knitternun

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Reading for Jan 31, 2008

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

January 31, June 1, October 1
Chapter 7: On Humility

The third degree of humility is that a person
for love of God
submit himself to his Superior in all obedience,
imitating the Lord, of whom the Apostle says,
"He became obedient even unto death."


Humility

Very Revd Dr Christopher Hancock, Dean of Bradford

http://chapel.jesus.cam.ac.uk/reading/sermons/humility.html

It is a very great pleasure to be invited to preach tonight. To be invited to Jesus [reference is to Jesus College, Cambridge University] once is generous, to be invited twice is stupendous, to be invited three times is positively miraculous! Some months ago I said I would speak on humility: it has seemed a poor idea ever since. For one virtue the church individually and corporately is reckoned by its critics to be most lacking is humility. As George Bernard Shaw declared, "The Church must learn humility, as well as teach it". In this season of Lent a certain honesty before failure, hesitancy before mystery, reticence in the realm of public morality and care about institutional integrity, would to most critics of the Church be worthy expressions of Christian Lenten penitence.

But the Church's difficulties don't end here. For the issue of humility isn't just about being humble; its being humble about the right things in the right way and at the right times. In G K Chesterton's famous words of caution, "What we suffer from today is humility in the wrong place. Modesty has settled on the organ of conviction; where it was never meant to be. A man was meant to be doubtful about himself but undoubting about the truth. This has been exactly reversed."

So what of genuine Christian humility? That virtue hidden in the heart of the Christian God of suffering love and self-giving forgiveness, that's embodied in the life of His Son who, the ancient Christian hymn declares, "humbled himself and became obedient unto death even death on a cross" (Philippians 2:8). What can we say of this true humus in which the Christian virtues all take root and grow, this delightful aroma (to change the analogy) in a truly great person that sours when created artificially by the falsely 'umble, and yet overpowers empty vanity when it meets its living opposite? For God, the Bible makes clear, "opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble" (James 4:6). So the wise disciple "humbles himself under the mighty hand of God" (1 Peter 5:6), and becomes the little child who is called "great in the Kingdom of Heaven" (Matthew 18:4). For humility and the essence of Christian wisdom are close cousins in the spiritual life. As T S Eliot glimpsed, "The only wisdom we can hope to acquire is the wisdom of humility".

So what of this strange virtue of Christian humility?

First, it is more difficult to define than to depict. Like musical notation, it's better understood when performed than merely scored. It's a done thing not a defined thing. For meekness, gentle self-denial, self- deprecation, self-sacrifice, forgetfulness, low self-regard, or a high regard for others, don't really capture it. But see a great musician pause to enjoy a beginners poor efforts and pass an encouraging word, and you see and know humility. As one of the college staff said of one of Magdalene's great members in recent years, "He always had time for us". And of him how true G.K.Chesterton's words once again, "It is always the secure who are humble".

This leads to the second mark of Christian humility: it is always more interested in others than self. If genuine sympathy is clouded by the sin of self-centredness, how much more true humility. For humility acts to show another matters more. It makes room, gives space, attends with care. It doesn't take itself so seriously that it can't admit others do things better and roars with laughter when its faults appear. " Without humility there can be no humanity", it's sometimes said. It's true humility which opens its heart to others and unites others in that act. If pride dehumanises self and others: humility does the reverse. No wonder Charles Simeon, echoing Augustine, said the three essential virtues of the Christian ministry were "Humility, humility, humility".

But if humility is more interested in others than self, it is also, thirdly, more committed to truth than convenience, to truthfulness than spin, we might say. For humility isn't concerned to cover up. It takes the risk of honesty. It's unvarnished authenticity, not lacquered gilding. So some will always find it - or call it - naive and untutored, irresponsible and, condescendingly, ever-so endearing or sweet - but with the implication that the humble deserve to be! St Vincent de Paul linked humility and truth, though, in a way that makes it supreme. As he wrote, "The reason why God is so great a lover of humility is because he is the great lover of truth. Now humility is nothing but truth, while pride is nothing but lying". It's why the great scholar bows for truth. Bows before a sense of the unknown and admits his own limitations and limited knowledge.

But humility is not just about attitude, it is, as we've begun to see already, also about orientation. Supremely, it's more inclined to look up to others than down on them. It's more comfortable with the lowly that the great. It is, like Jonnny Wilkinson - or so he appears - genuinely amazed, if not embarrassed, by the plaudits and sits light to human praise. As Thomas Merton once wrote, "The humble man receives praise the way a clean window takes the light of the sun. The true and more intense the light is, the less you see of the glass". Pride reflects praise: humility absorbs it appreciatively and passes it on to others. If pride was the first sin, not surprisingly humility (for it's the most essential feature of wholesome and attractive living Christianity) is the last virtue to be sought, let alone won.

So what's this genuine Christian humility? How does it express itself? In being seen at work not wondered at; in being more interested in others than self; in being more committed to truth than convenience, to truthfulness than spin; in being more inclined to look up to others than down on them, and, like the incarnate Son of God, being more comfortable with the lowly that the great. But if humility is a done thing more than a said thing: it is more often a silent thing than a loud thing. It listens more than speaks. Because it's passionate for truth it doesn't need to be defensiven, seek self-justification, or win every argument no matter what. And because the humble can never know they are (for in the act of self- refection humility evaporates, like the shadow lost by turning), humility makes no attempt to project itself. It certainly makes no pretence of being humble, and, as St Francis de Sales said, it "scarcely ever utters words of humility". No, humility is Christian silence ennobled, and Christian presence embodied in all the glory of Christ-like servanthood and strength.

And, in this Lenten season it's well to recall that humility is, lastly, more akin to sacrifice than self-indulgence. We know it by its opposites. We see it in self-giving and promote, or preserve, it in humble prayer, energetic praise, and hard-working service. For Christian humility doesn't just happen, we affect it. In New Testament Greek it's expressed as much by an active verb as a passive noun. We work to be humble by humbling ourselves. We grow in humility by deliberate humiliation. We radiate humility when the cost is unimportant and the good brought to others all that matters. But that is no more than saying, "If you really want to know what humility is, look at Jesus Christ".

Humility. It's what gives a distinctive flavour to Christian religion and philosophy. As William Law's Serious Call to Devout and Holy Life concluded, "We may as well try to see without eyes or live without breath, as to live in the spirit of religion without humility." So, as he wrote,

Let every day be a day of humility; condescend to all the weaknesses and infirmities of your fellow-creatures, cover their frailties, love their excellences, encourage their virtues, relieve their wants, rejoice in their prosperities, compassionate their distress, receive their friendship, overlook their unkindness, forgive their malice, be a servant of servants, and condescend to do the lowliest of offices to the lowest of mankind.

That is Christian humility.

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Daily Meditation 01/31/08

Collect

Give us grace, O Lord, to answer readily the call of our Savior Jesus Christ and proclaim to all people the Good News of his salvation, that we and the whole world may perceive the glory of his marvelous works; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

A Collect for the Renewal of Life

God, the King eternal, who divides the day from the night and turns the shadow of death into the morning: Drive far from us all wrong desires, incline our hearts to keep your law, and guide our feet into the way of peace; that, having done your will with cheerfulness while it was day, we may, when night comes, rejoice to give you thanks; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 50; PM Psalm [59, 60] or 8, 84
Gen. 16:15-17:14; Heb. 10:1-10; John 5:30-47
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Genesis 16:15-17:14. No longer shall your name be Abram, but your name shall be Abraham.

Abram was doing quite well, thank you. His was a contented and successful life. But the Lord God calls Abram to move from his country and leave everything behind. He chooses to walk before God, heeds this call, and follows the promise of the Lord. Abram's experience is so transformational that even his name changes to Abraham. It is only two letters, but it makes all the difference in the story of faith.


Faith is about engaging spiritual journey. We are to be sojourners. There may be obstacles that tempt us to be "sour-journers," but we are reminded that it is a holy quest. With us is a God who guides, shapes, and changes us.


A favorite saying in Spanish is: Caminante, no hay camino; se hace el camino al andar. It is translated: "Walker, there isn't one way; one makes the way by walking." Let us choose daily steps in God who prepares the way, leads our feet, accompanies us on the road, and blesses our conversion now and forever.


Conversion may occur in an instant, but the process of coming from sinfulness into a new life can be a long and arduous journey.
--Charles Colson (b. 1931)
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Argyll and The Isles (Scotland)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Praying for those attending General Convention, 2009: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/praygc
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

The monastery at Kildare

Daily Reading for January 31

“And who can describe in words the supreme beauty of this church, and the countless wonders of that minster—of that city as we may say, if it can rightly be called a city when it is surrounded by no circuit of walls? But because countless people come together in it, it earns the name ‘city’ from the gathering of crowds there. This city is supreme and metropolitan, in whose suburbs, which holy Brigit marked out with a precise boundary, is feared no mortal adversary nor onslaught of enemies. But it is the safest city of refuge, with all its external suburbs, in the whole land of the Irish for all fugitives. . . . And who can count the varied crowds and countless peoples flocking together from all provinces? Some come because of the abundance of feasts, others to obtain healing of their ailments, others to stare at the crowds; others bring great gifts and offerings to the celebration of holy Brigit’s birth.”

Thus the seventh-century Irishman Cogitosus praised Kildare. He was writing in a tradition, suffused with biblical conceptions of cities of refuge and the heavenly city, which presented the minsters of Ireland as places of safety, centrality, and popular resort as well as places of cult. The main centres of early Christian Ireland were indeed its monastic sites, and several of them have now yielded archaeological evidence for complex zoning of activities, including specialized craft production and industry, during the seventh to ninth centuries.

From The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society by John Blair (Oxford, 2005).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Maybe one day we'll grow weary of whining and celebrate the rain, the manna, the half-filled glass of water, the little gifts from heaven that make each day bearable. Instead of cloaking ourselves in the armor of pessimism, maybe we'll concede that we are who we are: capricious, unfortune, wonderful, delicate, alive. Forgiven.
— Mark Collins in On the Road to Emmaus

To Practice This Thought: The next time you start complaining about your lot in life, don't listen.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

We must have no confidence whatever in our own strength, but trust in His mercy - and until we do this all is weakness.
St. Teresa of 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

For Christians above all men are forbidden to correct the
stumblings of sinners by force...it is necessary to make a man
better not by force but by persuasion. We neither have autority
granted us by law to restrain sinners, nor, if it were, should we
know how to use it, since God gives the crown to those who are
kept from evil, not by force, but by choice.

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

The Joy of Being Like Others

At first sight, joy seems to be connected with being different. When you receive a compliment or win an award, you experience the joy of not being the same as others. You are faster, smarter, more beautiful, and it is that difference that brings you joy. But such joy is very temporary. True joy is hidden where we are the same as other people: fragile and mortal. It is the joy of belonging to the human race. It is the joy of being with others as a friend, a companion, a fellow traveler.

This is the joy of Jesus, who is Emmanuel: God-with-us.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Your Merciful Love
January 31st, 2008
Thursday’s Reflection

LORD AND LIGHT of the world,
set our hearts on fire
so that we may pass your merciful love,
one to another,
throughout the world.
Amen.

- Hart Ford-Hodges
devozine Magazine

From devozine Magazine, November/December 2002. Copyright © 2002 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

Things Hidden

Question of the day:
When have I stumbled and fallen “into the hands of the living God”?



The smallest of events can teach us everything, if we learn Who is doing them with us, through us and for us. But have no doubt: That is the total goal. We want law for the sake of order, obedience and “moral purity”; God and Paul want law for the sake of channeling us toward a realization of divine union, to force the honest person to stumble (see Romans 7:7-13—that’s really what it says!), and then “fall into the hands of the living God” (Hebrew 10:31). Juridically, law is an end in itself, absolutely good and necessary for social order.

Spiritually, though, law is a means, not an end at all.

Why did Paul come to this so clearly? Because Paul himself was a man of the law. As he tells us in Philippians (3:6-8), he was a perfect Pharisee. “As far as the Law can make you perfect, I was faultless,” he says. Yet in the next line he admits that he was a mass-murderer. “How could such perfect religious observance still create hateful and violent men like me?” That was his transformative question, and for him it worked. This still needs to be the question for many religious groups today.

Then what is the law really for? It’s not to make God love you. That issue is already solved once and forever, and you are powerless to change it one direction or the other. The purpose of spiritual law is simply to sharpen our awareness about who we are and who God is, so that we can name our own insufficiency and, in that same movement, find God’s fullness.

from Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality
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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

How sublime the humility of God the most high!

Our exalted Savior lost nothing by his humility, but we gained very much. By it the Most High was not lowered, but the lowly were exalted. In order to carry out perfectly the work of our redemption, the Son of God, Creator of all flesh, condescended to be born of the Virgin's flesh in the way all true flesh is born.

God, our Maker, became a real human being born of a human being. He was wrapped in swaddling bands, confined in a narrow manger, circumcised on the eighth day, and carried by human hands to his own temple.

How gracious is the kindliness of God! How sublime the humility of God most high! As a tiny baby he was nursed by his mother, he the boundless God who had created her. As a little child he was carried to his own temple by his parents, he the great God who was prayed to in that temple by his holy people. And he also ordained the offering of a sacrifice for himself, he who had come sinless to be immolated for our betrayals. Reflect, then, on what you owe to the Most High who was humbled for your sake, your exalted Creator and humbled Redeemer.

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

DO YOU SEE YOUR CALLING?


"Separated unto the Gospel." Romans 1:1

Our calling is not primarily to be holy men and women, but to be proclaimers of the Gospel of God. The one thing that is all important is that the Gospel of God should be realized as the abiding Reality. Reality is not human goodness, nor holiness, nor heaven, nor hell; but Redemption; and the need to perceive this is the most vital need of the Christian worker to-day. As workers we have to get used to the revelation that Redemption is the only Reality. Personal holiness is an effect, not a cause, and if we place our faith in human goodness, in the effect of Redemption, we shall go under when the test comes.

Paul did not say he separated himself, but - "when it pleased God who separated me. . ." Paul had not a hypersensitive interest in his own character. As long as our eyes are upon our own personal whiteness we shall never get near the reality of Redemption. Workers break down because their desire is for their own whiteness, and not for God. "Don't ask me to come into contact with the rugged reality of Redemption on behalf of the filth of human life as it is; what I want is anything God can do for me to make me more desirable in my own eyes." To talk in that way is a sign that the reality of the Gospel of God has not begun to touch me; there is no reckless abandon to God. God cannot deliver me while my interest is merely in my own character. Paul is unconscious of himself, he is recklessly abandoned, separated by God for one purpose - to proclaim the Gospel of God (cf. Rom. 9:3.)
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 31, June 1, October 1
Chapter 7: On Humility

The third degree of humility is that a person
for love of God
submit himself to his Superior in all obedience,
imitating the Lord, of whom the Apostle says,
"He became obedient even unto death."
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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.

St. Mark 10:17-27 (1/31) For Thursday of the 36th Week after
Pentecost (Thurs of 31st Week)

Worlds Apart: St. Mark 10:17-27 RSV, especially vs. 17: "Now as He was
going out on the road, one came running, and knelt before Him and asked
Him, 'Good Teacher, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?'"
How far apart this earnest man was from the Lord Jesus and the from the
journey upon which the Lord was embarked - toward Jerusalem, the
Passion, and the Cross! So intent was the Lord upon this goal that His
disciples were "amazed" as He pressed ahead (Mk. 10:32-34). The
earnestness of the unnamed man - to learn how to inherit eternal life -
is demonstrated in his unusual behavior: he ran rather than walked up to
the Lord Jesus. He knelt before One he considered to be a Rabbi (that
was not customary with Rabbis). He addressed the Lord in an unusual
way, one not practiced by either Jews or Greeks - when he called Him
"Good."

As the account unfolds, the gap between the Lord Jesus and the man
becomes more and more evident: to overcome the man's obsession with
"inheriting" eternal life, the Lord confronts him with an extreme demand
- to renounce all and follow Him to death (vs. 21). That demand reduces
the man to grief, and he walks away (vs. 22).

This petitioner believed that a finite, mortal man could rationally
understand how to inherit eternal life. The Lord knew better. The man
was deluded. He believed that God expects more than is revealed in the
Law for men to inherit eternal life (Deut. 30:19). The Lord Jesus, Who
actually gave the Law, reminded him that the Divine standard does not
change (Mk. 10:19). The man assumed that sinners, by their own effort,
could win eternal life. Christ our God knows that only He makes eternal
life possible (vs. 10:27). They were worlds apart.

The Lord Jesus' response when He was called "Good," reveals a basic
error in the man - the man believed Jesus could set the terms by which a
person inherits eternal life. The man believed that the person he saw
before him, the famous Rabbi, Jesus of Nazareth, as a man knew the
answer. The Lord's question and assertion, "Why do you call Me good?"
rejected the assumption that any human can be "good," for only God is
good (vs. 18). St. Hilary of Poitiers points out that the Lord "would
not have rejected the attribute of goodness if it had been attributed to
Him as God."1

The idea that human beings have the capacity to discover and take the
path to eternal life is inherent in most all of the world's religions,
but it is utterly foreign with respect to serving the true God. From
the first Divinely stated requirement for life (Gen. 2:17), to the
Apostolic declaration that "eternal life which was with the Father and
was manifested to us...is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ"
(1 Jn. 1:2,3), God alone reveals and extends the mystery of eternal life.

There is no esoteric knowledge for the earnest who desire eternal life.
Through His Holy People - Israel and the Church - God has revealed to
mankind "what is good; or what...the Lord require of thee...to do
justice, and love mercy, and be ready to walk with the Lord thy God"
(Micah 6:8). Still, the man who came to the Lord wrongfully sought a
human answer. This the Lord exposed by quoting the Law (Mk. 10:19). As
St. John adds: "I write no new commandment to you, but an old
commandment which you have had from the beginning" (1 Jn. 2:7).

The distance between the deluded man and the Lord Jesus was fully
revealed when Christ exposed his sin to him. Still, what the Lord
requires is for all (Mk. 8:34). Knowing the state of the man's heart,
the Lord placed this demand before him in unavoidable terms which he
could not rationalize. The man chose to turn away, for he knew he was
incapable of doing what he was told was required to obtain eternal
life. Sadly, he did not wait to hear the Gospel caveat: "With men it is
impossible; but not with God; for with God all things are possible" (Mk.
10:27)!

O Master...by the precepts which Thou teachest, save me Thine
undeserving servant....

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Reading for Jan 30, 2008

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

Chapter 7: On Humility

The second degree of humility
is that a person love not his own will
nor take pleasure in satisfying his desires,
but model his actions on the saying of the Lord,
"I have come not to do My own will,
but the will of Him who sent Me" (John 6:38).
It is written also,
"Self-will has its punishment,
but constraint wins a crown."



It is good for me, Lord, that Thou hast humbled me, that I may learn Thy righteous judgements, and may cast away all haughtiness of heart and all presumption.
Thomas a Kempis

Humility is the secret of fellowship, and pride the secret of division.
Robert C. Chapman

Obedience is the road to freedom, humility the road to pleasure, unity the road to personality.
C.S. Lewis

The meek man is not a human mouse afflicted with a sense of his own inferiority. Rather he may be in his moral life as bold as a lion and as strong as Samson; but he has stopped being fooled about himself. He has accepted God's estimate of his own life.
A.W. Tozer

Be desirous, my son, to do the will of another rather than thine own.
Thomas a Kempis

How great victory was that which Jonathon must have gained over himself, when he rejoiced to see David raised above him! He discerned the mind of God in David, and had so learned to delight in God, that he did not see in David one who was to outshine him, but another faithful man raised up for God and Israel.
Robert C. Chapman

God created the world out of nothing, and so long as we are nothing, He can make something out of us.
Martin Luther

After all, man knows very little, and may some day learn enough of his own ignorance to fall down and pray.
Henry Adams

Pride is at the bottom of a great many errors and corruptions, and even of many evil practices, which have a great show and appearance of humility.
Matthew Henry

Make mine kneeling, for thus I came to glory.
Oliver Cromwell, while looking at statues of great men.

The sufficiency of my merit is to know that my merit is not sufficient.
Augustine

Revival is a renewed conviction of sin and repentance, followed by an intense desire to live in obedience to God. It is giving up one's will to God in deep humility.
Charles Finney

Grant me prudence to avoid him that flattereth me, and to endure patiently him that contradicteth me.
Thomas a Kempis

Should you ask me what is the first thing in religion, I should reply that the first, second, and third thing therein is humility.
Augustine

Many ask good questions with a design rather to justify themselves than inform themselves, rather proudly to show what is good in them than humbly to see what is bad in them.
Matthew Henry

Humility is the proper estimate of oneself.
Charles Spurgeon

People who regard themselves as invalids rather than heroes will make excellent missionaries.
Daniel Fuller

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Daily Meditation 01/30/08

[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

Give us grace, O Lord, to answer readily the call of our Savior Jesus Christ and proclaim to all people the Good News of his salvation, that we and the whole world may perceive the glory of his marvelous works; 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 119:49-72; PM Psalm 49, [53]
Gen. 16:1-14; Heb. 9:15-28; John 5:19-29
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 5:19-29. The hour is coming.

The ancient world had a different understanding of time. There seems to have been tension about when "the hour was coming." Jesus says there is reason to pay attention and cause for concern, but the hour and time may not be the greatest issue.


"What time is it?" and "How much time do we have?" are the wrong questions. The crucial questions are "How do we use our time?" and "For whom is our time given?" Jesus says this matter is simple yet profound: judgment or resurrection. The teachings of Christ and the church portray "the hour" as a time of hope. The last chapter in the last book of the Bible summarizes these days as "healing among the nations." The final images in the Revelation to John are beautiful, lovely, and life-giving.


Furthermore, biblical Greek has two words for time: chronos and kairos. Chronos is tick, tick, tick. Kairos teaches that we also live in God's right time, blessed with an anointed hour, and walk toward the day of consummation. Kairos is the name of the spiritual encounter in prisons for inmates who are burdened with chronos. Their promise is also ours: believe in the completion of God's purpose and wait for the glory of Christ to come.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Argentina (Iglesia Anglicana del cono sur de America)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Humbly I adore thee

Daily Reading for January 30

Humbly I adore thee, Verity unseen,
Who thy glory hidest ’neath these shadows mean;
Lo, to thee surrendered, my whole heart is bowed,
Tranced as it beholds thee, shrined within the cloud.

Taste, and touch, and vision, to discern thee fail;
Faith, that comes by hearing, pierces through the veil.
I believe whate’er the Son of God hath told;
What the Truth hath spoken, that for truth I hold.

O memorial wondrous of the Lord’s own death;
Living Bread, that givest all thy creatures breath,
Grant my spirit ever by thy life may live,
To my taste thy sweetness never-failing give.

Jesus, whom now veiled, I by faith descry,
What my soul doth thirst for, do not, Lord, deny,
That thy face unveiled, I at last may see,
With the blissful vision blest, my God, of thee.

Thomas Aquinas, c. 1260; hymnal version, 1939. Hymn 204 in The Hymnal 1940 (Church Pension Fund, 1940).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

We must remind ourselves that, though our lives are small and our acts seem insignificant, we are generative elements of this universe, and we create meaning with each act that we perform or fail to perform.
— Kent Nerburn in Make Me an Instrument of Your Peace

To Practice This Thought: Discern the swirls of meaning emanating from one of your recent actions.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

We have now, by God’s help, like good gardeners, to make these plants grow and to water them carefully so that they may produce flowers which shall send forth great fragrance to give refreshment to this Lord of ours.
St Teresa of Jesus
Life 11.6
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

While the Bridegroom tarried, they slumbered and slept:
Give ear, ye prudent, to our Lord's parable, for it is all light.
All of them slept, both the foolish and the wise --
Which signifies that the good and the wicked die until the
resurrection.
The same sleep comes upon the ten of them, which is as much as to
say,
That death is the same for all creation without distinction.
One was the sleep of the wise and of the foolish,
For one is death, both of the righteous and of sinners.
The good die, as the wise virgins slept;
And the bad die, as the foolish also slept.
Behold, all creation looketh for the coming of the Bridegroom,
Christ, Who cometh at the end with His angels.
But since He hath tarried, all generations slumber and sleep
With the sleep of death, while looking for when He cometh.

A Homily on the Ten Virgins by Mar Jacob, Bishop of Serugh
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Choosing Joy

Joy is what makes life worth living, but for many joy seems hard to find. They complain that their lives are sorrowful and depressing. What then brings the joy we so much desire? Are some people just lucky, while others have run out of luck? Strange as it may sound, we can choose joy. Two people can be part of the same event, but one may choose to live it quite differently than the other. One may choose to trust that what happened, painful as it may be, holds a promise. The other may choose despair and be destroyed by it.

What makes us human is precisely this freedom of choice.
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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.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Shape Me
January 30th, 2008
Wednesday’s Reflection

POTTER GOD,
shape me
and form me
into a vessel
holding your good news.
Amen.

- Alive Now

From p. 55 of Alive Now, September/October 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

Things Hidden

Question of the day:
What prevents me from receiving the perfect gaze of God?



To have naked interface with the Ultimate Other is to know one’s self in one’s truest and deepest being. When you allow yourself to be perfectly received, totally gazed upon by the One who knows everything and receives everything, you are indestructible.

If you can learn how to receive the perfect gaze of the Other, to be mirrored by the Other, then the voices of the human crowd, even negative ones, have little power to hurt you. Best of all, as Meister Eckhart has been quoted, “the eyes with which you will look back at God will be the same eyes with which God first looked at you.”

Standing before one, accepting God literally allows you to be composed and gathered into one place. You can be in one place; you can be here, now. You stop always looking over there, for tomorrow’s happiness. Then, and always, “now is the favorable time, today is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2).

from Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality
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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

Devotion to prayer

The purpose of prayer is nothing other than to manifest God and self. And this manifestation of God and self leads to a state of perfect and true humility. For this humility is attained when the soul sees God and self. It is in this profound state of humility, and from it, that divine grace deepens and grows in the soul. The more divine grace deepens humility in the soul, the more divine grace can grow in this depth of humility. The more divine grace grows, the deeper the soul is grounded, and the more it is settled in a state of true humility. Through perseverance in true prayer, divine light and grace increase, and these always make the soul grow deep in humility as it reads, as has been said, the life of Jesus Christ, God and man. I cannot conceive anything greater than the manifestation of God and self. But this discovery, that is, this manifestation of God and self, is the lot only of those legitimate sons and daughters of God who have devoted themselves to true prayer.

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

THE DILEMMA OF OBEDIENCE


"And Samuel feared to shew Eli the vision." 1 Samuel 3:15

God never speaks to us in startling ways, but in ways that are easy to misunderstand, and we say, "I wonder if that is God's voice?" Isaiah said that the Lord spake to him "with a strong hand," that is, by the pressure of circumstances. Nothing touches our lives but it is God Himself speaking. Do we discern His hand or only mere occurrence?

Get into the habit of saying, "Speak, Lord," and life will become a romance. Every time circumstances press, say, "Speak, Lord"; make time to listen. Chastening is more than a means of discipline, it is meant to get me to the place of saying, "Speak, Lord." Recall the time when God did speak to you. Have you forgotten what He said? Was it Luke 11:13, or was it 1 Thess. 5:23? As we listen, our ear gets acute, and, like Jesus, we shall hear God all the time.

Shall I tell my "Eli" what God has shown to me? That is where the dilemma of obedience comes in. We disobey God by becoming amateur providences - I must shield "Eli," the best people we know. God did not tell Samuel to tell Eli; he had to decide that for himself. God's call to you may hurt your "Eli;" but if you try to prevent the suffering in another life, it will prove an obstruction between your soul and God. It is at your own peril that you prevent the cutting off of the right hand or the plucking out of the eye.

Never ask the advice of another about anything God makes you decide before Him. If you ask advice, you will nearly always side with Satan. "Immediately I conferred not with flesh and blood."
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

Chapter 7: On Humility

The second degree of humility
is that a person love not his own will
nor take pleasure in satisfying his desires,
but model his actions on the saying of the Lord,
"I have come not to do My own will,
but the will of Him who sent Me" (John 6:38).
It is written also,
"Self-will has its punishment,
but constraint wins a crown."
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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.

St. Mark 10:11-16 (1/30) For Wed of the 36th Week after
Pentecost (Wed of 31st Week)

Becoming Little Children: St. Mark 10:11-16, especially vs. 15:
"...whoever does not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child will
by no means enter it." In this verse, the Lord declares what is
required to have life in Him: if we would have Him take us in His arms,
lay His hands on us, and bless us (vs. 16), we must, before all else,
convert and "become as little children" (Mt. 18:3). In today's Gospel,
the Lord reveals how one may be transformed within to become an
untainted child, handed over to Him and touched by Him (vs. 13). To be
a child again within ourselves, it necessary to strip away all that has
grown up in us to prevent our from coming in innocence to Him (vs. 14).
For what could be of more worth than to receive His blessing and the
laying on of His hands (vs. 16)!

St. John Chrysostom points out that "the soul of a little child is pure
from all the passions." Though we show "him the queen with a diadem, he
prefers her not to his mother clad in rags...and nothing more than
necessary things doth he seek." Furthermore, "The young child is not
grieved at what we are grieved, as at the loss of money and such things
as that, and he doth not rejoice again at what we rejoice, namely, at
these temporal things." The Lord's injunction to become as little
children is given so that we "by choice should practice these things,
which young children have naturally."1 The secret of being little
children lies in recovering our natural, God-given virtues.

Notice that this passage clearly states that children did not come to
the Lord "on their own account." They were "brought to Him" (vs. 13).
To be "brought to Him" one needs "good" parents who can bring us to
Christ. Thus, if we are not borne in the arms of our Mother the Church,
then we shall pursue the virtues of the world - which are not virtues.
Instead, we shall depend on our imperfect, rational minds, and we shall
be led astray. To have good Fathers - which we require - St. Nil Sorsky
declares that the Holy Fathers who followed the Apostles must be the
"main guide for those who wish to be saved and...attain Christian
perfection."2

The Lord sharply corrected His as-yet-unillumined disciples when they
prevented children from coming to Him (vs. 13). Following His example,
let us countermand in ourselves whatever prevents our coming to Him as
innocents (vs. 14). Acquiring pure, simple, natural virtues requires
diligent work directed against all that arises from the sinful self, the
world, and the devils - the attractions that suggest that we should
indulge ourselves. As Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos reminds us: "when
a person struggles to subject his body to his soul and his soul to God,
the virtues of body and soul are produced."3 Let us begin this work, of
restraining and retraining.

Consider: the Lord's desire that "little children" come to Him (vs. 14)
is truly a positive prompting to cultivate those godly virtues that the
Church reveals. Metropolitan Hierotheos provides us with some obvious
starting points: "Self-control and love rid us of impassioned thoughts.
By controlling anger and desire we quickly do away with evil thoughts.
Vigils also contribute a great deal....Let us receive everything with a
good thought. Even if everything is ugly, let us receive it with
equanimity, and then God will right the anomalies of things."4

Every newly awakened Christian who addresses the negative and positive
work spoken of above, discovers the monumental task of coming to Christ
as a little child. Let us not imagine that we can accomplish purity of
life and holiness in our own strength. That fatal delusion will
eventually plunge us into certain despair. Rather, let us be dependent
upon the Church to bring us to Christ, and there learn to receive the
touch of the Lord Jesus' hand, His healing, and His blessing (vs. 16).
The Church gives us birth and helps us put on the new man. St. Gregory
Palamas says, "the deified saints...are engendered by God, God gave them
the power to become children of God."

Burn Thou the thorns of all my transgressions, cleanse my soul, and
hallow my thoughts.5

Monday, January 28, 2008

Daily Meditation 01/28/08

[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

Give us grace, O Lord, to answer readily the call of our Savior Jesus Christ and proclaim to all people the Good News of his salvation, that we and the whole world may perceive the glory of his marvelous works; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.


Almighty God, you have enriched your Church with the singular learning and holiness of your servant Thomas Aquinas: Enlighten us more and more, we pray, by the disciplined thinking and teaching of Christian scholars, and deepen our devotion by the example of saintly lives; 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 41, 52; PM Psalm 44
Gen. 14:(1-7)8-24; Heb. 8:1-13; John 4:43-54
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 4:43-54....a prophet has no honor in the prophet's own country.

I knew persons who traveled to South Africa in the 1970s. Upon their return, awkward comments about the conditions there included "It's not so bad" and "It's a complex matter." As a person whose people have lived with injustice, I wondered.


In the early 1980s I heard that certain American church leaders were dismayed about an Anglican bishop in South Africa who had wild and crazy ideas about the future of that nation. I wondered again. I felt sad, frustrated, and helpless. My parish priest counseled me and quoted this part of the Bible to me. He was a white man who had had a cross burned on his front lawn by a hate group in the 1960s. Persons speaking God's truth are often lone voices in the wilderness. In 1994, I heard a celebrated--and vindicated--Desmond Tutu address the General Convention of the Episcopal Church.


Perhaps it takes decades of listening, striving, and waiting to recognize a prophet. Jesus the prophet had only a few years among witnesses. But he left a legacy of signs and wonders for those who believed in the healing power of the Lord. May we have faith in our day to seek and serve Christ in all persons.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

St. Thomas Aquinas:
Psalm 37:3-6,32-33 or 119:97-104
Wisdom 7:7-14; Matthew 13:47-52
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Thomistic synthesis

Daily Reading for January 28 • Thomas Aquinas, Priest and Friar, 1274

Though involved in numerous ecclesiastical and civil affairs, Thomas Aquinas was primarily a theological thinker and writer. The only comparable figure in previous church history is Augustine, and Aquinas quotes his distinguished predecessor more frequently than any other of the Fathers. But unlike Augustine, Aquinas was a systematizer with a neat, orderly mind that delighted in logical and dialectical coherence. Aiding him in this architectonic ideal was the newly rediscovered Aristotle, whose precision of definition and syllogistic distinctions provided Aquinas with the philosophical instrument he needed for his theological construction. Thus in Aquinas both Augustine and Aristotle meet, and the synthesis added an astonishing brilliance to such perennial problems as the relation of revelation and reason.

There are two distinct lines of development in Christian theology. One comes out of the Hebrew-Christian tradition and the other from the Greco-Roman philosophy and culture. The so-called Thomistic synthesis brought the two into functional coexistence.

From Readings in Christian Thought, edited by Hugh T. Kerr (Abingdon, 1983).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Lama Tsongkhapa suggested that instead of jealousy we try to cultivate the habit of extracting joy from the good things we see in others. He commented that by rejoicing in a good quality or situation that we perceive in others, we share in the joy of having it ourselves.
— Glenn H. Mullin in Gems of Wisdom from the Seventh Dalai Lama

To Practice This Thought: Identify and celebrate someone else's best qualities.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Those who are able to shut themselves up within this little heaven of the soul, wherein dwells the Maker of heaven and earth, may be sure that they will come without fail to drink of the water of the fountain.
St Teresa of Jesus
Way 20.5
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

Do all in your power not to fall, for the strong athlete should
not fall. But if you do fall, get up again at once and continue
the contest. Even if you fall a thousand times because of the
withdrawal of God's grace, rise up again each time, and keep on
doing this until the day of your death. For it is written, 'If a
righteous man falls down seven times' - that is, repeatedly
throughout his life - 'seven times shall he rise again' [Prov.
24:16].

John of Karpathos
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Forgiving in the Name of God

We are all wounded people. Who wounds us? Often those whom we love and those who love us. When we feel rejected, abandoned, abused, manipulated, or violated, it is mostly by people very close to us: our parents, our friends, our spouses, our lovers, our children, our neighbors, our teachers, our pastors. Those who love us wound us too. That's the tragedy of our lives. This is what makes forgiveness from the heart so difficult. It is precisely our hearts that are wounded. We cry out, "You, who I expected to be there for me, you have abandoned me. How can I ever forgive you for that?"

Forgiveness often seems impossible, but nothing is impossible for God. The God who lives within us will give us the grace to go beyond our wounded selves and say, "In the Name of God you are forgiven." Let's pray for that grace.
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Weekly Reflection from the Merton Institute

This afternoon I suddenly saw the meaning of my American destiny -- one of those moments when many unrelated pieces of one's life and thought fall into place in a great unity towards which one has been growing.

My destiny is indeed to be an American -- not just an American of the United States. We are only on the fringe of the true America. I can never be satisfied with this only partial reality that is almost nothing at all, that is so little that it is like a few words written in chalk on a blackboard, easily rubbed out.

I have never so keenly felt the impermanence of what is now regarded as American because it is North American and the elements of stability and permanence which are in South America. Deeper roots, Indian roots. The Spanish, Portuguese, Negro roots also. The shallow English roots are not deep enough. The tree will fall.

To be an American of the Andes -- containing in myself also Kentucky and New York. But New York is not, and never will be, really America. America is much bigger and deeper and more complex than that -- America is still an undiscovered continent.

Thomas Merton. A Search for Solitude. Edited by Lawrence S. Cunningham (San Francisco, HarperSanFrancisco, 1996): 168.

Thought for the Day

My vocation is American -- to see and to understand and to have in myself the life and the roots and the belief and the destiny and the orientation of the whole hemisphere -- as an expression of something of God, of Christ, that the world has not yet found out -- something that is only now, after hundreds of years, coming to maturity!

...[T]o be oneself a whole hemisphere and to help the hemisphere to realize its own destiny.

A Search for Solitude: 168-169
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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/

On Holy Ground
January 28th, 2008
Monday’s Reflection

WHAT DO WE EXPECT in our spirituality? God loves us and comforts us. But God also challenges and directs us. God changes us, if we allow it; and change is never easy. When Moses stood on holy ground, the experience was frightening and life changing.

- Paul E. Stroble
You Gave Me a Wide Place: Holy Places in Our Lives

From p. 34 of You Gave Me a Wide Place by Paul E. Stroble. Copyright © 2006 by the author. Published by Upper Room Books. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission. http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/. Learn more about or purchase this book.
Today’s Scripture Reading

When Moses went up on the mountain, the cloud covered it, and the glory of the LORD settled on Mount Sinai.

