A moment of contemplation for yourself or on behalf of others on everything from the life-altering to the mundane.


Prayer: A conversation with The Higher Other who lives within each of us. An invitation to vent, to re-think, to ask, and to rest.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Meditation in Eastertide: Tuesday, Week 5: Sometimes a Little Kick Can Help

April 30, 2024 ~ Tuesday, Week 5


We should ask God to
increase our hope when it is small,
awaken it when it is dormant,
confirm it when it is wavering,
strengthen it when it is weak,
and raise it up when it is overthrown.
~ John Calvin*

      Well, God, I think I'm a pretty hopeful person. But as I think about it in this moment, I'm not always sure what I'm hopeful about. When I was young I was hopeful about a happy marriage and great kids, a successful career and lots of travel.  Some of it has happened.  Some of it went a very different way. There were times when things were so bleak I didn't care enough to even want to have hope. But then, through no action of my own, hope blossomed again.
      SO, what am I hopeful about now?  Mostly, I want to be hopeful even when hope by itself  doesn't change things. Of course I hope for the usual list: good health, healthy family and friends, world peace, ending hunger and violence, etc. But so much these days, well, I guess most of the time, is beyond my control and that takes me down a path of despair, or, at the very least feeling disheartened. 
     I want to and hope to be a better follower of Jesus, taking to heart, especially His commandment to love You and all my neighbors and myself. Some days are better than others with those. At the very least, I know that when life is painful and chaotic, I can pray for the desire to hope and for, as Reinhold Niehbuhr says in his prayer, the wisdom to accept the things I cannot change and change the things I can**. And, when I am feeling hopeful, send a reminder for me to give thanks to You ~ an unexpected butterfly or a child’s smile, or the neighbor's dog who runs to me and licks my hand even with no treat in it! While I do know that You are always here, sometimes a little kick somewhere can help.  amen.

  

*John Calvin [1509-1564] was born in France and so would have been addressed by the French pronunciation of his name mostly lost to us over time, which is approximately Zhawn Cal-vawn. The ordained Calvin left the Roman Catholic Church and became a major player in the Protestant Reformation. His writings were contentious and he was influential in at least one execution. He and his contemporary, Martin Luther, had respect for one another early on though each had a differing theological view. There was a disagreement between Luther and a Reformer in Zurich, Huldrych Zwingli, over the interpretations regarding the Eucharist. Calvin's opinions on the matter caused Luther to equate Calvin with Zwingli. From those tempestuous beginnings, Calvin's theological perspective is seen as the major influence for the Reformed, Congregational, and Presbyterian churches throughout the world today. While not my favorite theologian, the lesson to be gleaned is that there is always something useful to be gleaned from reading and/or listening to someone with whom we disagree.

 

** Here is the full, original, unabridged Niebuhr text of the famous Serenity Prayer:  

God, give us grace to accept with serenity the things that cannot be changed,
Courage to change the things
which should be changed,
and the Wisdom to distinguish
the one from the other.

Living one day at a time,
Enjoying one moment at a time,
Accepting hardship as a pathway to peace,
Taking, as Jesus did,
This sinful world as it is,
Not as I would have it,
Trusting that You will make all things right,
If I surrender to Your will,
So that I may be reasonably happy in this life,
And supremely happy with You forever in the next.

Amen.











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Monday, April 29, 2024

Prayers of the People: It’s Personal ~ Sixth Sunday of Easter '24 Yr B

For Sunday, May 5, 2024; Readings: Acts 10:44-48, Psalm 98, 1 John 5:1-6, John 15:9-17

The circumcised believers who had come with Peter were astounded that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out, even on the Gentiles...Then Peter said, "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy Spirit just as we have?" [Acts 10:45, 46b-47]

    Sing to the Lord a new song, for he has done marvelous things...He remembers his mercy and faithfulness to the house of Israel, and all the ends of the earth have seen the victory of our God... In righteousness shall he judge the world, and the peoples with equity. [Ps 98:1, 4, 10]

    Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God, and everyone who loves the parent loves the child…For the love of God is this, that we obey his commandments…for whatever is born of God conquers the world. And this is the victory…our faith. Who is it that conquers the world but the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God? [1 John 5:1, 3a, 4-5]

    Jesus said to his disciples, "As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you; abide in my love...This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you...And I appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last... [John 15:9, 12, 16b]

     NINE YEARS AGO, that is, in 2015, I wrote the following:  How intrusive is this [Gospel] message against the backdrop of mistrust, hatred of "the other," and the seemingly endless and rampant violence across the world and in our local communities? Them vs Us, You vs Me, This is Mine, You can’t do/have/be…is as ancient as Caine and Abel and never tires of repeating. As the reading from Acts tells us, the circumcised believers...were astounded that the Holy Spirit was given even to the Gentiles. Peter was clear that the water of baptism cannot be withheld from those who are different because they have received the Holy Spirit just as we have... And Jesus was even more clear: This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. I see no room for negotiation here. Yet we continue with judgment that is meant only to be God’s when the prevailing thought is those people are doing terrible things so how can Jesus possibly expect us to love them? Well, what we think he expects is irrelevant, he commands it. IF we believe in Jesus, then we must bear the fruit of God's love to all people, in all places, and everywhere. NO MATTER WHAT ANYONE THINKS ABOUT “THEM,” EVERYONE IS INCLUDED IN HIS COMMANDMENT! And yes, I am shouting!

    Today I find it more than disheartening to realize that things, nine years later, are now exponentially worse on so many levels especially in issues of race, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and politics ~ talk about lions and tigers and bears, oh my! ~ not to mention dragons and snakes and skunks. Yet there are some seeds of hope grounded in love, amidst the anger, frustration, and despair, that are rising up, beginning to flower, and showing great potential to bear sweet and sustaining fruit for sharing. I have to stop often to remember that Jesus didn't require us to "like" anyone, only love them. We are to seek not only Jesus but ourselves in another. "Oh, really," you say, "nothing of Jesus or me is found in THAT person." Look harder and listen more closely. What you and I think and feel ~ and say? ~ about those we label as them may very well be what they think and feel and say about us. We are likely to uncomfortably discover that we are not so very different from them after all. Maybe, if we go beyond the “Golden Rule” to employ the “Platinum Rule” those others might be slightly easier to love. What is the platinum rule? “Do unto others as they would have you do unto them.” If I only do what I want done for me how is that helpful to another? For example, if I invite you to dinner and fill the table with all my favorite foods without asking if you have preferences or allergies or serious dislikes, who is more comfortable? Is not Love for another to go beyond our wants and wishes?
     That said, the stark truth must be acknowledged: Our loving of them does not require ~ nor will it regularly result in ~ reciprocation. The dangers, fears, and tensions of the world will not suddenly evaporate because we are more intentionally loving people. Yes, there is evil intent in this world that no amount of love or understanding will resolve. But judgment belongs to God. As the psalmist says: In righteousness shall he judge the world and the peoples with equity. [Ps 98:10]
    As we listen, hear, and remember the Gospel message together, we can work as a team to learn and practice how to love, through the experience of intentional relationship. After all, even in a loving family, not everyone is happy with everyone all the time, but we work through it because of the connections we want to maintain. And sometimes we have to let go of the things we don’t like about another in order to sustain the relationship.  
    Of course, we are not called to pursue “relationships” with everyone, especially with those who intend harm. We are, however, to reconcile our first thoughts and actions through the lens of Christ’s love. It’s hard and often un-rewarding work in this life. Yet, we are promised much more than a rose garden for following Christ’s commandment. This life is short though it can feel endless when we encounter very demanding, difficult, and desperate days ~ and people. Feeling supported in the trials of faith by the presence of Christ and the Holy Spirit, and in community, we can come to believe that working to act in, through, and by love ~ first, last, and always ~ as best we can in this mortal time, is always personal, whether directed outwardly or inwardly. 

LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY

Leader:  ~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman, as You chose us to be bearers of the fruit of Your eternal love, lift us from the shadows of doubt. Awaken our souls to follow Your Commandments to love one another and to fully abide in You as You abide in us.

                                 Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness                                         
     RESPONSE:  Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always     

~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman, grant us such consciousness of our gifts from the Spirit, that we hold ourselves and those who govern accountable, throughout this Planet, this Country, and this Community; acting always to uphold Your standards of righteousness and equity, on behalf of all people everywhere. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                              Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness
                                              Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always

~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman, lovingly embrace with healing all who are ill in body, mind, or soul, and all who give them love and care. We now join our hearts to pray for those in need… add your own petitions

                                                 Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness
                                                 Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always  

~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman, with trumpets and the sound of the horn You shout with joy, as those who have risen above this earthly plain are welcomed to the everlasting peace of new life in You. We pray especially for… add your own petitions

                                                 Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness
                                                 Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always

~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman, we pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions, and memorials… add your own petitions

                                                 Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness
                                                 Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always

~ Christ Jesus, Born of God and Woman,  we offer special thanksgivings for those among us who are anointed to teach and lead us in Your Word and Ways. Grant them continual renewal of purpose and endless replenishment of vim and vigor. We pray especially for: add your own petitions 

                                                 Oh Lord of Mercy and Faithfulness
                                                 Guide us to offer Love first, last, and always

The Celebrant adds: Almighty and Ever-Loving God, infuse us with the inner peace and fortitude to let the actions of our lives be the instruments of rejoicing playing new songs of faith and love, each and every day. We ask through Jesus, our Loving Redeemer; and the Holy Spirit, Your Truth; who together with You, are One God, now and forever.  Amen.







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Meditation in Eastertide ~ Monday, Week 5 '24: Catherine of Siena

April 29, 2024 ~ Monday Week 5


To show the love that we have for Him,we ought to serve and love
every rational creature and extend our charity to good and bad 
-- as much to one who does us ill service and criticizes us 
as to one who serves us. For, His charity extends 
over [the] just men and sinners. 

~ St. Catherine of Siena*

Our Risen Lord Christ, 
     We need Your help, more than ever, to live into Catherine's description of Your Great Commandment. When we feel maligned, insulted, or emotionally wounded by others, keep us conscious of the lives we touch and the similar impact we may have on them whether intended or not. Remind us to apologize when we have injured, and to hold back anger, un-judge, and respond with kindness in all circumstances. Guide our minds to love and forgive with You in our hearts. It is always the right place and the right time to remember the right teachings You give to us all.  amen.


*Catherine [1347-1380], the 23rd of 24 children, began having visions of Jesus at age 6. She had such visions often in which Jesus spoke to her and although she attempted to live a “more worldly life” for several years as requested by her parents, she lived almost a hermit life in her family home until she reached an age to live in a monastic community. She was a Third Order member of the Dominicans ~ a lay person, not a vowed member of the community but an adherent to its principles and rules. She was the first woman to wear the black and white Dominican habit. Catherine was a Scholastic Philosopher and Theologian and although never learning to read or right, she was no shrinking violet. Her dictated writings and thoughts to Bishops were so critically important in male dominated times, she convinced Pope Gregory VI to move the papacy back to Rome from Avignon in an extended time of conflict within the Church itself. She was named a Doctor of the Church (one who has shown significant importance in theology and doctrine) by Pope Paul VI in 1970 along with Teresa of Avila, the first two women so named to one of the Roman Church's highest honors.
  Only 33 at her death, Catherine's profound spiritual writings and tremendous political influence were highly exceptional for her times and she remains greatly respected today.

 

Of the 35 Doctors of the [Roman Catholic] Church, the other 2 women are St. Therese of Lisieux (also known as The Litte Flower), and St. Hildegard of Bingen.













