For the world and time are the dance of the Lord in emptiness. The silence of the spheres is the music of a wedding feast. The more we persist in misunderstanding the phenomena of life, the more we analyze them out into strange finalities and complex purposes of our own, the more we involve ourselves in sadness, absurdity, and despair. But it doesn not matter much, because no despair of ours can alter the reality of things, or stain the joy of the cosmic dance which is always there. Indeed, we are in the midst of it, and it is in the midst of us, for it beats in our very blood, whether we want it to or not. Yet the fact remains that we are invited to forget ourselves on purpose, cast our awful solemnity to the winds and join in the general dance.
– Thomas Merton
New Seeds of Contemplation
Archive for the ‘Fine Lines’ Category
Second Week of Advent – An Image of Hope
Posted in Fine Lines on December 11, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Second Sunday of Advent – Peace when there is no peace
Posted in Fine Lines on December 10, 2007| Leave a Comment »
I am writing a day late because we spent most of yesterday in airports – cancelled flights, mechanical failures, changing flights – we got to our home sweet home close to 3 am. I barely overheard the news about the most recent shootings in Colorado in the place people are meant to feel at peace. It’s not the first time there have been shootings in a church but it is no less horrifying and no less a violent contradiction to the Peace of Christ.
At that same time that was happening, I was witnessing peace at work. My husband and I were visiting the First Baptist Church in Granville Ohio. It is an annual visit coordinated with his company Christmas party. We love visiting this church because it is a Welcoming and Affirming Church with a long history of Peace and Justice. It is so refreshing to worship in a place where anything can be discussed and all are truly welcome. At the end of the service, I turned around and was astounded to see the man who preached at my installation service in 1989. Bill and Mary Jane Salyers happened to be visiting this church as a part of a visioning process for their own church. We hadn’t see each other in more than a decade. And then I remembered what I had written on this blog about my prejudice against the state of Ohio…..Bill had read the blog and said it didn’t sound like me at all….and there I was in the midst of Ohio among people whom I admire….my eyes were beginning to open.
About 12 hours later, we arrived at the tiny airport in Elmira NY. By chance, two of our fellow flyers had no way of getting home (not a lot of taxis or rental cars at 1 am in the Elmira airport). We had the delightful opportunity to give them a ride and found ourselves getting to know two wonderful men who clearly live their lives in a way that let’s God shine through.
What does this have to do with peace? I belive that the goodness of human beings and the image of God that is present in each of of us is a light that no darkness will ever overcome. We probably won’t see peace on earth unless we are peace to one another.
Awaiting the Savior – 7th day of Advent
Posted in Fine Lines on December 8, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Forget the past, for it is gone from your domain! Forget the future, for it is beyond your reach! Control the present! Live supremely well now! It will whitewash the dark past, and compel the future to be bright! This is the way of the wise. – Paramahansa Yogananda
Many churches in this area of Ohio where I am today, as well as the area of NY state where I live, have the phrase “Jesus Saves” written bright red letters somewhere on their edifice. This always annoys me, not because I disagree or want to hide from this truth but because the words are code language understood only from the inside – inside that particular church as well as inside of the experience of Jesus Christ as savior. It’s a language from another era that doesn’t quite compute. It begs the question – what exactly is Jesus saving? In a capitalist society, the society at large might wonder if its in a bank or in stocks and bonds!
Indeed, we do need a savior. The quote I’m meditating on above speaks of controlling the present as the way to whitewash the dark past. I can’t do that without a savior. By “savior” I don’t mean one who rescues me from past descisions or changes my circumstances with a magic wand. That view of Christ as Savior is the unique distortion of North American christianity. No, the Savior we need is: the Christ that dissolvesthe delusions, Christ Jesus who cleans the temple of our heart from the lies and self-loathing as he swept the temple in Jerusalem, the child Jesus who frees us to ask questions and to be wise, the infant Jesus who trusts enough to be a vulnerable one of us. But if we look for a rescuer from up on high somewhere outside of this human experience, then we will waste our time on this earth and miss the point of it all.