- Exodus 24:15-16, NIV
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Richard Rohr's Daily Reflection
http://cacradicalgrace.org/getconnected/getconnected_index.html

Things Hidden

Question of the day:
What deep experiences have transformed you?



This marvelous anthology of books and letters called the Bible is all for the sake of astonishment! It’s for divine transformation (theosis), not intellectual or “small self” coziness.

The genius of the biblical revelation is that we will come to God through what I’m going to call the “actual,” the here and now, or quite simply what is.

God is always given, incarnate in every moment and present to those who know how to be present themselves.

Let’s state it clearly: One great idea of the biblical revelation is that God is manifest in the ordinary, in the actual, in the daily, in the now, in the concrete incarnations of life. That’s opposed to God holding out for the pure, the spiritual, the right idea or the ideal anything. This is why Jesus stands religion on its head!

That is why I say it is our experiences that transform us if we are willing to experience our experiences all the way through.

“God comes disguised as our Life” (a wonderful line I learned from my dear friend and colleague, Paul D’Arcy).

from Things Hidden
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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 cross exemplifies every virtue

Why did the Son of God have to suffer for us? There was a great need, and it can be considered in a twofold way: in the first place, as a remedy for sin, and secondly, as an example of how to act.

It is a remedy, for, in the face of all the evils which we incur on the account of our sins, we have found relief through the passion of Christ. Yet, it is no less an example, for the passion of Christ completely suffices to fashion our lives. Whoever wishes to live perfectly should do nothing but disdain what Christ disdained on the cross and desire what he desired, for the cross exemplifies every virtue.

If you seek the example of love: Greater love than this no man has, than to lay down his life for his friends. Such a man was Christ on the cross. And if he gave his life for us, then it should not be difficult to bear whatever hardships arise for his sake.

Thomas Aquinas, O.P.
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

BUT IT IS HARDLY CREDIBLE THAT ONE COULD SO PERSECUTE JESUS!


"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?" Acts 26:14

Am I set on my own way for God? We are never free from this snare until we are brought into the experience of the baptism of the Holy Ghost and fire. Obstinacy and self-will will always stab Jesus Christ. It may hurt no one else, but it wounds His Spirit. Whenever we are obstinate and self-willed and set upon our own ambitions, we are hurting Jesus. Every time we stand on our rights and insist that this is what we intend to do, we are persecuting Jesus. Whenever we stand on our dignity we systematically vex and grieve His Spirit; and when the knowledge comes home that it is Jesus Whom we have been persecuting all the time, it is the most crushing revelation there could be.

Is the word of God tremendously keen to me as I hand it on to you, or does my life give the lie to the things I profess to teach? I may teach sanctification and yet exhibit the spirit of Satan, the spirit that persecutes Jesus Christ. The Spirit of Jesus is conscious of one thing only - a perfect oneness with the Father, and He says, "Learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart." All I do ought to be founded on a perfect oneness with Him, not on a self-willed determination to be godly. This will mean that I can be easily put upon, easily over-reached, easily ignored; but if I submit to it for His sake, I prevent Jesus Christ being persecuted.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 28, May 29, September 28
Chapter 7: On Humility

As for self-will,
we are forbidden to do our own will
by the Scripture, which says to us,
"Turn away from your own will" (Eccles. 18:30),
and likewise by the prayer in which we ask God
that His will be done in us.
And rightly are we taught not to do our own will
when we take heed to the warning of Scripture:
"There are ways which seem right,
but the ends of them plunge into the depths of hell" (Prov. 16:25);
and also when we tremble at what is said of the careless:
"They are corrupt and have become abominable in their will."

And as for the desires of the flesh,
let us believe with the Prophet that God is ever present to us,
when he says to the Lord,
"Every desire of mine is before You" (Ps. 37:10).
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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.

St. Mark 9:42-10:1 (1/28) For Mon of the 31st Week after Pentecost
(Mon of the 31st Week)

Trial, Temptation, and Sacrifice: St. Mark 9:42-10:1, especially vs. 49:
"For everyone will be seasoned with fire, and every sacrifice will be
seasoned with salt." The entire reading for today confronts Christ's
Disciple with the "demanding" side of the life in Christ. Effectively,
the Lord Jesus admonitions in this lesson are a manual for martyrs, and
should be received in that vein.

"Eternal life" demands uncompromising purity and faithfulness. Purity
and faithfulness are what God requires as a condition for saving us from
the fires of hell "that shall never be quenched" (vss. 43,45). Truly,
painful choices are sure to confront us - if not today, sooner or
later. Moments and events will force us to decide, whether "...the
sufferings of this present life are...worthy to be compared with the
glory that shall be revealed in us" (Rom. 8:18).

The demands listed in this reading are those that the three holy youths
confronted in the burning fiery furnace (Dan. 3:16-18). Notice that the
Lord Jesus uses the identical language that the Apostle Peter employs
when he refers to "fiery trials" (1 Pet.1:7; 4:12). St. Peter asks:
Will we stand with Christ whatever the cost? Will we be healed of sin
despite the pain of the treatment? Will we trust that God is faithful
to His word? Will we be faithful in our words and deeds?

These verses makes clear that it is a disservice to Christians and
non-Christians alike to suggest that the life in Christ will be free of
trial, temptation, and sacrifice. Still, the good news is that the Lord
is "faithful, Who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what .you are
able, but with the temptation will also make a way to escape, that you
may be able to bear it" (1 Cor. 10:13).

To maintain oneself in the face of the demands of Christ Jesus, we must
set boundaries. Since trial and temptation are certain, it is mandatory
to make preparations for addressing them. Having boundaries helps us in
meeting assaults against our faith, attacks that constantly besiege the
edges of our integrity. Boundaries help keep temptations out of the
depths of our hearts.

The alcoholic keeps liquor out of the house. The sexually tempted keeps
a covenant with his eyes and guards his every thought (Job 31:1). St.
Theophylact of Ochrid says bluntly: "the Lord exhorts those to whom
offense is given to guard themselves against those who are always ready
to offend and to tempt. Whether it be your foot, hand, or eye, which
cause you to fall, which means, even if it is one of your closest
friends or relatives, in close relationship to you either by kinship or
by necessity who causes you to fall, cut him off, that is, reject that
friendship or kinship to him."1 Such choices involve wrenching soul
pain, like amputation without anesthesia.
How does one prepare for inevitable pain and fire? The boundary around
one's life helps with many of the day to day choices. The technique is
simple: by-pass the doorways that lead to choices that we know will
certainly spell defeat.

Of course the enemy has a way of slipping past our boundaries and
pressing his fiery trials deeper! Graciously, the Lord warns us, expect
that "...everyone will be seasoned with fire." He prophesies such
trials for our lives (Mk. 9:49). Those who are practiced in small,
undramatic acts of faithfulness are much more likely to survive when the
harder tests by fire come along.

The Lord, His Prophets, and His Apostles operated in a culture that used
salt to ratify agreements. Hence, salt served to symbolize fidelity and
constancy. When the Lord Jesus says, "every sacrifice will be seasoned
with salt," He means that genuine sacrifice must be inseparable from
fidelity and constancy. The only way to be ready for fire is to be
well-disciplined in fidelity, a gift of the Holy Spirit given to the
earnest and faithful Christian. Hence, the Lord also connects our
having the salt of constancy with our having "peace with one another"
(vs. 50).

O Lord... lead me in the right path, because of mine enemies. (Ps. 26:13
LXX)

Friday, January 25, 2008

Reading for Jan 25, 2008

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

January 25, May 26, September 25
Chapter 7: On Humility

Holy Scripture, brethren, cries out to us, saying,
"Everyone who exalts himself shall be humbled,
and he who humbles himself shall be exalted" (Luke 14:11).
In saying this it shows us
that all exaltation is a kind of pride,
against which the Prophet proves himself to be on guard
when he says,
"Lord, my heart is not exalted,
nor are mine eyes lifted up;
neither have I walked in great matters,
nor in wonders above me."
But how has he acted?
"Rather have I been of humble mind
than exalting myself;
as a weaned child on its mother's breast,
so You solace my soul" (Ps. 130:1-2).

Hence, brethren,
if we wish to reach the very highest point of humility
and to arrive speedily at that heavenly exaltation
to which ascent is made through the humility of this present life,
we must
by our ascending actions
erect the ladder Jacob saw in his dream,
on which Angels appeared to him descending and ascending.
By that descent and ascent
we must surely understand nothing else than this,
that we descend by self-exaltation and ascend by humility.
And the ladder thus set up is our life in the would,
which the Lord raises up to heaven if our heart is humbled.
For we call our body and soul the sides of the ladder,
and into these sides our divine vocation has inserted
the different steps of humility and discipline we must climb.

Some Thoughts

I feel as if I am back at chap 7 All Too Soon. Anyone else feel this way? Anyone else feel this way? I certainly find this section inspiring, but at the same time I remember how often I've failed. The most humble we can be, I think, is when we want Jesus above everything else. Which is easy enough to say but at the same time, I have to ask myself how often do I want Jesus above everything else? When are the times when I don't? What events, considerations pull me away from Him?

We are but human when all's said and done. a Franciscan of my acquaintance told me once that we are just stable muck. I replied "Maybe we are stable muck, but we are **redeemed** stable muck!"

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Daily Meditation 01/25/08

[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, whose Son our Savior Jesus Christ is the light of the world: Grant that your people, illumined by your Word and Sacraments, may shine with the radiance of Christ's glory, that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

O God, by the preaching of your apostle Paul you have caused the light of the Gospel to shine throughout the world: Grant, we pray, that we, having his wonderful conversion in remembrance, may show ourselves thankful to you by following his holy teaching; 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 31; PM Psalm 35
Gen. 11:27-12:8; Heb. 7:1-17; John 4:16-26
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Acts 26:9-21. Why are you persecuting me?

The rock group R.E.M. has a song called, "Everybody Hurts." On several levels it is a painful reminder that suffering is a part of life. To live in this world is to hurt. To inflict hurt on someone is a double hurt, for that person and oneself.


Saul hurt people. He rationalized persecution of those who differed from his views by invoking God's Name. Then Saul encountered the Lord Christ. His personal hurt became a source of healing among nations. Note that even his name changed to Paul. The vulnerable personality traits that made him a rabid terrorist are curiously similar to the characteristics that allowed him to become an effective missionary. All hurts become sources of healing and grace.


Let our hurts be healed. Let goofs become grace. Let persecutions of any kind be converted into a perfect work in the name of Christ.


When suffering is inevitable, the Christian puts it to good use. There is a wonderful compensation by which physical evil, if humbly accepted, conquers moral evil. It purifies the soul, spurs it on and detaches it. Finally, acting as a sacrament acts, it effects a mysterious union between the faithful soul and the suffering Christ.
--Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (d. 1955)
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Conversion of St. Paul:
AM Psalm 19; Isaiah 45:18-25; Philppians 3:4b-11
PM Psalm 119:89-112; Ecclesiasticus 39:1-10; Acts 9:1-22
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Antananarivo (Indian Ocean)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Prayer for unity

Daily Reading for January 25 • The Conversion of St. Paul the Apostle

We have come together in the presence of Almighty God to pray for the recovery of the unity of Christ’s Church, and for the renewal of our common life in Jesus Christ in whom we are all made one.

Silence

Let us give heed to the words of Holy Scripture which set forth God’s will and purpose for the unity of his Church.

“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.”
Lord, write your word in our hearts:
That we may know and do your will.

“There is one body, and one Spirit, as there is also one hope held out in God’s call to you; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.”
Lord, write your word in our hearts:
That we may know and do your will.

“For Christ is like a single body with its many limbs and organs which, many as they are, together make up one body. For indeed we were all brought into one body by baptism, in the one Spirit, whether we are Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, and that one Holy Spirit was poured out for all of us to drink.”
Lord, write your word in our hearts:
That we may know and do your will.

“But it is not for these alone that I pray, but for those also who through their words put their faith in me; may they all be one; as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, so also may they be in us, that the world may believe that you have sent me.”
Lord, write your word in our hearts:
That we may know and do your will. Amen.

A litany for The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity from Prayers for Today’s Church, quoted in The Wideness of God’s Mercy: Litanies to Enlarge Our Prayer, revised and updated edition, compiled and adapted by Jeffery Rowthorn with W. Alfred Tisdale. Copyright © 2007. 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/

You can heartfully evoke the Billy Joel mantra: "I love you just the way you are."
— Dean Sluyter in Why the Chicken Crossed the Road and Other Hidden Enlightenment Teachings from the Buddha to Bebop to Mother Goose

To Practice This Thought: Create a mantra from another song lyric.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

There are times when we are wearied with travelling, and the Lord grants our faculties tranquillity and our soul quiet, and while they are in that state, He gives us a clear understanding of the nature of the gifts he bestows on those whom He brings to His kingdom.
St Teresa of Jesus
Way, 30.6
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

No one on this earth can avoid affliction; and although the
afflictions which the Lord sends are not great, men imagine them
beyond their strength and are crushed by them. This is because
they will not humble their souls and commit themselves to the will
of God. But the Lord Himself guides with His grace those who are
given over to God's will, and they bear all things with fortitude
for the sake of God Whom they have so loved and with Whom they are
glorified for ever. It is impossible to escape tribulation in this
world but the man who is giver over to the will of God bears
tribulation easily, seeing it but putting his trust in the Lord,
and so his tribulations pass.

Archimandrite Sophrony
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Receiving Forgiveness

There are two sides to forgiveness: giving and receiving. Although at first sight giving seems to be harder, it often appears that we are not able to offer forgiveness to others because we have not been able fully to receive it. Only as people who have accepted forgiveness can we find the inner freedom to give it. Why is receiving forgiveness so difficult? It is very hard to say, "Without your forgiveness I am still bound to what happened between us. Only you can set me free." That requires not only a confession that we have hurt somebody but also the humility to acknowledge our dependency on others. Only when we can receive forgiveness can we give it.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Therefore, we seek to love all those to whom we are bound by ties of family or friendship. Our love for them increases as their love for Christ grows deeper. We have a special love and affection for members of the Third Order, praying for each other individually and seeking to grow in that love. We are on our guard against anything which might injure this love, and we seek reconciliation with those from whom we are estranged. We seek the same love for those with whom we have little natural affinity, for this kind of love is not a welling up of emotion, but is a bond founded in our common union with Christ.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Focused on God
January 25th, 2008
Friday’s Reflection

WHEN WE PRAY on behalf of another, we are creating a space for God to use that life as is most appropriate, according to God’s light, not ours. Because of our shared nature with God, in this space our life becomes God’s life: God’s tears, God’s offering, God’s power. We should set God free to work his mysterious love in ways that we should not care to seek to know, if we are rightly focused on God.

- Maggie Ross
“The Space of Prayer”
Weavings Journal

From p. 43 of Weavings Journal, July/August 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

Conversion

Question of the day:
When has a breakdown lead you to a breakthrough?



There are four descriptions of poverty in the Scriptures. First, there's poverty as sin, emptiness, the poverty of people who are dead inside. That obviously is not the poverty that Scripture idealizes. And yet it does play a part in the whole pattern of salvation. Sin and grace are related. In a certain sense the only way we really understand salvation, grace, and freedom, is by understanding their opposites. That's why the great saints are, invariably, converted sinners.

When you finally have to eat and taste your own hard-heartedness, your own emptiness, selfishness and all the rest, then you open up to grace. That is the pattern in all our lives. That's why it was such a grace in my hermitage year when I was able, at last—even as a male and a German—to weep over my sins and to feel tremendous sadness at my own silliness and stupidity.

I think all of us have to confront ourselves as poor people in that way. And that's why many of our greatest moments of grace follow upon, sometimes, our greatest sins. We are hard-hearted and closed-minded for years, then comes the moment of vulnerability and mercy. We break down and break through.

from Letting Go: A Spirituality of Subtraction
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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

aul's conversion

Herein is Saint Paul's conversion memorable: that it was a triumph over the enemy. When Almighty God would convert the world, opening the door of faith to the Gentiles, who was the chosen preacher of this mystery? Not one of Christ's first followers. To show his power, he put forth his hand into the very midst of the persecutors of his Son, and seized upon the most strenuous among them. The prayer of a dying man, Stephen, is the token and occasion of that triumph which he had reserved for himself. His strength is made perfect in weakness.

It was a triumph over the enemies of Christ; but it was also an expressive emblem of the nature of God's general dealings with the race of man. What are we all but rebels against God and enemies of the truth? Who then could so appropriately fulfill the purpose of him who came to call sinners to repentance, as one who esteemed himself the least of the apostles, that was not meet to be called an apostle, because he had persecuted the Church of God? When Almighty God in his infinite mercy purposed to form a people to himself out of the heathen, as vessels for this glory, first he chose the instrument of this his purpose as a brand from the burning, to be a type of the rest.

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

LEAVE ROOM FOR GOD


"But when it pleased God. . ." Galatians 1:15

As workers for God we have to learn to make room for God - to give God "elbow room." We calculate and estimate, and say that this and that will happen, and we forget to make room for God to come in as He chooses. Would we be surprised if God came into our meeting or into our preaching in a way we had never looked for Him to come? Do not look for God to come in any particular way, but look for Him. That is the way to make room for Him. Expect Him to come, but do not expect Him only in a certain way. However much we may know God, the great lesson to learn is that at any minute He may break in. We are apt to over look this element of surprise, yet God never works in any other way. All of a sudden God meets the life - "When it was the good pleasure of God. . ."

Keep your life so constant in its contact with God that His surprising power may break out on the right hand and on the left. Always be in a state of expectancy, and see that you leave room for God to come in as He likes.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 25, May 26, September 25
Chapter 7: On Humility

Holy Scripture, brethren, cries out to us, saying,
"Everyone who exalts himself shall be humbled,
and he who humbles himself shall be exalted" (Luke 14:11).
In saying this it shows us
that all exaltation is a kind of pride,
against which the Prophet proves himself to be on guard
when he says,
"Lord, my heart is not exalted,
nor are mine eyes lifted up;
neither have I walked in great matters,
nor in wonders above me."
But how has he acted?
"Rather have I been of humble mind
than exalting myself;
as a weaned child on its mother's breast,
so You solace my soul" (Ps. 130:1-2).

Hence, brethren,
if we wish to reach the very highest point of humility
and to arrive speedily at that heavenly exaltation
to which ascent is made through the humility of this present life,
we must
by our ascending actions
erect the ladder Jacob saw in his dream,
on which Angels appeared to him descending and ascending.
By that descent and ascent
we must surely understand nothing else than this,
that we descend by self-exaltation and ascend by humility.
And the ladder thus set up is our life in the would,
which the Lord raises up to heaven if our heart is humbled.
For we call our body and soul the sides of the ladder,
and into these sides our divine vocation has inserted
the different steps of humility and discipline we must climb.
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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.

St. John 10:9-16 (1/25) Gospel for Holy Hierarchs
(Gregory the Theologian, et. al.)

Three Images: St. John 10:9-17, especially vss. 9, 11, 17:"I Am the
door....I Am the good shepherd....My Father loves Me...." In today's
Gospel, the Lord Jesus presents Himself not in abstract words nor
convoluted phrases but in three simple, earthly images, easily
understood by thoughtful people in every culture and society. The
images are at once profound invitations and solemn warnings. They
convey all the essential elements of the life-giving Gospel of our
Faith, the great good that is in Christ, and the clear and present
dangers of turning away from Him.

When the Lord Jesus declares, "I Am the door" (vs. 9), He indicates that
He is the exclusive gateway for reaching God. In traveling to earthly
destinations, we may pass through many gateways or doors onto various
roads or paths by which to cross a city or to reach another part of the
country; but to enter any space walled off from entrance, only a door
provides access. In today's passage, the enclosure to which the Lord
refers is a sheepfold, a pen for holding and protecting a flock (Jn.
10:1). With this image, our Lord Jesus discloses that entrance into
Divine safety, shelter, and care is through Him: whoever "enters by Me,
he will be saved, and...find pasture" (Jn. 10:9).

A century ago, a traveler in the Middle East reported meeting a shepherd
with a flock. As the two men talked, the shepherd indicated the fold
where he kept his flock during the night - an enclosure where his sheep
were safe from predators. It consisted of four walls with one opening,
for passing in and out. The traveler noted that there was no door or
gate across the opening, the shepherd answered, "I am the door; I lay
down across the opening after I have brought in my flock." Furthermore,
the shepherd declared that none of his sheep crossed over him during the
night, and no wolf would come in, being deterred by his body lying
across the entry way.1
The prevailing image throughout today's passage is the Good Shepherd.
The Lord even names Himself thus twice (vss. 11,14). St. John
Chrysostom points out that by this image our Lord "speaketh concerning
the Passion," thereby especially underscoring His Self-sacrifice for
"the salvation of the world."2 In addition through this image, the Lord
Jesus calls on you and me to consider the bond between Himself and us -
His flock, the Church. Each of our relationships with Him is very
personal and special to Him. You are His own. He will not flee when
you or any of us are under duress (vs. 12), something demonstrated
repeatedly throughout history. He is continuously present: "lo, I Am
with you always, even to the end of the age." (Mt. 28:20).

This presence of the Lord is reassuring: He always "sees the wolf
coming," long before we are aware of the enemy's advance (Jn. 10:12).
Knowing us intimately (vs. 14), He is able to awaken us early to the
spiritual dangers coming upon us and rouse us to prayer - if we will.
Thus He prepares us for Satan's assaults, so that we may be ready. How
is it that He is able to have such foresight and to communicate with us
when danger lurks? Do not forget that in Christ Jesus we are touching
God Who created and ever protects us, in the past, now, and forever.

In the closing verses of the passage, our Lord Jesus directs attention
to His Divine nature: "as the Father knows Me, even so I know the
Father...." (vs. 15). The Good Shepherd, our Lord Jesus Christ Who is
ever with us - through Whom we have access to God the Father - sees and
understands our condition better than we do ourselves. He is our
guarantee that there is nothing to "hinder us from being
saved....Nothing, unless we ourselves revolt from Him...," as St. John
Chrysostom says.3 What better assurance do we need than to know that we
belong to God Who even laid "down [His] life for the sheep" (vs. 15),
and took "it again" (vs. 17), and watches over us?

O Thou, Good Shepherd of Thy People, grant us to hear Thy voice and to
follow where Thou dost lead, for with Thy Father and the Holy Spirit,
Thou art our God unto all ages

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Reading for Jan 24, 2008

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


January 24, May 25, September 24
Chapter 6: On the Spirit of Silence

Let us do what the Prophet says:
"I said, 'I will guard my ways,
that I may not sin with my tongue.
I have set a guard to my mouth.'
I was mute and was humbled,
and kept silence even from good things" (Ps. 38:2-3).
Here the Prophet shows
that if the spirit of silence ought to lead us at times
to refrain even from good speech,
so much the more ought the punishment for sin
make us avoid evil words.

Therefore, since the spirit of silence is so important,
permission to speak should rarely be granted
even to perfect disciples,
even though it be for good, holy edifying conversation;
for it is written,
"In much speaking you will not escape sin" (Prov. 10:19),
and in another place,
"Death and life are in the power of the tongue" (Prov. 18:21).

For speaking and teaching belong to the mistress;
the disciple's part is to be silent and to listen.
And for that reason
if anything has to be asked of the Superior,
it should be asked
with all the humility and submission inspired by reverence.

But as for coarse jests and idle words
or words that move to laughter,
these we condemn everywhere with a perpetual ban,
and for such conversation
we do not permit a disciple to open her mouth.


Some Thoughts:

The very first thing that comes to my head is how much I long for silence. There is noise everywhere and it just plain grates. And the world seems to have only gotten noiser since i was born in 1950.

This one of those passages which I would imagine some readers might find archaic. In a society or perhaps it is world-wide which claims that I have as much right to express my opinion as you, it must come as a shock that Benedict is not interested in our opinions, feelings, issues. He would have us get over our fine selves and care only about the opinions, feeling and issues of the Lord.

Note that we are to refrain from "even good speech." "permission to speak should rarely be granted even to perfect disciples, even though it be for good, holy edifying conversation" Not that I am any example, but what might this mean? We are accustomed to hashing things out with others be it family, friends, therapists, email lists... . Sometimes I don't even know what I think until I say it to someone else. Or type it to a list. Do you have that experience?

Communication is ingrained in us. Look at the shelves in the self-help section. All those books about more effective communication. It's easy to understand why Benedict would place a ban on coarse jests and idle words. Words that move to laughter" is perhaps harder to understand, because surely laughter is a good thing. Perhaps the question is at what do we laugh? And why? Laughter from joy is one thing, laughter at the expense of another or in our own self-aggrandizement is another.

What is the first sentence of the Prologue? "Listen to the precepts of your master." It takes silence to do that. Benedict would have us communicate with God first and foremost above all.

At least, that's what I think. What do you think?

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Daily Meditation 01/24/08

[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, whose Son our Savior Jesus Christ is the light of the world: Grant that your people, illumined by your Word and Sacraments, may shine with the radiance of Christ's glory, that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Gracious God, we thank you for calling Florence Li Tim-Oi, much beloved daughter, to be the first woman to exercise the office of a priest in our Communion: By the grace of your Spirit inspire us to follow her example, serving your people with patience and happiness all our days, and witnessing in every circumstance to our Savior Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the same Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 37:1-18; PM Psalm 37:19-42
Gen. 11:1-9; Heb. 6:13-20; John 4:1-15
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Genesis 11:1-9. Let us make a name for ourselves.

The movie Babel deals with violence, disaster, and tragedy. It also addresses the need for greater human understanding. The pain felt around the world is starkly portrayed, but there is yet a ray of hope. In order to comprehend, listening is required.


The movie is not quite like the Genesis story of the Tower of Babel. Human pride permeates the biblical account. It is about myopic competition and egotistical priorities. These faults lead to a cracking of human unity. Lack of understanding ensues because no one listens. Communication falls apart. Division creeps in. Instead of a tower, walls are built that separate people.


Today the Anglican communion celebrates one brave soul who did not give up when faced with walls, Florence Li Tim-Oi. In 1944, she was ordained the first woman priest in our part of the body of Christ. There were afflictions and struggles, but Florence remained faithful in breaking down barriers. Let us bless the Lord for servants who overcome by understanding, listening, and affirming all the people of God.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Ordination of Florence Li Tim-Oi
Psalm 116:1-2
Galatians 3:23-28; Luke 10:1-9
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Missionary Diocese of Angola (South Africa)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Ministry transformed

Daily Reading for January 24 • Ordination of Florence Li Tim-Oi, First Woman Priest in the Anglican Communion, 1944

The first woman priest in the Anglican Communion was not an American. In a curious parallel to the seating of Elizabeth Dyer in the House of Deputies in 1946, the upheaval of wartime had also made possible the 1944 ordination of Florence Li Tim-Oi by Ronald O. Hall, the bishop of Hong Kong, to provide priestly ministrations to Chinese Americans under the Japanese occupation. When word of the ordination reached England, Bishop Hall was roundly denounced and Li Tim-Oi agreed to suspend her sacramental ministry to protect Hall from punitive action. Her subsequent disappearance throughout the years China was closed to the West made it easy for the Anglican Communion to resist dealing with the implications of her ordination, but Li Tim-Oi’s ordination reminds us that the issue was by no means an American invention of the 1960s. In fact, women’s ordination to the priesthood had been urged by women’s rights activists on both sides of the Atlantic since the turn of the century, and was first alluded to in a Lambeth Conference report of 1920. . . .

On February 11, 1989, before a jubilant crowd of eight thousand people in the Hynes Auditorium in Boston, Barbara Clementine Harris was consecrated suffragan bishop of the most populous diocese in the American church. . . . Everything about the service testified to the fact that the old order was changing. The preacher was Harris’s mentor, Paul Washington, rector of the Church of the Advocate which had hosted the Philadelphia ordinations fifteen years earlier. Joining Bishop Harris around the altar to concelebrate the Eucharist were Florence Li Tim-Oi, the first Anglican woman ordained to the priesthood in 1944, and Carter Heyward, one of the Philadelphia Eleven. . . . A woman had become a bishop, and the episcopacy had been transformed: no longer a male preserve, it had become an image of human leadership within a community of diverse men and women united in Christ’s service.

From New Wine: The Story of Women Transforming Leadership and Power in the Episcopal Church by Pamela W. Darling (Cowley Publications, 1994).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Great dreams contain inexhaustible truths, and orient us, like runes, toward our futures. One hesitates to try to explain them; one wants to dance them, act them out in living gestures. The more we put ourselves into a great dream, the more we get back. Great dreams are wells that never run dry.
— Michael Grosso in Soulmaker

To Practice This Thought: Follow through on something started in one of your night dreams — call someone you met in the dream or visit a place seen there.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

The spirit of God, insofar as it is hidden in the veins of the soul, is like soft refreshing water which satisfies the thirst of the spirit.
St John of the Cross
Living Flame, 3.8
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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 evil one cannot comprehend the joy we receive from the
spiritual life; for this reason he is jealous of us, he envies us
and sets traps for us, and we become grieved and fall. We must
struggle, because without struggles we do not obtain virtues.

Elder Ieronymos of Aegina
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Community, a Quality of the Heart

The word community has many connotations, some positive, some negative. Community can make us think of a safe togetherness, shared meals, common goals, and joyful celebrations. It also can call forth images of sectarian exclusivity, in-group language, self-satisfied isolation, and romantic naivete. However, community is first of all a quality of the heart. It grows from the spiritual knowledge that we are alive not for ourselves but for one another. Community is the fruit of our capacity to make the interests of others more important than our own (see Philippians 2:4). The question, therefore, is not "How can we make community?" but "How can we develop and nurture giving hearts?"
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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/

Offering Our Gifts
January 24th, 2008
Thursday’s Reflection

WORK IS ONE ASPECT of a full human life, but it is not a whole life. We need to think about work, not in isolation but as part of a whole way to live. … For most of us, our work will not be written on our tombstones or remembered by friends after we are gone. But work is important. Work is a way of offering our gifts to others and to God.

- Nancy Pineda-Madrid and Angela Fernández
“Work”
Way to Live: Christian Practices for Teens

From p. 124 of Way to Live: Christian Practices for Teens, edited by Dorothy C. Bass and Don C. Richter. Copyright © 2002 by the editors. 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

Conversion

Question of the day:
What conversion are you being invited into right now?



I hope that we will have the courage to stop rewarding and confirming peoples egos and calling morality ministry and Church. I hope that we will have lower expectations of leadership and the institution and therefore less need to rebel against it or unnecessarily depend upon it. After all, as the poet Rilke put it, “There is no place on earth that isn’t looking for you. You must change your life.” The Church cannot make that happen. It can only announce its possibility and offer its Risen Life as leaven and salt. I always wonder why such a glorious power and privilege is not enough! It is more than I ever hoped for or will ever do! Many people are upset with the Church because they expected too much from it.

More than anything else I hope that we will be a people who have entered into mercy and allow others to enter. I once saw God’s mercy as patient, benevolent tolerance, a form of forgiveness. Now it has become an understanding, a loving allowing, a willing “breaking of the rules” by the One who made the rule, a wink and a smile, a firm and joyful taking of the hand—while we clutch at our sins and gaze at God in desire and disbelief.

from The Great Themes of Scripture
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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

Our neighbors are like our Maker

To have a Christian love for our neighbors is to love God in them, or them in God; it is to cherish God alone for his own sake, and his creatures for love of him. When we look upon our neighbors, created in the image and likeness of God, should we not say to each other: "Look at these people he has made—are they not like their Maker?" Should we not be drawn irresistibly toward them, embrace them, and be moved to tears for love of them? Should we not call down upon them a hundred thousand blessings? And why? For love of them? No indeed, since we cannot be sure whether, of themselves, they are worthy of love or hate. Then why? For love of God, who created them in his own image and likeness, and so capable of sharing in his goodness, grace, and glory; for love of God, I say, unto whom they exist, from whom they exist, through whom they exist, in whom they exist, for whom they exist, and whom they resemble in a very special manner.

This is why divine love not only repeatedly commands us to love our neighbors, but also itself produces this love and pours it out into our hearts, since they bear its own image and likeness; for just as we are the image of God, so our holy love for one another is the true image of our heavenly love for God.

Francis de Sales
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

THE OVERMASTERING DIRECTION


"I have appeared unto thee for this purpose." Acts 26:16

The vision Paul had on the road to Damascus was no passing emotion, but a vision that had very clear and emphatic directions for him, and he says, "I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision." Our Lord said, in effect, to Paul - Your whole life is to be overmastered by Me; you are to have no end, no aim, and no purpose but Mine. "I have chosen him."

When we are born again we all have visions, if we are spiritual at all, of what Jesus wants us to be, and the great thing is to learn not to be disobedient to the vision, not to say that it cannot be attained. It is not sufficient to know that God has redeemed the world, and to know that the Holy Spirit can make all that Jesus did effectual in me; I must have the basis of a personal relationship to Him. Paul was not given a message or a doctrine to proclaim, he was brought into a vivid, personal, overmastering relationship to Jesus Christ. Verse 16 is immensely commanding - "to make thee a minister and a witness." There is nothing there apart from the personal relationship. Paul was devoted to a Person not to a cause. He was absolutely Jesus Christ's, he saw nothing else, he lived for nothing else. "For I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ, and Him crucified."
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/


January 24, May 25, September 24
Chapter 6: On the Spirit of Silence

Let us do what the Prophet says:
"I said, 'I will guard my ways,
that I may not sin with my tongue.
I have set a guard to my mouth.'
I was mute and was humbled,
and kept silence even from good things" (Ps. 38:2-3).
Here the Prophet shows
that if the spirit of silence ought to lead us at times
to refrain even from good speech,
so much the more ought the punishment for sin
make us avoid evil words.

Therefore, since the spirit of silence is so important,
permission to speak should rarely be granted
even to perfect disciples,
even though it be for good, holy edifying conversation;
for it is written,
"In much speaking you will not escape sin" (Prov. 10:19),
and in another place,
"Death and life are in the power of the tongue" (Prov. 18:21).

For speaking and teaching belong to the mistress;
the disciple's part is to be silent and to listen.
And for that reason
if anything has to be asked of the Superior,
it should be asked
with all the humility and submission inspired by reverence.

But as for coarse jests and idle words
or words that move to laughter,
these we condemn everywhere with a perpetual ban,
and for such conversation
we do not permit a disciple to open her mouth.
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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.

The Heights of Humility: St. Mark 9:33-41, especially vss. 35, 36: "And
He sat down, called the twelve, and said to them, 'If any one desires
to be first, he shall be last of all and servant of all.' Then He took
a little child and set him in the midst of them." Earlier in his
Gospel, St. Mark records the Lord Jesus' stringent requirements for
being united to Him - taking up your cross and following Him (8:34-38).
In the present passage, the Lord reveals other dimensions of taking up
the cross through self-denial and service to others. St. Theophylact of
Ochrid shows how the Lord connects the question of being honored by
Christ and simultaneously humbling yourself: "The Lord does not forbid
us to desire to become His favorites, for He wants us to desire
advancement in the spiritual life. But He does not want us to grasp for
honors and privileges, but rather to reach the heights by humility."1
In this vein, God forbid we belittle anyone of low estate, education,
position, or language! Especially, let us defer to those who simply
serve the Lord with little deeds of kindness and love.

Observe how the Savior develops His teaching concerning humility.
First, He states the attitude required: "to be first, he shall be last
of all and servant of all" (Mk. 9:35). Then, He dramatizes this by
setting a child among us (vs. 36). Tradition identifies this child as
St. Ignatius of Antioch, who, years later, went into the Arena with
lions joyfully embracing death in his humility. Thus, that child, grown
and become Bishop, would die for Christ just as Christ died for us all.

Without question, our Lord chose to be "last of all and servant of all"
(vs. 35) as His life in the flesh manifests. In His birth He "made
Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant" (Phil. 2:7),
entering human society as a member of the lowest class, taking His first
breath in a cave used to shelter livestock, fleeing as a refugee,
growing up unknown in a carpenter's shop, accepting "a baptism of
repentance for the remission of sins" (Mk. 1:4,9) - thus making Himself
"Who knew no sin to be sin for us" (2 Cor. 5:21). His associates were
the outcasts of society: "many tax collectors and sinners also sat
together with Jesus and His disciples; for there were many, and they
followed Him" (Mk. 2:15). In the end, He was executed with common
criminals, "one on His right and the other on His left" (Mk. 15:27).

Observe how Gregory the Great reveals Christ's use of the humility of
the Cross to benefit us in attaining humility: "since it is competent
for Divine Power not only to make good things out of nothing, but also
to refashion them from the evils that the devil had committed, the
humility of God appeared among men as a remedy against this wound
inflicted by the proud devil, so that those who had fallen through
imitation of their haughty enemy might rise by the example of their
humbled Creator."2 Bear your every cross as did the Lord - whether you
afflict your body by abstinence, meet your neighbor's need with
compassion, or suffer wrongs on behalf of others.

As for being last of all, St. Gregory warns those who hold position of
honor and distinction in the Body of Christ: "there are many in the
Church who scorn to be little ones and they do not cease to be great in
their own sight in place of humility....they claim their heavenly
country - and yet they do not love it."3 It is as Archimandrite
Sophrony Sakharov declares: "God...set no limits for any of us on the
spiritual plane....We are called to eternal life in the Kingdom of our
Father Which is in heaven;"4 yet, as the Lord states, "entry into the
Kingdom inevitably entails suffering. Many decline the Father's gift of
love precisely because the utmost effort is required...." Do not fear
the life in Christ, which you have accepted. Be a little child of your
Father, and, at the same time, establish yourself with the prodigal son:
"I...am no longer worthy to be called your son" (Lk. 15:21). Thus, if
God wills, let Him raise you however He will to the heights by humility.