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Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Meditation in Eastertide ~ Saturday, Week 4 ' 24: Here's a "Method"

April 27, 2024 ~ Saturday, Week 4 

~ John Wesley*

Dear God,
    It's seems too simple, John Wesley's Rule of Life.  Just do good, all the time, in all ways, in all places, to everyone for as long as possible.  But I realize that sometimes in the seemingly simple there is deep complexity. I must look deeply within myself to be conscious and intentional about my thoughts and actions to see where I am on track and where I am not.  
   Oh Dear God! I'm off track more than I'm on and I am in such need of Your help. I want to do the good You have called me to do. Having Wesley's words as a kind of mantra will help to guide me but at the end of every day, I need to return to You in my prayer. Please breathe the good of Jesus into my soul as the fuel to fire my life in Christ. Give me the courage and fortitude to spread the Good News through good thoughts and better actions throughout all the days of my life, for as long as I ever can.  amen.  

*John Wesley [1703-1791], born in Epworth, England, was an Anglican cleric and with his brother Charles, also Anglican, and Charles Whitefield, a Calvinist, were riding a circuit to reach rural areas. John's "method" effectively trained and used non-ordained itinerant preachers to develop small Christian discipleship groups offering religious instruction to effect social reforms, particularly in prison reform and the abolition of slavery. It became an evangelical movement known as Methodism and strongly influenced the Holiness and Pentecostal movements. John, however, argued against Calvinism, especially pre-destination, and he and his brother Charles, from whom we have the gift of many hymns, remained thoroughly committed to the Anglican Church and its sacramental theology. By the end of his life John was known as "the best loved man in England."











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Meditation in Eastertide ~ Friday, Week 4 '24: Struggle Transformed

April 26, 2024 ~ Friday, Week 4


 

The spiritual life is not the elimination of struggle; 
it is the sanctification of struggle.  
It is struggle transformed to wisdom.

          ~ Sr. Joan Chittister            

When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. 
But when I grew up, I put away childish things.  

~ 1 Corinthians 13:11 

Dear God,
   When I was a kid I thought You were The Most Magic Person. You created the heavens and the earth and all that is in it, Adam and Eve and me! As I grow older I wonder more about You and discover that the more I learn, the less I know, although I now believe some things very differently. 
    I now believe that as life happens, so do the ups and downs, joys and sorrows, the routine and ordinary. I know that it's up to me to turn to You, to sanctify the days of joy, the days of struggle, and the days of nothing special. In the midst of terrible times I won't feel immediately better as the Magic You of my childish imaginings would have it. Yet through Your presence in my soul, the older me is more readily able, and sooner, to move forward, accepting the things I cannot change and living each day as fully as possible for the time that I am given. Perhaps in my times of struggle ahead, and by remembering to turn to You before, during, and after, I will more easily transform those times into opportunities for some wisdom. As I continue to work on entering and growing into a more spiritual life, I already know that there is peace and rest in the midst of questions and conflict.  
   As I grow older, help me please, to be more child-like in my faith ~ that is, unspoiled, open, with an accepting innocence, and less child-ish ~ that is, immature, stubborn, and demanding to have things my way and angry when I cannot. Let me remember always, that the Magic of Life is contained within my acceptance, perseverance, and Faith by walking in, with, and through Your grace. amen.

 

*Sr. Joan Chittister [1936- ] is a member of the Benedictine Sisters in Erie, Pennsylvania.  A noted author and lecturer, she is regular columnist with the National Catholic Reporter, and also contributes to other publications on-line and in print. She writes on the issues of women in the church and society, human rights, peace, and justice in the areas of war and poverty, religious life, and spirituality. She is co-chair of the Global Peace Initiative of Women, a UN-sponsored organization creating a worldwide network of women peacemakers.  The author of more than 50 books and hundreds of articles, Sr. Joan has received numerous awards for her writing. Sr. Joan is slated to be a keynote speaker at the Discipleship of Equals in October 2023 in Rome hosted by Spirit Unbounded, a new international network for Reform-Minded Catholics.

