Most High and reach from one end of the earth to the other, mightily and sweetly ordering all things: Come and teach us the way of prudence.

In his book, The Far-Spent Night, Edward West pointed out that the first thing needed in preparing to meet the Lord is prudence or “good sense.” “It is good sense,” he said, “which makes the disobedient listen to the wisdom of the just. It is good sense which makes [us] cope with the whole of life as a unit. It is good sense applied to every area of living which is the outward and visible sign of an inner integrity. In short, it means to have understanding, but it is an understanding of wisdom.”

In the context of the Old Testament, wisdom is always a gift from God, rather than some skill or knowledge that we can gain for ourselves. In the context of the New Testament, wisdom is a person. Wisdom is who Christ is and what Christ does. Wisdom is often thought of as feminine—as the Greek “Sophia”—through which we access a deeper knowledge and understanding of God not only as creator, but also as nurturer and sustainer.

It is when wisdom truly comes to us that we will have the prudence—the good sense—to listen and to follow where Christ leads. In asking Christ to come as Wisdom, we are praying for a unity in our life that will draw us into purpose and vision, and away from fragmentation and unproductivity. The Wisdom that is Christ may well lead us in the ways of the just: into compassion, concern, peace, justice, and love.

O Wisdom,
gift on the breath of creation,
measurer of the earth and seas,
singer of paths for stars and planets in the heavens,
holder of all things together
since before time and forever.

My sister, my friend,
as the Spirit of the Lord fills the whole world,
and as you know every word that is said,
come as mentor and guide:
so I’ll delight in knowledge,
claim intuition and understanding for my own,
discern, learn
what his advent holds for me.

O Wisdom, my sister,
let us lean close, laugh and weep together,
be one with each other as we shout our whispered greeting
to the Lord of life.

From Hasten the Kingdom: Praying the O Antiphons of Advent by Mary Winifred, C.A. (Liturgical Press, 1996).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

The link between "natural" disasters and our behavior is growing stronger — from the effects of global warming on weather crises and the way that global starvation is a matter of unjust distribution to the loss of species due to the expansion of the human population — we can see the finger of blame pointing at ourselves.
— Sallie McFague in Life Abundant

To Practice This Thought: Don't blame the Divine for the next "act of God." Look instead at your consumer choices and style of living.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Come, then, O beautiful soul. Since you know now that your desired Beloved lives hidden within your heart, strive to be really hidden with Him, and you will embrace Him within you and experience Him with loving affection.
St John of the Cross
Spiritual Canticle, 1.8
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

from http://www.balamandmonastery.org.lb/fathers/indexsayings2.htm

O monk, take thou the greatest possible care that thou sin not,
lest thou disgrace God Who dwelleth in thee, and thou drive Him
out of thy soul.

Abba Epiphanius
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

The Freedom to Refuse Love

Often hell is portrayed as a place of punishment and heaven as a place of reward. But this concept easily leads us to think about God as either a policeman, who tries to catch us when we make a mistake and send us to prison when our mistakes become too big, or a Santa Claus, who counts up all our good deeds and puts a reward in our stocking at the end of the year.

God, however, is neither a policeman nor a Santa Claus. God does not send us to heaven or hell depending on how often we obey or disobey. God is love and only love. In God there is no hatred, desire for revenge, or pleasure in seeing us punished. God wants to forgive, heal, restore, show us endless mercy, and see us come home. But just as the father of the prodigal son let his son make his own decision God gives us the freedom to move away from God's love even at the risk of destroying ourselves. Hell is not God's choice. It is ours.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Sixteen - The First Way of Service, cont'd

Tertiaries recognize the power of intercessory prayer for furthering the purposes of God's kingdom, and therefore seek a deepening communion with God in personal devotion, and constantly intercede for the needs of his church and his world. Those of us who have much time at their disposal give prayer a large part in their daily lives. Those of us with less time must not fail to see the importance of prayer and to guard the time we have allotted to it from interruption. Lastly, we are encouraged to avail themselves of the sacrament of Reconciliation, through which the burden of past sin and failure is lifted and peace and hope restored.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

All Are Embraced
December 16th, 2007
THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT
Sunday’s Reflection

GOD’S ASTOUNDING and radical intervention in our human history cannot be contained in the tame and timid displays of Christmas lights, catchy slogans, or the exchange of gifts.

Advent confronts us once again with God’s unparalleled effort to communicate the message that all humankind is embraced and held close by a God of love. Jesus Christ has come, is present with us, and will come again in final victory when all darkness, pain, and evil will be no more.

In Advent we begin again to try to make plain the wonderful truth of the most extraordinary good news the world has ever heard. Soon we will join the angelic chorus in singing, “Christ the Savior is born.”

- Norman Shawchuck and Rueben P. Job
A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God

From pp. 20-21 of A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God by Norman Shawchuck and Rueben P. Job. Copyright © 2003 by the authors. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html



Advent Prayer

O Wisdom, O holy Word of God, you govern all creation with your strong yet tender care: Come. O Sacred Lord of ancient Israel, you showed yourself to Moses in the burning bush and you gave the holy law on Mount Sinai: Come. O Flower of Jesse's stem, you have been raised up as a sign for all people; kings stand silent in your presence; the nations bow down in worship before you: Come. O Key of David, O royal Power of Israel, you [not the systems of this world] control at your will the gate of heaven: Come break down the prison walls of death. O Radiant Dawn, splendor of eternal light, sun of justice: Come shine on those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death. O King of all the nations, the only joy of every human heart; o Keystone of the mighty arch of humankind: Come and save these creatures you fashioned from the dust. O Emmanuel, God-With-Us, king and lawgiver, desire of the nations, Savior of all people: Come and set us free.

The Spirit and the bride say, "Come." Amen. Lord Jesus, come soon! Lord Jesus, come and free us from the prisons of death. We ask for it together as his people. And we ask for it in Jesus' name. Amen.

from Preparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr
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From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
http://www.artsci.villanova.edu/dsteelman/tradition/sources.htm

God comes to us

The Lord of all, who had made each one of us, stooped down to our level and took us up into his own body, so that, using the same skill and mastery with which he had originally created us, he could fashion us anew.

Not in the grandeur that was his as Lord did he come to us, but in the form of a slave, though slave he never was. He who is the power of God, the Lord of hosts, the helper and protector of all, became like a man deprived of all help; and he who restores sinners to righteousness through faith was himself numbered among criminals. The lamb who takes away the sins of the world was led like a sheep to the slaughter, and he who gives us eternal life endured the pain of death.

To appreciate so sublime a plan, so great a gift, we need his own light to dawn on us from the everlasting hills. It is to those hills that we must lift up our eyes to see how we were saved from hurtling down the path we now climb, and how for the second time in sacred history a tree and a virgin played a prominent part. There is only one path, leading either to condemnation or salvation. No longer must pride direct our course downhill; rather let humility guide our steps upward and so bring us back to the Lord.

Paulinus of Nola
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

WRESTLING BEFORE GOD


"Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God . . . praying always . . . " Ephesians 6:13, 18

You have to wrestle against the things that prevent you from getting to God, and you wrestle in prayer for other souls; but never say that you wrestle with God in prayer, it is scripturally untrue. If you do wrestle with God, you will be crippled all the rest of your life. If, when God comes in some way you do not want, you take hold of Him as Jacob did and wrest