O Christ God, Thou hast dwelt in a cave, and a manger did receive Thee:
Glory to Thy condescension, O Thou only Lover of mankind Who hast
revealed to us the heights of humility.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Daily Meditation 01/23/08

[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, whose Son our Savior Jesus Christ is the light of the world: Grant that your people, illumined by your Word and Sacraments, may shine with the radiance of Christ's glory, that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, now and for ever. Amen.


O everlasting God, you revealed truth to your servant Phillips Brooks, and so formed and molded his mind and heart that he was able to mediate that truth with grace and power: Grant, we pray, that all whom you call to preach the Gospel may steep themselves in your Word, and conform their lives to your will; 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 38; PM Psalm 119:25-48
Gen. 9:18-29; Heb. 6:1-12; John 3:22-36
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Hebrews 6:1-12. We want each one of you to show the same diligence so as to realize the full assurance of hope to the very end, so that you may not become sluggish.

In Spanish, the verb esperar, usually translated "to hope," can also mean "to wait." I have a contemplative friend who gets in the longer line at grocery stores and banks. She explains that this gives her more time to pray for her husband and sons. In choosing to wait, this dear soul acknowledges the close connection between waiting and hope. Much of life consists of waiting. Waiting makes some people anxious and angry, but for others, waiting is an occasion for prayer and hope.


There is a group of Hebrew verbs variously translated as "to hope," "to trust," and "to wait." In many cases, any of these three English words will fit the context of the Hebrew text. If we would "realize the full assurance of hope," we cannot be in a hurry, but must bide our time and fill that time with trust and prayer. To rush needlessly leads to cynicism, anger, burnout, and (as this text puts it) sluggishness.Whatever you're waiting for, wait expectantly and patiently--and be surprised by hope.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Phillips Brooks:
Psalm 84:7-12 or 33:1-5,20-21
Ephesians 3:14-21; Matthew 24:24-2
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Anglican Parishes of the Central Interior (British Columbia and the Yukon, Canada)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

In the way of love

Daily Reading for January 23 • Phillips Brooks, Bishop of Massachusetts, 1893

I find myself pitying the friends of my youth, who died when we were twenty-five years old, because whatever may be the richness of the life to which they have gone, and in which they have been living ever since, they never can know that particular manifestation of Christ which He makes to us here on earth, at each successive period of our human life. All experience comes to be but more and more of pressure of His life on ours. It cannot come by one flash of light, or one great convulsive event. It comes without haste and without rest in this perpetual living of our life with Him. And all the history, of outer or inner life, of the changes of circumstances, or the changes of thought, gets its meaning and value from this constantly growing relation to Christ.

I cannot tell you how personal this grows to me. He is here. He knows me and I know Him. It is no figure of speech. It is the realest thing in the world. And every day makes it realer. And one wonders with delight what it will grow to as the years go on.

Less and less, I think, grows the consciousness of seeking God. Greater and greater grows the certainty that He is seeking us and giving Himself to us to the complete measure of our present capacity. That is Love,--not that we loved Him, but that He loved us. I am sure that we ought to dwell far more upon God's love for us than on our love for Him. There is such a thing as putting ourselves in the way of God's overflowing love and letting it break upon us till the response of love to Him comes, not by struggle, not even by deliberation, but by necessity, as the echo comes when the sound strikes the rock.

From Life and Letters of Phillips Brooks, quoted in Love's Redeeming Work: The Anglican Quest for Holiness, compiled by Geoffrey Rowell, Kenneth Stevenson, and Rowan Williams (Oxford, 2001).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

We must love them both —
Those whose opinions we share,
Those whose opinions we don't share.
They've both labored in the search for Truth
and have both helped us in finding it.
— Thomas Aquinas quoted in Imagining the Sacred by Vernon Ruland

To Practice This Thought: Make a list of people you agree and disagree with and then contemplate it with love.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

The soul of the just person is nothing else but a paradise where the Lord says He finds His delight.
St Teresa of Jesus
Interior Castle, I.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 those who believe in Him, Christ will become all this and even
more, beyond enumeration, not only in the age to come but first i
this life, and then in the world to come. Thou in an obscure way
here below and in a perfect manner in the Kingdom, those who
believe see clearly nonetheless and receive as of now the
first-fruits of everything they will have in the future life.
Indeed, if they do not receive on earth everything that was
promised to them, they do not have any part of foretaste of the
blessings to come, their higher hope being set on the hereafter.
However, it is through death and the resurrection that God in His
foresight has given us the Kingdom, incorruptibility, the totality
of life eternal. Given these conditions, we unquestionably become
partakers of the good things to come, that is, incorruptible,
immortal, sons of God, sons of the light and of the day,
inheritors of the Kingdom of Heaven, since we carry the Kingdom
within.

St. Symeon the New Theologian
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

The Voice in the Garden of Solitude

Solitude is the garden for our hearts, which yearn for love. It is the place where our aloneness can bear fruit. It is the home for our restless bodies and anxious minds. Solitude, whether it is connected with a physical space or not, is essential for our spiritual lives. It is not an easy place to be, since we are so insecure and fearful that we are easily distracted by whatever promises immediate satisfaction. Solitude is not immediately satisfying, because in solitude we meet our demons, our addictions, our feelings of lust and anger, and our immense need for recognition and approval. But if we do not run away, we will meet there also the One who says, "Do not be afraid. I am with you, and I will guide you through the valley of darkness."

Let's keep returning to our solitude.
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Weekly Merton Reflection from the Merton Institute

I must get to know something of modern physics. Even though I am a monk, that is no reason for living in a Newtonian universe or, worse still, an Aristotelian one. The fact that the cosmos is not quite what St. Thomas and Dante imagined it to be has after all some importance. It does not invalidate St. Thomas or Dante or Catholic theology, but it ought to be understood and taken into account by a theologian. It is futile to try and live in an expanding universe with atomic fission an ever present possibility and try to think and act exclusively as if the cosmos were fixed in an immutable order centered upon man's earth. Modern physics has its repercussions in the monastery and to be a monk one must take them into account, although that does nothing whatever to make one's spirituality either simple or neat.

Thomas Merton. A Search for Solitude. Edited by Lawrence S. Cunningham (San Francisco, HarperSanFrancisco, 1996): 132

Thought for the Day

One must get along without the security of neat and simple, ready-made solutions. There are things one has to think out, all over again, for oneself.

A Search for Solitude: 132
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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/

Change My Heart
January 23rd, 2008
Wednesday's Reflection

O GOD, CHANGE my heart. Transform the attitudes from which my actions grow that I may honor you and others in my daily interactions. Amen.

- Mary Lou Redding
The Upper Room Disciplines 2007

From p. 233 of The Upper Room Disciplines 2007. Copyright © 2006 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

Conversion

Question of the day:
What happens when we fall in love with God?



We prostituted Christianity when we told our people they had to "save their souls." That attitude often affirmed the ego "spiritually", which is very dangerous and deceptive. We called it the journey into holiness, but it was often disguised and denied self-interest.

Saving one's soul and falling in love with God are two very different journeys. Because we told our people to save their souls, they got into spiritual consumerism, gathering sacraments, holy works, ascetical practices—all affirming the false self. Now we've got these big Christian egos walking around, who are very self-protective, satisfied and conservative in the wrong way. Conversion is not on their agenda. Every preacher or teacher knows what I'm talking about.

An unhealthy conservatism is incapable of exodus, of risk, of passion, and, therefore, perhaps incapable of the living God.

from Letting Go: A Spirituality of Subtraction
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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 gift of the Holy Spirit

When the Creator of the universe conceived the magnificent plan of gathering up all things in Christ and restoring human nature to its original condition, he promised that along with all his other gifts he would once more give us the Holy Spirit. This was the only way for us to regain secure possession of God's blessings. By God's decree the time for this descent of the Spirit upon us was to concur with the coming of Christ. God gave his word that in those days—by which he meant the days of our Savior—he would pour out his Spirit upon the whole human race.

So it was that when the time for this great act of generosity arrived and brought God's only Son into our midst in human flesh, a man born of a woman as holy scripture says, God the Father began at once again to give the Spirit. The first to receive the Spirit was Christ, since he was the firstfruits of our renewed nature. John bore witness to this when he said: I saw the Spirit coming down from heaven, and it rested on him.

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

RANSFORMED BY INSIGHT


"We all, with open face, beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image." 2 Corinthians 3:18

The outstanding characteristic of a Christian is this unveiled frankness before God so that the life becomes a mirror for other lives. By being filled with the Spirit we are transformed, and by beholding we become mirrors. You always know when a man has been beholding the glory of the Lord, you feel in your inner spirit that he is the mirror of the Lord's own character. Beware of anything which would sully that mirror in you; it is nearly always a good thing, the good that is not the best.

The golden rule for your life and mine is this concentrated keeping of the life open towards God. Let everything else - work, clothes, food, everything on earth - go by the board, saving that one thing. The rush of other things always tends to obscure this concentration on God. We have to maintain ourselves in the place of beholding, keeping the life absolutely spiritual all through. Let other things come and go as they may, let other people criticize as they will, but never allow anything to obscure the life that is hid with Christ in God. Never be hurried out of the relationship of abiding in Him. It is the one thing that is apt to fluctuate but it ought not to. The severest discipline of a Christian's life is to learn how to keep "beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord."
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/


January 23, May 24, September 23
Chapter 5: On Obedience

But this very obedience
will be acceptable to God and pleasing to all
only if what is commanded is done
without hesitation, delay, lukewarmness, grumbling, or objection.
For the obedience given to Superiors is given to God,
since He Himself has said,
"He who hears you, hears Me" (Luke 10:16).
And the disciples should offer their obedience with a good will,
for "God loves a cheerful giver" (2 Cor. 9:7).
For if the disciple obeys with an ill will
and murmurs,
not necessarily with his lips but simply in his heart,
then even though he fulfill the command
yet his work will not be acceptable to God,
who sees that his heart is murmuring.
And, far from gaining a reward for such work as this,
he will incur the punishment due to murmurers,
unless he amend and make satisfaction.
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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.

St. Mark 8:30-34 (1/23) For Wed of the 35th Week after Pentecost
(Wed of the 30th Week)

The Faith to Follow: St. Mark 8:30-34, especially vs. 31: "...and He
began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things, and be
rejected by the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and
after three days rise again." This reading from St. Mark straddles the
two major portions of his Gospel. It separates the account of the Lord
Jesus' early ministry (1:1-8:30) from His final disputes with the
religious leadership, His Passion, and Resurrection (8:31-16:20). Read
these verses with this transition in mind.

The verses immediately preceding the reading record a discussion
concerning our Lord Jesus' identity (Mk. 8:27-29), and concludes with
the disciple Peter's confession (vs. 29). The Lord then directs His
disciples to "tell no one about Him" (vs. 30). Next, He teaches them
about His Passion, the Resurrection, as well as the cost of discipleship
- the primary subject of today's reading and the predominating theme
throughout the remainder of St. Mark's narrative.

The new teaching that the Lord introduced at this point was at least
sobering: "...the Son of Man must suffer many things, and be rejected by
the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and after three
days rise again" (vs. 31). This instruction was first given to the
disciples, but very soon after to the crowds (vss. 32,34), as the word
"openly" suggests.

In the wording of His declaration, the Lord Jesus speaks of Himself
ambiguously. The term, "the Son of Man," could serve either as a title
or simply could be a common Semitic way of referring to one's self.
Whichever the Lord intended, "Son of Man," effectively kept His
Messianic "secret" from the crowds. While suppressing His identity as
the Christ publicly, He allowed the disciples to "digest" two truths:
both His identity as the Messiah and His coming Passion.

Still, the crowds heard the Lord Jesus say that He was going to suffer,
die, and rise on the third day. It seems that the Lord was preparing
both His disciples and the multitudes for the reality of a suffering
Messiah, One Who would embrace suffering and death before triumphing.

Along with the new information of what lay ahead there was a warning:
the Lord Jesus' followers should also expect necessarily to take up
their own personal crosses (vs. 34). To follow our Lord still entails a
readiness to suffer with Him and for Him.

Try to understand what "the faith to follow" means for those facing
martyrdom: trusting Him requires living as He directs and without
compromise. At times, that may mean not bending even when faced with
threats of death. The Church has a glorious history of such witnesses.
"Faith to follow" likewise has produced a radiant company of
"confessors" who have suffered, but not unto death. Still, there is the
suffering that every disciple accepts by following in faith.

Holy Tradition affirms the necessity of a "suffering of the heart" for
every follower. This is the suffering of contrition, the "joyful
sorrow" of repentance, the heart of the Orthodox Christian life.
Metropolitan Vlachos is quite frank about the importance of such pain
for all Christians: "A Christian life without pain is bogus. Pain of
the heart is essential for salvation."

Whether your suffering is physical, psychological, or spiritual, God
receives it on "His holy, most heavenly and ideal altar," as St. Paul
appeals to you: "We have an altar" and a "sanctuary" and a "high priest
for sin....Jesus" Who sanctifies His "people with His own
blood....Therefore let us go forth to Him"(Heb. 13:10-13). The present
"comfort culture" encourages you to soothe pain and flee suffering. St.
John Chrysostom, himself a Confessor, observed that "by their trials the
righteous flourished. For the soul is purified when it is afflicted for
God's sake." The faith that follows Christ will suffer to bring forth
the priceless fruit of the Holy Spirit (see Gal. 5:22, 23).

O Christ our God, help us be bold to deny ourselves and to follow Thee
in faith.

Reading for Jan 23, 2008

January 23, May 24, September 23
Chapter 5: On Obedience

But this very obedience
will be acceptable to God and pleasing to all
only if what is commanded is done
without hesitation, delay, lukewarmness, grumbling, or objection.
For the obedience given to Superiors is given to God,
since He Himself has said,
"He who hears you, hears Me" (Luke 10:16).
And the disciples should offer their obedience with a good will,
for "God loves a cheerful giver" (2 Cor. 9:7).
For if the disciple obeys with an ill will
and murmurs,
not necessarily with his lips but simply in his heart,
then even though he fulfill the command
yet his work will not be acceptable to God,
who sees that his heart is murmuring.
And, far from gaining a reward for such work as this,
he will incur the punishment due to murmurers,
unless he amend and make satisfaction.

Some thoughts:

It is not just obedience God wants from us, but a glad, happy obedience. How do we do that? Isn't just human nature to compare ourselves to others? Do we curse our someone on the highway for cutting us off and then forget to use our own directional?

The glad heart is crucial, Benedict says. So crucial that unless we have have it, our work, no matter how good, will never please the Lord. But what can we do about this? Our burdens are heavy. We feel as if it is all on our shoulders.

I don't have any answer. I am one who will meet all of my responsibilities but I do not always rejoice over them. Far from it.

Perhaps we can join together and help each other figure out how to obey without grumbling.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Reading for Jan 22

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

January 22, May 23, September 22
Chapter 5: On Obedience

The first degree of humility is obedience without delay.
This is the virtue of those
who hold nothing dearer to them than Christ;
who, because of the holy service they have professed,
and the fear of hell,
and the glory of life everlasting,
as soon as anything has been ordered by the Superior,
receive it as a divine command
and cannot suffer any delay in executing it.
Of these the Lord says,
"As soon as he heard, he obeyed Me" (Ps. 17:45).
And again to teachers He says,
"He who hears you, hears Me" (Luke 10:16).

Such as these, therefore,
immediately leaving their own affairs
and forsaking their own will,
dropping the work they were engaged on
and leaving it unfinished,
with the ready step of obedience
follow up with their deeds the voice of him who commands.
And so as it were at the same moment
the master's command is given
and the disciple's work is completed,
the two things being speedily accomplished together
in the swiftness of the fear of God
by those who are moved
with the desire of attaining life everlasting.
That desire is their motive for choosing the narrow way,
of which the Lord says,
"Narrow is the way that leads to life" (Matt. 7:14),
so that,
not living according to their own choice
nor obeying their own desires and pleasures
but walking by another's judgment and command,
they dwell in monasteries and desire to have an Abbot over them.
Assuredly such as these are living up to that maxim of the Lord
in which He says,
"I have come not to do My own will,
but the will of Him who sent Me" (John 6:38).

Some Thoughts;

Reminded of one of the sayings in the collection, _Sayings of the Desert Fathers_ about a disciple named Mark who was loved by his abba for the obedieince he showed the abba. One time Mark was writing the letter omega, which looks sorta like a w. As the story goes, the abba called for Mark and so instant was his obedience that he put down his pen () a quill I suppose) and left the letter unfinished.

In the film "The Nun's Story", Sr Luke (played by Audrey Hepburn) consistently demonstrates an inability to obey, especially when it comes to leaving patients in order to obey the bell summoning her to a daily office. Eventually she realizes that she will never be able to master obedience like this and she leaves the community.

In today's reading from the RB we see Benedict insisting on obedience. By the time he wrote the Rule, the story about mark was already known and that may have been in his mind when he wrote this section. We'll never know of course. What does Benedict emphasize? Which points does he repeat in various ways? What metaphors does he use?

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Daily Meditation 01/22/08

[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

Almighty God, whose Son our Savior Jesus Christ is the light of the world: Grant that your people, illumined by your Word and Sacraments, may shine with the radiance of Christ's glory, that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Almighty God, your deacon Vincent, upheld by you, was not terrified by threats nor overcome by torments: Strengthen us to endure all adversity with invincible and steadfast faith; 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 26, 28; PM Psalm 36, 39
Gen. 9:1-17; Heb. 5:7-14; John 3:16-21
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 3:16-21. For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but have eternal life. Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.

"3:16." It could become a sound bite. It may have begun with the fellow with the rainbow Afro in the early 1980s. He would sit at media-strategic seats in stadiums and hold a sign, "John 3:16." This earnest yet troubled soul received his fifteen minutes of fame and then some. Then in the 1990s a born-again Christian wrestler quoted the Bible before matches. One of his favorites was John 3:16. An opponent reacted to what he felt was pious self-righteousness and started quoting Austin 3:16. The mantra that followed did not even resemble the text of the gospel.


So, what does John 3:16 say? It says that God has acted for the entire world. The Son of God has come and died for us. Jesus has given us fullness of life. This fullness implies ecstatic joy, perfect freedom, and blessed giftedness. We are offered life in Christ.


May we hear and cherish these sounds of the Lord.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Vincent:
Psalm 31:1-5 or 116:10-17
Revelation 7:13-17; Luke 12:4-12
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the The Church of Bangladesh and the Diocese of Dhaka
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Defending the faith

Daily Reading for January 22 • Vincent, Deacon of Saragossa and Martyr, 304

Another early deacon with close ties to his bishop was Vincent of Saragossa, martyred on 22 January 304. Vincent was not only the eyes and ears of his bishop, but literally his mouth. Because Valerius stuttered badly, Vincent often preached for him. According to legend, they were arrested by the governor of Spain, threatened with torture and death, and pressured to renounce their faith. Vincent said, “Father, if you order me, I will speak.” Valerius replied, “Son, as I have committed you to dispense the word of God, so I now charge you to answer in vindication of the faith which we defend.” Vincent defied the governor and was tortured to death. . . .

Scholars may question the historical accuracy of these legends about Laurence and Vincent, Apollonia and Thekla, and other early martyrs, but they tell us a good deal about deacons in the early church. They stood close to their bishop, they brought help to the poor and brought the word to the people, and they held the mystery of the faith with a clear conscience, even to death.

From Many Servants: An Introduction to Deacons by Ormonde Plater (Cowley Publications, 1991).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

To stay in one place and watch the seasons come and go is tantamount to constant travel; one is traveling with the earth.
— Marguerite Yourcenar quoted in Unexpected Miracles by David Richo

To Practice This Thought: Relish the changing landscape of the place where you live
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

The loveliest masterpiece of the heart of God is the heart of a mother.
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

Self-accusation before God is something that is very necessary for
us; and humility of heart is extremely advantageous in our lives,
above all at the time of prayer. For prayer requires great
attention and needs a proper awareness, otherwise it will turn out
to be unacceptable and rejected, and `it will be turned back
empty' to our bosom.

Martyrius of Edessa
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Community Supported by Solitude

Solitude greeting solitude, that's what community is all about. Community is not the place where we are no longer alone but the place where we respect, protect, and reverently greet one another's aloneness. When we allow our aloneness to lead us into solitude, our solitude will enable us to rejoice in the solitude of others. Our solitude roots us in our own hearts. Instead of making us yearn for company that will offer us immediate satisfaction, solitude makes us claim our center and empowers us to call others to claim theirs. Our various solitudes are like strong, straight pillars that hold up the roof of our communal house. Thus, solitude always strengthens community.
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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/

The State of Our Spirit
January 22nd, 2008
Tuesday’s Reflection

I DON’T IMAGINE God expects us always to respond calmly and lovingly, but I’ve come to believe God wants us to develop awareness of the state of our spirit, for our own sake and the sake of others. And I’ve come to know that God can begin molding any spirit, however cranky, toward better ends than we would devise for ourselves.

- Robert Corin Morris
Wrestling with Grace

From p. 11 of Wrestling with Grace: A Spirituality for the Rough Edges of Daily Life by Robert Corin Morris. Copyright © 2003 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

Conversion

Question of the day:
Do we have to know sin to know salvation?

We don't think ourselves into a new way of living; we live ourselves into a new way of thinking. The journeys around the edges of sin lead us to long for a deeper life at the center of ourselves.

Ruthless ambition can lead one to the very failure and emptiness that is the point of conversion. Is the ambition, therefore, good or is it evil? Do we really have to sin to know salvation? Call me a "sin mystic," but that is exactly what I see happening in all my pastoral experience: Darkness leads us to light.

That does not mean that we should set out intentionally to sin. We only see the pattern after the fact. Blessed Julian of Norwich put it perfectly: "Commonly, first we fall and later we see it—and both are the Mercy of God." How did we ever lose that? It got hidden away in that least celebrated but absolutely central Easter Vigil service when the deacon sings to the Church about a felix culpa, the happy fault that precedes and necessitates the eternal Christ. Like all great mysteries of faith, it is hidden except to those who keep vigil and listen.

from Radical Grace, "Center and Circumference"
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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

Divinization

The same honor, the same latreutic worship that is paid to the divinity is paid to the humanity as well, inasmuch as it subsists in the divinity. And therefore God cannot confer a greater dignity upon a human being than to give it a share in the veneration due to himself. As Saint John Damascene explains how latreutic worship can be paid to a creature: "As a lighted piece of charcoal is not simply wood but wood united to fire, so the flesh of Christ is not mere flesh but flesh united to the Godhead." In that passage he speaks therefore of the flesh of Christ as divinized; because of this divinization there is a sharing in the honor and veneration due to God.

The eternal Word willed to stoop to such great poverty, in order that he might enrich us abundantly with heavenly gifts. Should one reflect on the manner in which he enriched us, one would find it wonderful indeed, since he enriched us by his poverty and endowed us out of his indigence.

Henry of Friemar, O.S.A
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

WHAT AM I LOOKING AT?


"Look unto Me, and be ye saved." Isaiah 45:22

Do we expect God to come to us with His blessings and save us? He says - Look unto Me, and be saved. The great difficulty spiritually is to concentrate on God, and it is His blessings that make it difficult. Troubles nearly always make us look to God; His blessings are apt to make us look elsewhere. The teaching of the Sermon on the Mount is, in effect - Narrow all your interests until the attitude of mind and heart and body is concentration on Jesus Christ. "Look unto Me."

Many of us have a mental conception of what a Christian should be, and the lives of the saints become a hindrance to our concentration on God. There is no salvation in this way, it is not simple enough. "Look unto Me" and - not "you will be saved," but "you are saved." The very thing we look for, we shall find if we will concentrate on Him. We get preoccupied and sulky with God, while all the time He is saying - "Look up and be saved." The difficulties and trials - the casting about in our minds as to what we shall do this summer, or to-morrow, all vanish when we look to God.

Rouse yourself up and look to God. Build your hope on Him. No matter if there are a hundred and one things that press, resolutely exclude them all and look to Him. "Look unto Me," and salvation is, the moment you look.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 22, May 23, September 22
Chapter 5: On Obedience

The first degree of humility is obedience without delay.
This is the virtue of those
who hold nothing dearer to them than Christ;
who, because of the holy service they have professed,
and the fear of hell,
and the glory of life everlasting,
as soon as anything has been ordered by the Superior,
receive it as a divine command
and cannot suffer any delay in executing it.
Of these the Lord says,
"As soon as he heard, he obeyed Me" (Ps. 17:45).
And again to teachers He says,
"He who hears you, hears Me" (Luke 10:16).

Such as these, therefore,
immediately leaving their own affairs
and forsaking their own will,
dropping the work they were engaged on
and leaving it unfinished,
with the ready step of obedience
follow up with their deeds the voice of him who commands.
And so as it were at the same moment
the master's command is given
and the disciple's work is completed,
the two things being speedily accomplished together
in the swiftness of the fear of God
by those who are moved
with the desire of attaining life everlasting.
That desire is their motive for choosing the narrow way,
of which the Lord says,
"Narrow is the way that leads to life" (Matt. 7:14),
so that,
not living according to their own choice
nor obeying their own desires and pleasures
but walking by another's judgment and command,
they dwell in monasteries and desire to have an Abbot over them.
Assuredly such as these are living up to that maxim of the Lord
in which He says,
"I have come not to do My own will,
but the will of Him who sent Me" (John 6:38).
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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.

St. Mark 8:22-26 (1/22) For Tues of the 35th Week after Pentecost (Tues
of the 30th Week)



Cultivating Faith: St. Mark 8:22-26, especially vss. 24, 25: "And he looked
up and said, 'I see men like trees, walking.' Then He put His hands on his
eyes again and made him look up. And he was restored and saw everyone
clearly." It is a truism that emotional and spiritual dependency on
tangible signs and wonders destroys the possibility of faith in the Lord.
Today's Gospel and the one for tomorrow both touch on different aspects of
faith in Christ and are a help in exploring what it means to have faith in
the Lord Jesus.

Today's Gospel is the account of a blind man whom the Lord Jesus healed in
stages. The man's relationship with the Lord reveals growth in faith as an
incremental process. At first, the blind man needed only a tiny bit of
trust in Christ - permitting others to bring him near the Lord. See how
being healed from the grim darkness of sin - against which we all struggle -
requires letting the Lord lead us beyond the secure and familiar to enlarge
our faith.

See the blessing: if we take risks with the Lord's help, He heals our doubt.
He assists us in taking little steps, for a tiny risk brings greater faith.
How does this happen? The Lord's pure light within enables us to see as
never before. Still, as the Gospel shows, the sight we gain is incomplete
because we are limited - being both finite and sinful. The blessing is
that the Lord never ceases to cultivate faith within us. He presses on to
establish, purify, adorn, and enlighten.

Another miracle occurs when our gracious God illumines the eyes of our
hearts: our vision of others grows increasingly clearer. Such enlightenment
may disturb, even astound us. It may leave us uncertain. Yet, the Lord
thereby creates a new opportunity for faith in Him. What are we to do with
our new insight into others? Go back to old relationships that are
familiar, spend our time with those who formerly made us feel at ease, or
shall we turn toward "home"? Like the blind man, the Lord tells us to "go
home," but for us that means to enter into the Holy Community of the
Faithful where men and women "...worship [Him] in spirit and in truth" (Jn.
4:24).

Faith, at each step, is a free act on our part. We agree to come to Him.
It may seem initially to be other humans that we trust: parents, friends, a
spouse, a wise and loving Pastor, the friendship of people in a parish. We
do not see clearly at first. In time, however, we discover that truly it
was the Lord Jesus Whom we trusted, shining through the Faithful. Through
participation in the life of the Church, we come face to face with the Lord
Jesus Himself.

In this passage, the Evangelist tells us, "...He took the blind man by the
hand and led him out of the town" (Mk. 8:23). Think of the situation of the
blind man. In town he had a certain security provided by his senses:
familiar smells, sounds, touch, and the words of others. The Lord, however,
led him out of town so that he had to depend entirely on Him with no
familiar supports. Do you see? Healing and illumination as an Orthodox
Christian means leaving the familiar, abandoning our natural, comfortable
ways of thinking in order to receive new visions of truth and reality. St.
Clement of Alexandria says that we must "fling ourselves upon the majesty of
Christ," and He most certainly will take us to faith, beyond what has been
comfortable.

Finally, note that Orthodoxy affirms that we are blind and do not see
perfectly even when the Lord heals one or another aspect of our lives. The
life in Christ is a process of continuing growth in faith. We pray, receive
the Holy Mysteries, study Scripture and the Fathers, and His light grows
within us. He continues to take us beyond the familiar, to heal us in small
steps as we are able to bear the Light, and then He sends us back home into
our Church community.

To Thee I come, O Christ, blinded in my soul's eyes, crying unto Thee in
repentance, "Thou art the Light of transcendent radiance to those who are in
darkness."

Friday, January 18, 2008

Reading for Jan 18, 2008

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

January 18, May 19, September 18
Chapter 4: What Are the Instruments of Good Works

1. In the first place, to love the Lord God with the whole heart, the whole soul, the whole strength.
2. Then, one's neighbor as oneself.
3. Then not to murder.
4. Not to commit adultery.
5. Not to steal.
6. Not to covet.
7. Not to bear false witness.
8. To honor all (1 Peter 2:17).
9. And not to do to another what one would not have done to oneself.
10. To deny oneself in order to follow Christ.
11. To chastise the body.
12. Not to become attached to pleasures.
13. To love fasting.
14. To relieve the poor.
15. To clothe the naked.
16. To visit the sick.
17. To bury the dead.
18. To help in trouble.
19. To console the sorrowing.
20. To become a stranger to the world's ways.
21. To prefer nothing to the love of Christ.

Some thoughts

Can't tell you why this image pops into my head but as I read the above, I found myself imagining some smart aleck of a monk, possibly among a group of young monks all snickering, whispering and giggling, and this monk says " So, Benedict, my dear man, just what do you mean by good works anyway?" Benedict aims a steely gaze in the direction of the snickering monks and rattles off the list that becomes Ch 4 of the RB. I imagine the fatuous expressions being replaced by surprise and then consternation as the list gets longer and longer.

Maybe they were surprised at the ordinariness of the list. It's all right out of the Bible and more than likely already familiar to them. But for some reason, Benedict felt he had to spell it out. Maybe he wanted to dispel any notion that good works meant anything other than very concrete actions and attitudes of the heart. Maybe his monks were beginning to think too highly of themselves as prayerful people, emphasizing so-called spiritual things over the so-called mundane. Perhaps Benedict wanted to remind them that there is nothing on this earth which is n not spiritual. The only question is which spirit is represented.

So no dualism of mind or spirit over the body for St. Benedict. One could consider anything which follows #2 as commentary on 1 and 2. If we actually do 1 and 2 then the rest very naturally follows, according to the saint.

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Daily Meditation 01/18/08, Confession of St Peter

[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

Father in heaven, who at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan proclaimed him your beloved Son and anointed him with the Holy Spirit: Grant that all who are baptized into his Name may keep the covenant they have made, and boldly confess him as Lord and Savior; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.

Almighty Father, who inspired Simon Peter, first among the apostles, to confess Jesus as Messiah and Son of the living God: Keep your Church steadfast upon the rock of this faith, so that in unity and peace we may proclaim the one truth and follow the one Lord, our Savior Jesus Christ; 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 16, 17; PM Psalm 22
Gen. 6:1-8; Heb. 3:12-19; John 2:1-12
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Matthew 16:13-19. You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church.

There is a saying among persons of color, "The sister (or brother) can preach!" This refers to the articulate, passionate, and convincing oratorical skills of sisters and brothers who speak from the pulpit. Certain lay and clergy persons among us are riveting proclaimers of the Word, and their words guide us to the gospel.


The gospel was foremost for the friend of Jesus named Peter. Peter was admittedly an "uneducated and common" person, but he knew Jesus. He was impetuous and spontaneous; nonetheless, Peter remained true to the good news of Christ. Disciple, apostle, and rock of the church, he was a brother who could preach and offered this gift with eloquent authority. I imagine Peter to be a strong, tall, dark-skinned, and thick-haired person. Today, he might fit in with a group of bikers, migrant workers, or NASCAR fans.


Regardless of his appearance Peter is remembered for how he lived. The church is blessed by his affirmation of faith, being filled with the Holy Spirit, belief in salvation of Jesus, and commitment to this one and only Name under heaven. Peter the saint and rock is venerated for preaching Christ crucified. The brother could preach!
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Confession of St. Peter:
AM Psalm 66, 67; Ezekiel 3:4-11; Acts 10:34-44
PM Psalm 118; Ezekiel 34:11-16; John 21:15-22
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Algoma (Ontario, Canada)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

You are the Christ

Daily Reading for January 18 • The Confession of St. Peter the Apostle

From apostolic times, Jesus has been spoken of, and proclaimed, as the Christ, the anointed One. While such usage is common in the earliest Christian preaching, it is not common in the Gospel accounts, although Peter proclaims Jesus as the Christ at Caesarea Philippi (Mark 8.29; Matt. 16.16; Luke 9.20). However, Mark tells us that Jesus forbade his disciples to speak of this (Mark 8.30), and he himself does not speak of himself as the Christ (apart from the two references in Matt. 23.10 and Mark 9.41 which are from secondary sources). Christ, Messiah, was not at this time a divine or even supernatural title, but was associated with an act of earthly liberation, with the restoration of Israel. Whether Jesus ever specifically accepted the title is not clear. When asked by the High Priest about the claim to messianic status, he seems to have accepted it (Mark 14.61; Matt. 26.63) though this may simply reflect the early Church’s view. Yet within a generation of the crucifixion the name ‘Christian’ was being used in Antioch (Acts 11.26), and King Agrippa II knows and understands this usage (26.28).

In view of the clear centrality of the identification of Jesus with the Christ/Messiah in the early Church’s preaching, it is significant that there is so little evidence in the Synoptics, or even in John, for an explicit claim from the lips of Jesus himself. Had there been more evidence to produce, the early Church would surely have produced it in support of their belief. . . . It was out of the experience of what Jesus had achieved, in his ministry, death, and resurrection, and out of reflection on this achievement in the light of the Jewish hope, that the early Christians came quickly to see Jesus as the Messiah.

From Experiencing God: Theology as Spirituality by Kenneth Leech (Harper and Row, 1985).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Hope is a state of mind, not of the world. Hope, in this deep and powerful sense, is not the same as joy that things are going well, or willingness to invest in enterprises that are obviously heading for success, but rather an ability to work for something because it is good, not because it stands for a chance to succeed.
— Vaclav Havel quoted in Lyrics for Re-Creation by James Conlon

To Practice This Thought: Join a group doing good in the world and really believe in its goals, no matter what happens.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

The Father spoke one Word, which was His Son, and this Word He always speaks in eternal silence, and in silence must It be heard by the soul.
St John of the Cross
Sayings of Light and Love.
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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 enemy of our salvation especially strives to draw our heart
and mind away from God when we are about to serve Him, and
endeavours to adulterously attach our heart to something
irrelevant. Be always, every moment, with God, especially when you
pray to Him. If you are inconstant, you will fall away from life,
and will cast yourself into sorrow and straitness.

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

Finding Solitude

All human beings are alone. No other person will completely feel like we do, think like we do, act like we do. Each of us is unique, and our aloneness is the other side of our uniqueness. The question is whether we let our aloneness become loneliness or whether we allow it to lead us into solitude. Loneliness is painful; solitude is peaceful. Loneliness makes us cling to others in desperation; solitude allows us to respect others in their uniqueness and create community.

Letting our aloneness grow into solitude and not into loneliness is a lifelong struggle. It requires conscious choices about whom to be with, what to study, how to pray, and when to ask for counsel. But wise choices will help us to find the solitude where our hearts can grow in love.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Eighteen - The Second Way of Service, cont'd

As well as the devotional study of Scripture, we all recognize our Christian responsibility to pursue other branches of study, both sacred and secular. In particular, some of us accept the duty of contributing, through research and writing, to a better understanding of the church's mission in the world: the application of Christian principles to the use and distribution of wealth; questions concerning justice and peace; and of all other questions concerning the life of faith.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Trust
January 18th, 2008
Friday’s Reflection

WE MUST ADMIT
that we are helpless
before God.
We must trust
that our Creator
will come and find us.

- Daniel Wolpert
Creating a Life with God: The Call of Ancient Prayer Practices

From p. 63 of Creating a Life with God: The Call of Ancient Prayer Practices by Daniel Wolpert. Copyright © 2003 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


Call to Church

Question of the day:
How is solidarity more challenging than altruism and generosity?



The term Third World was coined at the United Nations back in the 1950's. I remember thinking, Well, that's about as low as you can go. Third World countries are those with low potential and low development. But there are Fourth World countries with some potential and no development and there are Fifth World countries with no potential and no development, like Nepal. I was in Nepal, in fact, giving a retreat to the Jesuits. They said, Welcome to a Fifth World country. And I said, What? There is such a thing?

It's hard for us even to comprehend that two people living on the same planet could live in such utterly different worlds. The gospel isn't asking us to be do-gooders or altruistic, the big white fathers and big white mothers. I think it's calling for something that's really much harder than altruism and generosity (although that certainly is asked for in cases). The gospel is calling us into solidarity.

The First World Churches will never be converted until they receive the Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth parts of Christ's Body.

from Letting Go: A Spirituality of Subtraction
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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

Support the companion of your pilgrimage

You are told to love God. If you say to me: Show me whom I am to love, what shall I say if not what Saint John says: No one has ever seen God! But in case you should think that you are completely cut off from the sight of God, he says: God is love, and he who remains in love remains in God. Love your neighbor, then, and see within yourself the power by which you love your neighbor; there you will see God, as far as you are able.

Begin, then, to love your neighbor. Share your bread with the hungry and bring into your home the homeless poor; clothe anyone you see to be naked, and do not despise your own flesh and blood.

What will you gain by doing this? Your light will burst forth like the dawn. Your light is your God: he is your dawn, for he will come to you when the night of time is over. He does not rise or set but remains for ever.

By loving other people and caring for them you make progress on your journey. Where are you traveling if not to the Lord God, to him whom we should love with our whole heart, our whole soul, or our whole mind? We have not yet reached his presence, but we have our neighbor at our side. Support, then, this companion of your pilgrimage if you want to come into the presence of the one with whom you desire to remain for ever.