 






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Meditation in Eastertide ~ Thursday, Week 4 '24: They Didn't Believe It...

April 25, 2024 ~ Thursday Week 4

The Gospel of St. Mark 

But when they heard that he was alive and had been seen by her, they would not believe it. After this he appeared in another form to two of them, as they were walking into the country. And they went back and told the rest, but they did not believe them. Later he appeared to the eleven themselves as they were sitting at the table...

~ Mark 16:11-13, 14a 

O Jesus,
      Some days I question everything. I can definitely understand why the disciples didn't believe the reports they heard that You had been seen alive. We can be a skeptical lot. Even though You told them, even though they loved and trusted You, still, it was beyond their experience and their realm of possibility. And now, today, more than 2000 years later I believe it when I read it ~ after all, these accounts have lasted for all this time. But I need help sometimes. While I can imagine You sitting at my table, when my heart hurts or my head isn't on straight, imagining doesn't always relieve me. Today, I'm fine, my faith is strong and so is my willingness to proclaim the Good News. Tomorrow or next week? Please, in those times, remind me to read again, to be with those so close to you who were also having trouble believing until they finally did when they saw you. I’m sometimes in the Thomas camp ~ seeing is believing ~ but I’m still ready to  proclaim that You are risen! Indeed and Alleluia! amen.

 

The Gospel of Mark is thought to be the earliest of the four canonical Gospels despite its second place in the New Testament. It has the flavor of a Reader's Digest Condensed/No Frills Book as it chronicles the highlights of the life of Jesus without much of the detail of the others. Biblical scholars disagree on a variety of aspects of this Gospel, especially the ending, and the identity and biography of the attributed author, Mark. Whoever and whatever, the words tell the story of the One we choose to follow. The details in and about the Gospel of Mark make for interesting reading and engaging conversations.

 

St. Mark is remembered on liturgical calendars of many Christian denominations on April 25.

 








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Meditation in Eastertide ~ Wednesday, Week 4 '24: To Be A Silly Goose

April 24, 2024 ~ Wednesday, Week 4 


To Be A Silly Goose

Why do we call a goose silly?

      Oh, I know we can tease children by calling them a silly goose in fun. And sure, geese are comically ungainly in their gait on the ground and seriously noisy in their conversations. I had to wait on the street one day while two were having a raucous discussion across the white line and I was trying to pull into a driveway. I beeped and they stopped, looked at me, and promptly went right back. After a time, I very slowly let the car drift forward and they finally, unhappily, moved but never stopped their "discussion!"  
      In a morning that is sunny and clear I love to watch as they are winging across the sky honking encouragement to each other. The V-formation is beautiful in its symmetry and its purpose. Instinctive, normal, practical. Geese travel together and when one can't go or falls from the formation because of illness or injury, two stay behind to help, to care, to be there until the downed bird can fly again or dies. Then the trio or pair join another passing formation. 
      Each leader leads for a time, flying just slightly above the others to increase lift and reduce the effort of the flock. Then that leader moves to the back of the formation and another leads for a time and then moves to the back of the formation, and so on until the destination is reached. Everyone takes a turn to lead. Geese are also monogamous and mate for life. If their partner dies they mourn and many never take another mate.
      With geese, everyone works together for the good of the entire flock. Hmmm, if only Humans would be better at that. Not so silly after all. 
      With all that in mind I'm happy to be a silly goose in God's flock!

      Dear Lord, help me to be a reliable part of the flock I'm in, taking my turns to lead and to fall back. Give me extra grace to be thankful for those who stop to care for me and to be even more willing to stay on the ground to help another knowing that I'm able to join another passing flock without any resistance to my presence. Geese make me look silly ~ in formation and leadership they are a model of Your vision for the rest of us. Of course like the rest of us they can be unruly, occasionally noisy, and very messy! Yet my prayer is for the awareness of the lessons of interconnectedness and interdependence that You provide for us to see, understand, and reflect in each and every part of Your Creation.  amen.