Stay Awake – 6th Day of Advent 2007
Posted in Fine Lines on December 7, 2007| Leave a Comment »
“When we can see the image of God where we don’t want to see the image of God, then we see with eyes not our own.”
-Richard Rohr
We’ve been traveling today – two short trips on regional jets held together with duct tape. We are in Ohio. I have a prejudice against people in Ohio – I’m know this is irrational and most likely sinful but it is the truth. I’ve driven I-90 several times a year for over 10 years and the people who work in the rest stops have always left me with a bad taste in my mouth…not to mention smelly bathrooms. I know this is not a fair assesment of a state nor the people with in but I have a hard time shaking this pre-judgement. Our trip down here for business reasons did nothing to change this. So today I am asking God to see with eyes that are not my own. It is easy to see God in those who are in need – it pumps my ego to help them which is why it is easier to give than receive. It is easy to see God in people who are beautiful inside and out. It is easy to see God in heroes and saints. But to see God where we are pre-set by our own limitations to see stupidity or rudeness or filth….now that takes the eyes of God. May I see through God’s eyes more than I see through my own. When God looks through my eyes, I hope he lets me have a peek.
Looking for Meaning – 5th day of Advent 2007
Posted in Fine Lines, The Other Side on December 6, 2007| Leave a Comment »
I have read that grade school children now dream of being famous rather than being a fireman or ballerina or cowboy or nurse or anything useful. Yesterday we witnessed a life unknown only in death with a wish to be famous. A young man who never quite found a place in life chose to find a place in death in a mall of Christmas shoppers. Like a dead canary in the mine, this may be a clarion call to wake up to our toxic culture.
A friend said to me today “I think we are beginning to see the errors of a culture without a foundation. I feel truly hopeful that our country is waking up and taking stock of what is important. I believe we are no longer willing to be divided into enemy camps of politics and religion.” She had no basis for this hope other than her own new-found faith and intuition. I believe her – she is a wise woman. Besides, her vision is a compelling one.
I was listening to a program on NPR recently (actually, I always listen to NPR not just recently). This program was about the writings of Karl Marx and his admiration for capitalist economy. That in itself surprised me but then I’ve never read a word of Karl Marx. According to this report, he coined a phrase called “destructive creation” which basically says that a capitalist economy requires the constant destruction of the present in order to create a future wealth. Basic to this way of living is the constant tension of everything having to become something else. There is no time for rest. No time for enjoying life as it is.
Perhaps this is the Achilles heel of our society. This constant requirement of change makes it hard to find a place to land, hard to ever just be, hard to find the silent night much less the bright day.
My prayer is that this time is a time of creative destruction of the ways of death giving rise to the way of being the human race, creatures of God’s image designed for one purpose only – to be the divine in human form. Namaste.
Being Hope – Advent Day 4, 2007
Posted in Fine Lines on December 5, 2007| 2 Comments »
The first Sunday of Advent is traditionally Hope Sunday. The first candle on the Advent Wreath is lit and readings and prayers encourage us to hope for the return of Christ. I was raised a dispensationalist Christian in a loving but rigid Bible church. I had a Schofield Bible with notes to explain this point of view in plain King James English. When other translations began to be published they were feared and loudly proclaimed to be the work of the devil. It seems the dispensational reading of end times didn’t work quite so well in the the more accurate translations of older texts so recently discovered in the Dead Sea scrolls or the Nag Hamadi fragments. I have read dozens of books on the end of time and commentaries on the book of Revelation. All of which caused me to become quite cynical about waiting for the second coming of Jesus, thoughts I kept completely to myself for decades. I remember a recent Goshen College graduate who attended a Bible study I was leading back in 1979 asking me, “Who else but Jesus is allowed to be 2000 years late for dinner?” I was shocked and mortified by his question but it certainly stuck with me. I had all the fancy words learned in seminary, the concept of “already but not yet” view of the Kingdom of God. Intellectually, this has never worked and taking it all on faith began to seem a little silly.