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

IT IS THE LORD!


"Thomas answered and said unto Him, My Lord and my God." John 20:28

"Give Me to drink." How many of us are set upon Jesus Christ slaking our thirst when we ought to be satisfying Him? We should be pouring out now, spending to the last limit, not drawing on Him to satisfy us. "Ye shall be witnesses unto Me" - that means a life of unsullied, uncompromising and unbribed devotion to the Lord Jesus, a satisfaction to Him wherever He places us.

Beware of anything that competes with loyalty to Jesus Christ. The greatest competitor of devotion to Jesus is service for Him. It is easier to serve than to be drunk to the dregs. The one aim of the call of God is the satisfaction of God, not a call to do something for Him. We are not sent to battle for God, but to be used by God in His battlings. Are we being more devoted to service than to Jesus Christ?
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 18, May 19, September 18
Chapter 4: What Are the Instruments of Good Works

1. In the first place, to love the Lord God with the whole heart, the whole soul, the whole strength.
2. Then, one's neighbor as oneself.
3. Then not to murder.
4. Not to commit adultery.
5. Not to steal.
6. Not to covet.
7. Not to bear false witness.
8. To honor all (1 Peter 2:17).
9. And not to do to another what one would not have done to oneself.
10. To deny oneself in order to follow Christ.
11. To chastise the body.
12. Not to become attached to pleasures.
13. To love fasting.
14. To relieve the poor.
15. To clothe the naked.
16. To visit the sick.
17. To bury the dead.
18. To help in trouble.
19. To console the sorrowing.
20. To become a stranger to the world's ways.
21. To prefer nothing to the love of Christ.


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

At first glance, of course, this opening paragraph on the instruments of the spiritual art seems to be a relatively standard and basic reference to a biblical description of the holy life. And that seems sound. The trouble is that it also seems strange.

The surprise is that Benedict does not call us first to prayer or sacrifice or devotions or asceticisms. This is, after all, a contemplative lifestyle. It is at the same time, however, a communal lifestyle for "that most valiant kind of monastic heart," who sets out to find the holy in the human. The call to contemplation here is the call not simply to see Christ in the other but to treat the other as Christ. Benedict calls us first to justice: love God, love the other, do no harm to anyone.

First, Benedict instructs the monastic to keep the commandments. Then, in this next paragraph, the Rule requires the keeping of the corporal works of mercy. Benedictine monasticism is, apparently, not an escape from life. This spirituality is life lived with an eye on those for whom life is a terrible burden. "Do not pamper yourself," the Rule insists. "Relieve the lot of the poor."

The monastic heart is not just to be a good heart. The monastic heart is to be good for something. It is to be engaged in the great Christian enterprise of acting for others in the place of 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.


Luke 21:37-22:8 (1/18) For Fri of the 34th Week after
Pentecost (Fri of the 29th Week)

Embraced by Eternity: St. Luke 21:37-22:8, especially vs. 37: "And in
the daytime He was teaching in the Temple, but at night He went out and
stayed on the mountain called Olivet." Metropolitan of Nafpaktos
Hierotheos asserts that "we Orthodox...through living in Christ...are
running to meet the end of history and thus...the eternal embraces us at
every moment of time. Therefore past, present, and future are
essentially lived in one unbroken unity." Look at these verses from St.
Luke: Christ embraces the daytime "teaching in the Temple" (vs. 21:37),
spends the night "on the mountain called Olivet" (vs. 21:37), and
arranges for the Passover meal in the afternoon "when the Passover must
be killed" (vs. 22:7). The eternal moves through time touching us at
every hour, in our learning, our resting, and our celebrating. At no
moment let us forget the presence of Christ our God, but, in every
hour, meet Him Who makes each moment eternity and gives timeless purpose
to everything.

Do you wish to learn, to know, to understand? There are many schools
all across the land with teachers offering courses, knowledge,
education, learning, skills, and disciplines. You may go to them, hear
them, let them teach you; and, most likely, you will benefit to some
degree - more or less. If you enroll, you will be like all those people
who came early in the morning to hear Christ in the Temple. They wanted
to learn something, to be enlightened by Him, the Eternal in their
midst. They did not "happen" to hear Him, they "came to" Him
deliberately (vs. 21:38). What He taught they wanted. Likewise, if you
would learn from the Eternal, you must choose to come to Him, seek Him
out in Temples, in prayer, in the pages of Holy Scripture, from teachers
who know Him, at services honoring Him. You must unite yourself to Him.

Are you exhausted by the stress and corrosion of your life? Do you want
to rest? "At night" the Eternal "went out and stayed on the mountain
called Olivet" (vs. 21:37), and those with Him took their rest there.
He gave those hours to them for rest. At every moment He invites those
who will to join Him on the mountain to take their rest in Him: "Come to
Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I Am gentle and lowly in
heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and
My burden is light" (Mt. 11:28-30).

The presence of the Eternal in every moment is not welcomed by all, and
sometimes not by anyone. His embrace can create fear, which will stir
up a cold intent in some to be rid of Him by whatever means. "And the
chief priests and the scribes sought how they might kill Him, for they
feared the people" (Lk. 22:2). "They feared the people" because the
populace liked to hear Him, so much so that they sought Him out to hear
Him in the Temple run by the chief priests and scribes. Therefore,
eliminating Him had be done covertly, privately, out of the public eye,
lest the people retaliate for having Him killed. Why did the chief
priests and the scribes want to kill Him? The desire to destroy another
ignites when position, power, and control are threatened; and the
Eternal holds the highest position, the greatest power, and ultimate
control. At times He may even threaten you for that reason. Or, if you
are united to Him, hatred of Him may fall on you!

The Eternal is inviting you to Passover, to His Eternal Pascha, that you
might eat with Him at His table. He has sent His Apostles to prepare
the table before you "in the presence of them that afflict" you (Ps.
22:5 LXX). Will you remain united to Him, acknowledge Him Who embraces
every moment, and partake of Him, the Passover Lamb "Who takes away the
sin of the world" (Jn. 1:29)? Have you learned enough from Him, and
rested enough in Him, to set aside your fear of Him and come to the
Paschal Banquet with Him?

Thou art our God, and we know none other beside Thee. We call upon Thy
Name.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Reading for Jan 17, 2008

January 17, May 18, September 17
Chapter 3: On Calling the Brethren for Counsel

In all things, therefore, let all follow the Rule as guide,
and let no one be so rash as to deviate from it.
Let no one in the monastery follow his own heart's fancy;
and let no one presume to contend with his Abbot
in an insolent way or even outside of the monastery.
But if anyone should presume to do so,
let him undergo the discipline of the Rule.
At the same time,
the Abbot himself should do all things in the fear of God
and in observance of the Rule,
knowing that beyond a doubt
he will have to render an account of all his decisions
to God, the most just Judge.

But if the business to be done in the interests of the monastery
be of lesser importance,
let him take counsel with the seniors only.
It is written,
"Do everything with counsel,
and you will not repent when you have done it" (Eccles. 32:24).

Some thoughts

We couldn't ask for it to be made any more plainly, could we? We Benedictines take the Rule as our guide and we are not to deviate from it. Easier said than done, of course. I'm always quick with that caveat.

I love the bit about "let no one follow his own heart's fancy." The history of Christianity is filled with people who did and look at the troubles they left behind.

I fear we in our day and age are contributing to the legacy of people following their own heart's fancy as people decide which tenets of the Creeds or baptismal covenants are optional. One fellow Episcopalian, Marcus Borg, has even said that it doesn't matter if Jesus rose from the dead or not. It sorrows me that a fellow Episcopalian would not regard the Resurrection as the very heart of the matter. We are redeemed not just because Jesus died on the cross but because He also arose from the dead.

Well, I digress... What was the point In was making? Oh yes, the Rule as our guide. Perhaps it is worth saying, and if i said it before perhaps it is worth repeating: living the RB is a means, not the end. The purpose of the Rule is to allow us to so open our hearts to God that He will create a garden for Himself there.

What could be more wonderful than that?

Labels: , ,

Daily Meditation 01/17/08, St. Anthony of the Desert

[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

Father in heaven, who at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan proclaimed him your beloved Son and anointed him with the Holy Spirit: Grant that all who are baptized into his Name may keep the covenant they have made, and boldly confess him as Lord and Savior; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.

O God, by your Holy Spirit you enabled your servant Antony to withstand the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil: Give us grace, with pure hearts and minds, to follow you, the only God; 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 18:1-20; PM Psalm 18:21-50
Gen. 4:17-26; Heb. 3:1-11; John 1:43-51
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 1:43-51. Philip said to him, "Come and see."

One summer evening before ninth grade I could not find my friend. The next day I asked him, "What did you do last night?" He replied that he had been out playing basketball. I asked, "Where?" He paused and said, "At church. And we had homemade ice cream."


I looked at him silently and he asked, "Want to come next time?" I said, "Yes," and the church has been my spiritual home since that day.


I came to church because my friend of many years invited me. He was my Philip who said, "Come and see." Philip tells his friend Nathanael about Jesus of Nazareth. Nathanael at first expresses the bias of the day about such villages. Ultimately, Nathanael comes to witness the power of Jesus and is convinced that coming and seeing is a good thing.


What is good about my invitation to "come and see" is that I found a vocation in the priesthood. Over forty persons in my family are now members of this part of the body of Christ. One simple invitation to a game of ball and refreshments may lead to much more in the plan of God. I give thanks for all the "Philips" in the history of the church whose faith leads them to "make a friend, be a friend and bring a friend to Christ." Come and see!
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Antony
Psalm 91:9-16 or 1
1 Peter 5:6-10; Mark 10:17-21

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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Albany (United States)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Integrity before God

Daily Reading for January 17 • Antony, Abbot in Egypt, 356

Abba Antony said, ‘Whatever you find in your heart to do in following God, that do, and remain within yourself in Him.’ This personal integrity before God, without any disguises or pretensions, is the essence of the spirituality of the desert. All ascetic effort, all personal relationships, life in all its aspects, was to be brought slowly into the central relationship with God in Christ. All the means to this end were just that, means and no more; they could be changed or discarded as necessary. The Sayings of the desert fathers must be used in the spirit in which they were spoken, otherwise they will have less than their true value. They are not just for interest but for use. Radical simplicity and integrity is their aim and purpose.

From The Wisdom of the Desert Fathers by Sister Benedicta Ward SLG (SLG Press, 1975).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Today's headlines, viewed with the right consciousness, can be seen as a living alphabet through which humanity comes to know itself and God. A deeper meaning is revealed.
— Corrine McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson in Spiritual Politics

To Practice This Thought: Scan the headlines in today's newspaper. What do they tell you about yourself, your world, and God?
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

The beginner must think of themselves as one setting out to make a garden in which the Lord is to take His delight.
St Teresa of Jesus
Life 11.6
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

There was a man who at a lot and was till hungry, and another who
ate little and was satisfied. The one who ate a lot and was still
hungry received a greater reward than he who ate little and was
satisfied.

Apophthegmata Patrum
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Be Yourself

Often we want to be somewhere other than where we are, or even to be someone other than who we are. We tend to compare ourselves constantly with others and wonder why we are not as rich, as intelligent, as simple, as generous, or as saintly as they are. Such comparisons make us feel guilty, ashamed, or jealous. It is very important to realize that our vocation is hidden in where we are and who we are. We are unique human beings, each with a call to realize in life what nobody else can, and to realize it in the concrete context of the here and now.

We will never find our vocations by trying to figure out whether we are better or worse than others. We are good enough to do what we are called to do. Be yourself!
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Seventeen - The Second Way of Service - Study

"And this is eternal life: that they may know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent." (John 17:3) True knowledge is knowledge of God. Tertiaries therefore give priority to devotional study of scripture as one of the chief means of attaining that knowledge of God which leads to eternal life.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Working for God
January 17th, 2008
Thursday’s Reflection

REMEMBER FOR WHOM YOU WORK: Whether you work for a private company, the government, a large corporation, or yourself, the true disciple understands that he or she ultimately is working for God in that place. “Whatever your task, put yourselves into it, as done for the Lord and not for your masters, since you know that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward; you serve the Lord Christ” (Col. 3:23-24).

- Norman Shawchuck
A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God

From p. 284 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

Call to Church

Question of the day:
When have you been in solidarity with suffering and ecstasy?



As long as we think that we alone have to save the world, we become arrogant in our methods, impatient in our attitudes and quick in our solutions. We instead must seek the patience and peace of God. The man and woman of God are content simply to lay down their lives for some little bit of unity. Wherever you are, let God create unity. I believe that's what God's doing on earth. I know one sister who sees her primary call as bestowing "benevolent smiles" on everybody she meets. What a threat she must be to disunity!

If Jesus is to be risen among us, we must each individually and in groups together surrender to a love and mystery that is greater than our hearts. We must humbly admit that we really don't know much at all. We have few right answers, it seems to me, and even fewer conclusions. All we can be is what Jesus was: present and enfleshed. In the end it seems to me there's only one gospel: Jesus incarnate, Jesus crucified, Jesus resurrected. Solidarity in suffering and in ecstasy is God's gift to the world.

To be in the Church is to be willing to be part of the rhythm and create little bits of unity wherever we can.

from The Spiritual Family and the Natural Family ++++++++++

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

Who is Christ?

If then you wish to learn or be taught something about Christ, do not resort to arguments or cross-examine some person of great learning, but inquire of a prophet, ask an apostle, consult an angel, and if these should be at a loss, have recourse to the Father. If you inquire of the prophets, "Who is this Christ?" the prophetic choir will answer you, This is our God; no other can be compared to him. He has found out the whole way of knowledge and imparted it to Jacob his servant, to Israel his beloved. At last he appeared on earth and lived among us. Perhaps you will pursue your investigation, asking, "But who is this Christ, and how was he born?" You may indulge your busy curiosity about the divine child, and if so the prophets will curb your boldness, asking you in their turn, "What our reasoning could not compass, do you think to compass? If you wish to learn, learn that he is God. You presume to pry into the manner of his birth, but you must learn from our words: Who shall recount his origin?"

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

January 17, May 18, September 17
Chapter 3: On Calling the Brethren for Counsel

In all things, therefore, let all follow the Rule as guide,
and let no one be so rash as to deviate from it.
Let no one in the monastery follow his own heart's fancy;
and let no one presume to contend with his Abbot
in an insolent way or even outside of the monastery.
But if anyone should presume to do so,
let him undergo the discipline of the Rule.
At the same time,
the Abbot himself should do all things in the fear of God
and in observance of the Rule,
knowing that beyond a doubt
he will have to render an account of all his decisions
to God, the most just Judge.

But if the business to be done in the interests of the monastery
be of lesser importance,
let him take counsel with the seniors only.
It is written,
"Do everything with counsel,
and you will not repent when you have done it" (Eccles. 32:24).

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


Benedictine monasticism is life lived within the circuit of four guy wires: the Gospel, the teachings of its abbots and prioress, the experience of the community and the Rule of Benedict itself.

The Gospel gives meaning and purpose to the community. The teaching of its abbots and prioresses gives depth and direction to the community. The experience of the community, spoken by its members in community Chapter meetings, gives truth to the community. But it is the Rule of Benedict that gives the long arm of essential definition and character to the community.

Each of us, monastic or not, deals with the same elements in life. We are all bound to the Gospel, under leadership of some kind, faced with the dictates of tradition or the cautions of experience and in need of a direction. Monastic spirituality offers enduring principles and attitudes far beyond whatever culture embodies them. Once embraced, they guide our way through whatever the psychological fads or religious practices or social philosophies of the time that offer comfort but lack staying power. "All are to follow the teaching of the Rule," Benedict, the great abbot teaches, "and no one shall rashly deviate from it." Adapt the Rule, yes. Abandon the Rule, no.

The fact is that it is in the Rule itself that the principles and values of Benedictine spirituality are stored and maintained. No matter how far a group goes in its attempts to be relevant to the modern world, it keeps one foot in an ancient one at all times. It is this world that pulls it back, time and time again, to the tried and true, to the really real, to a Beyond beyond ourselves. It is to these enduring principles that every age looks, not to the customs or practices that intend to embody them from one age to 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.

St. Luke 6:17-23 Gospel for Holy Monks: Anthony the Great, Euthymios
the Great, et. al.
(1/17)
The Blessings of Ascesis: St. Luke 6:17-23, especially vs. 20: "Then He
lifted up His eyes toward His disciples, and said: 'Blessed are you
poor, for yours is the kingdom of God." Among the Saints of God, St.
Anthony is a shining example of the blessings of asceticism. He was
born of well-to-do, Christian parents in Egypt, yet from his youth he
displayed an unusual and singular desire to devote himself completely to
the Lord Jesus. Whenever he heard the Scriptures read in Church, he
immediately applied the teachings to himself in the most direct,
practical manner - a good plan!

When he was twenty, his parents died and he inherited the family
fortune. Hearing in Church the Gospel of the rich, young ruler (Lk.
18:18-30), St. Anthony gave away his worldly possessions and fully
embraced the ascetic disciplines. Through twenty years of struggle, he
defeated every temptation. He reduced his diet to bread, salt and
water, eating no more than once a day, sometimes only every other day,
frequently even less often. He lived in absolute solitude all those
years, maintaining unceasing prayer and overcoming every imaginable
demonic wile.

By the grace of God, the ascetic blessings manifested in St. Anthony
ignited, within the Church, the monastic movement - a permanent, visible
witness to the value of utter self-surrender to the Lord. Today, the
Church's monastics continue to demonstrate that blessings can come to
you from embracing poverty, hunger, tears, and austerity. These
consecrated souls provide living models of what our Lord teaches in this
passage (Lk. 6:20-23). Read these verses with care, for they reveal how
to attain the riches of the life in Christ through ascetic practice
instead of blindly embracing the fleeting pleasures of the consumerist
environment so ready to sell you "the real thing."

Consider the Lord's teaching. On the one hand, those who choose poverty
are blessed with the Kingdom of God (vs. 20). Quite to the opposite,
secular society promotes convenience and comfort through abundance.
Television and the other media repeatedly emphasize your "need" for
things to fulfill your life. How blessed you are with the reminder in
the funeral Liturgy that "all things are vanity and exist not after
death. Riches endure not, neither doth glory accompany on the way: for
when death cometh, all these things vanish utterly."
Admittedly, in the "climate" of consumerism, without the monastic
influence, can you imagine finding a blessing in poverty as did St.
Anthony? But you can embrace the blessings of ascesis amidst the swirl
of consumerism! Surely, there is nothing to prevent cutting back on
conveniences, simplifying your lifestyles, and doing with less that you
may give to the poor.

Also, the Lord teaches the blessing of hunger (vs. 21). The Holy
Fathers of the Church similarly insist on the necessity of fasting, and
not by monastics only, but by all the Faithful. Beloved, how blessed we
are: our Orthodox Faith has not sold-out to the modern, cultivated
palate. The Church still teaches discipline for the stomach as the
birthright of every Christian. Actually, is it really difficult for you
to fast from fish, meat, dairy products, wine and oil on Wednesdays and
Fridays and the four seasonal fasts? God promises spiritual blessings
if you will faithfully and diligently keep the fasting disciplines and
train your appetite in preparation for serving Him.

Finally, Christ teaches you to "weep now" in repentance (vs. 21), that
you may join in the rejoicing of the widow of Nain, of Jairus, of the
woman with the precious ointment, and of the friends of Tabitha. Weep
now that you may know joy and healing from our Savior. Let your Pastors
guide you in self-examination, confession, and unleashing the tears of
cleansing. Devote regular time to prayer and the struggle against the
demons who aim to disrupt and mislead you.

O Christ our God, implant in me the fear of Thy blessed commandments
that I may trample down all carnal desires, and enter upon a spiritual
manner of living.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Reading for Jan 16, 2008

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

January 16, May 17, September 16
Chapter 3: On Calling the Brethren for Counsel

Whenever any important business has to be done
in the monastery,
let the Abbot call together the whole community
and state the matter to be acted upon.
Then, having heard the brethren's advice,
let him turn the matter over in his own mind
and do what he shall judge to be most expedient.
The reason we have said that all should be called for counsel
is that the Lord often reveals to the younger what is best.

Let the brethren give their advice
with all the deference required by humility,
and not presume stubbornly to defend their opinions;
but let the decision rather depend on the Abbot's judgment,
and all submit to whatever he shall decide for their welfare.

However, just as it is proper
for the disciples to obey their master,
so also it is his function
to dispose all things with prudence and justice.


Instead of offering some of my thoughts, I offer you the following which i happened to read this morning and which cites this particular passage in the.

Mark Dyer was both rector of my parish and one of my seminary professors. It was a privilege.


Conversation in a Christian community
http://www.episcopalcafe.com/daily/conversation_in_a_christian_co.php

By Kathleen Henderson Staudt

Shortly before Christmas I attended a forum at Virginia Theological Seminary led by Bishop Mark Dyer. His purpose was to lay out some groundwork for truly faithful and Christ-centered conversations in a community where we do not all agree on matters of theology and Biblical interpretation. Bishop Mark speaks with deep spiritual and theological authority, as an author of the Windsor report, a veteran of ecumenical dialogue with the Orthodox churches, dialogue that is bearing new fruit. He also speaks out of his experience of 15 years as a Benedictine monk, living in community with people who, as he says “may not agree with each other but have to live together.”

In his introductory remarks, Bishop Mark spoke of the problem of “issue possession” in the Church: our tendency to let one issue take hold of us and shut everything else out, as if we were possessed by a demon. Do not be driven by “issue possession,” he urged, but be “possessed by Christ.”

There are small groups forming at VTS to engage with one another in an honest and Christ-centered way around difficult issues, and this forum was meant to initiate that program. But it struck me, listening, that much of what Bishop Mark was saying is applicable to all of us who are bound together in Christian community. With his permission, I want to just lay out here some of the wisdom that Bishop Mark offered in this forum. I hope that readers will find here some helpful guidelines for all kinds of Christian gatherings, from small groups to vestries, to discernment groups to “issue centered” discussion groups in times of conflict. Here is a distillation of the “basic assumptions for conversation in Christian community” that Bishop Mark laid out for us:

1. Assume that “My partner takes the Bible as seriously as I do.” That is part of who we are as Christians: we are grounded in Scripture. Do not mistake differences in interpretation for differences in desire to be faithful to Scripture.

2. Listen with a Christlike heart. Be guided by 1 Corinthians1, where Paul urges Christlike conversations between schismatic bodies.

3. Be radically honest on what you believe and why you believe it, and let the other do the same. Bishop Mark pointed out that in Ecumenical conversations the point is not to be “nice” but to be truthful. That is the best way to acknowledge our ultimate common ground in Christ. He quoted Orthodox theologian John Zizoulas, a longtime friend partner in ecumenical conversation, who insists that our unity is grounded in our love for one another, in the church of the Triune God.

4. While you are listening, also pray for the person who is speaking: pray for discernment. Be open to the possibility that maybe they are correct.

5. Practice forgiveness and reconciliation as a habit. Think about and discuss how we forgive and find reconciliation with one another.

6. Should the other attribute to you evil intentions, take a deep breath and pray. Who is setting the agenda? Do not let them be your environment. Reach down, find the Christ within you, and only then, speak.

7. Practice daily intercession, as part of a group that meets regularly for conversation and prayer. Covenant to pray for one another daily.

8. Be guided by the Benedictines, who know that they do not agree with each other AND that they have to live together.

Frame the issue you are discussing as clearly as you can, and let everyone say where their heart is on the question, BEFORE any discussion begins. The Benedictine practice is to begin with the youngest and go to the oldest monk. Every monk must say something, even if it is “I have no opinion.” (It seemed to me, listening to Bishop Mark describe this process, that this is similar to a process some know as “appreciative inquiry” or the practice of “clearness committees” in Quaker discernment practice). The key is that there is no dialogue until everyone has spoken.

This kind of approach to conversation feels threatening to those of us who like to “manage” conflict and keep things under control, but it also reflects what is most deeply counter-cultural about the Gospel: that our ultimate identity is baptismal, rooted and grounded in the love of Christ, and that we’re called to live this out, in a way that will witness to our call to radical reconciliation and wholeness. It is counter-cultural but it is real. I am grateful to Bishop Mark for challenging the seminary community to live in this way, and hope what he said may also be a witness and a challenge for the rest of us in the Church.

Dr. Kathleen Henderson Staudt works as a teacher, poet, spiritual director and retreat leader, and teaches courses in literature and theology at Virginia Theological Seminary and the University of Maryland, College Park. She is the author of two books: At the Turn of a Civilisation: David Jones and Modern Poetics and Annunciations: Poems out of Scripture. Her blog is at poetproph.blogspot.com.

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Daily Meditation 01/16/08

[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

Father in heaven, who at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan proclaimed him your beloved Son and anointed him with the Holy Spirit: Grant that all who are baptized into his Name may keep the covenant they have made, and boldly confess him as Lord and Savior; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 119:1-24; PM Psalm 12, 13, 14
Gen. 4:1-16; Heb. 2:11-18; John 1:(29-34)35-42
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Genesis 4:1-16. Abel for his part brought the firstlings of his flock.

Core values show where commitment lies. I hold to several core values including "offering the best." My World War II generation parents instilled in me that regardless of the circumstance, I should aim to be and do all in my capacity. In our household my wife, daughter, and I hold to this principle (though I confess it is sometimes a matter of interpretation).


Abel, son of Adam and Eve, holds to the core value to "offer the best." In his stewardship to God he gives the firstlings of his flock. He offers a tithe, which was the minimum standard for the Hebrew people. The tithe in giving to God is also the minimum standard in the Episcopal Church. However, Abel's core value is distinct from that of his brother Cain.


Cain chooses a simple "offering of the fruit of the ground." What transpires is difference of opinion, hostile emotions, harsh conflict, and fratricide.


Perhaps conflict could be resolved by discussion about core values. Could it be that differences are not so much about issues but about what is precious, virtuous, and valuable? Let us be mindful that every person is worthy in the sight of God.
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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
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

The way to God

Daily Reading for January 16

The desert fathers withdrew from ordinary society and sought the solitude of the desert. This was the first step in their ‘spirituality’. Then they placed themselves under spiritual fathers. After that, the daily life was their prayer, and it was a radically simple life: a stone hut with a roof of branches, a reed mat for a bed, a sheep-skin, a lamp, a vessel for water or oil. It was enough.

The aim of the monks’ lives was not asceticism, but God, and the way to God was charity. The gentle charity of the desert was the pivot of all their work and the test of their way of life. Charity was to be total and complete. Antony the Great said, ‘My life is with my brother’, and he himself returned to the city twice, once to relieve those dying of plague, and once to defend the faith against heresy. The old men of the desert received guests as Christ would receive them. They might live austerely themselves, but when visitors came they hid their austerity and welcomed them. A brother said, ‘Forgive me, father, for I have made you break your rule’, but the old man said, ‘My rule is to receive you with hospitality and send you on your way in peace.’

From The Wisdom of the Desert Fathers by Sister Benedicta Ward SLG (SLG Press, 1975).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Whatever comes, good or bad, don't make a move to avoid it.
— Maurine Stuart Roshi quoted in Hidden Spring by Sandy Boucher

To Practice This Thought: Meet everything that comes to you with an open heart and a welcoming spirit.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Take God for your bridegroom and friend, and walk with him continually; and you will not sin and will learn to love, and the things you must do will work out prosperously for you.
St John of the Cross
Sayings of Light and Love, 68.
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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/

Living with Hope

Optimism and hope are radically different attitudes. Optimism is the expectation that things-the weather, human relationships, the economy, the political situation, and so on-will get better. Hope is the trust that God will fulfill God's promises to us in a way that leads us to true freedom. The optimist speaks about concrete changes in the future. The person of hope lives in the moment with the knowledge and trust that all of life is in good hands.

All the great spiritual leaders in history were people of hope. Abraham, Moses, Ruth, Mary, Jesus, Rumi, Gandhi, and Dorothy Day all lived with a promise in their hearts that guided them toward the future without the need to know exactly what it would look like. Let's live with hope.
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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/

Wednesday’s Reflection

SHOW US the light of grace. … Illumine our souls with joyful delight when sadness tries to take over the day. Shine brightly on us today, God, until we reflect your glory as a witness to this world.

- Kwasi I. Kena
The Africana Worship Book: Year A

From p. 84 of The Africana Worship Book: Year A edited by Valerie Bridgeman Davis and Safiyah Fosua. Copyright © 2006 by Discipleship Resources. 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

Call to Church

Question of the day:
How is the risen Christ inviting you on the path of liberation?



Jesus taught us something about resurrection not long before his own Resurrection, when he called his friend Lazarus back from death. In John's telling of the story, Jesus comes before the tomb, the tomb symbolizing the deadness, the coldness, the hard-heartedness in all of us. He stands as the powerful warrior, the victor, the conqueror before that deadness, Jesus tells them to take away the stone, then he asks of them a further sign of faith. Do you believe that I can do it? Can you be with me as I do it? Step out. Make a bit of a fool of yourself, move away the stone. "Untie him," Jesus told them, "and let him go free" (John 11:44).

Notice what John may well be saying to the community. Though Jesus brings us to life, he needs us, the Body of Christ. He needs the community to unbind Lazarus. We now share in the power of resurrection. The eternal Christ says to the eternal Church: Unbind the suffering world and let it go free! That is the meaning of Church. It is our call, our burden, our task in human history. The risen Christ invites us on his path of liberation.

from The Great Themes of Scripture
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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

ecognize your dignity, O Christian

Let us give thanks to God the Father, through his Son, in the Holy Spirit, who, by reason of his great charity with which he has loved us, has taken pity on us; and whereas we were dead in sins, has quickened us in Christ to make us a new creation in him, a new handiwork. Let us accordingly lay aside our former way of life with all its works, and claiming our joint portion in Christ's sonship, let us renounce the deeds of corrupt nature. Recognize your dignity, O Christian, and once made a sharer in the divine nature, do not by your evil conduct return to the base servitude of the past. Keep in mind of whose head and body you are a member. Never forget that you have been plucked from the power of darkness and taken up into the light and kingdom of God. By the sacrament of baptism you have become a temple of the Holy Spirit. Do not through your depravity drive away so great a guest and put yourself once more in bondage to the devil, for the blood of Christ was the price of your redemption.

Leo the Great
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

THE VOICE OF THE NATURE OF GOD


"I heard the voice of the Lord saying, Whom shall I send?" Isaiah 6:8

When we speak of the call of God, we are apt to forget the most important feature, viz., the nature of the One Who calls. There is the call of the sea, the call of the mountains, the call of the great ice barriers, but these calls are only heard by the few. The call is the expression of the nature from which it comes, and we can only record the call if the same nature is in us. The call of God is the expression of God's nature, not of our nature. There are strands of the call of God providentially at work for us which we recognize and no one else does. It is the threading of God's voice to us in some particular matter, and it is no use consulting anyone else about it. We have to keep that profound relationship between our souls and God.

The call of God is not the echo of my nature; my affinities and personal temperament are not considered. As long as I consider my personal temperament and think about what I am fitted for, I shall never hear the call of God. But when I am brought into relationship with God, I am in the condition Isaiah was in. Isaiah's soul was so attuned to God by the tremendous crisis he had gone through that he recorded the call of God to his amazed soul. The majority of us have no ear for anything but ourselves, we cannot hear a thing God says. To be brought into the zone of the call of God is to be profoundly altered.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 16, May 17, September 16
Chapter 3: On Calling the Brethren for Counsel

Whenever any important business has to be done
in the monastery,
let the Abbot call together the whole community
and state the matter to be acted upon.
Then, having heard the brethren's advice,
let him turn the matter over in his own mind
and do what he shall judge to be most expedient.
The reason we have said that all should be called for counsel
is that the Lord often reveals to the younger what is best.

Let the brethren give their advice
with all the deference required by humility,
and not presume stubbornly to defend their opinions;
but let the decision rather depend on the Abbot's judgment,
and all submit to whatever he shall decide for their welfare.

However, just as it is proper
for the disciples to obey their master,
so also it is his function
to dispose all things with prudence and justice.

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

An African proverb says: "You do not teach the paths of the forest to an old gorilla." Experience counts. Wisdom is simply its distillation. Abbots may be abbots and prioresses may be prioresses but the community was there long before them and the community will remain long after they have gone, as well. To ignore the counsel of a group, then, is to proceed at risk.

But Benedict knows about more than the value of experience. Benedict knows about the presence and power of God. And Benedict knows that there is a spark of the divine in all of us. The function of an abbot or prioress, of leaders and spouses everywhere, is not so much to know the Truth as it is to be able to espy it and to recognize it in the other when they hear it. Calling the community for counsel is Benedict's contribution to the Theology of the Holy Spirit.

In the monastic community, this common search for truth is pitched at a delicate balance. The abbot and prioress are clearly not dictators but the community is not a voting bloc either. They are each to speak their truth, to share the perspective from which they see a situation, to raise their questions and to open their hearts, with honesty and with trust. The prioress and abbot are to listen carefully for what they could not find in their own souls and to make a decision only when they can come to peace with it, weighing both the community's concerns and the heart they have for carrying the decision through.

"Foresight and fairness" are essentials for leaders who lead out of a sense of Benedictine spirituality. The decision is all theirs and they will answer for it in conscience and in consequences. They must not make it lightly and they must take all of its effects into consideration. The emphasis in this paragraph is clearly on results rather than on power. It is easy to gain power. It is difficult to use it without being seduced by it. The Rule of Benedict reminds us that whatever authority we hold, we hold it for the good of the entire group, not for our own sense of self.
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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.


St. Luke 21:5-7, 10-11, 20-24 (1/16) For Wed. of the 34th Wk after
Pentecost (Wed 29th Wk)

The Destiny of Jerusalem: St. Luke 21:5-7,10-11,20-24, especially vss.
23, 24: "For there will be great distress in the land and wrath upon
this people. And they will fall by the edge of the sword, and be led
away captive into all nations. And Jerusalem will be trampled by
Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled." During the
days immediately before our Lord's arrest, He was invited to admire the
magnificence of the great temple of the Jews in Jerusalem - the third
and greatest of the national shrines erected for worship under the Old
Covenant.

Significantly, the Lord directed His remarks to events that would impact
the Church after His Passion and Resurrection. He graphically
prophesied how both the great building and the capital city would be
razed in war. Later, Church Fathers such as St. Cyril of Alexandria
linked these warnings to ancient Israel's rejection of the Lord as
Messiah and to the complicity of the Jewish leadership in His death:
"For He forewarned them that however worthy the temple might be
accounted by them of all admiration, yet at its season it would be
destroyed from its foundations being thrown down by the power of the
Romans, and all Jerusalem burnt with fire, and retribution exacted of
Israel for the slaughter of the Lord. For...such were the things which
it was their lot to suffer."

The years between AD 33 and the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70 were marked
by the very signs that the Lord describes in today's reading. There
were national uprisings and battles between kingdoms within the greater
Roman Empire (cf. Lk. 21:10). There were earthquakes, famines and
outbreaks of plagues (cf. vs. 11). Eventually, Jerusalem was put to
siege by the crack legions of Rome under Vespasian. Finally, it was
conquered by his son Titus. Both of these generals served Rome not only
as military leaders but eventually also as Emperors (cf. vs. 20).

Ironically, when Titus and his legions approached Jerusalem, many Jewish
pilgrims ignored him and went into the city for the Passover
celebration. They were confident that the Holy City was invincible
under the hand of God. From an Orthodox Christian perspective, and as
history proved, these pilgrims were foolhardy. The Lord Jesus had
warned that it was time to flee when the armies came, for "Jerusalem
will be trampled by Gentiles..."(vss. 20-24). Anyone with a measure of
historical knowledge cannot help but read the Lord's comment in vs. 22
soberly. "For these are the days of vengeance, that all things which
are written may be fulfilled."

Finally, let us sketch the history of the years from the time of the
Lord to the fall of Jerusalem under Titus. In 4 BC, the murderous Herod
the Great died. By the decision of Caesar Augustus, Herod's three
surviving sons were appointed to rule over portions of Herod's kingdom.
Archelaus (Mt. 2:22), to whom Jerusalem and Judea were assigned, proved
so inept that he was removed by the Romans in AD 6. Then a series of
Roman Procurators assumed control, one of whom was Pontius Pilate. In
AD 41, with a new Emperor in Rome, the grandson of Herod the Great,
Agrippa I, briefly assumed rule over Judea and Jerusalem but died
horribly in AD 44 (see Acts 12:23). Agrippa's reign, however, stirred
up Jewish nationalism, which was further inflamed by a series of
political blunders by the Roman Procurators. Finally, in AD 66, the
Procurator Florus raided the Temple treasury, and full-scale rebellion
broke out. The revolt ended in AD 70 with the Temple's utter
destruction and slavery for Jerusalem's survivors.

We Christians, the new Israel, have lived through two millennia and
might well wonder whether "the days of vengeance" are completed for
Jerusalem, living in an epoch when the city again is in hands of a
Jewish government, and again is torn by civil, religious, and ethnic
unrest, and again has massive international armies hovering nearby.
What will be the next chapter?

Salvation is of the Lord, and Thy blessing is upon Thy people. (Ps. 3:8 LXX)

Monday, January 14, 2008

Reading for Jan 14Ru, 2008

January 14, May 15, September 14
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

The Abbess should always remember what she is
and what she is called,
and should know that to whom more is committed,
from her more is required (Luke 12:48).
Let her understand also
what a difficult and arduous task she has undertaken:
ruling souls and adapting herself to a variety of characters.
One she must coax, another scold, another persuade,
according to each one's character and understanding.
Thus she must adjust and adapt herself to all
in such a way that she may not only suffer no loss
in the flock committed to her care,
but may even rejoice in the increase of a good flock.

Some thoughts

Don't know about you, but this is not a job I would want. Although I wouldn't mind being on the receiving end of such care from someone who has a more balanced view of who I am because I am very quick to heap burning coals on my head when I do something wrong and am all to quick to dismiss any good that I do.