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Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Meditation in Eastertide ~ Tuesday, Week 4: Peace in the Chaos?

April 23, 2024 ~ Tuesday, Week 4

 

Peace is not something you can force on anything or anyone... much less upon one's own mind. It is like trying to quiet the ocean by pressing upon the waves. Sanity lies in somehow opening to the chaos, allowing anxiety, moving deeply into the tumult, diving into the waves,
where underneath, within, peace simply is.

~ Gerald G. May*

Lord of the Deepest Peace,
      There are so many days I see that the world around me is in such chaos ~ whirling, often in Your name, in violence, poverty, pain, and cruelty to others who are not part of whatever group calls themselves "us." I am at such a loss trying to know in which direction to turn, which good cause needs me the most. What can I possibly do to make any kind of useful difference? I am merely the tiniest pebble in the hole of a huge dyke that strains against impending disaster. In those moments I close myself off from the noise of my inner turmoil. And then, taking a breath, I remember You and my prayer begins again. 
     Grant me the stillness within myself to simply stop, to breathe deeply, and allow that inner peace to flow outwardly, to everyone I meet whatever the time, place, or circumstance. My footing is more certain when Your peace is in my heart and my soul takes its ease in Your comfort. In Your presence, accepting things as they are, even in chaotic times, the quietness within grows, calms, and strengthens me. From there, with You, I can keep moving forward until a purposeful direction becomes clear. Each morning, noon, and night, and all times in between, I can breathe You in again. amen.  

*Gerald Gordon May, [1940-2005] was an American psychiatrist and theologian, and as a conscientious objector, worked as an Air Force psychiatrist in Vietnam. After his work in Vietnam, he was a staff psychiatrist in a prison mental hospital in Maryland. He later became a senior fellow at the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation in Bethesda, Maryland conducting workshops in contemplative theology and psychology. He wrote several books on the subject of combining spiritual direction with psychological therapy. 






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Monday, April 22, 2024

Prayers of the People: Living Guide to Creation ~ 5th Sunday of Easter '24 Yr B

For Sunday, April 28, 2024; Readings: Acts 8:26-40, Psalm 22:24-30, 1 John 4:7-21, 
John 15:1-8

   Then the Spirit said to Phillip, “Go over to his chariot and join it.” So Phillip ran up to it and heard him reading the prophet Isaiah. He asked, “Do you understand what you are reading?” He replied, “How can I, unless someone guides me?” [Acts 8:29-31a]

   The poor shall eat and be satisfied, and those who seek the Lord shall praise him: "May your heart live for ever!"...My soul shall live for him... [Psalm 22:25, 29a]

   God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God, and God abides in them. Love has been perfected among us in this: that we may have boldness on the day of judgment, because as he is, so are we in the world.  [1 John 4:16b-17]

   Jesus said to his disciples, "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinegrower. He removes every branch in me that bears no fruit. Every branch that bears fruit he prunes to make it bear more fruit...Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches."  [John 15:1-2, 4b-5a]