When I dared to research the origins of the end of times theologies (there are many) I began to see that this concept of waiting for the Savior to take us away from all of this and to punish all the bad guys to be quite dangerous and not much cause for hope. Even the first century Christians were not at all sure that was what Jesus meant. So what is the basis of hope for the coming of Christ Jesus in these times? He clearly said that heaven and earth would pass away but his word would not. (Matthew 5:18, 24:35, Mark 13:31, Luke 21:33)
I believe that one day we will understand but in the meantime, the only way we should concern ourselves with the second coming of Christ is to allow Christ to be fulfilled in our lives here and now. Many of the earliest Christians understood the meaning of the second coming in this way – The Second Coming of Christ is within our own lives as we become one with Christ in the same way Christ is one with God. In other words, we are to BE Christ in the lives we live here and now. That is so much harder than waiting for a savior to rescue us from the pain of this life.
Today I have tried to be hope to the people I encountered. The young cashier with bright blue highlights in her hair and piercings in her brow that didn’t want to look me in the eye; the lonely woman with so many disabilities; the man in the truck who almost ran me off the road; the person who pumped gas for me (yes, we actually have two gas stations here that do that!)…all these people are Christ coming to me for me to reflect hope back to them. There is a sanskrit word for this way of thinking: namaste – “the Divine in me greets the Divine in you.” This is for me the hope of the coming of Christ, Emmanuel, God with us.
Waiting – the 3rd Day of Advent 2007
Posted in Fine Lines on December 4, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Forget the past, for it is gone from your domain! Forget the future, for it is beyond your reach! Control the present! Live supremely well now! It will whitewash the dark past, and compel the future to be bright! This is the way of the wise.
Paramahansa Yogananda
By nature, I am not a patient person. I learned the hard way that God answers prayer for patience by bringing to one’s awareness situations that require patience. I don’t pray for patience anymore! However, prayer itself is an exercise in patience…it is waiting for God who comes to us, Emmanuel himself, the Spirit herself.
To “control the present” certainly cannot mean the pitiful attempt to make everything work according to the desire of the day by sheer willpower. Control requires the utmost of patience with myself and with the situation of the moment.
I usually wait an hour past my appointment time to see my chiropractor. In the past (that dark time that is no longer within my domain) I would have walked up to the counter and demanded to know how much longer it would be and proclaim the value of my time and exclaim my displeasure. My children referred to this as “ mom getting her bitch up. See why I like this whole idea of whitewashing my past?
Today was like every other day I have visited the chiropractor. I always bring something to read and my MP3 player on which to listen. It was a snowy day today and I was the only one in the waiting room. Usually it is filled with assorted characters, many of whom appear to have very little in life. On those days, I have become accustomed to praying for each of them, focusing my attention on each one and blessing them silently. There have been times I have seen a grumpy person turn to me and smile…times I’ve seen a tear sliding down a man’s cheek..times I’ve seen a child become calm. Most of the time, I just have that unspeakable peace in the region of my heart. Today, there was none of that – just a silent waiting. As the nurse walked me to the examining room. she remarked about the snow storm and icy weather. I smiled at her and she asked me if it didn’t bother me. I said truthfully “I love the snow – it turns everything beautiful and I don’t mind driving in it. The roads in this area are always plowed and well maintained. I love it here.” She looked at me in dismay and said, “Nothing bothers you! I’ve noticed this about you. You never get upset at waiting, you are always calm and smiling. You must be the most laid back person I know!” I just smiled…and that dark past of anxious impatient control was whitewashed into the gentle power of patiently waiting and a day of living supremely well.