When we are guided, we need someone who can see through the lies we tell about ourselves. We may not only be in denial about our sins, but we may equally be in denial about the gifts God has given us.

Daily Meditation 01/14/08

[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

Father in heaven, who at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan proclaimed him your beloved Son and anointed him with the Holy Spirit: Grant that all who are baptized into his Name may keep the covenant they have made, and boldly confess him as Lord and Savior; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 1, 2, 3; PM Psalm 4, 7
Gen. 2:4-9(10-15)16-25; Heb. 1:1-14; John 1:1-18
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Genesis 2:4-25. ...breathed into his nostrils the breath of life...

"It takes your breath away," I thought to myself. It was noontime, and someone at the local university community told me the news: An individual with a gun had killed as many as twenty persons, including students, in Virginia. At the end of that terrible day, the number of those who died was thirty-three. It had happened yet again, a horrific massacre. These were bright and promising lives taken away. They no longer breathe.


The Lord God breathed into the first human beings the breath of life."Breath" in the Hebrew is the same word as spirit and wind. The Spirit of God enters our being and we are carried by the Wind of the Lord. In the beginning the Lord God intended for women and men to dwell in goodness of creation and live in harmony with all creatures. Sometimes it goes wrong. On the other hand, the Lord God is faithful to what has been made, and offers redemption to all who fall.


I pray to God our Redeemer. May there be comfort for all who mourn. May there be mercy for those who hurt and hate. May those who are vulnerable receive divine strength. May our breath given by the Lord be returned with eternal peace.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Akure (Ondo, Nigeria)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Beloved one

Daily Reading for January 14

A voice from heaven tells Jesus he is a beloved son who is well pleasing. Close your eyes. Silently or aloud say, “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” Then in your mind’s eye, see Jesus and imagine his unspoken response.

Now visualize what it would be like for you to have God descend upon you. Ask yourself:
—If that were to happen in my life, what might I have to give up or take on?
—The word beloved—what does it mean to be a beloved one?

Look around your office or school or dining room table and wonder:
—Who has ever called me a beloved son, daughter, friend, spouse, lover, or colleague?
—From whom do I yearn to hear those words?
—To whom have I given that blessing?
—Who has waited and still waits to hear me say: “You are my beloved in whom I am well pleased”?

From Finding Jesus, Discovering Self: Passages to Healing and Wholeness by Caren Goldman and William Dols. Copyright © 2006. Used by permission of Morehouse Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. www.morehousepublishing.com
Posted by Vicki K. Black on January 14, 2008 4:00 AM
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Be helpless, dumbfounded,
Unable to say yes or no.
Then a stretcher will come from grace
to gather us up.
— Rumi translated by Coleman Barks

To Practice This Thought: Remember who's in charge.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

She lived in solitude, and now in Solitude has built her nest; and in Solitude her beloved alone guides her, who also bears in solitude the wound of love.
St John of the Cross
Spiritual Canticle, 35.
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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 knowledge of the Cross is concealed in the sufferings of the
Cross.

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

From Unceasing Thinking to Unceasing Prayer

Our minds are always active. We analyze, reflect, daydream, or dream. There is not a moment during the day or night when we are not thinking. You might say our thinking is "unceasing." Sometimes we wish that we could stop thinking for a while; that would save us from many worries, guilt feelings, and fears. Our ability to think is our greatest gift, but it is also the source of our greatest pain. Do we have to become victims of our unceasing thoughts? No, we can convert our unceasing thinking into unceasing prayer by making our inner monologue into a continuing dialogue with our God, who is the source of all love.

Let's break out of our isolation and realize that Someone who dwells in the center of our beings wants to listen with love to all that occupies and preoccupies our minds.
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of January 14, 2008

Our glory and our hope--We are the Body of Christ. Christ loves us and espouses us as His own flesh. Isn't that enough for us? But we do not really believe it. No! Be content, be content. We are the Body of Christ. We have found Him, He has found us. We are in Him, He is in us. There is nothing further to look for except for the deepening of this life we already possess. Be content.

Thomas Merton. A Search for Solitude. Edited by Lawrence S. Cunningham (San Francisco, HarperSanFrancisco, 1996): 70

Thought for the Day

Spiritual Reading puts us in contact not just with words, with ideas, but with reality-with God.

To seek God is to seek reality. And this must be something more than a flight from images to ideas. The interior life is not merely what is not exterior.

A Search for Solitude: 67
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Fourteen - The First Way of Service -

Prayer

Tertiaries seek to live in an atmosphere of praise and prayer. We aim to be constantly aware of God's presence, so that we may indeed pray without ceasing. Our ever deepening devotion to the indwelling Christ is a source of strength and joy. It is Christ's love that inspires us to service, and strengthens us for sacrifice.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Dependence on God
January 14th, 2008
Monday’s Reflection

DEPENDENCE ON GOD forms the foundation of true humility, and our experience of dependence — so easily forgotten — returns to us in our weaker moments. When I try to pray and my mind wanders, even this tiny setback can remind me of my humanity, my vulnerability, and my need for God.

- Sarah Parsons
A Clearing Season: Reflections for Lent

From p. 74 of A Clearing Season: Reflections for Lent by Sarah Parsons. 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


Call to Church

Question of the day:
How do you love the unlovely?



Nothing in this world is an end in itself, including Church, pastors, priests, bishops, popes, laws, Bible—nothing! Only God is an end; everything else is a means. Only God can save us, not the Church.

I say that out of a great love for the Church. God saves, and the Church is that beautiful gift given by God to preach that word which will set us free. But when we preach "Church" and raise up "Church," we are not necessarily proclaiming the Lord. We often are preaching ourselves. Jesus never preached Israel, he preached Yahweh. He preached the absolute transcendence of Yahweh and fidelity and obedience to Yahweh.

At the same time Jesus never put Israel down. He loved Israel. Insofar as Israel was true to the covenant and true to the prophets, Jesus was obedient to Israel, obedient to the priests, obedient to "the Church." But he wasn't afraid to keep knocking on the door. He kept inviting Israel to be true to itself. Jesus taught us to love the unlovely, exactly as it was.

If we simply love that which is worthy of love, we will never love at all. The Lord loved "the Church," Israel, exactly as it was. You cannot love the Church as it was fifty years ago. That's a cop-out. The only Church you must love is the Church today.

from The Great Themes of Scripture
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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

May I always hold fast to my baptism

According to the apostle, Lord, your Holy Spirit fully understands and penetrates your inmost depths; he also intercedes on my behalf, saying to you things for which I cannot find the words. Nothing can penetrate your being but what is divine already; nor can the depths of your immense majesty be measured by any power which itself is alien or extrinsic to you. So, whatever enters into you is yours already, nor can anything which has the power to search your very depths ever have been other than your own.

I beg you therefore, Father, to preserve in me that pure and reverent faith and to grant that to my last breath I may testify to my conviction. May I always hold fast to what I publicly professed in the creed when I was baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. May I worship you, the Father of us all, and your Son together with you and may I be counted worthy to receive your Holy Spirit who through your only Son proceeds from you. For me there is sufficient evidence for this faith in the words: Father, all that I have is yours, and all that is yours is mine, spoken by Jesus Christ my Lord who remains, in and from and with you, the God who is blessed for endless ages. Amen.

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

CALLED OF GOD


"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me." Isaiah 6:8

God did not address the call to Isaiah; Isaiah overheard God saying, "Who will go for us?" The call of God is not for the special few, it is for everyone. Whether or not I hear God's call depends upon the state of my ears; and what I hear depends upon my disposition. "Many are called but few are chosen," that is, few prove themselves the chosen ones. The chosen ones are those who have come into a relationship with God through Jesus Christ whereby their disposition has been altered and their ears unstopped, and they hear the still small voice questioning all the time, "Who will go for us?" It is not a question of God singling out a man and saying, "Now, you go." God did not lay a strong compulsion on Isaiah; Isaiah was in the presence of God and he overheard the call, and realized that there was nothing else for him but to say, in conscious freedom, "Here am I, send me." Get out of your mind the idea of expecting God to come with compulsions and pleadings. When our Lord called His disciples there was no irresistible compulsion from outside. The quiet passionate insistence of His "Follow Me" was spoken to men with every power wide awake. If we let the Spirit of God bring us face to face with God, we too shall hear something akin to what Isaiah heard, the still small voice of God; and in perfect freedom will say, "Here am I; send me."
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 14, May 15, September 14
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

The Abbess should always remember what she is
and what she is called,
and should know that to whom more is committed,
from her more is required (Luke 12:48).
Let her understand also
what a difficult and arduous task she has undertaken:
ruling souls and adapting herself to a variety of characters.
One she must coax, another scold, another persuade,
according to each one's character and understanding.
Thus she must adjust and adapt herself to all
in such a way that she may not only suffer no loss
in the flock committed to her care,
but may even rejoice in the increase of a good flock.


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

To "vary with the circumstances" may be the genius of the entire Rule of Benedict. It is undoubtedly clear here.

The Rule of Benedict does not turn people into interchangeable parts. Benedict makes it quite plain: people don't all learn the same way; they don't all grow the same way; they can't all be dealt with the same way. Those concepts, of course, have become commonplace in a culture that is based on individualism. But they were not commonplace as recently as fifty years ago. Historically, there has been a more acceptable way for just about everything: a more acceptable way to pray; a more acceptable way to celebrate the Mass; a more acceptable way to think; a more acceptable way to live. Not everyone did it, of course, but everyone had very clear criteria by which to judge the social fit of everyone else.

Personalism is a constant throughout the Rule of Benedict.Here, though, in a chapter on the abbot or prioress, you would certainly expect at least to find a clear call for order, if not for perfection and discipline and conformity. There is no room in Benedictine spirituality, though, for bloodless relationships between people in authority and the people for whom they have responsibility. Benedictine authority is expected to have meaning. It is to be anchored in the needs and personality of the other person. For the prioress or abbot or parent or supervisor, it is an exhausting task to treat every individual in our care as an individual but nothing else is worth our time. It is easy to intimidate the stubborn with power. It is simple to ignore the mediocre. It is possible to leave the docile on their own and hope for the best.

In the Rule, though, the function of the leader is to call each individual to become more tomorrow than they were today. The point of the paragraph is not how the calling is to be done, with firmness or tenderness or persuasion or discipline. The theories on that subject change from period to period. Some types respond to one approach, some respond better to another. The point here is simply that the calling is to be done. The person who accepts a position of responsibility and milks it of its comforts but leaves the persons in a group no more spiritually stirred than when they began, no more alive in Christ than when they started, no more aflame with the gospel than when they first held it in their hands, is more to be criticized than the fruitless group itself. It was Eli, Benedict points out, the father who did not correct his sinful sons, whom God indicts, not the sons alone.

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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.

St. Luke 20:27-44 (1/14) For Mon of the 34th Week after Pentecost
(Mon of the 29th Week)

Denying Resurrection: St. Luke 20:27-44, especially vs. 27: "Then some
of the Sadducees, who deny that there is a resurrection, came to
Him...." In the original text, St. Luke opens this passage with an
unusual double negative, which the New Jerusalem Bible, among our
English translations, renders clearly: "Some Sadducees - those who argue
that there is no resurrection - approached Him..." (vs. 27). Both
"deny" and "argue" are used to translate "antilegontes," meaning "those
who speak against," to which the Evangelist added "there is no
resurrection," thereby drawing attention to the strict opposition of the
Sadducees to any belief in resurrection. Many of the Jews believed in a
resurrection at the end of time (Jn. 11:23,24), and so some of the
scribes hastened to say, "Teacher, You have spoken well" (Lk. 20:39).

In our day, the Sadducees have colleagues, pundits who reject any
reality except this present existence. Both deny resurrection. These
drink deeply from the materialist wellspring. St. Cyril of Alexandria
aptly characterizes all such secular "thinkers" in his description of
the Sadducees as persons who "attach great importance to their wretched
fancies" and "imagine themselves possessed of such knowledge as no man
can gainsay." Thus, when the Lord corrected the fanciful tale of the
Sadducees - of a woman married to seven brothers (vss. 29-32) - He
exposed the faulty, underlying assumptions of all who deny resurrection
in every age.

First, the Lord addresses the materialist bias of those who deny
resurrection. He shows that all who reject the reality of a spiritual
dimension think solely in terms of the physical realm and cannot imagine
another "age," "sphere," or state of existence beyond that which can be
measured and tested objectively. To correct them, the Lord Jesus points
out that, "The sons of this age marry and are given in marriage" while
those in the age to come do not marry, "nor can they die anymore" (vss.
34-36). As St. Theophylact states: "Here, there is marriage because
there is death....There, where death has been abolished, what need is
there of marriage?"

Second, the Lord Jesus shows that all materialists - from Sadducees to
contemporary secularists - consistently exclude God. Western Societies
generally favor separation of Church and State. There must be little or
no mention of God or His Name. Notice the contrast between the Lord's
manner of speaking about "those who are counted worthy to attain that
age" (vs. 35) and the style of the Sadducees. Our Lord, as God, acts
supremely - as the One Who counts men worthy or not of that age; for He
is the One by Whom "the dead are raised" (vs. 37). In forming their
challenge and telling their story, the Sadducees never even once mention
God (vss. 28-33).

Of course, the process of thrusting God "out of the picture" results in
calculating all events and problems in terms of tangible objects and
relationships. The Mosaic Law served the Sadducees as their objective
measure for everything. Therefore, they reasoned that there was no
resurrection because Moses did not mention it in the Law. And, of
course, it was from Moses' teaching that they drew the problem of the
story of the seven brothers (vs. 28; Deut. 25:5-10).

The Lord Jesus, on the other hand, laced His reply with references to
God and God's revelation of Himself (vss. 35-38). Notice that the Lord
Jesus' basis for knowledge of resurrection rested squarely on Divine
revelation. As the Great Prophet who revealed God's gift of
resurrection, "Moses showed in the burning bush passage that the dead
are raised, when he called the Lord 'the God of Abraham, the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob'" (vs. 37). Thus, today, the Church, on the
basis of recorded revelation, declares to all who deny resurrection,
"Christ is risen!"

O how noble! O how dear! O how sweet is Thy voice, O Christ; for Thou
hast verily made us a true promise, that Thou shalt be with us to the
end of time, an anchor for our hopes.

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Sunday, January 13, 2008

Reading for Jan 13, 2008

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

January 13, May 14, September 13
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

In her teaching
the Abbess should always follow the Apostle's formula:
"Reprove, entreat, rebuke" (2 Tim. 4:2);
threatening at one time and coaxing at another
as the occasion may require,
showing now the stern countenance of a mistress,
now the loving affection of a mother.
That is to say,
it is the undisciplined and restless
whom she must reprove rather sharply;
it is the obedient, meek and patient
whom she must entreat to advance in virtue;
while as for the negligent and disdainful,
these we charge her to rebuke and correct.

And let her not shut her eyes to the faults of offenders;
but, since she has the authority,
let her cut out those faults by the roots
as soon as they begin to appear,
remembering the fate of Heli, the priest of Silo (1 Kings 2-4).
The well-disposed and those of good understanding
let her correct with verbal admonition the first and second time.
But bold, hard, proud and disobedient characters
she should curb at the very beginning of their ill-doing
by stripes and other bodily punishments,
knowing that it is written,
"the fool is not corrected with words" (Prov. 18:2; 29:19),
and again,
"Beat your son with the rod,
and you will deliver his soul from death"(Prov. 23:13-14).

Some thoughts:

What I like the most about this passage, is that it is the monastic superior whose job it is to identify sin and faults and not the job of anyone else. IMO the world is too entirely full of people who feel it is their business to comment negatively on the business of others. Granted we are not in a monastery, but I think I am too full of my own sin that I need to take to the Lord to dare to comment upon that of an other person's.

What do you think, please?

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Daily Meditation 01/13/08

[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

Father in heaven, who at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan proclaimed him your beloved Son and anointed him with the Holy Spirit: Grant that all who are baptized into his Name may keep the covenant they have made, and boldly confess him as Lord and Savior; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm 146, 147; PM Psalm 111, 112, 113
Gen. 1:1-2:3; Eph. 1:3-14; John 1:29-34
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Matthew 3:13-17. A voice from heaven said, "This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased."

The movie The Lion King is one of my favorites. The opening scene is spectacular and majestic. The entire congregation of the animal kingdom is called to assemble below a cliff top. A lion cub has been born to the queen and king. The royal family stands before those gathered. A priestly baboon performs a ritual and anoints the newborn prince. The king and queen smile as the entire community cheers in approval.


Everyone enjoys a baptism, be it of an adult or child. The Book of Common Prayer teaches that Holy Baptism is to be a public rite, with sanctified water and anointing with chrism. In this act of Christian initiation, one is "sealed by the Holy Spirit in Baptism, and marked as Christ's own for ever (p. 308)." Baptism is the beginning of a spiritual calling that may never be broken.


The Lion King seeks to run away, tear apart, and deny his calling. Ultimately, he realizes that he must be who he was anointed to be. The baptized in Jesus are anointed to seek, share, and serve in the body of Christ. May we always know our blessed place in the reign of God.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Anglican Communion. Today is Anglican Communion Sunday throughout the world.
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Christ is baptized

Daily Reading for January 13 • The Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord

Christ is bathed in light; let us also be bathed in light. Christ is baptized; let us also go down with him, and rise with him.

John is baptizing when Jesus draws near. Perhaps he comes to sanctify his baptizer; certainly he comes to bury sinful humanity in the waters. He comes to sanctify the Jordan for our sake and in readiness for us; he who is spirit and flesh comes to begin a new creation through the Spirit and water.

The Baptist protests; Jesus insists. Then John says: “I ought to be baptized by you.” He is the lamp in the presence of the sun, the voice in the presence of the Word, the friend in the presence of the Bridegroom, the greatest of all born of woman in the presence of the firstborn of all creation, the one who leapt in his mother’s womb in the presence of him who was adored in the womb, the forerunner and future forerunner in the presence of him who has already come and is to come again. “I ought to be baptized by you;” we should also add: “and for you,” for John is to be baptized in blood, washed clean like Peter, not only by the washing of his feet.

Jesus rises from the waters; the world rises with him.

From Oration 39 by Gregory of Nazianzus, Bishop of Constantinople (389), quoted in Readings for the Daily Office from the Early Church, edited by J. Robert Wright. Copyright © 1991. 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/

My wife and I periodically try to engage in a "complaining fast." For a week at a time, we try to refrain from all whining and complaining. . . . Doing so makes it easier to become conscious of things that are going well in your life.
— Rabbi Joseph Telushkin in The Book of Jewish Values

To Practice This Thought: Commit to a complaining fast in your household.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Scattering a thousand graces, he passed through these groves in haste, and looking on them as he went, with his glance alone, he clothed them in beauty.
St John of the Cross
Spiritual Canticle, 5.
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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 work of prayer belongs to the angels, and is, therefore, the
special concern of the Church. Every other work, i.e., charity,
nursing the brethren, visiting the sick, caring for prisoners,
releasing captives, and other similar things, is done by the
brethren in love and offered by them to God. Similarly, poverty,
fasting, sleeping on the ground, prostrations, vigils, etc., are
good and like a sacrifice to God, because they aim to subdue and
humble the body so that we may be purified and approach God and
become friends of God -- yet these things do not present us
directly to God, whereas prayer does so and unites us with Him. A
person praying acts towards God like a friend -- conversing,
confiding, requesting -- and through this becomes one with our
Maker Himself.

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

The Still, Small Voice of Love

Many voices ask for our attention. There is a voice that says, "Prove that you are a good person." Another voice says, "You'd better be ashamed of yourself." There also is a voice that says, "Nobody really cares about you," and one that says, "Be sure to become successful, popular, and powerful." But underneath all these often very noisy voices is a still, small voice that says, "You are my Beloved, my favor rests on you." That's the voice we need most of all to hear. To hear that voice, however, requires special effort; it requires solitude, silence, and a strong determination to listen.

That's what prayer is. It is listening to the voice that calls us "my Beloved."
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Thirteen - The Three Ways of Service

Tertiaries desire to be conformed to the image of Jesus Christ, whom we serve in the three ways of Prayer, Study, and Work. In the life of the Order as a whole these three ways must each find full and balanced expression, but it is not to be expected that all members devote themselves equally to each of them. Each individual's service varies according to his/her abilities and circumstances, yet the member's personal rule of life includes each of the three ways.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Work of a Lifetime
January 13th, 2008
Sunday’s Reflection

WE ARE CONVERTED one aspect of the self at a time. That phenomenon explains why some parts of us can be approaching holiness while others remain locked in resistance and rebellion. Because different parts of our soul proceed at different rates, the invitation to love with our “whole heart” is the work of a lifetime and beyond.

- Robert Corin Morris
Provocative Grace: The Challenge in Jesus’ Words

From p. 109 of Provocative Grace: The Challenge in Jesus’ Words by Robert Corin Morris. 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

Call to Church

Question of the day:
What is it to surrender to Holy Mystery?



A man shocked me one day when he said, "You Christians don't love Christ. You hate Christ. You hate what Christ stands for." He continued, "You cover up your own hatred and fear of Christ by talking about how much you love Jesus. But if you love Jesus, why don't you love your enemies? If you love Jesus, why don't' you really obey the gospel, most of which you ignore?"

I heard those words and I trembled inside, thinking, My God, is that true of me? Brothers and sisters, just open Mark's Gospel. Most of us haven't paid attention to nine-tenths of it. Most of the passages are just conveniently ignored by the institutional Church and by ourselves. In fact, I find we very often do the exact opposite of what Jesus teaches about, as if a bigger lie is easier to cover up. Christians and their leaders have been condoning and participating in war, greed and false security for centuries, while calling themselves the Body of Christ—or even the magisterium! Matthew 23 would seemingly make us unwilling to wear a long robe or tassels ever again! Strange, isn't it?

When was the last time you heard that someone was thrown out of the Church for not rejoicing and exalting when they were criticized? Did anybody ever think if it? Well, Jesus taught that (Matthew 5:11-13). How come we don't make that a matter for excommunication? The thought never entered our minds.

from Letting Go: A Spirituality of Subtraction
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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

May I always hold fast to my baptism

According to the apostle, Lord, your Holy Spirit fully understands and penetrates your inmost depths; he also intercedes on my behalf, saying to you things for which I cannot find the words. Nothing can penetrate your being but what is divine already; nor can the depths of your immense majesty be measured by any power which itself is alien or extrinsic to you. So, whatever enters into you is yours already, nor can anything which has the power to search your very depths ever have been other than your own.

I beg you therefore, Father, to preserve in me that pure and reverent faith and to grant that to my last breath I may testify to my conviction. May I always hold fast to what I publicly professed in the creed when I was baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. May I worship you, the Father of us all, and your Son together with you and may I be counted worthy to receive your Holy Spirit who through your only Son proceeds from you. For me there is sufficient evidence for this faith in the words: Father, all that I have is yours, and all that is yours is mine, spoken by Jesus Christ my Lord who remains, in and from and with you, the God who is blessed for endless ages. Amen.

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

HAVE YOU EVER BEEN ALONE WITH GOD?


"When He was alone the twelve . . . asked of Him . . ." Mark 4:10

His Solitude with Us. When God gets us alone by affliction, heartbreak, or temptation, by disappointment, sickness, or by thwarted affection, by a broken friendship, or by a new friendship - when He gets us absolutely alone, and we are dumbfounded, and cannot ask one question, then He begins to expound. Watch Jesus Christ's training of the twelve. It was the disciples, not the crowd outside, who were perplexed. They constantly asked Him questions, and He constantly expounded things to them; but they only understood after they had received the Holy Spirit (see John 14:26).

If you are going on with God, the only thing that is clear to you, and the only thing God intends to be clear, is the way He deals with your own soul. Your brother's sorrows and perplexities are an absolute confusion to you. We imagine we understand where the other person is, until God gives us a dose of the plague of our own hearts. There are whole tracts of stubbornness and ignorance to be revealed by the Holy Spirit in each one of us, and it can only be done when Jesus gets us alone. Are we alone with Him now, or are we taken up with little fussy notions, fussy comradeships in God's service, fussy ideas about our bodies? Jesus can expound nothing until we get through all the noisy questions of the head and are alone with Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 13, May 14, September 13
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

In her teaching
the Abbess should always follow the Apostle's formula:
"Reprove, entreat, rebuke" (2 Tim. 4:2);
threatening at one time and coaxing at another
as the occasion may require,
showing now the stern countenance of a mistress,
now the loving affection of a mother.
That is to say,
it is the undisciplined and restless
whom she must reprove rather sharply;
it is the obedient, meek and patient
whom she must entreat to advance in virtue;
while as for the negligent and disdainful,
these we charge her to rebuke and correct.

And let her not shut her eyes to the faults of offenders;
but, since she has the authority,
let her cut out those faults by the roots
as soon as they begin to appear,
remembering the fate of Heli, the priest of Silo (1 Kings 2-4).
The well-disposed and those of good understanding
let her correct with verbal admonition the first and second time.
But bold, hard, proud and disobedient characters
she should curb at the very beginning of their ill-doing
by stripes and other bodily punishments,
knowing that it is written,
"the fool is not corrected with words" (Prov. 18:2; 29:19),
and again,
"Beat your son with the rod,
and you will deliver his soul from death"(Prov. 23:13-14).

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

To "vary with the circumstances" may be the genius of the entire Rule of Benedict. It is undoubtedly clear here.

The Rule of Benedict does not turn people into interchangeable parts. Benedict makes it quite plain: people don't all learn the same way; they don't all grow the same way; they can't all be dealt with the same way. Those concepts, of course, have become commonplace in a culture that is based on individualism. But they were not commonplace as recently as fifty years ago. Historically, there has been a more acceptable way for just about everything: a more acceptable way to pray; a more acceptable way to celebrate the Mass; a more acceptable way to think; a more acceptable way to live. Not everyone did it, of course, but everyone had very clear criteria by which to judge the social fit of everyone else.

Personalism is a constant throughout the Rule of Benedict.Here, though, in a chapter on the abbot or prioress, you would certainly expect at least to find a clear call for order, if not for perfection and discipline and conformity. There is no room in Benedictine spirituality, though, for bloodless relationships between people in authority and the people for whom they have responsibility. Benedictine authority is expected to have meaning. It is to be anchored in the needs and personality of the other person. For the prioress or abbot or parent or supervisor, it is an exhausting task to treat every individual in our care as an individual but nothing else is worth our time. It is easy to intimidate the stubborn with power. It is simple to ignore the mediocre. It is possible to leave the docile on their own and hope for the best.

In the Rule, though, the function of the leader is to call each individual to become more tomorrow than they were today. The point of the paragraph is not how the calling is to be done, with firmness or tenderness or persuasion or discipline. The theories on that subject change from period to period. Some types respond to one approach, some respond better to another. The point here is simply that the calling is to be done. The person who accepts a position of responsibility and milks it of its comforts but leaves the persons in a group no more spiritually stirred than when they began, no more alive in Christ than when they started, no more aflame with the gospel than when they first held it in their hands, is more to be criticized than the fruitless group itself. It was Eli, Benedict points out, the father who did not correct his sinful sons, whom God indicts, not the sons alone.

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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.

St. Luke 18:35-43(1/13) For Sunday of the 33rd Week after Pentecost (Sun
of the 28th Week)

The Creator of Faith: St. Luke 18:35-43, especially vs. 42: "And Jesus
said unto him, 'Receive your sight: your faith has made you well.'" St.
Ephrem, reflecting on the Lord Jesus' healing of the blind man at
Jericho, observed that "Light came into the world to give sight to the
blind and faith to those who lacked it." St. Luke's account of a blind
man who cried out to the Lord illustrates the ways in which the Lord
constantly is creating faith and saving men and women thereby. The
passage provides a concrete illustration of the Apostle Paul's
declaration that the Lord is "the author and finisher of our faith"
(Heb. 12:2).

The Evangelist begins by revealing how Christ initially "authors" faith
in human hearts. First, He creates a climate conducive to faith or
trust in Himself. Then, He calls those in need to trust Him. The
passage also shows how the Lord brings trust in Himself to a complete
state - by giving those who come to Him tangible opportunities to
express their faith directly. His grace always is active, working in
advance of men's faith. Also, the Lord Jesus' grace actively creates
trust within a person, so that one may respond to Him and thus be
saved. The encounter of the Lord and the blind beggar at Jericho holds
up the dual truth: that "by grace you have been saved..." and that
salvation comes "through faith," that is, when faith is exercised (see
Eph. 2:8). This Gospel reading shows how salvation is synergistic, a
cooperation between man and God.

St. Luke records that the blind man heard a multitude passing and asked
"what it meant" (vs. 36). He was told "that Jesus of Nazareth was
passing by" (vs. 37). His reaction was instantaneous: he immediately
cried out to the Lord (vs. 38). Why so? The obvious answer is that the
Lord's fame and notoriety as a healer were well known by this point in
time - especially to a blind man. The Lord Jesus had been preaching to
the poor and healing various diseases (Lk. 4:40), including the giving
of sight to many blind persons (Lk. 7:21). His evident care for those
in need, coupled with His well-documented capacity to cure, was drawing
huge crowds (Lk. 8:19). Undoubtedly, the beggar knew about Jesus, for
the Lord had created an extraordinary climate of faith-potential. He
was feeding crowds of 5,000 or more (Lk. 9:12-17) and even giving life
to the dead (Lk. 7:11-18). All around us today He continues to heal
miraculously. And we hear the Gospels read to us with one account after
another providing reasons for trusting Him; and despite a dry climate of
doubt and scoffing, the wonders of God continue in and through His
Church. Truly, Christ our God not only responds to those who have faith
in Him, but, in our own day, He is creating faith-potential on every side.

Notice next that when the blind man cried out irrepressibly, the Lord
called him to Himself (Lk. 18:38-40). The Lord Jesus energizes faith by
calling those to Him who wish to have Him act in their lives. His
parable of the importunate widow tells of a woman who drove a judge to
distraction until he gave her vengeance. By such illustrations, the
Lord encourages appeal to God (Lk. 18:2-7). Pay attention to the
behavior of the blind beggar, for you, like all of us, are a blind
beggar. You can cry out to the Lord from your darkness with potential
faith, and He will hear you and call you to Himself. Ignore the voices
around you that ask, "What is the use?", or the voices that warn you,
"You are not important enough!", or that query, "If God exists, will He
reverse or change this situation?" The Creator of faith is not going to
abandon you in dark doubt. Cry out!

Finally, the blind man stood before Him, and Christ gave him an
opportunity to exercise faith in Himself. He asked him, "What do you
want Me to do for you?" (Lk. 18:41). Do you think the Lord did not
know what the blind man wanted? St. Cyril chides us, "Was his request
then unknown to Him?" No! The Creator of faith also lets us venture in
faith to learn that it works and how.

O Christ, Creator of all things, grant me the grace of faith always to
cry out unto Thee.

What do you want for Anglicanism in North America?

http://www.united-anglicans.org/

Go to this website and voice your opinion. Here's what I said:

That we will remember that we are all sinners and that all sin is equally heinous in the eyes of God.

That we will remember that in Christ Jesus there is no neither Jew nor Greek, male or female, slave or free, white or black, gay or straight.

That we will remember that all who love God with everything within them, love their neighbors as themselves, embrace the Creeds, live out the Baptismal Covenant have far far more in common than otherwise.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Reading for Jan 12, 2008

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

January 12, May 13, September 12
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Let her make no distinction of persons in the monastery.
Let her not love one more than another,
unless it be one whom she finds better
in good works or in obedience.
Let her not advance one of noble birth
ahead of one who was formerly a slave,
unless there be some other reasonable ground for it.
But if the Abbess for just reason think fit to do so,
let her advance one of any rank whatever.
Otherwise let them keep their due places;
because, whether slaves or free, we are all one in Christ (Gal. 3:28)
and bear in equal burden of service
in the army of the same Lord.
For with God there is no respect of persons (Rom. 2:11).
Only for one reason are we preferred in His sight:
if we be found better than others in good works and humility.
Therefore let the Abbess show equal love to all
and impose the same discipline on all
according to their deserts.

It refreshes me to read this. Here in the USA we are apt to give precedence to the oddest people, according celebrity status to seriously broken people, voyeuristically devouring the symptoms of their brokenness, celebrating their lapses and returns to rehab.

Here in the RB, though, we have refuge from that dysfunction. Nobody is better or worse than another. We are all one in Christ Jesus. Thank God, oh thank you, God.

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Daily Meditation 01/12/08

[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

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Pour into our hearts, O God, the Holy Spirit's gift of love, that we, clasping each the other's hand, may share the joy of friendship, human and divine, and with your servant Aelred draw many to your community of love; through Jesus Christ the Righteous, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.
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Today's Scripture http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/

AM Psalm, 98, 99, [100]
Gen. 49:1-2, 8-12; Col. 3:18—4:6; John 15:1-16
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 15:1-16. You are my friends...

The warmth of friendship brings satisfaction and joy to the soul. Friends come in many shapes and sizes. My friends include women and men who began a relationship with me as early as first grade and as recently as a few years ago. I count on my friends to be honest and helpful. The Beatles sing, "I get by with a little help from my friends." The book of Proverbs states, "A true friend sticks closer than one's nearest kin." The philosopher Aristotle wrote that a "friend is another self." Mutuality, respect, and interdependence are keys in a lasting and growing friendship.


It was an honor to the disciples that Jesus called them friends. They were beloved ones to our Lord. Perhaps the disciples were haunted by the thought of friendship with Jesus. They had witnessed signs, teachings, and the authority of Jesus. Friendship with Jesus meant repentance and risk. It could lead to their humiliation and death. Ultimately these friends of Jesus received resurrection and redemption in Christ.


Jesus says, "I am the true vine." A vine connects, gives life, and multiplies. May our friendships be a vineyard of many flavors. May the wine of friendship lead to celebration. May knowing Christ be the source of all friendships in God's Holy Name.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Aelred:
Psalm 36:5-10 or 145:8-13
Philippians 2:1-4; John 15:9-17 or Mark 12:28-34a
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Akoko (Ondo, Nigeria)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Aelred of Rievaulx

Daily Reading for January 12 • Aelred, Abbot of Rievaulx, 1167

When God created man, in order to commend more highly the good of society, he said: “it is not good for man to be alone: let us make him a helper like unto himself.” It was from no similar, nor even from the same, material that divine Might formed this help mate, but as a clearer inspiration to charity and friendship he produced the woman from the very substance of the man. How beautiful it is that the second human being was taken from the side of the first, so that nature might teach that human beings are equal and, as it were, collateral, and that there is in human affairs neither a superior nor an inferior, a characteristic of true friendship.

Hence, nature from the very beginning implanted the desire for friendship and charity in the heart of man, a desire which an inner sense of affection soon increased with a taste of sweetness. But after the fall of the first man, when with the cooling of charity concupiscence made secret inroads and caused private good to take precedence over the common weal, it corrupted the splendor of friendship and charity through avarice and envy, introducing contentions, emulations, hates and suspicions because the morals of men had been corrupted. From that time the good distinguished between charity and friendship, observing that love ought to be extended even to the hostile and perverse, while no union of will and ideas can exist between the good and wicked. And so friendship which, like charity, was first preserved among the all by all, remained according to the natural law among the few good. They saw the sacred laws of faith and society violated by many and bound themselves together by a closer bond of love and friendship. In the midst of the evils which they saw and felt, they rested in the joy of mutual charity.

From Spiritual Friendship by Aelred of Rievaulx (Cistercian Publications, 1977).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Without doing anything, things can sometimes go more smoothly just because of our peaceful presence. In a small boat when a storm comes, if one person remains solid and calm, others will not panic and the boat is more likely to stay afloat.
— Thich Nhat Hanh in Love in Action

To Practice This Thought: In the morning make the intention that you will be the solid and calm one in your family or workplace today.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Our most holy King has much more to give: He would rejoice to do nothing but give could He find souls capable of receiving.
St Teresa of 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


He who really keeps account of his actions considers as lost every
day in which he does not mourn, whatever good he may have done in
it.

St. John of the Ladder
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen)
The Spiritual Work of Gratitude

To be grateful for the good things that happen in our lives is easy, but to be grateful for all of our lives-the good as well as the bad, the moments of joy as well as the moments of sorrow, the successes as well as the failures, the rewards as well as the rejections-that requires hard spiritual work. Still, we are only truly grateful people when we can say thank you to all that has brought us to the present moment. As long as we keep dividing our lives between events and people we would like to remember and those we would rather forget, we cannot claim the fullness of our beings as a gift of God to be grateful for.

Let's not be afraid to look at everything that has brought us to where we are now and trust that we will soon see in it the guiding hand of a loving God.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Twelve - The Third Aim, cont'd

Personal spending is limited to what is necessary for our health and well-being and that of our dependents. We aim to stay free from all attachment to wealth, keeping ourselves constantly aware of the poverty in the world and its claim on us. We are concerned more for the generosity that gives all, rather than the value of poverty in itself. In this way we reflect in spirit the acceptance of Jesus' challenge to sell all, give to the poor, and follow him.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

God, Our First Friend
January 12th, 2008
Saturday’s Reflection

WHAT DOES IT MEAN to be a friend of God? … The mystics joyfully remind us that we are born from God; we live in God; and we return to God. Certainly we know this is true as we watch an orange-red sun drop beneath the edge of the ocean or witness a newborn kicking his tiny feet in the air. But so often these miracles of life are dimmed by distraction and busyness. We find ourselves stuck in the rut of the familiar. Our first Friend, God, may even seem far away.

- Stephanie Ford
Hungering for God

From p. 88 of Hungering for God: Selected Writings of Augustine 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

Mystery

Question of the day:
What is it to surrender to Holy Mystery?