      Spring is in full bloom in this part of the globe. The weekend cacophony of lawn mowers, weed trimmers, ATVs, and skateboards rises with the temperature. Gardeners are happily filling their wheeled carts with soil, compost, and mulch, cleaning away the debris of winter, preparing the earthen beds for planting, and pruning shrubs, bushes, and trees. The birds and local  , migrating and local, the bird empty the hanging feeders with amazing speed.
     Every gardener, even one with a single small plant, knows that good growth requires maintenance. Some plants, such as grapevines or fruit trees, need pruning to make them stronger and able to produce more and better fruit. Along with water, sunshine, and good soil, a gardener must constantly tend the pots, rows, fields, or orchards with care. Knowledge of weather, season, and region and climate growing zones is essential. The occasional frost warning creates a hurrying to protect still fragile plants for the next few weeks or longer.
    As a gardener watches for signs of growth as well as of decline, we too, must constantly tend our relationship with Christ, finding ways to be more intentional about the spiritual growth of our souls, and, awareness of the overgrowth of the weeds of our distractions that lead us to the neglect of our inner growth and outer practice.
    The First Letter of John reminds us that when we believe that the love God has for us through Jesus our Savior, God’s love is then perfected in us. It is with that perfected love within that we become the gardeners for growing God’s Kingdom on Earth.
    In the Gospel of John for this week, Jesus tells us that he is the true vine and that God is the vine grower. Jesus calls us to abide in him as he abides in us, joined to him as His Branches on the Vine. We will bear much fruit if we seek to prune our inner deadwood to clear the way for new spiritual sprouting. But the fruit we bear is not for our own care and feeding ~ it is to be shared with others for their spirit-filled nurturing and growth. As we, the branches, grow stronger, we draw together as brothers and sisters in a community of faith, hope, and eternal love in and with Christ as our Vine. And the Holy Spirit is our constant Wisdom Guide through the sometimes fallow fields and barren orchards, in droughts and and flood and destructive fires. God Almighty as our ultimate Gardener/Vine grower gives us a continuous 24-hour Living Guide to Creation if we choose to see. Even if Autumn is the new season where you are, there is always much to do to prepare your inner garden for the winter ahead. Whatever the season, we find our strength in Christ who keeps our souls rooted to produce the fruit of the Divine for us all.

LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY 

Leader:  ~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, prepare our souls as the fertile soil that will bring forth the harvest of Your love and peace. Teach us to see, know, and nourish all people as our brothers and sisters, companion branches in God’s Holy Vineyard.

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
RESPONSE:                 Guide us to perfect love

~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, transform our complacence into compassion and ignite desire and courage within us, to stand in faith and act together for environmental justice, and for all who are denied economic, racial, and every justice issue for basic human need and respect that is refused, across this world and at national and local levels  We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
                                                       Guide us to perfect love 

~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, comfort and heal all who are poor in health and spirit, and grant energy to all who give them care. We now join our hearts to pray for those in need… add your own petitions

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
                                                       Guide us to perfect love 

~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, fill us with praise and gladness and hope as the souls of those we love and sent ahead, now live again sheltered in eternity by Your forever Heart. We pray especially for… add your own petitions

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
                                                       Guide us to perfect love 

~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, we pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions, and memorials… add your own petitions

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
                                                       Guide us to perfect love 

~ Jesus, Abundant Vine of Life, bless all who give their lives in service to Your Church, and walk with us even through sometimes fallow fields and barren orchards, as we seek the joy in knowing You are with us now in this brief life and forever in the next.  We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                       Infinite, Abiding Lord
                                                       Guide us to perfect love 

The Celebrant adds: Living God, Eternal Vine Grower, prune detachment and sin from our hearts to cultivate strong, dynamic, and fruitful branches that flourish, not wither, as we abide always in You. We ask this through Jesus, our True and Perfect Vine; and the Holy Spirit, our Wisdom Guide; who together with You, live and reign as One God forever and ever. Amen.

 







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Meditation in Eastertide ~ Monday, Week 4: Earth Mother?

Monday, April 22, 2024 ~ Earth Day in Earth Month
                   Monday in Eastertide, Week 4


An Oak Tree
Earth Day in Earth Month ~ April 2024


   Do you know that even when you look at a tree and say, `That is an oak tree', or `that is a banyan tree', the naming of the tree, which is botanical knowledge, has so conditioned your mind that the word comes between you and actually seeing the tree? To come in contact with the tree you have to put your hand on it and the word will not help you to touch it...[and] if you have no relationship with the living things on this earth, you may lose whatever relationship you have with humanity.  