Waking Up – the second day of Advent
Posted in Fine Lines on December 3, 2007| 1 Comment »
Advent is a spiritual season of waiting and watching which requires one to be awake and alert. I suffer from insomnia as part of a chronic illness. It’s a strange thing to wait and watch for sleep to come…not wanting to be awake or alert and yet being so. I know I’m not alone in this – insomnia plaques many adults in this turbulent time. I wonder how anyone can sleep soundly…perhaps they don’t watch the news or read it on-line. As I watch and wait, I’m learning to use this time to “control the present and to live supremely well now” in surprising ways. (see yesterday’s post for this reference)
This has become a time to repeat the “Jesus Prayer” Om Jesu Christi Misreri Nobis which means O Lord Jesus Christ, shed thy grace on us. I have learned to control my thoughts in this way. A wise man taught me that our thoughts are like creative sounds that manifest according to their own nature. Another way to put this is this: what the mind dwells upon… it becomes.
When I dwell on the peace of Christ through this ancient prayer of the heart, I awaken to that peace. A problem that might be on the back burner of my brain will take on a new shape and solve itself. Perhaps there has been someone that day who pushed my buttons…in the midst of sleeplessness transformed by prayer, I begin to see this other with compassion and to see myself through the mirror of their eyes. Often the news of the day or the debating politicos make me wonder at our future as a planet much less as a nation…..Lord Jesus Christ have mercy makes melody out of dissonance and I remember that God so passionately loves this world that he became one of us. And I watch to see how he will live through us in these turbulent times. The candidates faces waft through my mind and I pray “Lord Have Mercy” and I can see the light of Christ in their eyes even though their hearts might be filled with fear or arrogance that belies that light. Indeed, Lord Have Mercy. Then sleep comes, “God gives to his beloved sleep” the psalmist wrote and as I settle down into the arms of the beloved, sleep comes and my soul is truly awake.
Advent 2007 – Come Emmanuel Come
Posted in Fine Lines on December 2, 2007| 1 Comment »
It’s been a long season of writers block for this practical mystic. In a year in which my soul’s work has been one of awe and wild joy, it has also been a year of increased physical pain and aching frustration. But this, this day is the beginning of yet another year of waiting the coming of Emmanuel, awakening once again to the ever new God within us.
I began to read the Bhagavad Gita this year, or rather translations thereof. I’m about half way through the first of two volumns entitled by Paramahansa Yogananda The Bhagavad Gita: Royal Science of God-Realization reading a verse and commentary a day. I’ve been pondering this quote for a week:
Forget the past, for it is gone from your domain! Forget the future, for it is beyond your reach! Control the present! Live supremely well now! It will whitewash the dark past, and compel the future to be bright! This is the way of the wise.
page 97
And so, for this advent I am pondering what it means to control the present and live supremely well NOW as a christian in these turbulent times. What I am controlling to day is an attitude of hope, choosing hope over despair, hope rather than cynicism, hope instead of frustration, hope in contradiction to fear. Won’t you join me?
Resurrection
Posted in Fine Lines on April 8, 2007| 1 Comment »
“We celebrate the death of death, the destruction of hades, the beginning of another life eternal, and leaping for joy, we hymn the Cause, the only blessed and most glorious God of our fathers. For truly sacred and all festive is this saving night, and this shining light-bearing day, the harbinger of the Resurrection, whereon the Timeless Light bodily from the tomb upon all hath shined.”
from the Russian Orthodox Prayer Book
How might life be different if we truly believed that hades has been destroyed? How different the living faith of the church universal would be if we truly, truly believed that death has lost it’s sting and hell is no more. Would we not have less need to judge, to change others into our image, to anxiously see only that which conforms to our preconceived notions of what outh to be?
I’ve been living for some time now with the conviction that there is no hell except that which we create for ourselves. Perhaps all of us, certainly I, have lived through hells of our own delulsional thought built slowly by wrong-headed descions, thoughtless actions and mindless cruelties. Tempted to see hell as something to avoid only in death by clinging to beliefs handed down to us by someone who clung to them unthinking, we become unable to see the hand of God in each simple breath of life.
On this Easter day, I joyfully proclaim “He Is Risen!” and delight in the response “He is Risen Indeed!” And I know that this life is an immense gift to embrace and with each waking hour long to see just a little more of God’s glory in preparation for the day for which all creation longs when we will be embraced by the Light. May each of you who read this embrace this Light which came into the world, always has been in the world and always will be right there in your heart.