We can only play the prophet within the admitted and chosen realm of mystery. Who could have foreseen the miracle of Vatican II in the humdrum of 1958? Could reason or futurism have concluded the cultural shift that took place somewhere in the mid-1960’s? Who would have predicted the seeming reactionary era of the 1990’s—both in Church and state? Is there any possibility that this maddening rhythm is actually a part of the Holy Mystery? Oh, I want us to use our minds, our will, our spiritual intuition to plot and plan for what we think must be God’s future and God’s plan. But I can only trust that seeing and foreseeing in those who have first surrendered to the Holy Mystery. Otherwise we will have only more of what we already have too much of: willfulness and ego-centered determination calling itself the new age of the Spirit.

Have no doubt, brothers and sisters of the faith, that cannot be the best of the American Church or any Church. In that house there is too much of the privatized, eccentric self to ever perceive the true Master of the house. True surrender must precede the search. It is surrender that finally generates the search. I do not trust the search without surrender. As Yahweh said to Job, “Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundations? Have you ever in your life given orders to the morning or sent the dawn to its post?” (Job 38:4, 12, JB). Is Yahweh talking to Job or to us?

from “The Future of the American Church”
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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

You possess nothing that you have not received

God is glorified among us when we grow in love and compassion, when we carry out his commands and persevere in doing his will; these are the ways in which he is glorified. Now we know that the Lord has been sent to us as our redeemer, our life, and our healing, bringing us his loving mercy and grace beyond all our deserts. So when we see ourselves lifted up from the dust of the earth to receive a heavenly prize, let all of us believers be glad of heart and rejoice, and, as living souls raised up from the dead, let each one of us seek the Lord.

What return shall we make to the Lord for such blessings? All we can do is to bow our heads and beat our breasts, saying with the publican: O God, be merciful to me a sinner! Rejoice, then, my friends, at these great gifts of his, exult in such great blessings! Take care not to ascribe to yourselves the good things you have received from him, for if you do, you will lose what you have. You must be convinced that you possess nothing that you have not received. And if you have received it, do not boast as though you had not. If you keep to this rule the gifts you have received will be preserved among you, and anything you now lack will be granted to you in full.

The Latin Chrysostomos
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

HAVE YOU EVER BEEN ALONE WITH GOD?


"When they were alone, He expounded all things to His disciples." Mark 4:34

Our Solitude with Him. Jesus does not take us alone and expound things to us all the time; He expounds things to us as we can understand them. Other lives are parables. God is making us spell out our own souls. It is slow work, so slow that it takes God all time and eternity to make a man and woman after His own purpose. The only way we can be of use to God is to let Him take us through the crooks and crannies of our own characters. It is astounding how ignorant we are about ourselves! We do not know envy when we see it, or laziness, or pride. Jesus reveals to us all that this body has been harbouring before His grace began to work. How many of us have learned to look in with courage?

We have to get rid of the idea that we understand ourselves, it is the last conceit to go. The only One Who understands us is God. The greatest curse in spiritual life is conceit. If we have ever had a glimpse of what we are like in the sight of God, we shall never say - "Oh, I am so unworthy," because we shall know we are, beyond the possibility of stating it. As long as we are not quite sure that we are unworthy, God will keep narrowing us in until He gets us alone. Wherever there is any element of pride or of conceit, Jesus cannot expound a thing. He will take us through the disappointment of a wounded pride of intellect, through disappointment of heart. He will reveal inordinate affection - things over which we never thought He would have to get us alone. We listen to many things in classes, but they are not an exposition to us yet. They will be when God gets us alone over them.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 12, May 13, September 12
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Let her make no distinction of persons in the monastery.
Let her not love one more than another,
unless it be one whom she finds better
in good works or in obedience.
Let her not advance one of noble birth
ahead of one who was formerly a slave,
unless there be some other reasonable ground for it.
But if the Abbess for just reason think fit to do so,
let her advance one of any rank whatever.
Otherwise let them keep their due places;
because, whether slaves or free, we are all one in Christ (Gal. 3:28)
and bear in equal burden of service
in the army of the same Lord.
For with God there is no respect of persons (Rom. 2:11).
Only for one reason are we preferred in His sight:
if we be found better than others in good works and humility.
Therefore let the Abbess show equal love to all
and impose the same discipline on all
according to their deserts.

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

If Benedict of Nursia was anything, he was not a pious romantic. He knew the Gospel and he knew life and he set out to bring the two together.

In one paragraph of this chapter, he shapes a completely new philosophy of authority, in another paragraph he hints at a different philosophy of religious life and in this one he rejects, out of hand, the common social structures of the period. In his communities, slave and free are equal as the gospels demand.

This is the Jesus life. What is insane in the streets is common coin here. What is madness to politicians is life breath here. What is unheard of in nice company is taken for granted here. Here people are ranked in the order in which they came to the group--not by education, not by money, not by social status but simply according to the moment they came to Christ. There is, as a result, no rank at all and this is very disconcerting to a world that loves uniforms and titles and knowing people who are in Who's Who.

But do not be misled. Benedict is a realist, not a feckless libertarian. There are differences among us and he recognizes those. There is a kind of natural hierarchy of gifts. Some of us are business people and some of us are not. Some of us are musicians and some are not. Some of us are leaders and some are not. The question is not whether or not some of us should be put over others of us. The question is how we get there and why we're put there.

Here Benedict draws another sharp contrast with life as we know it. The monastic life, the spiritual life, is not a life dedicated to climbing and clawing to the top. The monastic mind is not set on politicking or groveling. Abbots and prioresses, good leaders anywhere, are not in the business of forming kitchen cabinets or caucuses.

No, favoritism and intrigue are not the mint of the monastic mindset, commitment is.

Benedict doesn't just want a business manager who can make money for the monastery. He doesn't want workers for their productivity only. He doesn't take for leaders simply those who know how to control a group or build a business. Whom Benedict wants appointed to positions of responsibility are people who are distinguished "in goods works and obedience," in "good works and humility." It is a model for leadership in those places where profit and power and the party line take precedence over what the business or the diocese or the social service agency proclaims it is about.

He does not want people in positions simply to get a job done. He wants people in positions who embody why we bother to do the job at all. He wants holy listeners who care about the effect of what they do on everybody else.
Imagine a world that was run by holy listeners.
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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.

St. Matthew 4:1-11 (1/12) The
Saturday after the Feast of Theophany

Purpose Of Temptation: St. Matthew 4:1-11, especially vs. 1: "Then Jesus
was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the
devil." Even the Lord Jesus was tempted. Why? St. John Chrysostom
notes: "...He endures also to be led up thither, and to wrestle against
the devil: in order that each of those who are baptized, if after his
baptism he have to endure greater temptations, may not be troubled as if
the result were unexpected...." St. Seraphim of Sarov warns us of the
same: "We must always be attentive to the assaults of the devil; for can
we hope that he will leave us without temptation, when he did not leave
our Founder and Source of faith and Perfecter, the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself?"

Temptation is our human lot (1 Cor. 10:13). But observe, Beloved: the
Lord Jesus had a greater purpose in undergoing temptation than merely to
remove the surprise of it. As the great Commander of the armies in
heaven (Rev. 19:14), He aims at our survival in combat. Therefore we
must be alert to "watch our flank." And more: the Lord went into the
desert to be tempted because He desires that each disciple understand
how and when temptations are going to come.

Surprisingly, the Gospel lesson teaches us that temptations will come to
the Faithful just as they did to the Lord Himself, at the leading of the
Holy Spirit (Mt. 4:1). The Spirit often drives Christians into the
struggle against the whispering of the prowler. Why? St. John
Chrysostom says, "...to teach thee that thou art become much stronger"
by being a Christian, and "...that thou mayest continue modest, neither
be exalted...that thou mayest in this way be made stronger and better
tempered than any steel...[and] that thou mayest obtain a clear
demonstration of the treasures entrusted to thee." On the other hand,
what of temptation for the non-Christian? With the secularist and those
of other religions, temptation is barely significant. They are already
under the management of the enemy, and so they blithefully pursue what
the devil provides.

Temptation comes when we are isolated (vs. 1). As St. Theophylact says
of the Lord, "He is led into the wilderness to show us that the devil
tempts you when he sees us alone and without help from others.
Therefore we must not put our trust in ourselves without any counsel
from others." The foul one caught Eve when she was apart from Adam. So
St. John Chrysostom suggests that we flock "...together continually,
that we may not be open to the devil's attacks."

Temptation comes to us because we are honored by God in the Holy Mystery
of the Faith. The Lord rose from His Baptism (Mt. 3:16). The Spirit
came upon Him (Mt. 3:16), and the Father glorified Him: "This is My
Beloved Son" (Mt. 3:17). Remember, the great honor is ours. We have
been joined to Christ. We died and rose with Him from the Holy waters.
We have been sealed as His Own forever with the Holy Spirit. He has fed
us with His Holy Gifts. The devil is mad with rage and envy that we are
honored. He wills to cheat us of our heritage.

Temptation also comes when we have been deprived or demeaned. The
devil's name, "Diabolus," means "slanderer." So, he suggests to Christ
"If You are the Son of God" (Mt. 4:3), insinuating that the Lord was
abandoned. "Thou art washed" in the name of the Holy Trinity, not
abandoned. Never trust "feelings" of abandonment. "God is the Lord, He
hath shown us light!"

Temptation to turn from God also comes through the allure of power,
riches, and this world's tangible pleasures (Mt. 4:8). The devil paints
the picture beautifully to arouse our passions, stir us up and lead us
to fall. He offers bread made from stones when we are hungry! (cf.: Mt.
4:3). A fast track to fame, the world at our feet, and no Cross.
Beware, O my soul!

Blessed is my God, and let the God of my salvation be exalted. O my
Deliverer from enemies...from them that arise up against me wilt Thou
lift me high. (Ps. 17:47,48 LXX)

Labels:

Friday, January 11, 2008

Daily Meditation 01/11/08

[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 Are One
Let go
take deep steadying breaths
there is no time, there is no purpose
there is nothing to be anxious about
God is here
God is here
God is here
every One is present and
accounted for
none are left out, none are excluded
all are wearing their wedding garment
holding their arms open to
receive
the child born in Bethlehem
the King who will restore and heal
the One who made and loves all
the gift of belonging and relationship
letting go of the need to control or
define
the need for answers
and the fear of difference of change of tomorrow
there is no time but now
there is no place but here
there is no one but
God and you and me and them
and we are One


by L. Zoe Cole

Collect

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, 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 148, 150; PM Psalm 61, 62
Isa. 55:3-9; Col. 3:1-17; John 14:6-14

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

Colossians 3:1-17. If you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above.

David Robinson was a Naval Academy midshipman, basketball player, and Olympic medalist. His talents took him to a career with the San Antonio Spurs. Robinson played in two championships and is considered one of the best basketball players of all time.


I heard David Robinson give a personal testimony of faith after a basketball game about ten years ago. Mr. Robinson spoke of "seeking things that are above." He explained how his three sons will someday receive a significant inheritance due to his earnings as a professional athlete. Nonetheless, he assured us that his sons will be beneficiaries of an inheritance in the reign of Christ that promised far more riches and greater blessings than any money found on earth.


I witnessed a gifted human being who believes and lives so that the gifts of God may be shared among the people of God.


Do not let your thoughts be upset by things here on earth, but keep your mind's gaze on "Jerusalem which is above." Ensure that you let go of everything that belongs to this world.
--Babai the Great (d. 628)
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Aipo Rongo (Papua New Guinea)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Be not afraid

Daily Reading for January 11

The question is not whether the things that happen to you are chance things or God’s things because, of course, they are both at once. There is no chance thing through which God cannot speak—even the walk from the house to the garage that you have walked ten thousand times before, even the moments when you cannot believe there is a God who speaks at all anywhere. He speaks, I believe, and the words he speaks are incarnate in the flesh and blood of our selves and of our own footsore and sacred journeys. We cannot live our lives constantly looking back, listening back, lest we be turned to pillars of longing and regret, but to live without listening at all is to live deaf to the fullness of the music. Sometimes we avoid listening for fear of what we may hear, sometimes for fear that we may hear nothing at all but the empty rattle of our own feet on the pavement. But be not affeard, says Caliban, nor is he the only one to say it. “Be not afraid,” says another, “for lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.” He says he is with us on our journeys. He says he has been with us since each of our journeys began. Listen for him. Listen for the sweet and bitter airs of your present and your past for the sound of him.

From The Sacred Journey by Frederick Buechner (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1982).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

In Tibet, practitioners would sometimes be instructed to go into a cave or canyon and alternately yell compliments and insults at themselves, listening to the echoed sounds and watching the mind's reactions to the praise and criticism.
— Glenn H. Mullin in Gems of Wisdom from the Seventh Dalai Lama

To Practice This Thought: Make a tape recording of your own personal barrage of praise and insults. Play it back to yourself and note how you respond.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

O living flame of love, that tenderly wounds my soul, in it deepest centre! Since now you are not oppressive, now consummate! if it be your will: tear through the veil of this sweet encounter!
St John of the Cross
Living Flame, stanza 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

We truly love God and keep His commandments if we restrain
ourselves from our pleasures. For he who still abandons himself to
unlawful desires certainly does not love God, since he contradicts
Him in his own intentions. . . Therefore, he loves God truly,
whose mind is not conquered by consent to evil delight. For the
more one takes pleasure in lower things, the more he is separated
from heavenly love.

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

Trusting the Catcher

Trust is the basis of life. Without trust, no human being can live. Trapeze artists offer a beautiful image of this. Flyers have to trust their catchers. They can do the most spectacular doubles, triples, or quadruples, but what finally makes their performance spectacular are the catchers who are there for them at the right time in the right place.

Much of our lives is flying. It is wonderful to fly in the air free as a bird, but when God isn't there to catch us, all our flying comes to nothing. Let's trust in the Great Catcher.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Eleven - The Third Aim, cont'd

Although we possess property and earn money to support ourselves and our families, wo show ourselves to be true followers of Christ and of Saint Francis by our readiness to live simply and to share with others. We recognize that some of our members may be called to a literal following of Saint Francis in a life of extreme simplicity. All of us, however, accept that we avoid luxury and waste, and regard our possessions as being held in trust for God.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Finding a Friend
January 11th, 2008
Friday’s Reflection

LET YOUR PRAYER be against the malice of your enemies, that it may die and they may live. For if your enemy were dead, it might seem you have lost an enemy, yet have you not found a friend. But if your enemy’s malice died, you have at once lost and enemy and found a friend.

- Augustine
Hungering for God

From p. 76 of Hungering for God: Selected Writings of Augustine edited by Keith Beasley-Topliffe. Copyright © 1997 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

Mystery

Question of the day:
Can you name in your life what matters, what lasts and what is?



In the centuries of fighting over the humanity and the divinity of Christ, the Western Church has gradually lost touch with the larger and more universal message: "The image of the unseen God, the firstborn of all creation, for in him were created all things in heaven and on earth...and he holds all things in unity...because God wanted all perfection to be found in him and all things to be reconciled through him and for him" (Colossians 1:15-20).

This is not a problem-solving Christ, not a denominational or cultural Christ, not a Christ domesticated by the Churches. This Christ names in his life and person what matters, what lasts, and finally what is. He holds it all together in significance, reveals the redemptive pattern that we call the life and death of things and holds the meaning and value of our lives outside of ourselves!

Because we no longer worship such a Christ, we are condemned to worship smaller stories. We try to replace him with colorized myths of pilgrims, George Washington and Arnold Schwarzenegger, but none of them are big enough or real enough to give universal order and meaning. We look to the private psyche, but it is just not big enough or connected enough to encompass human spiritual longing.

The Church's efforts at evangelization will remain trapped in culture and fundamentalism until we are, ourselves, large enough to proclaim a Cosmic Christ.

from Sojourners, "Why Does Psychology Always Win?"
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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 fans our hearts into flames

You may wonder how it can be that people are children of God. But just as what is born of a human being is human, of deer, deer, and of peacock, peacock, in the same way what is born of God is also God. What, then, becomes of the human nature, the flesh and blood, as they say, then it changes into God? In other words, does it become God and is God produced? But why do you marvel that humanity becomes God? Was not God made human and the Word made flesh? For if God, who has in himself the highest existence, becomes human, why then should not humanity, whose final resting place is in God, be changed into God? Imperfect things are drawn to perfection by something in nature that stimulates them. But they are born of God through love, not nature. And why not nature? Because the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and he begot us when he was conceived in our hearts in a way very different from how children are generally begotten. For children are conceived to be born, while Christ dwells within us that he might beget us even before he is conceived by us. Lying hidden within us, Christ draws out of his very self seeds of fire. For he is stone and flint; and, as you know, seeds of fire are hidden in the veins of flint. Thus when Christ knocks out sparks, he kindles the soul and fans the heart into flames. How are hearts burned within us on the way, said those journeying to Emmaus.

Giles of Viterbo, O.S.A.
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Daily Readings From "My Utmost for His Highest", Oswald Chambers
http://www.myutmost.org/

WHAT MY OBEDIENCE TO GOD COSTS OTHER PEOPLE


"They laid hold upon one Simon . . . and on him they laid the cross." Luke 23:26

If we obey God it is going to cost other people more than it costs us, and that is where the sting comes in. If we are in love with our Lord, obedience does not cost us anything, it is a delight, but it costs those who do not love Him a good deal. If we obey God it will mean that other people's plans are upset, and they will gibe us with it - "You call this Christianity?" We can prevent the suffering; but if we are going to obey God, we must not prevent it, we must let the cost be paid.

Our human pride entrenches itself on this point, and we say - I will never accept anything from anyone. We shall have to, or disobey God. We have no right to expect to be in any other relation than our Lord Himself was in (see Luke 8:2-3).

Stagnation in spiritual life comes when we say we will bear the whole thing ourselves. We cannot. We are so involved in the universal purposes of God that immediately we obey God, others are affected. Are we going to remain loyal in our obedience to God and go through the humiliation of refusing to be independent, or are we going to take the other line and say - I will not cost other people suffering? We can disobey God if we choose, and it will bring immediate relief to the situation, but we shall be a grief to our Lord. Whereas if we obey God, He will look after those who have been pressed into the consequences of our obedience. We have simply to obey and to leave all consequences with Him.

Beware of the inclination to dictate to God as to what you will allow to happen if you obey Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 11, May 12, September 11
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Therefore, when anyone receives the name of Abbess,
she ought to govern her disciples with a twofold teaching.
That is to say,
she should show them all that is good and holy
by her deeds even more than by her words,
expounding the Lord's commandments in words
to the intelligent among her disciples,
but demonstrating the divine precepts by her actions
for those of harder hearts and ruder minds.
And whatever she has taught her disciples
to be contrary to God's law,
let her indicate by her example that it is not to be done,
lest, while preaching to others, she herself be found reprobate (1 Cor. 9:27),
and lest God one day say to her in her sin,
"Why do you declare My statutes
and profess My covenant with your lips,
whereas you hate discipline
and have cast My words behind you" (Ps. 49:16-17)?
And again,
"You were looking at the speck in your brother's eye,
and did not see the beam in your own" (Matt. 7:3).

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

The Tao says,

"We join spokes together in a wheel
but it is the center hole
that makes the wagon move."

Benedict says that those who hold authority in a community are not to be above the group, they are to be the centers of it, the norm of it, the movers of it. They themselves are to mirror its values. Their job is not simply to give orders. Their job is to live out the ideals. It is an authority far removed from office elitism or pompous hierarchy or highhanded parenting.

Benedict calls a community to obedience, yes, but he does not call it to servitude. He does not call people to conformity for the sake of conformity. That's where modern concepts of blind obedience and the monastic concept of cenobitic obedience are so distinct from one another. Blind obedience demands that underlings comply with authority without thought of consequences. Cenobitic obedience insists that equals must bring a thoughtful concern for what is best for everyone before they ask anything of consequence.

Autocrats and militarists and spiritual charlatans and abusive parents and corporate moguls want the people under them to obey laws from which their exalted positions hold them exempt. Benedict says that the only authentic call for obedience comes from those who themselves demonstrate the value of the law.

The point is that what we do not live we do not have a right to require, and that for two reasons: first, because it is a hollow call to insist that others do what we do not do ourselves and secondly, because it requires for the sake of requiring something rather than for the merit of the requirement itself. To hold people under us to a law which we ourselves have no intention of respecting is to make a mockery of what we ask. Employees whom we require to work because we will not; children who are told to avoid what they see us doing with impunity; citizens who must do what they see us declaring exempt for ourselves, do learn from us. They learn that law is useless and that we are frauds and that power protects only the powerful. Benedict is saying that if the laws are good, then people will be able to see that in the lawgiver.

But Benedict is saying even more than this. Benedict is saying that the function of spiritual leadership is not to intimidate people into submission by fear or guilt. The function of spiritual leadership is to show in our own lives the beauty that oozes out of those who live the spiritual life to its fullness. The function of spiritual leadership is to enshrine what a good life can be.

The abbot and prioress are to make of themselves the light that guides and the crystal that rings true. Otherwise, why should anyone else attempt the Way at all. "Love work and hate lordship," the Hasidim teach their rabbis. It is Benedict's teaching, too.
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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.

St. Matthew 11:27-30 (1/11) For Holy Monks (For
Theodosios & Thurs, 4th APE)

Believing in God and Knowing God: St. Matthew 11:27-30: "All things have
been delivered to Me by My Father, and no one knows the Son except the
Father. Nor does anyone know the Father except the Son, and the one to
whom the Son wills to reveal Him. Come to Me, all you who labor and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you, and learn
from Me, for I Am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for
your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light." To know God
is to enter into the very life of the Holy Trinity. We have come to
know the Father through the Son as the Son reveals Him to us by the Holy
Spirit.

Knowing God is not simply acknowledging His existence nor even bending
to His sovereignty and dominion. Knowing God is a personal acquaintance
that grows from living a relationship. It has similarities to knowing
other human beings. but intellectual concepts play only a minor part.
Knowing God is greater, permitting infinite growth of interpersonal
knowledge unknown in human relationships. The path to this knowledge is
through union with and submission to Christ, Who fills us with Divine
life. As He "knows the Father," He enables us to have a relationship
with the Unoriginate "Father." For the Father has given over all things
to Christ, including access to and knowledge of Himself. "No one comes
to the Father except through Me" (Jn. 14:6).

We cannot say that those who claim to believe in God know the True God.
There are many false gods of human creation and speculation. Men have
inclined to invent and worship these in place of the True God, the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Pride leads men to create gods
having a human image, human likeness, and human limitations. Mankind,
without the light of the knowledge of God given in Christ, prefers the
idolatrous service of gods who fulfill human desires at the beck and
call of finite creators. Idolatry allows men to blame the gods they
have fashioned for the disorder and failure that they themselves
create. Men are able to project responsibility onto "the gods," onto
the works of their own hands. While false gods are convenient, their
service leaves no peace, no joy, and no fulfillment - rather it gives
place to demons.

Beloved, idolatry is a temptation and a "religious solution" into which
even we who call ourselves Orthodox Christians may fall. Enthroning a
lesser god, and calling it "Christ" or "our Father" is actually a
contrivance that conveniently avoids the real difficulties and the
actual demands of a living knowledge of the God Who is God. Such
"packaging" and modification of true faith is death to the soul, for the
Source of true Life is replaced with a manageable deity, a tidy little
distortion that allows us to pursue our passions and desires. Guard
yourself against every self-created, subtle movement of your heart and
mind that would raise up false gods to suit your pride and your ego.
When you refuse to surrender to the True God, you presume to bear the
whole world and your own sins upon your own shoulders. In fact, the
world and our sins bear us down to hell.

Remember: knowing God requires surrender of your preoccupations and of
your petty, inadequate delusions about yourself and especially about
God. But if you will struggle for union with Christ and submit to Him,
if you will answer His call and take up His yoke and His Cross, then He
will bless you with a true rest in Himself. You shall be able to cry
out from your ongoing relationship and to say, "Our Father." It is in
your surrendering to Christ that the Lord Jesus lifts away the heavy
yoke of our sins from you and yokes you to Himself (Mt. 11:28,29). He
shoulders the unbearable burden now made light for you. "Blessed are
the poor in spirit," who mourn meekly before God (Mt. 5:3-5) to whom He
grants His own life and Sonship with the Father.

Save us, O Lover of mankind, in the multitude of Thine infinite
compassion and mercy!

Reading for 01/11/08

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

January 11, May 12, September 11
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Therefore, when anyone receives the name of Abbess,
she ought to govern her disciples with a twofold teaching.
That is to say,
she should show them all that is good and holy
by her deeds even more than by her words,
expounding the Lord's commandments in words
to the intelligent among her disciples,
but demonstrating the divine precepts by her actions
for those of harder hearts and ruder minds.
And whatever she has taught her disciples
to be contrary to God's law,
let her indicate by her example that it is not to be done,
lest, while preaching to others, she herself be found reprobate (1 Cor. 9:27),
and lest God one day say to her in her sin,
"Why do you declare My statutes
and profess My covenant with your lips,
whereas you hate discipline
and have cast My words behind you" (Ps. 49:16-17)?
And again,
"You were looking at the speck in your brother's eye,
and did not see the beam in your own" (Matt. 7:3).

Some thoughts:

Did I mention this the last time we read this bit? St. Francis is said to have said "Preach the Gospel always. If necessary, use words." Isn't it so true, though, that what we do is remembered far more than what we say? That our actions reveal what we really believe far more than our words? Especially when the deeds and the words do not accord with each other.

I can think of so m many ways in which my words and deeds don't match up. I can get so caught up in the high of the approval of others, for instance, that I will really milk that. Or I can be so cast down by their disapproval that I want to spend the next month in bed with the covers over my head.

Neither response is a good one. Seems clear to me that the monastic superior, who is also elected to the position by the very monastics one is to govern, is one who has learned to b e content with God. How much I long for this myself.

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Reading for Jan 10, 2008

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

January 10, May 11, September 10
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Let the Abbess always bear in mind
that at the dread Judgment of God
there will be an examination of these two matters:
her teaching and the obedience of her disciples.
And let the Abbess be sure
that any lack of profit
the master of the house may find in the sheep
will be laid to the blame of the shepherd.
On the other hand,
if the shepherd has bestowed all her pastoral diligence
on a restless, unruly flock
and tried every remedy for their unhealthy behavior,
then she will be acquitted at the Lord's Judgment
and may say to the Lord with the Prophet:
"I have not concealed Your justice within my heart;
Your truth and Your salvation I have declared" (Ps. 39:11).
"But they have despised and rejected me" (Is. 1:2; Ezech. 20:27).
And then finally let death itself, irresistible,
punish those disobedient sheep under her charge.

Some thoughts:

At first I read this and I think what a thankless job! To be held accountable for God not only for the quality of what is taught but also to be held accountable for the way others obey what is taught. The first one, ok. the latter, Whoa, Nellie!! How could a spiritual teacher possibly be responsible for what then taught do with the teaching?

Then I realised it is not merely the speaking and the hearing that are at issue, but the doing. The one who teaches is as much responsible for the doing as are any hearers.

What do you think?

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Daily Meditation 01/10/08 William Laud

[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

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Keep us, O Lord, constant in faith and zealous in witness, that, like your servant William Laud, we may live in your fear, die in your favor, and rest in your peace; for the sake of Jesus Christ your Son 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 138, 139:1-17(18-23); PM Psalm 147
Jer. 23:1-8; Col. 2:8-23; John 10:7-17
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Jeremiah 23:1-8. The LORD is our righteousness.

Recently I received a phone call from a woman whom I have not seen in several years. She is a sweet soul and has displayed leadership in her community. My friend now lives in the United States and works at a factory. She spoke of her journey from her homeland to Mexico, and then across the border and into the shadows. She is alone, cold, and sometimes fearful. She sends money to her four children who are living with her sister in Latin America. Nonetheless, she has faith, peace, and love in Christ. Indeed, I am in awe of her relationship with the Lord. It is a healthy, good, and right relationship with God.


A healthy relationship with God and the people of God is called righteousness. The Hebrew word for righteousness is the same as for the concept of justice. The prophets of old and many voices of today call us to this state of being and willingness to act in the name of the Lord. Justice occurs when everyone is treated fairly. My friend reminds me of a song by Tish Hinojosa entitled, "Las Marias." It is about anonymous women who do the work of the world. May all Marias (and Marios) point to a blessed way to relate to God and our neighbor.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

William Laud, archbishop & martyr
Psalm 73:24-29 or 16:5-11
Hebrews 12:5-7,11-14; Matthew 10:32-39
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Ahoada (The Niger Delta, Nigeria)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

William Laud

Daily Reading for January 10 • William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1645

The ‘unity,’ then, ‘of the Spirit,’ to which the apostle exhorts, includes both; both concord in mind and affections, and love of charitable unity, which comes from the Spirit of God, and returns to it. And, indeed, the grace of God’s Spirit is that alone which makes men truly at peace and unity one with another. To Him it is to be attributed, not to us, saith Saint Augustine. It is ‘He that makes men to be of one mind in an house.’ Now one mind in the Church, and one mind in the State, come from the same fountain with ‘one mind in an house;’ all from ‘the Spirit.’ And so the Apostle clearly, ‘one body, and one Spirit,’ that is, ‘one body,’ by ‘one Spirit.’ For it is ‘the Spirit’ that joins all the members of the Church into ‘one body.’ And it is the Church that blesses the State, not simply with ‘unity,’ but with that unity with which itself is blessed of God. A State not Christian may have ‘unity’ in it. Yes; and so may a State that hath lost all Christianity, save the name. But ‘unity of the Spirit’ nor Church nor State can longer hold, than they do in some measure obey the ‘Spirit,’ and love the ‘unity.’

This ‘unity of the Spirit’ is closer than any corporal union can be; for spirits meet where bodies cannot, and nearer than bodies can. The reason is given by Saint Chrysostom: because the soul or spirit of man is more simple, and of one form. And the soul apter in itself to union is made more apt by the Spirit of God which is ‘one,’ and loves nothing but as it tends to one. Nay, as the Spirit of God is one, and cannot dissent from itself, no more ought they whom the Spirit hath joined in one; and the Spirit hath joined the Church in one; therefore he that divides the unity of the Church, practices against the ‘unity of the Spirit.’

And now I cannot but wonder what words Saint Paul, were he now alive, would use, to call back ‘unity’ into dismembered Christendom. For my part, death were easier to me, than it is to see and consider the face of the Church of Christ scratched and torn, till it bleeds in every part, as it doth this day.

From Sermons Before King Charles’s Third Parliament by William Laud, quoted in Love’s Redeeming Work: The Anglican Quest for Holiness, compiled by Geoffrey Rowell, Kenneth Stevenson, and Rowan Williams (Oxford, 2001).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Truly great dancers are those who make their partners look good. Like Fred Astaire.
— Melanie Svoboda in Rummaging for God

To Practice This Thought: Find ways in the dance of daily life to make your partner look good.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Prayer of a soul enkindled with love. My Way is the way of trust 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

A greedy appetite for food is terminated by satiety and the
pleasure of drinking ends when our thirst is quenched. And so it
is with the other things. . . But the possession of virtue, once
it is solidly achieved, cannot be measured by time nor limited by
satiety. Rather, to those who are its disciples it always appears
as something ever new and fresh.

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

Growing Beyond Self-Rejection

One of the greatest dangers in the spiritual life is self-rejection. When we say, "If people really knew me, they wouldn't love me," we choose the road toward darkness. Often we are made to believe that self-deprecation is a virtue, called humility. But humility is in reality the opposite of self-deprecation. It is the grateful recognition that we are precious in God's eyes and that all we are is pure gift. To grow beyond self-rejection we must have the courage to listen to the voice calling us God's beloved sons and daughters, and the determination always to live our lives according to this truth.

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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

To live simply

The first Christians surrendered completely to our Lord and recklessly gave all that they had, offering the world a new vision of a society in which a fresh attitude was taken towards material possessions. This vision was renewed by Saint Francis when he chose Lady Poverty as his bride, desiring that all barriers set up by privilege based on wealth should be overcome by love. This is the inspiration for the third aim of the Society, to live simply.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Guiding God
January 10th, 2008
Thursday’s Reflection

I HAVE SO MANY CHOICES facing me right now, Guiding God. … I listen for your voice.

I listen with an open heart. I trust that you will guide me to the right choice. In this trusting, I am going to move out in faith and open the doors in front of me. …

Ever-present God, the process of opening doors begins now. Please help me discern the best choice.

- Patricia F. Wilson
Quiet Spaces

From Quiet Spaces by Patricia F. Wilson. Copyright © 2002 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


Mystery

Question of the day:
What is it to be one part of the universal chain of being?



We are in a transitional time, a hopeful bridge-building generation. Maybe every age is. Most little people born onto this planet have known that they are first the children of their parents and the parents of their children. We always stand in-between. We hold hands tightly and gratefully and know that we must finally let go. That is the fate of all humans. It is humble, partial, a mere link in a universal chain of being. For most folks it has been enough, and it is amazing that we baby boomers ever thought it would be different for us.

All philosophy of progress, self-actualization and Yankee-can-do aside, we are overwhelmed by the amount of death and depression in our society. We are obviously mere tracings in a much larger history and a Mystery where only an Eternal God draws the final lines. That's not a copout; it's not denial. It's the most courageous "yes" a human being can offer. After wars for oil, catastrophic worldwide poverty and Churches that themselves run from the gospel, it might be the only yes that we can utter—and the only yes that will finally make a difference.

Let's try. It's the only life that we have on this planet. I am content to build bridges that the next generation might possibly walk on. I am happy and even freed to be part of a merely transitional generation.

from Radical Grace, "A Transitional Generation"
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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 made himself visible

The Word of God saw the firm hold that corruptibility had on us as the penalty for our transgression and that it would be monstrous for the law to come to nothing before ever having been fulfilled. He also saw the unseemliness of what was happening, of his own creatures ceasing to exist. He saw the excessive wickedness of the human race and how little by little it was mounting up against us and becoming intolerable. He saw that all human beings were subject to death.

Therefore, he had mercy on our race and in his pity for our weakness he descended to our corruptible condition. He could not allow death to have the mastery, for fear that creation should perish and his Father's work for the human race come to nothing. And so he took a body for himself, a body no different from ours. For he did not wish simply to become embodied and to make himself visible. If he had wished merely to become visible he could have manifested himself by means of some nobler instrument. But no; he took a human body, and took it moreover from a spotless, immaculate virgin, without the intervention of a man. He who is powerful and who created the whole universe fashioned for himself in the Virgin a body to be his temple, making it his own as the instrument through which he could be known and in which he could dwell.

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

THE OPENED SIGHT


"To open their eyes . . . that they may receive . . ." Acts 26:18

This verse is the grandest condensation of the propaganda of a disciple of Jesus Christ in the whole of the New Testament.

The first sovereign work of grace is summed up in the word - "that they may receive remission of sins." When a man fails in personal Christian experience, it is nearly always because he has never received anything. The only sign that a man is saved is that he has received something from Jesus Christ. Our part as workers for God is to open men's eyes that they may turn themselves from darkness to light; but that is not salvation, that is conversion - the effort of a roused human being. I do not think it is too sweeping to say that the majority of nominal Christians are of this order; their eyes are opened, but they have received nothing. Conversion is not regeneration. This is one of the neglected factors in our preaching today. When a man is born again, he knows that it is because he has received something as a gift from Almighty God and not because of his own decision. People register their vows, and sign their pledges, and determine to go through, but none of this is salvation. Salvation means that we are brought to the place where we are able to receive something from God on the authority of Jesus Christ, viz., remission of sins.

Then there follows the second mighty work of grace - "an inheritance among them which are sanctified." In sanctification the regenerated soul deliberately gives up his right to himself to Jesus Christ, and identifies himself entirely with God's interest in other men.

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

January 10, May 11, September 10
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

Let the Abbess always bear in mind
that at the dread Judgment of God
there will be an examination of these two matters:
her teaching and the obedience of her disciples.
And let the Abbess be sure
that any lack of profit
the master of the house may find in the sheep
will be laid to the blame of the shepherd.
On the other hand,
if the shepherd has bestowed all her pastoral diligence
on a restless, unruly flock
and tried every remedy for their unhealthy behavior,
then she will be acquitted at the Lord's Judgment
and may say to the Lord with the Prophet:
"I have not concealed Your justice within my heart;
Your truth and Your salvation I have declared" (Ps. 39:11).
"But they have despised and rejected me" (Is. 1:2; Ezech. 20:27).
And then finally let death itself, irresistible,
punish those disobedient sheep under her charge.


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

Benedict puts a great deal of responsibility on the shoulders of people in authority, but not all of it. Abbots and prioresses are to teach, to proclaim, but the community's responsibility is to listen and to respond.

Benedict wants a community that is led, but not driven.

The concept is clear: people are not acquitted of the responsibility for their own souls. Personal decisions are still decisions, personal judgments are still judgments, free will is still free will. Being in a family does not relieve a child of the responsibility to grow up. The function of twenty-one year olds is not to do life's tasks as their parents told them to do it when they were six years old. The function of twenty-one year olds is simply to do the same tasks well and to take accountability themselves for having done it.

Perhaps the most important result of a model of authority like this is the environment it creates. The monastery is not a royal court, a military barracks, or a detention home. The role of leadership is not to make lackeys, or foot soldiers or broken children out of adult Christians.

The purpose of Benedictine spirituality is to gather equally committed adults for a journey through earthen darkness to the dazzling light that already flames in each of us, but in a hidden place left to each of us to find.

The Rule's model of leadership and authority, then, is a paradigm for any relationship, husband and wife, parent and child, supervisor and employee. The function of authority is not to control the other; it is to guide and to challenge and to enable the other. Benedictine authority is a commitment to that, a promise of that.

A midrash on Genesis points out: "God prefers your deeds to your ancestors' virtues." We are not here simply to follow someone else. Being part of something good does not automatically make us good. What we do with our own lives is the measure of their value. We are here to learn to take ourselves in hand.
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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.

St. Luke 20:9-18 (1/10) For Thursday of the 33rd Week after
Pentecost (Thur 28th Week)

Love and Hate: St. Luke 20:9-18, especially vss. 15, 16: "Therefore what
will the owner of the vineyard do to them? He will come and destroy
those vinedressers and give the vineyard to others." The Lord Jesus'
final days in Jerusalem ended with His arrest, trial, Passion, and
Resurrection. For the Jews - the ancient "vineyard" and People of God -
as well as for the Lord Himself, those days were the defining moment of
their relationship. It was a time of incalculable love and vitriolic
hate. To help all men everywhere plumb the essence of the love and
hate, our gracious God and Savior speaks through the parable of the
vinedressers.

During those epic, final days, and true to His nature, our loving Lord
defined the depth and breadth of love as never before imagined by angels
or by men. The response of the ancient People of God to Love Incarnate
was not clear-cut. There were members of ancient Israel who truly loved
the Lord and made every effort to follow Him - as well as they were
able. Love roused them to love in return; and, by the grace of God,
they discerned "the words of eternal life" (Jn. 6:68). They had "come
to believe and know that [He is] the Christ the Son of the living God"
(Jn. 6:69). These "believers," all of them Jews, and the core of the
New Israel, the Church, give us the Lord's words of life. It was in
following that they learned how "Blessed [is] the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, Who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us
again to a living hope through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the
dead" (1 Pet. 1:3).

Quite opposite, there were those in the ancient Israel who refused to
receive the Lord, Jews who did not have the word of God "abiding" in
them. The Lord Jesus told them - warned them plainly, - "...I know you,
that you do not have the love of God in you" (Jn. 5:42), and worst of
all, "...you seek to kill Me, because My word has no place in you" (Jn.
8:37). He addressed their hatred - a hatred straight out of Hell - in
the parable of the vinedressers: "You are of your father the devil, and
the desires of your father you want to do. He was a murderer from the
beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in
him" (Jn. 8:44).

We, the New Israel, believers in Christ who have lived through recent
history, know venomous hatred all too well, yet we have been blessed to
know incredible Love Himself, as did the early believers. And we have
seen Satan's terrible hate unleashed against the descendants of the
ancient people of God. As Christians, we have witnessed burning hatred
turned likewise upon Christians, murderously poured out on the Church.
The Devil ever promotes hatred in any heart that will grant him room.
Nonetheless, let us say, "Thanks be to God;" for this present time in
which the love of God still prevails over hate and new martyrs still
triumph over our ancient foe.

Be clear: the parable of the vinedressers does not teach anti-Semitism,
for iniquity springs from hate and the devil. Rather the parable warns
us to root out hatred from our hearts. The Lord took away the vineyard
from the ancient People of God and gave it to His new Israel. We are
the "others" to whom the Lord gave charge of His vineyard (vs. 16).
Have you never heard our Bishops say, "O God of hosts, return again; and
look down from heaven and behold, and visit this vine, And perfect that
which Thy right hand hath planted..." (Ps. 79:15,16 LXX)?

Observe: the Lord our God truly is a cornerstone of love (Lk. 20:17), as
St. Cyril of Alexandria teaches: "Now the sacred Scripture compares to a
cornerstone the gathering together, or joining of the two people, Israel
I mean, and the Gentiles, in sameness of sentiment and faith." The
Church, ancient and modern (including you), is joined to God in love to
overcome all hatred.

The Savior Who planted the vineyard and calls His laborers is near.
Come, let us receive our hire; for the Giver is rich, loving, and
merciful, even to those who have labored little.

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More on "love the sinner, hate the sin"

Ona list someone said: ""That there are hurt glbt, hurt by the way others have behaved towards them is not lessened by the fact that there are hurt people of all sorts and conditions who may share similar experience to whom we all are called to
reach out in love and practical compassion, which, after all, is what this
wretched catch phrase is all about anyway.


Let's try rewording: "That there are hurt
Negroes , hurt by the way others have behaved towards them is
not lessened by the fact that there are hurt people of all sorts and
conditions who may share similar experience to whom we all are called to
reach out in love and practical compassion, which, after all, is what this
wretched catch phrase is all about anyway.

It invalidated the struggle of black people when such things have been said to them. It invalidates the struggle of GLBT when the same is said to them.

The example of Jesus is quite clear: he sought the company of the sinners, publicans, tax collectors, prostitutes. He assured a thief that "today he would be with me in paradise".

The Pharisees faulted Jesus for spending time with sinners. They wanted Him to separate Himself from them. They didn't like the company He kept. So even if a person insists on identifying it sinful to be GLBT (which I most emphatically don't) it is the responsibility of Episcopalians to do as Jesus did and seek their company. Not join the Southern Cone or the Churches of Uganda or Nigeria.

Jesus told us the meek will inherit the earth. I think it is self-evident that the meek are those who know they are no better than anyone else. The meek are those who do not presume to tell another that he or she is a sinner because the meek are All Too Aware of their own sin and spend too much time repenting of their own sin to have free time to correct another.

We are all broken people. Broken people need to reach out with arms widespread in mercy and compassion to embrace the other broken people under our noses. We can't afford to look around for someone more broken and refuse to comfort the broken person standing next to us.We especially can't afford to postpone this while we deal with our own personal brokenness first because there is never any end to that. One of those humdinger paradoxical mysteries of the Christian faith is that broken people are God's agents to bring wholeness other broken people.

While part of me is sickened to see some of those new to the House of Bishops/Deputies list of the Episcopal Church and several of the older members reveal themselves for the homophobes that they are, part of me rejoices that truth is out there at last. It is only when we come out of denial that we can be healed. It is the truth that sets us free. Jesus said this. He ought to know.

I am aware that people don't like being called homophobes. Wife beaters and other abusers don't care to be identified as wife beaters, pedophiles, racists either. They can protest all they want at being called such, but as long as they persist in the behaviors, such they will be called.

"Love the sinner, hate the sin"

On the email list for the Episcopal House of Bishops and Deputies, someone brought up the non-Christian tired old chestnut that we are "love the sin, hate the sinner." The origin of this phrase is not Biblical, nor is it Christian. Gandhi thought it up and it is is consistent with the mind/body dualism that is common among the Eastern religions, much so called New Age spirituality and even among Christians. But dualism is not Christian and this phrase is destructive. IMO.

I wrote this to the House of Bishops and Deputies. I repost it here.

Having been a kibitzer on this list for years now, having participated
on other world-wide Anglican email lists for even longer, IMO all of
you are missing the real issue in this discussion of "love the sinner,
hate the sin". For one thing, it is asking us to compartmentalize
ourselves in a way that is very non-Christian. The Bible does not
teach us to separate who we are from what we do but to regard
ourselves as a whole.

The real issue as I see it, is that those who use this non-Christian
concept do not actually and in fact love the sinner. As far as I can
tell from what it is written here and on other email lists, is that
GLBT Episcopalians are actually and in fact hated.

"Love the sinner, hate the sin" is just another disguise for
homophobia. I am not gay, but I recognized bigotry and prejudice when
I see it. Were we to substitute "negroes" for "homosexual" we would
find the language that tried to keep black Americans at the back of
the bus, in separate restaurants and using different water fountains.

While it is true that we are all hypocrites along with St. Paul
struggling to do good but doing evil instead, some of us have the
honesty to acknowledge that we are hypocrites. We do not wrap it up
in pious sounding phrase or proof-texting Biblical verses.

On the whole, we Episcopalians are too nice to call a spade a spade.
I have never been called a nice person in my life as I am much too
blunt spoken. And I have no intention of being anything but blunt
here. I have been and shall continue to be astonished at the
forbearance, tolerance and love shown by the GLBT individuals in TEC
to those who would kick them out.

It is not those on this list who would excuse their behavior as loving
the sinner, hating the sin who demonstrate what it is to love. Quite
the opposite, I fear, is what has been demonstrated.

The demonstration of love is is to be found among those who have been
identified as the sinners, the unwanted, the outcasts. Just where
Jesus said it would be found.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Reading for 01/09/08

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

January 9, May 10, September 9
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

An Abbess who is worthy to be over a monastery
should always remember what she is called,
and live up to the name of Superior.
For she is believed to hold the place of Christ in the monastery,
being called by a name of His,
which is taken from the words of the Apostle:
"You have received a Spirit of adoption ...,
by virtue of which we cry, 'Abba -- Father'" (Rom. 8:15)!

Therefore the Abbess ought not to teach or ordain or command
anything which is against the Lord's precepts;
on the contrary,
her commands and her teaching
should be a leaven of divine justice
kneaded into the minds of her disciples.

Some thoughts:

What a standard: hold the place of Christ in the monastery. Would you want to have to measure up against that? Not I.

The thing is though, as Christians we are called to hold the place of Christ wherever we are. Whatever we do. Whatever we say. I can only rejoice that the Holy Spirit moved the authors of Scripture and Benedict to write as they have, because I surely do need their help.

Labels: , , ,

Reading for 01/09Ru/08

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

January 9, May 10, September 9
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

An Abbess who is worthy to be over a monastery
should always remember what she is called,
and live up to the name of Superior.
For she is believed to hold the place of Christ in the monastery,
being called by a name of His,
which is taken from the words of the Apostle:
"You have received a Spirit of adoption ...,
by virtue of which we cry, 'Abba -- Father'" (Rom. 8:15)!

Therefore the Abbess ought not to teach or ordain or command
anything which is against the Lord's precepts;
on the contrary,
her commands and her teaching
should be a leaven of divine justice
kneaded into the minds of her disciples.

Some thoughts:

What a standard: hold the place of Christ in the monastery. Would you want to have to measure up against that? Not I.

The thing is though, as Christians we are called to hold the place of Christ wherever we are. Whatever we do. Whatever we say. I can only rejoice that the Holy Spirit moved the authors of Scripture and Benedict to write as they have, because I surely do need their help.

Daily Meditation, 01/09/08 Wed in the week of EPIPHANY 1

[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]




Ambvon Prayer on the Feast Holy Theophany

Ineffable is Thy love towards us,
and boundless is the sea of Thy good will,
O Lord our God;
For it was pleasing unto Thee
for Thine Only-begotten Son to be born of a chaste woman,
and to become man;
and to be like unto us in all things, save sin:
and to be baptized as a man for our sake by John,
though needing no baptism:
so that, in sanctifying the element of water,
He might grant us rebirth by water and the Spirit.
And in these things discerning Thee to be God eternal,
we worship Thee,
Who hast from the heavens proclaimed Him that was baptized to be Thy Son.
We glorify Thy Holy Spirit,
Who descended upon Him and revealed Him to John:
for Thou hast sealed us,
and endowed us with the grace of Baptism;
Thou hast made us communicants of Thy Christ:
of Whom deprive not us sinners,
but by His Grace support us against every force of evil;
and strengthen the Orthodox Christians against every assault,
and lead us all into Thy Kingdom:
that in us may be glorified Thine all-holy Name,
and that of Thine Only-begotten Son,
together with the most Holy Spirit, now and ever,
and unto ages of ages. Amen.
From an ancient Amvbon prayer


Collect

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

The Collect

God of all creation, you call us in Christ to make disciples of all nations and to proclaim your mercy and love: Grant that we, after the example of your servant Julia Chester Emery, may have vision and courage in proclaiming the Gospel to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our light and our salvation, 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 121, 122, 123; PM Psalm 131, 132
Isa. 45:14-19; Col. 1:24-2:7; John 8:12-19
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm


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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

Julia Chester Emery
Psalm 67 or 96:1-7
Romans 12:6-13; Mark 10:42-45 John 8:12-19. I am the light of the world.

It is winter in the northern hemisphere. The sun setting in late afternoon makes for longer nights. These are the moments of this season when the cold and darkness seem never to end.


This time of the year has a mystical quality. Those living where the snow falls often know that gentle snow encourages everyone to slow down. Snow brings a divine quiet upon the earth. Snow on the ground reflects light in the utter darkness of this season. Snow on a tree radiates crystal sparkles before one's eyes. Perhaps it is nature's way of saying the light of the world shall not be overcome.


Jesus teaches his followers that he is light to their eyes. This light guides, directs, and ultimately gives life in Christ. The light of Christ has come into the entire cosmos. The light permits us to see beyond darkness, gain perspective in a fog, and have vision for the future.


In all seasons may the light encourage and energize our being. May the light of Christ be shown through our life and labor. May the light of the world bring warmth and comfort to all.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Agra (North India)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Julia Chester Emery

Daily Reading for January 9 • Julia Chester Emery, 1922

Julia Chester Emery is not the kind of person one expects to meet in a calendar of religious commemorations, in part because of the nature of her accomplishments. Her story does not involve extraordinary feats of courage, neither was she tortured or executed for reason of her faith. She was only twenty-four years old when she assumed the only ecclesiastical post she would ever hold, secretary of the Woman’s Auxiliary of the Episcopal Church. In that office Julia Emery served for forty years, a faithful lay woman.

By the time Julia Emery left her post in 1916, she had helped organize branches of the Woman’s Auxiliary in nearly two-thirds of the eighty-five hundred parishes of the Episcopal Church. Moreover, the Auxiliary itself dispensed many dollars in financial aid to missions and raised the awareness of the larger church to the important work of outreach.

Julia Emery reminds us that the most difficult and demanding work of mission is the most mundane, the work of administration and education. Increasingly, missionary work involves not exotic travel or rare courage; far less does it involve a zeal for conversion to one’s own ideals or methods. Instead, modern mission demands just those qualities Julia Emery devoted to service—gifts for educating, organizing, and administering.

We remember Julia Emery for raising funds, organizing volunteers, administering institutions, and educating lay members of the church. Apparently, her only training for this ministry was a willingness to try it, for she possessed no special education or preparation. Her only authority was collegial, for being a lay woman, she had neither the office nor the perquisites of ordained status to buttress her leadership. Julia Emery reminds us that we all possess the resources we need to be effective missionaries, except perhaps the two most important qualities exemplified in her—a willingness to try and the commitment to stick with it, even for a lifetime.

From Brightest and Best: A Companion to the Lesser Feasts and Fasts by Sam Portaro (Cowley, 2001).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Our duty is not to see through one another, but to see one another.
— Leonard Sweet in A Cup of Coffee at the Soul Cafe

To Practice This Thought: Give up trying to judge others; let them lean on you instead.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Mine are the heavens and mine is the earth. Mine are the nations, the just are mine, and mine are the sinners. The angels are mine, and the Mother of God, and all things are mine; and God Himself is mine and for me, because Christ is mine and all for me.
St John of the Cross
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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

Observe your thoughts, and beware of what you have in your heart
and your spirit, knowing that the demons put ideas into you so as
to corrupt your soul by making it think of that which is not
right, in order to turn your spirit from the consideration of your
sins and of God.

Abba Elias
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Daily Meditation (Henri Nouwen) http://www.henrinouwen.org/home/free_eletters/

Stepping over Our Wounds

Sometimes we have to "step over" our anger, our jealousy, or our feelings of rejection and move on. The temptation is to get stuck in our negative emotions, poking around in them as if we belong there. Then we become the "offended one," "the forgotten one," or the "discarded one." Yes, we can get attached to these negative identities and even take morbid pleasure in them. It might be good to have a look at these dark feelings and explore where they come from, but there comes a moment to step over them, leave them behind and travel on.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Nine - The Second Aim, cont'd

As Tertiaries, we are prepared not only to speak out for social justice and international peace, but to put these principles into practice in our own lives, cheerfully facing any scorn or persecution to which this may lead.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

The Divine Embrace
January 9th, 2008
Wednesday’s Reflection

IF WE SEEK FAITH, we will know the divine embrace that enables us to embrace one another. Amid much brokenness around us and among us, this embrace is no small sign.

- Stephen V. Doughty
Discovering Community: A Meditation on Community in Christ

From Discovering Community: A Meditation on Community in Christ by Stephen V. Doughty. Copyright © 1999 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

Mystery

Question of the day:
How is one present to reality?



Somewhere each day we have to fall in love with someone, something, some moment, event, phrase. Somehow each day we must allow the softening of the heart. Otherwise our hearts will move inevitably toward hardness. We will move toward cynicism, bitterness, fear and despair. That's where most of the world is trapped and doesn't even know it.

The world's been in love with death so long that it calls death life. It tries to conjure up life by making itself falsely excited, by creating parties where there's no reason to celebrate.

We have to create and discover the parties of the heart, the place where we know we can enjoy, the place where we can give of ourselves. If you're not involved in giving your thoughts, your emotions, "for-giving," you will be involved only in taking. Yet the only way to experience joy is to give yourself to reality. Joy comes after you go that extra mile and offer yourself first-thing every day.

Ask the Lord to give you the grace to fall in love. Then you'll see rightly, because only when we are in love do we understand. Only when we've given ourselves to reality can we, in fact, receive reality. That is the endless mystery of the Trinity that is expressed in every facet of this world: Perfect giving equals perfect receiving.

from The Passion of God and the Passion Within
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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

Our second birth

We know, and our knowledge is true, that we who were defiled by our first birth have been cleansed by our second birth; we who were enslaved by our first birth have been freed by our second birth; we who became children of earth at our first birth became children of heaven at our second birth; we who were fleshly because of the corruption inherent in our first birth have become spiritual by virtue of our second birth. The first made us children of wrath; the second, children of grace. Therefore let everyone know that any attack on the reverence due to holy baptism is an insult to God himself who told us: No one who is not born again of water and spirit can enter the kingdom of heaven.

Sound instruction therefore give us the grace to understand the nature and purpose of saving baptism. As the apostle puts it: If we have died with Christ, we believe we shall also live with Christ; for the object of our dying and being buried with Christ is to enable us to rise again and live with him.

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





INTERCESSORY INTROSPECTION


"And I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless." 1 Thess 5:23

"Your whole spirit. . ." The great mystical work of the Holy Spirit is in the dim regions of our personality which we cannot get at. Read the 139th Psalm; the Psalmist implies - "Thou art the God of the early mornings, the God of the late at nights, the God of the mountain peaks, and the God of the sea; but, my God, my soul has further horizons than the early mornings, deeper darkness than the nights of earth, higher peaks than any mountain peaks, greater depths than any sea in nature - Thou Who art the God of all these, be my God. I cannot reach to the heights or to the depths; there are motives I cannot trace, dreams I cannot get at - my God, search me out."

Do we believe that God can garrison the imagination far beyond where we can go? "The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin" - if that means in conscious experience only, may God have mercy on us. The man who has been made obtuse by sin will say he is not conscious of sin. Cleansing from sin is to the very heights and depths of our spirit if we will keep in the light as God is in the light, and the very Spirit that fed the life of Jesus Christ will feed the life of our spirits. It is only when we are garrisoned by God with the stupendous sanctity of the Holy Spirit, that spirit, soul and body are preserved in unspotted integrity, undeserving of censure in God's sight, until Jesus comes.

We do not allow our minds to dwell as they should on these great massive truths of God.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 9, May 10, September 9
Chapter 2: What Kind of Person the Abbess Ought to Be

An Abbess who is worthy to be over a monastery
should always remember what she is called,
and live up to the name of Superior.
For she is believed to hold the place of Christ in the monastery,
being called by a name of His,
which is taken from the words of the Apostle:
"You have received a Spirit of adoption ...,
by virtue of which we cry, 'Abba -- Father'" (Rom. 8:15)!

Therefore the Abbess ought not to teach or ordain or command
anything which is against the Lord's precepts;
on the contrary,
her commands and her teaching
should be a leaven of divine justice
kneaded into the minds of her disciples.

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

The social revolution of the Rule starts in this paragraph on authority. This will be a different kind of life than the sixth century Roman ever saw. The head of the monastery will not be a chief or a queen or a feudal lord. The superior of a monastery of Benedictines will be a Christ figure, simple, unassuming, immersed in God, loving of the marginal, doer of the gospel, beacon to the strong.

Once you begin to understand that, you begin to understand the whole new type of authority that the Rule models for a world gone wild with power. You begin to understand that it is not the laws of the mighty that will govern this group. It is the law of God that will preempt all other considerations.

Like Christ, this leader does not lead with brute force. This leader understands the leavening process. This leader, called appropriately abbot or abbess or prioress, is a spiritual parent, a catalyst for the spiritual and psychological growth of the individual monastic, not a border guard or a warden. This leader is not a parent who terrorizes a child into submission; this leader believes in the best and gives people the opportunities to make the mistakes that lead to growth.

The prioress and abbot provide an environment that confronts the monastic with the presence of God, that shows them the Way. After that it is up to the monastic to let the practices of the community and the rhythm of the prayer life work their way until the piercing good of God rises in them like yeast in bread.

"If you meet the Buddha on the road," the Zen master teaches the disciple, "kill him." Don't let any human being become the measure of your life, the Zen implies. Eliminate whatever you would be tempted to idolize, no matter how worthy the object. The role of the spiritual leader, in other words, is not to make martinets out of people; it is to lead them to spiritual adulthood where they themselves make the kind of choices that give life depth and quality. Like the teacher of Zen, Benedict does not make the superior of the monastery the ultimate norm of life. Pleasing the abbot is not what monastic life is all about. Becoming what the abbess or prioress thinks you should be is not the goal of monasticism. Following the leader is not the end for which we're made; finding God is. Benedict makes the superior of his monasteries a lover of people, a leader who can persuade a person to the heights, show them the mountain and let them go.

In our own culture, becoming someone important, climbing the corporate and ecclesiastical ladder has so often meant pleasing the person at the top rather than doing what conscience demands or the situation requires. That kind of leadership is for its own sake. It makes the guru, rather than the gospel, the norm of life. That kind of obedience puts the business before the soul. That kind of authority is not monastic and it is not spiritual. That kind of authority so often leads to the satisfaction of the system more than to the development of the person and the coming of the reign of God. That kind of authority breeds Watergate and My Lai in the face of a tradition that holds up for public emulation Joan of Arc and Thomas More whose obedience was always to a much higher law than the institutions of the country.
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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.

St. Luke 20:1-8 (1/9) For Wednesday of the 33rd Week after
Pentecost (Wed 28th Week)

Rights vs. Repentance: St. Luke 20:1-8, especially vss. 5, 6: "And they
reasoned among themselves, saying, 'If we say, "From heaven," He will
say, "Why then did you not believe him?" But if we say, "From men," all
the people will stone us, for they are persuaded that John was a
prophet.'" The Evangelist Mark records two imperatives that the Lord
Jesus' places before all mankind: "Repent, and believe in the gospel"
(Mk. 1:15). Christ's authoritative call to repent and believe in His
message aroused the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders: "by what
authority are You doing these things? Or who is he who gave You this
authority?" (Lk. 20:2). These national leaders were confident that they
were the "authorities," being members of the ruling Council of the
People of Israel and God's designated officials (Nu. 11:16-17 LXX).
Here was a Galilean peasant speaking for God in the Lord's sacred Temple
on His own authority (Lk. 19:47).

Notice that the Lord did not attempt to convince these leaders of His
Divine nature and anointing as Messiah, a ground for authority beyond
all adequacy in any sense. Rather, He returned to His basic message of
repentance and obedience to the Gospel by posing a question to His
interrogators: "The baptism of John - was it from heaven or from men?"
(Lk. 20:4).

St. John called all men to repent and to confirm their repentance by a
cleansing Baptism. Thus it is in one's heart that the Lord Jesus'
question must be settled: was John's authority from God, or was it from
himself or some other human authority? Behind the question lies one's
openness to repentance. Do you see? The Lord Jesus sought to open the
hearts of His interrogators (and all of us) to repentance as preached by
St. John and Himself. God's appointed leaders in the Temple, most of
all, should have acknowledged St. John as a Prophet and heeded his call
to repent; but, sadly, they were closed even to this elementary step
toward salvation. Because they would not repent, neither could they
hear the Gospel nor believe in Christ and His message.

The Temple authorities created a false polarization of rights versus
repentance. Woe to anyone so preoccupied with rights and self esteem
that he is not open to God's call to "repent and believe in the
Gospel." The call to repent is the call to life, when issued by Life
Himself. There is no conflict over the right to call others to repent,
so long as the appeal comes from the God Who spoke through John and was
Incarnate in Jesus. The reasoning of the authorities exposed their
uncertainty concerning John (vs. 5), and likely their unwillingness to
believe that John spoke for the God Who is God. If they could not
acknowledge John's call as valid, how then could they answer the Lord
Jesus? However, each of us must answer the Lord's question.

St. Peter of Damaskos exhorts you and me to answer the call of St. John
and the Lord: "It is always possible to make a new start by means of
repentance. 'You fell,' it is written, 'now arise' (see Prov. 24:16).
And if you fall again, then rise again, without despairing at all of
your salvation, no matter what happens." While you breathe air in this
life you have the choice to renew your Baptism into Christ through
repentance, and the need to repent is urgent for everyone, for without
repentance no one can be saved. Do not delay, as St. Peter exhorts. Why?

"Repentance is the first healing medicine. The heart has to repent and
come to its natural condition. If a life of sin has led it to an
unnatural state, a life of repentance will bring it back to its right
state, will give it life," as we are taught by Metropolitan Hierotheos.
Orthodoxy is well described as a life of repentance. Hence, St. John of
San Francisco says, "to ascend spiritually, it is necessary first of all
to free oneself from the weight of sin. It is taken from us through
repentance, provided that we banish from ourselves all enmity."

Pardon and forgive our transgressions, O Merciful Savior, and grant that
we may complete the remaining time of our life in peace and repentance.

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Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Reading for 01/08/08

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


January 8, May 9, September 8
Chapter 1: On the Kinds of Monks

It is well known that there are four kinds of monks.
The first kind are the Cenobites:
those who live in monasteries
and serve under a rule and an Abbot.

The second kind are the Anchorites or Hermits:
those who,
no longer in the first fervor of their reformation,
but after long probation in a monastery,
having learned by the help of many brethren
how to fight against the devil,
go out well armed from the ranks of the community
to the solitary combat of the desert.
They are able now,
with no help save from God,
to fight single-handed against the vices of the flesh
and their own evil thoughts.

The third kind of monks, a detestable kind, are the Sarabaites.
These, not having been tested,
as gold in the furnace (Wis. 3:6),
by any rule or by the lessons of experience,
are as soft as lead.
In their works they still keep faith with the world,
so that their tonsure marks them as liars before God.
They live in twos or threes, or even singly,
without a shepherd,
in their own sheepfolds and not in the Lord's.
Their law is the desire for self-gratification:
whatever enters their mind or appeals to them,
that they call holy;
what they dislike, they regard as unlawful.

The fourth kind of monks are those called Gyrovagues.
These spend their whole lives tramping from province to province,
staying as guests in different monasteries
for three or four days at a time.
Always on the move, with no stability,
they indulge their own wills
and succumb to the allurements of gluttony,
and are in every way worse than the Sarabaites.
Of the miserable conduct of all such
it is better to be silent than to speak.

Passing these over, therefore,
let us proceed, with God's help,
to lay down a rule for the strongest kind of monks, the Cenobites.


Some Thoughts;

What I find myself thinking about and it is too personal, perhaps for details, is that there are times in my my life when I am more like a sarabaite or a gyrovague. Self-gratification is seductive, is it not? So easy to fall into it unknowingly.

As for wondering about... One does not have to wonder about geographically to be a gyrovague. One can wander about between disciplines, never staying in one long enough for it grow deep roots. One can "keep one's options open" to such an extent that one never commits to anything.

What sarabaites and gyrovagues have in common is a preference for their own desires over the desire for God. The challenge before all Christians is to learn to replace one's own will with God's. It is hard to do this. Extremely, if you are anything like I.

We have all sorts of ways of avoiding the struggle, too. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. There are many ways we disguise our insistence on our own way. People have told me they dislike the Rule of St. Benedict because it has too many rules or archaic language. The way I see it, this indicates a refusal to expose one's self to the content. If one thinks that the RB is too full of rules, why not read them anyway and consider what the "rules" say? If one feels the language archaic, there are modern versions with modern language. One can even obtain a copy in gender inclusive language if one prefers to read sentences with "she/he" or "Abbot/Abbess" in them.

I've heard people tell me that since God is limitless, they don't want to put limits on the way He can relate to them. I don;t think it is possible to limit God, do you? I do think, paradox as it may be, that when we have limits, we have more freedom. Too many options and we flounder around in a flip flop reaction. Narrow the focus and we are free to concentrate our energy, effort, time, resources.

Which of course leads to that pesky concept of commitment. The presupposition which lies behind the Rule is that we will commit ourselves to God. The Rule merely provides the framework that allows us to build and grow.

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Daily Meditation, 01/08/08 Mon in the week of EPIPHANY 1

[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]




A Collect for the Epiphany

O God
Who on this day
through the guidance of a star
didst manifest
Thine Only-Begotten Son to the Gentiles;
mercifully grant
that we who know Thee now by faith,
may one day be brought
to the contemplation of the beauty of Thy majesty.
Through the same Christ our Lord. Amen.
Benedictine Monastic Diurnal

Collect

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Holy God, you chose your faithful servant Harriett Bedell to exercise the ministry of deaconess and to be a missionary among indigenous peoples: Fill us with compassion and respect or all people, and empower us for the work of ministry throughout the world; 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 117, 118; PM Psalm 112, 113
Exod. 17:1-7; Col. 1:15-23; John 7:37-52
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Colossians 1:15-23. [Christ Jesus] is the head of the body, the church.

There is a saying in Spanish that translates, "Every head is its own world."

St. Paul's letter to the Colossians eloquently describes the person and purpose of Jesus Christ. He comes from God. He is like the head of a body, and this body is like the church. We are the church.

At our parochial school we sing, "We are the church." Its simple and profound lyrics remind our community of several beliefs: "You are the church; I am the church; we are the church together..."

While Christ is the head of the church, in another sense every one of us is a head, and every head counts. Everyone in the assembly is important. Every soul is reconciled. Every person is called to faith. The core beliefs, community structure, and spiritual DNA are set. Our role is simply to participate in the life and work before us. The Book of Common Prayer says that "the Church is the community of the New Covenant" in which "all baptized persons are members" (p. 854). It is "the People of God, a holy nation, a royal priesthood, and the pillar and ground of truth." May we be one in the church and the church be one for all time.
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Today we remember:
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary

[Harriet Bedell]
Psalm 96:1-7;
Romans 16:1-2; Matthew 5:1-12

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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Igreja Episcopal Anglicana do Brasil, and the Diocese of Southern Brazil

http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Harriet Bedell

Daily Reading for January 8 • Harriet Bedell, Deaconess and Missionary, 1969

St. Andrew's Mission at Stephen's Village on the Yukon River between Fort Yukon and Rampart, deserves a special word because its actual starting was the result of a really clamorous importunity on the part of the Indians themselves. So long as the white man's town of Rampart was large enough to warrant a resident missionary, Stephen's Village, with its native catechist, was visited from that post, eighty miles away. It was on a Christmas journey thither that the Rev. John Huhn, our last resident clergyman at Rampart, contracted the illness from which he died, in 1906. He is buried on the hill above the old native village near Rampart, in the burying ground of the Indians whom he loved.

As Rampart decayed many of the natives who had flocked thither when it was prosperous (to their demoralization and general detriment) returned to the more eligible Indian residence at Stephen's Village, situate just on the edge of the Yukon Flats, ten or twelve miles above the abrupt beginning of the Lower Ramparts of the Yukon. The village thus grew by accretions until it numbered nearly an hundred souls. There had been a Government school there for a few years, but it burned down and was not rebuilt (for lack of funds) and the teacher was withdrawn. Every time that the Bishop stopped there on his visitations there were eager demands for a mission of their own. At length the Bishop told them that if they would build a church themselves (so far as the log structure was concerned) he would send a missionary, and the next summer the church was built and the missionary demanded.

So Miss Effie Jackson was sent and for two years taught school and held service in the church, and a convenient cabin was built for her. She was followed by Miss Harriet Bedell, of long experience in Indian work, who for three years past has lived all alone in the village, exercising all the functions of a woman missionary and swaying almost undisputed influence over the native mind. Off the steamboat track in summer--for the steamboats do not like to cross the river amidst sandbars and make the turn necessary to reach the place unless they have freight to discharge--entirely cut off from communication in the winter, for there is now no mail route down the Yukon and the nearest post office is eighty miles away, this is one of the most isolated spots in interior Alaska, although it is situated on the main Yukon. And again this very isolation makes for more intensive educational and religious work. Such a post requires a missionary entirely absorbed and happy in the work, and such a one is Miss Bedell.

From The Alaskan Missions of the Episcopal Church: A brief sketch, historical and descriptive by Hudson Stuck, D.D., Archdeacon of the Yukon (New York: Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society, 1920).

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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

Each time you go to an art or sporting event, look for one imperfection and give thanks for it.
— Gregory F. A. Pierce in Spirituality @ Work

To Practice This Thought: Be more appreciative of the mistakes in life.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Mental prayer in my opinion is nothing else than an intimate sharing between friends - it means taking time frequently to be alone with Him who we know loves us.
St Teresa of Jesus
Life, 8.14

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Reading from the Desert Christians http://www.cin.org/dsrtftin.html

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

Have unfeigned love among yourselves, keep the tradition, and may
the God of peace be with you and confirm you in love.

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

Enough Light for the Next Step

Often we want to be able to see into the future. We say, "How will next year be for me? Where will I be five or ten years from now?" There are no answers to these questions. Mostly we have just enough light to see the next step: what we have to do in the coming hour or the following day. The art of living is to enjoy what we can see and not complain about what remains in the dark. When we are able to take the next step with the trust that we will have enough light for the step that follows, we can walk through life with joy and be surprised at how far we go. Let's rejoice in the little light we carry and not ask for the great beam that would take all shadows away.
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Eight - The Second Aim, cont'd

Members of the Third Order fight against all such injustice in the name of Christ, in whom there can be neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female; for in him all are one. Our chief object is to reflect that openness to all which was characteristic of Jesus. This can only be achieved in a spirit of chastity, which sees others as belonging to God and not as a means of self-fulfillment.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Genuine Community
January 8th, 2008
Tuesday’s Reflection

IN A WORLD where rugged individualism is highly valued, discovering and participating in a genuine community of Christian fellowship may be among the most radical acts of our age. One of the primary ends of the gospel is to befriend and include all who are willing to become Christ-followers around the communal table.

- Trevor Hudson and Stephen D. Bryant
The Way of Transforming Discipleship

From p. 73 of The Way of Transforming Discipleship by Trevor Hudson and Stephen D. Bryant. 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

Mystery

Question of the day:
When have you wrestled with God?



Our faith is not in words. Our faith is in a person. Our faith is in God, who is revealing the divine self to us in Christ and in the lives of the Body of Christ. The word calls us into a personal dialogue, not a slavish idealism of words, not a rigid love affair with ideas. That is fundamentalism.

The scriptures call us into a personal struggle like Jacob’s. He wrestled with the angel of Yahweh (Genesis 32:24-31). In that personal involvement, in our personal wrestling match with the mystery of God, we come to faith. Faith is not just another competing ideology. It is more a process than a conclusion, more a way of relating than a way of explaining, more a wrestling match than a classroom lesson.

from The Great Themes of Scripture
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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 made Christ the way itself

God promised human beings divinity, mortals immortality, sinners justification, outcasts glory. But because his promise that we who are mortal, corruptible, weak and of low estate, mere dust and ashes, were to be equal to the angels seemed incredible, God not only made a written covenant with us to win our faith, but he also gave us a mediator of his pledge. This mediator was not a prince, an angel, or an archangel, but his only Son; through his own Son he meant both to show us and give us the way by which he would lead us to the promised goal. He was not satisfied with sending his Son to show us the way. He made him the way itself.

God’s only Son, then, was to come among us, take our human nature, and in this nature be born as a man. He was to die, to rise again, to ascend into heaven, to sit at the right hand of the Father, and to fulfill his promises among the nations. After that he was also to fulfill his promise to come again, to demand what he had previously requested, to separate those deserving his anger from those deserving his mercy, to give the wicked what he had threatened and the just what he had promised.

All this had to be prophesied, foretold, and impressed on us as an event in the future so that we should not be terrified by its happening unexpectedly, but wait for it with faith.

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

DOES MY SACRIFICE LIVE?


"And Abraham built an altar . . and bound Isaac his son." Genesis 22:9

This incident is a picture of the blunder we make in thinking that the final thing God wants of us is the sacrifice of death. What God wants is the sacrifice through death which enables us to do what Jesus did, viz., sacrifice our lives. Not - I am willing to go to death with Thee, but - I am willing to be identified with Thy death so that I may sacrifice my life to God. We seem to think that God wants us to give up things! God purified Abraham from this blunder, and the same discipline goes on in our lives. God nowhere tells us to give up things for the sake of giving them up. He tells us to give them up for the sake of the only thing worth having - viz., life with Himself. It is a question of loosening the bands that hinder the life, and immediately those bands are loosened by identification with the death of Jesus, we enter into a relationship with God whereby we can sacrifice our lives to Him.

It is of no value to God to give Him your life for death. He wants you to be a "living sacrifice," to let Him have all your powers that have been saved and sanctified through Jesus. This is the thing that is acceptable to God.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/


January 8, May 9, September 8
Chapter 1: On the Kinds of Monks

It is well known that there are four kinds of monks.
The first kind are the Cenobites:
those who live in monasteries
and serve under a rule and an Abbot.

The second kind are the Anchorites or Hermits:
those who,
no longer in the first fervor of their reformation,
but after long probation in a monastery,
having learned by the help of many brethren
how to fight against the devil,
go out well armed from the ranks of the community
to the solitary combat of the desert.
They are able now,
with no help save from God,
to fight single-handed against the vices of the flesh
and their own evil thoughts.

The third kind of monks, a detestable kind, are the Sarabaites.
These, not having been tested,
as gold in the furnace (Wis. 3:6),
by any rule or by the lessons of experience,
are as soft as lead.
In their works they still keep faith with the world,
so that their tonsure marks them as liars before God.
They live in twos or threes, or even singly,
without a shepherd,
in their own sheepfolds and not in the Lord's.
Their law is the desire for self-gratification:
whatever enters their mind or appeals to them,
that they call holy;
what they dislike, they regard as unlawful.

The fourth kind of monks are those called Gyrovagues.
These spend their whole lives tramping from province to province,
staying as guests in different monasteries
for three or four days at a time.
Always on the move, with no stability,
they indulge their own wills
and succumb to the allurements of gluttony,
and are in every way worse than the Sarabaites.
Of the miserable conduct of all such
it is better to be silent than to speak.

Passing these over, therefore,
let us proceed, with God's help,
to lay down a rule for the strongest kind of monks, the Cenobites.

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

In this chapter, Benedict describes each of the four main classes of religious life that were common at the time of his writing. The effects of the descriptions and definitions are apparent. He is for all intents and purposes telling us the characteristics that he values most in spiritual development and emphasizing the qualities which in his opinion are most important to spiritual growth.

In one brief sentence, then, Benedict describes the life of the cenobite. Cenobites are the seekers of the spiritual life who live in a monastery--live with others--and are not a law unto themselves. Holiness, he argues, is not something that happens in a vacuum. It has something to do with the way we live our community lives and our family lives and our public lives as well as the way we say our prayers. The life needs of other people affect the life of the truly spiritual person and they hear the voice of God in that.

Cenobites, too, live "under a Rule." Meaningless spiritual exercises may not be a Benedictine trait but arbitrariness or whim are not part of Benedict's prescription for holiness either. Monastic spirituality depends on direction. It is a rule of life. Self-control, purpose and discipline give aim to what might otherwise deteriorate into a kind of pseudo-religious life meant more for public show than for personal growth. It is so comforting to multiply the practices of the church in our life and so inconvenient to have to meet the responsibilities of the communities in which we live.

But the spiritual life is not a taste for spiritual consolations. The spiritual life is a commitment to faith where we would prefer certainty. It depends on readiness. It demands constancy. It flourishes in awareness. The ancients say that once upon a time a disciple asked the elder,

"Holy One, is there anything I can do to make myself Enlightened?"

And the Holy One answered, "As little as you can do to make the sun rise in the morning."

"Then of what use," the surprised disciple asked, "are the spiritual exercises you prescribe?"

"To make sure," the elder said, "that you are not asleep when the sun begins to rise."

The Rule prescribes directions that will keep us, like the mythical disciple, awake until what we live, lives in us.

Then, Benedict says, the cenobite lives under an abbot or prioress, someone who will mediate past and future for us, call us to see where we have come from and where we are going, confront us with the call to the demands of living fully in the now when we might be most likely to abandon our own best ideals for the sake of the easy and the selfish. It is a basic Christian call. Everyone in life lives under someone and something. Adulthood is not a matter of becoming completely independent of the people who lay claim to our lives. Adulthood is a matter of being completely open to the insights that come to us from our superiors and our spouses, our children and our friends, so that we can become more than we can even begin to imagine for ourselves.

The cenobite, like most of the people of the world, works out the way to God by walking with others. In monastic spirituality, there is no escape from life, only a chance to confront it, day after day in all its sanctifying tedium and blessed boredom and glorious agitation in the communities of which we are a part at any given moment of our lives.


If any paragraph in the Rule dispels the popular notion of spirituality, surely this is it. Modern society has the idea that if you want to live a truly spiritual life, you have to leave life as we know it and go away by yourself and "contemplate," and that if you do, you will get holy. It is a fascinating although misleading thought. The Rule of Benedict says that if you want to be holy, stay where you are in the human community and learn from it. Learn patience. Learn wisdom. Learn unselfishness. Learn love. Then, if you want to go away from it all, then and only then will you be ready to do it alone.

There is, of course, an anchorite lurking in each of us who wants to get away from it all, who finds the tasks of dailiness devastating, who look for God in clouds and candlelight. Perhaps the most powerful point of this paragraph is that it was written by someone who had himself set out to live the spiritual life as a hermit and then discovered, apparently, that living life alone is nowhere near as searing of our souls as living it with others. It is one thing to plan my own day well with all its balance and its quiet and its contemplative exercises. It is entirely another rank of holiness to let my children and my superiors and my elderly parents and the needs of the poor do it for me.


There's passion in the Rule of Benedict, lots of it, and sarabaites come in for good share. Benedict calls this sort of "spirituality" detestable.

Anchorites separate themselves from a community in order to concentrate their energies and strengthen their virtues apart from the distractions of everyday life. They are seasoned seekers who want to center their lives in God alone, naively perhaps but sincerely nevertheless.

Sarabaites separated themselves also. Before the codification of religious law, people could assume a habit without formal training or approval. Sarabaites presented themselves as religious but separated themselves from a disciplined life and spiritual guidance and serious purpose in order to concentrate their energies on themselves. They called themselves religious but they were the worst of all things religious. They were unauthentic. They pretended to be what they were not.

They lived lives of moderate commitment, chaste and even simple to a point, but they listened to no one's wisdom but their
Perhaps the real importance of the paragraph for today is to remind ourselves that it's not all that uncommon for people of all eras to use religion to make themselves comfortable. It is a sense of personal goodness that they want, not a sense of gospel challenge. They are tired of being challenged. They want some proof that they've arrived at a spiritual height that gives consolation in this life and the promise of security in the next. There comes a time in life for everyone where the effort of it all begins to seem too much, when the temptation to settle down and nestle in becomes reasonable.

After years of trying to achieve a degree of spiritual depth with little result, after a lifetime of uphill efforts with little to show for it, the lure is to let it be, to stop where we are, to coast. We begin to make peace with tepidity. We begin to do what it takes to get by but little that it takes to get on with the spiritual life. We do the exercises but we cease to "listen with the heart." We do the externals--the churchgoing and churchgiving--and we call ourselves religious, but we have long since failed to care. A sense of self-sacrifice dies in us and we obey only the desires and the demands within us.

The gyrovagues, whom Benedict rejected out of hand, actually had a noble beginning. Founded to follow the Christ "who had nowhere to lay his head," the earliest gyrovagi threw themselves on the providence of God, having nothing, owning nothing, amassing nothing. Originally, therefore, a sign of faith and simplicity to the Christian community, gyrovagi soon became a sign of indolence and dissipation.

Gyrovagues went from community to community, living off the charity of working monks, begging from the people, dependent on the almsgiving of others. But they never stayed anyplace long enough to do any work themselves or to be called to accountability by the community. As admirable as their call to total poverty may have been in the beginning, it began to be their own particular brand of self-centeredness. They took from every group they visited but they gave little or nothing back to the communities or families that supported them. Gyrovagues abound in religious groups: they talk high virtue and demand it from everybody but themselves. They know how to shop for a parish but they do little to build one. They live off a community but they are never available when the work of maintaining it is necessary. They are committed to morality in the curriculum of grade schools but completely unmoved by the lack of morality in government ethics. Gyrovagues were an extreme and undisciplined kind of monastic and Benedict decried them, not so much because of their ideals surely as because of their lack of direction and good work.

Benedict's reference to the gyrovagues teaches a good lesson yet today. Extremes in anything, he implies, even in religion, are dangerous. When we go to excess in one dimension of life, the unbalance in something else destroys us. Work, for instance, is good but not at the expense of family. Love is good but not at the expense of work.

Too much of a good thing can creep into life very easily and become our rationalization for avoiding everything else. Achievement becomes more important than family. Prayer becomes more important than work. Religious exercises become more important than personal responsibilities. There is a little gyrovague in us all.

The Tao Te Ching, the Chinese Book of the Way, an ancient manual on the art of living that is the most widely translated book in world literature after the Bible, says on the same subject:

Fill your bowl to the brim
and it will spill.
Keep sharpening your knife
and it will blunt.
Chase after money and security
and your heart will never unclench.
Care about people's approval
and you will be their prisoner.
Do your work, then step back.
The only path to serenity.
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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.

St. Luke 19:45-48 (1/8) For Tuesday of the 33rd Week after
Pentecost (Tue 28th Week)

Cleanse Thy Church: St. Luke 19:45-48, especially vs. 46: "...My house
is a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves." The
Apostle Paul reminds us that, being the Church, we "are the temple of
the living God. As God has said: 'I will dwell in them and walk among
them. I will be their God, and they shall be My People'" (2 Cor. 6:16;
Lev. 26:12; Ezek. 37:27). To recognize that we are the Temple of God
changes today's Gospel into an admonition, for any community of the
earthly Church can meet the same tragic destiny as did the ancient
Temple of God.

History supports the possibility of this tragedy. In order to advance
the material prosperity of the institutional Church, segments of the
Church have rejected the primary task of God's People - to be a "house
of prayer." Yes, agents of material success have subtly and sometimes
blatantly treated Christ as an inconvenience needing "reinterpretation"
to fit into their material desires. "...the chief priests, the scribes,
and the leaders of the people [who] sought to destroy [Jesus]" (Lk.
19:47), were clear in their diagnosis that the God Who is met and known
in and through prayer can be a dangerous inconvenience to worldly agendas.

Therefore, it is incumbent on all Christians, since we are those whom
God has "chosen" as "precious..living stones...being built up a
spiritual house" (1 Pet. 2:4,5), to be alert to protect the holy
communities and jurisdictions of God's Church against the tragic,
destructive course of "making over" some portion of the Church - whether
a committee, a parish, a diocese, or whatever - into a successful,
growing, materially-oriented program or institution. Prayerful
reflection on this Gospel will show us the Lord Jesus' way for avoiding
such a pitfall.

First, we are to purify our hearts so that worship in our communities
are love feasts of the Kingdom of God. Only thus will we avoid becoming
"a den of thieves" (Lk. 19:46). As St. John Chrysostom urges:
"love...then let us plant in our own souls, that we may stand with all
the Saints. For they all pleased God by their love for their
neighbor." If we will but let Christ's love transform us, then in our
Eucharistic gatherings we will be a Father Schmemann describes:
"standing in the presence of Christ, and like Moses before God...covered
with His glory." Then in our assemblies, we will only say, "Christ is
among us: He is and He shall ever be!" There never will be a thought of
devising in the secret of our hearts to seek how we can destroy Him.
(cf. vs. 47).

The second means for preventing " materialist thieves" from making over
any portion of the living Temple of God into a measurably profitable
program or a successful earthly institution is "for all the people [to
be] very attentive to hear [Christ our God]" (vs. 48). St. Gregory of
Nyssa has us note that "the human mind..., as long as its current
spreads itself in all directions over the pleasures of the sense, has no
power that is worth the naming of making its way toward the Real Good;
but once call it back and collect it upon itself, so that it may begin
to move without scattering and wandering toward the activity which is
congenital and natural to it, it will find no obstacle in mounting to
higher things, and in grasping realities." It is not by accident that
so often in the Liturgy we are called to "Be attentive!"

Finally, lest we fall into delusion to become some part of the den for
thieves, let us pray that Christ our God will come and "drive out" (vs.
45) all thoughts and inclinations within us to embrace the world's
offers of quick success, proven programs, growth through promotional
solutions for our Orthodox communities. Rather, let us sing: "Come let
us worship and fall down before Christ. O Son of God, Who art risen
from the dead, save us who sing unto Thee!"

O Lord, cleanse us by Thy cords of light and truth, driving out all base
loves and making the glories of the blameless life and a worship in
spirit and in truth to shine forth in us.

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Monday, January 07, 2008

Reading for 01/07/08

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

January 7, May 8, September 7
Prologue

And so we are going to establish
a school for the service of the Lord.
In founding it we hope to introduce nothing harsh or burdensome.
But if a certain strictness results from the dictates of equity
for the amendment of vices or the preservation of charity,
do not be at once dismayed and fly from the way of salvation,
whose entrance cannot but be narrow (Matt. 7:14).
For as we advance in the religious life and in faith,
our hearts expand
and we run the way of God's commandments
with unspeakable sweetness of love (Ps. 118:32).
Thus, never departing from His school,
but persevering in the monastery according to His teaching
until death,
we may by patience share in the sufferings of Christ (1 Peter 4:13)
and deserve to have a share also in His kingdom.

Some thoughts:

This is it. We have the invitation. Benedict offered the cost benefit analysis. We have been warned of the consequences. Are we going to start the course, do the homework, allow the Rule to be more important than our own personal wishes, desires and egos? I ask this of myself all the time.

Courtesy, etiquette and non-violent communication require that one writes in terms of the first person: my thoughts, my feelings, my values, etc. Sometimes it feels quite egotistical as if what I think, feel, believe is more important than what God has to say to me. I cannot tell you how much I wish to dissolve into God, to have Him speak through every word, act in every deed.

What choice is there, then, but to enter the school? Begin the work again? Identify with Christ? This is my choice. What God has given to me, I offer back to Him for His use and disposition.

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Daily Meditation, 01/07/08 Mon in the WEEK FO EPIPHANY 1

[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

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, 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/

Psalm 103;
Deut. 8:1-3; Col. 1:1-14; John 6:30-33,48-51
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

John 6:30-33, 48-51. I am the living bread.

Bread is not a part of some people's diet due to health reasons. My compassion is sent to those individuals. Bread has always been among my favorite foods. You might call me the Will Rogers of bread. Also, I never met a tortilla I did not like. I enjoy corn tortillas that are factory made or homemade, thicker corn tortillas from Central American countries, and flour tortillas that come from the Southwestern United States. Of course, I like sourdough, wheat, rye, and other breads.


Jesus lived among a people for whom bread was a staple of life. He teaches in one of his seven "I am" sayings that "living bread" is a gift from heaven. This living bread is better than any bread prepared in ovens or grills. It will feed all human beings, meet any spiritual yearning, fill any deprivation of the soul, and restore each pang of the heart. Jesus Christ is living bread that provides celestial nutrition for our daily pilgrimage.


The imagery in the Gospel of John often has multiple meanings. Living bread is to remind us of manna from heaven in the Exodus story, daily bread which nourishes, and the eucharistic feast that is our worship of God. Jesus invites you and me to taste and see.
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Adelaide (South Australia, Australia)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Listen to the story

Daily Reading for January 7

The story of the magi ranks right up there with the Christmas and Easter stories in terms of snaring the human imagination. Poets as distinct as William Butler Yeats and William Carlos Williams have wrapped words around the visit of the wise men. Longfellow even gave them names: Melchior, Gaspar, and Balthasar. Hundreds of artists have painted the scene, including Botticelli and Fra Angelico.

In more recent years, Garrison Keillor has told the story on National Public Radio’s “Prairie Home Companion,” and James Taylor has written a lilting song from which the title of this sermon comes. So much has been made of this story about which we know so little. They were not kings, of course, and there were not three of them, at least not according to Matthew. We do not know who they were, where they came from, or how many of them there were. We do not know how long it took them to get to Bethlehem or how old Jesus was by the time they got there. We are not even sure about that famous star.

It is not that the facts don’t matter. It is just that they don’t matter as much as the stories do, and stories can be true whether they happen or not. You do not have to do archaeology to find out if they are genuine, or spend years in the library combing ancient texts. There is another way home. You just listen to the story. You let it come to life inside of you, and then you decide on the basis of your own tears or laughter whether the story is true. If you are in any doubt, it is always a good idea to watch other people who have listened to the story—just pay attention to how the story affects them over time. Does it make them more or less human? Does it open them up or shut them down? Does it increase their capacity for joy?

From “Home By Another Way,” in Home By Another Way by Barbara Brown Taylor (Cowley, 1999).
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Spiritual Practice of the Day http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/

We connect to something larger than ourselves when we perform a ritual. Think of it as a Spirit Fax.
— Caroline W. Casey in Making the Gods Work for You

To Practice This Thought: Send a Spirit Fax at the place where you work.
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Carmelite.com: Reflections http://www.carmelite.com/spirituality/reflection.php

Look Jesus in the Face ... there you will see how He loves us.
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

Bringing doxology to the One born of the Virgin in church hymns
and spiritual songs, we must, outside the church as well,
unceasingly praise Him and give Him thanks for His ineffable
lovingkindness to us sinners, who are atoned by His honourable
blood and who have received through this promise life eternal,
blessed, and unceasing.

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

The Gift of Friendship

Friendship is one of the greatest gifts a human being can receive. It is a bond beyond common goals, common interests, or common histories. It is a bond stronger than sexual union can create, deeper than a shared fate can solidify, and even more intimate than the bonds of marriage or community. Friendship is being with the other in joy and sorrow, even when we cannot increase the joy or decrease the sorrow. It is a unity of souls that gives nobility and sincerity to love. Friendship makes all of life shine brightly. Blessed are those who lay down their lives for their friends.
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The Merton Reflection for the Week of January 7, 2008

I come into solitude to die and love. I come here to be created by the Spirit in Christ.
I am called here to grow. "Death" is a critical point of growth, or transition to a new mode of being; to a maturity and fruitfulness that I do not know (they are in Christ and in His Kingdom). The child in the womb does not know what will come after birth. He must be born in order to live. I am here to face death as my birth.
This solitude-a refuge under His wings, a place to hide myself in His Name, therefore, a sanctuary where the grace of Baptism remains a conscious, living, active reality valid not only for me but for the whole Church. Here, planted as a seed in the cosmos, I will be a Christ seed, and bring fruit for other men. Death and rising in Christ.

Thomas Merton. Dancing in the Water of Life. Journals, Volume 5. Robert E. Daggy, editor. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1997: 333-334.

Thought to Remember:

I need to be "confirmed" in my vocation by the Spirit... This ordains me to be the person I am and to have the particular place and function I have, to be myself in the sense of choosing to tend toward what God wants me to be, and to orient my whole life to being the person He loves.

Dancing in the Water of Life: 334
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From the Principles of the Third Society of St. Francis: http://www.tssf.org/textonly/principles.shtml

Day Seven - The Second Aim

To spread the spirit of love and harmony

The Order sets out, in the name of Christ, to break down barriers between people and to seek equality for all. We accept as our second aim the spreading of a spirit of love and harmony among all people. We are pledged to fight against the ignorance, pride, and prejudice that breed injustice or partiality of any kind.
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Upper Room Daily Reflection http://www.upperroom.org/reflections/

Yearning to Know God
January 7th, 2008
Monday’s Reflection

I BELIEVE that all our vague, unsatisfied, and unsatisfiable yearnings are in some way at their root the yearning to know God, to be put right with God, and to see the world put right with God. Just as our physical hunger and thirst remind us that we are made to eat and drink, our hunger for meaning and direction in life reminds us that we are created to need and want God — continually, even if we have not yet put a name on the yearning — and to serve God.

- Mary Lou Redding
The Power of a Focused Heart: 8 Life Lessons from the Beatitudes

From p. 55 of The Power of a Focused Heart: 8 Life Lessons from the Beatitudes by Mary Lou Redding. 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

Mystery

Question of the day:
How has faith led you into deeper mystery?



"Come, Lord Jesus." The Christian Bible ends with this great invitation for Jesus to be with us, the acknowledgment that what is coming is not fully here (Revelation 22:17). "Come, Lord Jesus" means that all of Christian history has to live out of a kind of chosen non-fulfillment.

Yet we demand that our anxiety be taken away. We say, Why didn't you do that for me? We tend to get disappointed because reality does not fulfill our expectations—or, more likely, somebody doesn't: our spouse, our children, our community. We're refusing to say, "Come, Lord Jesus."

So we refuse to live with openness, with freedom, with surrender. We demand of ourselves, and one another, what the Word of God told us not to demand and not even to expect.

To demand total life now is not to live in hope or faith. The only life promised to us in this world is the "mystery of faith"—which is life and death all mixed together, the paschal mystery: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will always come again.

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

A teacher to be imitated

Our faith is not founded upon empty words; nor are we carried away by mere caprice of beguiled by specious arguments. On the contrary, we put our faith in words spoken by the power of God, spoken by the Word himself at God’s command. God wished to win us back from disobedience, not by using force to reduce us to slavery, but by addressing to our free will a call to liberty.

The Word spoke first of all through the prophets, but because the message was couched in such obscure language that it could only dimly be apprehended, in the last days the Father sent the Word in person, commanding him to show himself openly so that the world could see him and be saved.

We know that by taking a body from the Virgin he refashioned our fallen nature. We know that his humanity was of the same clay as our own; if this were not so, he would hardly have been a teacher who could expect to be imitated. If he were of a different substance from me, he would surely not have ordered me to do as he did, when by my very nature I am so weak. Such a demand could not be reconciled with his goodness and justice.

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

INTIMATE WITH JESUS


"Have I been so long with you, and yet hast thou not known Me?" John 14:9

These words are not spoken as a rebuke, nor even with surprise; Jesus is leading Philip on. The last One with whom we get intimate is Jesus. Before Pentecost the disciples knew Jesus as the One Who gave them power to conquer demons and to bring about a revival (see Luke 10:18-20). It was a wonderful intimacy, but there was a much closer intimacy to come - "I have called you friends." Friendship is rare on earth. It means identity in thought and heart and spirit. The whole discipline of life is to enable us to enter into this closest relationship with Jesus Christ. We receive His blessings and know His word, but do we know Him?

Jesus said, "It is expedient for you that I go away" - in that relationship, so that He might lead them on. It is a joy to Jesus when a disciple takes time to step more intimately with Him. Fruit bearing is always mentioned as the manifestation of an intimate union with Jesus Christ (John 15:1-4).

When once we get intimate with Jesus we are never lonely, we never need sympathy, we can pour out all the time without being pathetic. The saint who is intimate with Jesus will never leave impressions of himself, but only the impression that Jesus is having unhindered way, because the last abyss of his nature has been satisfied by Jesus. The only impression left by such a life is that of the strong calm sanity that Our Lord gives to those who are intimate with Him.
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Today's reading from the Rule of St. Benedict http://www.osb.org/rb/

January 7, May 8, September 7
Prologue

And so we are going to establish
a school for the service of the Lord.
In founding it we hope to introduce nothing harsh or burdensome.
But if a certain strictness results from the dictates of equity
for the amendment of vices or the preservation of charity,
do not be at once dismayed and fly from the way of salvation,
whose entrance cannot but be narrow (Matt. 7:14).
For as we advance in the religious life and in faith,
our hearts expand
and we run the way of God's commandments
with unspeakable sweetness of love (Ps. 118:32).
Thus, never departing from His school,
but persevering in the monastery according to His teaching
until death,
we may by patience share in the sufferings of Christ (1 Peter 4:13)
and deserve to have a share also in His kingdom.

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

The spiritual life is not something that is gotten for the wishing or assumed by affectation. The spiritual life takes discipline. It is something to be learned, to be internalized. It's not a set of daily exercises, it's a way of life, an attitude of mind, an orientation of soul. And it is gotten by being schooled until no rules are necessary.

Among the ancients there is a story told that confirms this insight to this day:

"What action shall I perform to attain God?" the disciple asked the elder.

"If you wish to attain God, the elder said, there are two things you must know. The first is that all efforts to attain God are of no avail."

"And the second?" the disciple insisted.

"The second is that you must act as if you did not know the first," the elder said.

Clearly, great pursuers of the spiritual life know that the secret of the spiritual life is to live it until it becomes real.
The difference between Benedict and other spiritual masters of his time lay in the fact that Benedict believed that the spiritual life was not an exercise in spiritual gymnastics. It was to be nothing "harsh or burdensome." And it was not a private process. It was to be done in community with others. It was to be a "school" dedicated to "the good of all concerned." It was to be lived with "patience."

The private preserves of the spiritual life are far from dead, however. It is so much easier to go to daily Mass and feel good about it than it is to serve soup at a soup kitchen. It is so much more comfortable to say bedtime prayers than it is speak peace in a warring world. It is so much more satisfying to contribute to the building of a new church than it is to advocate for welfare legislation. It is so much more heroic to fast than it is to be patient with a noisy neighbor. It is so much easier to give the handshake of peace in church than it is to speak gently in the family. And yet, one without the other is surely fraud if life with God in community is truly of the essence of real spiritual growth.

The messages of the Prologue are clear: Life is very short. To get the most out of it, we must begin to attend to its spiritual dimensions without which life is only half lived. Holiness is in the Now but we go through life only half conscious of it, asleep or intent on being someplace other than where we are. We need to open our eyes and see things as they exist around us: what is valuable and what is not, what enriches and what does not, what is of God and what is not. It may be the neighborhood we live in rather than the neighborhood we want that will really make human beings out of us. It may be the job we have rather than the position we are selling our souls to get that will finally liberate us from ourselves. It may be what we do rather than the prayers we pray that will finally be the measure of our sanctity.

God is calling us to more than the material level of life and God is waiting to bring us to it. All we have to do is to live well with others and live totally in God. All we have to do is to learn to listen to the voice of God in life. And we have to do it heart, soul and body. The spiritual life demands all of us.
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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.

St. Luke 19:37-44 (1/7) For Monday of the 33rd Week after Pentecost (Mon
28th Week)

To Weep and To Laugh: St. Luke 19:37-44, especially vss. 37, 41: “Then,
as He was now drawing near the descent of the Mount of Olives, the whole
multitude of the disciples began to rejoice and praise God....as He drew
near, He saw the city and wept over it.” Wise Solomon once observed:
“All the things which He has made are beautiful in His time: He has also
set the whole world in their heart, that man might not find out the work
which God has wrought from the beginning even to the end” (Eccles. 3:11
LXX). Being made in His image, we yearn from our hearts to trace God’s
ways from beginning to end - yet the Infinite is beyond us!

By means of a written account, called a Gospel, the Evangelist Luke
guides us into the Mystery of Christ (Eph. 3:4). He reveals Light
Himself Who illumines God’s ways. Beginning with the Lord Jesus’
Incarnation “of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary,” the Evangelist
describes the Lord’s early ministry until “the time had come for Him to
be received up [when] He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem”
(Lk. 9:51). Following that declaration, St. Luke diligently records the
Lord’s recurring predictions of His Passion, the increasing opposition
to Him, and His solemn teachings concerning the cost of discipleship.

In this particular reading, St. Luke starts into the account of the
final days of the Lord Jesus’ Judean ministry - a season that led up to
His arrest, a few penultimate days when God shared in our humanity prior
to the time (in St. Cyril of Alexandria’s words) when the Lord Jesus
embraced “that Passion which was for the salvation of the whole world,
to free the inhabitants of the earth from the tyranny of the enemy, and
abolish death, and destroy the sin of the world.” In Solomon’s words it
was “...a time to weep and a time to laugh...” (Eccles. 3:4 LXX). But
let St. Luke teach you to appreciate those days in full. (Lk. 19:37,41).

After seeing Jesus, Truth Incarnate, heal incurable diseases, overcome
demons, feed crowds, and subdue natural forces, the disciples naturally
“began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice” (vs. 37) as they now
witnessed Him coming into Jerusalem. They had shared in His “mighty
works” first hand (vs. 37), and they had good, solid reasons,
well-supported by clear, tangible evidence, to believe that Jesus was
the long-awaited, God-anointed King Who, in the popular view of the day,
would inaugurate God’s Kingdom (vs. 38).

Since the days of King David, God’s People had seen very few good times
and far, far too many bad times. Current political, economic, and social
realities cried out for someone blessed and empowered of God to usher in
genuine freedom and real independence. The Lord Jesus obviously
possessed Divine power and every spiritual resource. The people were in
expectation: “O my Strength, I will keep watch for Thee, for Thou, O
God, art my helper” (Ps. 58:9 LXX). In the Lord Jesus people saw a
reason for joy and praise and a time of laughter.

Ironically, however, as the Lord drew near the city, He “...wept over
it” (Lk. 19:41). The eyes of God Incarnate scanned deep beneath the
surface of politics and economic conditions, down into the things of the
heart and soul, “...that make for your peace” (vs. 42). There He saw
that sin blinds people - and keeps the truth “hidden from your eyes”
(vs. 42). He knew that the Romans and Herods were only symptoms; for the
fact is, people’s “foolish hearts were darkened” (Rom. 1:21). As a
result, those in Jerusalem would not repent nor cleanse their hearts,
and soon their city would be destroyed (Lk. 19:43,44). Yes, they would
turn their wrath to crucifying Him and fighting the Romans. In the
process, they would lose. There is a time to weep.

O Thou Who of Thine Own compassion didst bear all things, saving all
from the curse, O long-suffering Lord, glory to Thee.

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Sunday, January 06, 2008

Reading for Jan 6

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

January 6, May 7, September 6
Prologue

So we have asked the Lord
who is to dwell in His tent,
and we have heard His commands
to anyone who would dwell there;
it remains for us to fulfill those duties.

Therefore we must prepare our hearts and our bodies
to do battle under the holy obedience of His commands;
and let us ask God
that He be pleased to give us the help of His grace
for anything which our nature finds hardly possible.
And if we want to escape the pains of hell
and attain life everlasting,
then, while there is still time,
while we are still in the body
and are able to fulfill all these things
by the light of this life,
we must hasten to do now
what will profit us for eternity.

Some thoughts:

We have asked, been invited and informed. At least, informed enough to make a decision whether or not to go further. Do we want to?

If the answer is yes, then we must prepare. I watched a movie last night I had never seen before, "A Nun's Story". I remember vaguely there was some scandal about this move back in the 50s but I was 9 or 10 when it came out, so what do I know?

Some bits impressed me though. I found myself envious of the postulancy and novitiate periods. Several times throughout the film it was said "A nun's life isn't easy." It sure isn't. And even with all the preparation and training, Sr Luke still found obedience too difficult. Isn't it ever!!

Today we celebrate Epiphany. The Light has pierced the darkness and become human. Today Christ is made manifest to the entire world. As the Prologue concludes, will we ask God for His help, second by second, to live the Rule?

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Daily meditation 01/06/08, Feast of Epipjany

[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]



An Epiphany Prayer

Lord Jesus
may your light shine our way,
as once it guided the steps of the magi:
that we too may be led into your presence
and worship you,
the Child of Mary,
the Word of the Father,
the King of nations,
the Saviour of mankind;
to whom be glory for ever.

Frank Colquhoun


Collect

O God, by the leading of a star you manifested your only Son to the peoples of the earth: Lead us, who know you now by faith, to your presence, where we may see your glory face to face; through Jesus Christ our Lord, 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 46, 97 ; PM Psalm 96, 100
Isa. 49:1-7; Rev. 21:22-27; Matt. 12:14-21
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From Forward Day by Day: http://www.forwardmovement.org/todaysreading.cfm

Isaiah 60:1-6. Arise, shine; for your light has come.

My paternal grandfather was born on this day. He was named Epifanio, in commemoration of this principal feast day. This is a day of celebration as the church universal remembers the Magi, their presentation of gifts, and their worshiping the Christ Child. On this day many Hispanic Latinos share in a King's cake with a tiny plastic baby Jesus in it. Most bakeries in our neighborhoods will have standing orders. Whoever gets the piece of cake with the infant Jesus has the privilege of hosting the next fiesta at his or her home on February 2, the next feast day of the season.


I never met my grandfather. But I have heard of his courage and his journey to this country. I know of his rearing of children, including several World War II veterans, and the new city that he called home. And I recall his name Epifanio, which I claim as my own. Blessed Epiphany!


To hail thy rising, Sun of life,
the gathering nations come,
joyous as when the reapers bear
their harvest treasures home.
-John Morrison (d. 1789)
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Today in the Anglican Cycle of Prayer we pray for the Diocese of Accra (West Africa)
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm
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The Season of Epiphany

Dennis Bratcher

In western Christian tradition, January 6 is celebrated as Epiphany. It goes by other names in various church traditions. In Hispanic and Latin culture, as well as some places in Europe, it is known as Three Kings’ Day (Span: el Dia de los Tres Reyes, la Fiesta de Reyes, or el Dia de los Reyes Magos; Dutch: Driekoningendag). Because of differences in church calendars, mainly between the Eastern Orthodox and the western Catholic and Protestant traditions, both Christmas and Epiphany have been observed at different times in the past. Today, most of the Eastern Orthodox traditions follow the western church calendar. The exceptions are some Greek Orthodox Churches and related traditions (e.g., Russian and Serbian Orthodox) that still follow the older calendar and celebrate Epiphany as the Theophany on January 19th.

Epiphany is the climax of the Christmas Season and the Twelve Days of Christmas, which are usually counted from December 25th until January 5th. In most traditions, the day before Epiphany is the Twelfth Day of Christmas, the evening of which is called Twelfth Night. This is an occasion for feasting in some cultures, including the baking of a special King's Cake as part of the festivities of Epiphany (a King's Cake is part of the observance of Mardi Gras in French Catholic culture of the Southern USA). In some church traditions, January 5th is considered the Eleventh Day of Christmas, while the evening is still counted as the Twelfth Night, the beginning of the Twelfth day of Christmas the following day. In these traditions the Twelfth Day of Christmas is January 6th, the Epiphany.

In traditional Christian churches Christmas, as well as Easter, is celebrated as a period of time, a season of the church year, rather than just a day. The Season of Christmas begins with the First Sunday of Advent, marked by expectation and anticipation, and concludes with Epiphany, which looks ahead to the mission of the church to the world in light of the Nativity. The one or two Sundays between Christmas Day and Epiphany are sometimes called Christmastide. For many Protestant church traditions, the season of Epiphany extends from January 6th until Ash Wednesday, which begins the season of Lent leading to Easter. Depending on the timing of Easter, this includes from four to nine Sundays. Other traditions, especially the Roman Catholic tradition, observe Epiphany as a single day, with the Sundays following Epiphany counted as Ordinary Time. In some western traditions, the last Sunday of Epiphany is celebrated as Transfiguration Sunday.

babyjesus.jpg (30908 bytes)The term epiphany means "to show" or "to make known" or even "to reveal." In Western churches, it remembers the coming of the wise men bringing gifts to visit the Christ child, who by so doing "reveal" Jesus to the world as Lord and King. In some Central and South American countries influenced by Catholic tradition, Three Kings’ Day, or the night before, is the time for opening Christmas presents. In some eastern churches, Epiphany or the Theophany commemorates Jesus’ baptism, with the visit of the Magi linked to Christmas. In some churches the day is celebrated as Christmas, with Epiphany/Theophany occurring on January 19th.

The colors of Epiphany are usually the colors of Christmas, white and gold, the colors of celebration, newness, and hope that mark the most sacred days of the church year. In traditions that only observe a single day for Epiphany, the colors are often changed after Epiphany to the colors of Ordinary Time, usually green or thematic sanctuary colors, until Transfiguration Sunday, the last Sunday before the beginning of Lent. The colors for Transfiguration Sunday are usually the colors of Holy Days, white and gold.

As with most aspects of the Christian liturgical calendar, Epiphany has theological significance as a teaching tool in the church. The Wise Men or Magi who brought gifts to the infant Jesus were the first Gentiles to acknowledge Jesus as "King" and so were the first to "show" or "reveal" Jesus to a wider world as the incarnate Christ. This act of worship by the Magi, which corresponded to Simeon’s blessing that this child Jesus would be "a light for revelation to the Gentiles" (Luke 2:32), was one of the first indications that Jesus came for all people, of all nations, of all races, and that the work of God in the world would not be limited to only a few.

The day is now observed as a time of focusing on the mission of the church in reaching others by "showing" Jesus as the Savior of all people. It is also a time of focusing on Christian brotherhood and fellowship, especially in healing the divisions of prejudice and bigotry that we all too often create between God’s children.
An Epiphany Prayer

Father, we thank you for revealing yourself to us in Jesus the Christ, we who once were not your people but whom you chose to adopt as your people. As ancient Israel confessed long ago, we realize that it was not because of our own righteousness, or our own superior wisdom, or strength, or power, or numbers. It was simply because you loved us, and chose to show us that love in Jesus.

As you have accepted us when we did not deserve your love, will you help us to accept those whom we find it hard to love? Forgive us, O Lord, for any attitude that we harbor that on any level sees ourselves as better or more righteous than others. Will you help us to remove the barriers of prejudice and to tear down the walls of bigotry, religious or social? O Lord, help us realize that the walls that we erect for others only form our own prisons!

Will you fill us so full of your love that there is no more room for intolerance. As you have forgiven us much, will you enable us with your strength to forgive others even more? Will you enable us through your abiding Presence among us, communally and individually, to live our lives in a manner worthy of the Name we bear?

May we, through your guidance and our faithful obedience, find new avenues in ways that we have not imagined of holding the Light of your love so that it may be a Light of revelation for all people.

We thank you for your love, praise you for your Gift, ask for your continued Presence with us, and bring these petitions in the name of your Son, who has truly revealed your heart. Amen


-Dennis Bratcher, Copyright © 2006, Dennis Bratcher, All Rights Reserved
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Speaking to the Soul: http://www.episcopalcafe.com/

Home by another way

Daily Reading for January 6 • The Feast of the Epiphany

A colleague of mine noticed several years ago one of those marvelous phrases of multiple meaning strewn throughout our scriptures, the familiar reference to the magi who, “having been warned in a dream not to return to Herod, . . . left for their own country by another road.” We both had noticed that the political acumen of the magi surely certified their wisdom. But it was my friend who noticed something else: that nearly everyone who encounters Jesus ends up going home by another way. The encounter with Jesus changes people, makes them different. After they have met this Jesus, they seem incapable—or certainly unwilling—to go back the same way they had come.

The Feast of the Epiphany and the season that follows is, for the church, a traditional season of mission and evangelism. Of course, for the modern church in America, there are very few mission fields left to us, few places where the basic outlines of the gospel has not penetrated geographical, political, and cultural barriers in one fashion or another. And evangelism demands some good news to proclaim, but too many days there seems precious little good to report. But there is still a ripe mission field remaining for each of us, if only we turn our sights inward.

I was reminded of this at a national conference for Episcopal students where we used varied liturgies from prayers books across the Anglican Communion. I was reminded of how very different we all are, and how much more so we grow daily. In this modern-day church, as in that ancient stable, those gathered really have nothing much in common. If we look around that manger, if we look at those who surrounded Jesus throughout his life, and even those who stood around at his death, we find that they were as diverse a lot as one might find. Like us. For truth be told, when you get right down to it, we probably really do not have much in common, you and I; the only thing we have in common is this person, Jesus. And that was certainly true for those of us who gathered at that conference. Even when we could not agree on what this Jesus looked like, or what he thought, or the meaning of what he said and did, we could still acknowledge that he was our common connection.

That was his singular gift, a genuine gift, something inherent in his person, and no