 Jiddu Krishnamurti*

 

Dear Creator God ~
            Your precious Creation in all of its bounty is as equally important in the scheme of life as we humans are. You have given us plant life, sea life, creatures of the land, and all that our life requires to be sustained.  Help me to stop and look, touch, hear, taste, and breathe in all the goodness that this Earth, our island home, has to offer.  Help me know a tree, a flower, a bird, a fruit beyond its classification and name. Help me to know this Earth as more than just land, air, and bodies of water to support me. Help me to know it as a partner in life, mutually beneficial, living and breathing as I do and requiring as much of my participation and care in its health as I need from its participation in mine. Help me to pay more attention to the destruction of our Earth in so many ways including tearing down large parcels of trees to pave for unnecessary building for unnecessary profit, and its air and water by the convenience of the packaging we use, the trash islands in our oceans, the microplastics filling our bodies with the bottled water we drink, and the heat and fumes generated by our rabid consumption of fossil fuels.
          Maybe, if we all learn to know that the dirt under our feet is as necessary to our life as are all the pretty creatures and lakes and oceans, we will not only take action for its better care, it will take better care of us.  Perhaps in that way, more of us will see all of creation as necessary: wild, tame, cultivated, animal, mineral, and vegetable. And in those ways we will finally understand that every human on this Earth is also a partner in life, mutually beneficial, living and breathing as we do and requiring as much of us as we need from each of them.  Maybe then, we'll have branched out and have a true relationship with humanity and our planet beyond just the names of a few people and a few trees. amen.
 

 

*Jiddu Krishnamurti, [1895-1986] a speaker and writer on matters philosophical and spiritual was born in British India and was influenced as a child by the Theosophical Society in Aydar. Sickly and sensitive as a child, considered vague and dreamy, he was deemed to be mentally backward and was regularly beaten at home and at school. His subsequent development as a writer and speaker is exceedingly remarkable. He disavowed allegiance to any caste or religion, mastered several languages and traveled the world lecturing and writing.  He died in Ojai, California leaving a tremendously interesting legacy of writings and a fascinating biography.

 

 

 














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Saturday, April 20, 2024

Meditation in Eastertide ~ Saturday, Week 3: ALL OF THEM ALL THE TIME?

April 20, 2024 ~ Saturday, Week 3



The bible is very easy to understand. But...[t]ake any words in the New Testament and forget everything except pledging yourself to act accordingly. My God, you will say, if I do that my whole life will be ruined. How would I ever get on in the world…
~ Søren Kierkegaard*   


Jesus said, "The First Commandment is this:  Hear O Israel: The Lord our God is the only Lord. Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, with all your mind and with all your strength.  The second is love your neighbor as [if it is] your self.  There is no commandment greater than these." 
Mark 12:29-31  

Dear Jesus ~ 
     I don't have any idea when I last examined my relationship with the Commandments. I know that I haven't stolen anything since I was a kid and got caught; well, ok a few pens from work here and there but that's all, really! I definitely have not killed anyone though maybe I've had a covet or two. But then You already know what I have and haven't done. 
    I go through each day, week, month, and year and just assume in the back of my mind that I'm doing reasonably ok as a Christian. Well, actually, I don't really think about it at all; I just wander through time doing everyday stuff and as life goes, and I do better on some days than I do on others. But, it's time, now, to look closer about how I truly and consciously  know that I love God, how well or not that I love all of my neighbors and, how I act 
upon that love. Oh Jesus, help me to Love all those neighbors that I can barely like some days (and could you please ignore how I feel about them on some other days as I work on this?). Give me the compassion, the empathy, the humility to live all that I profess to believe. It is a struggle, each and every day, to be intentional and conscious of being a Christ-Follower with all that You and I expect of me and all that represents to the world in these difficult, contentious, and fraught times. It's very hard work. So, please, please, I need all the help You can give me, and I will work at being better at Love with a capital L as in Love of, with, in, for, and by Christ. amen.

and we are also to Love:
Thy Hispanic Neighbor
Thy Hindu Neighbor
Thy Asian Neighbor
Thy Poor Neighbor
Thy Rich Neighbor
Thy Elderly Neighbor
Thy Teenaged Neighbor
Thy LGBTQIA+ Neighbor
Terrible Parent Neighbor
Thy Thoughtless Next-Door Neighbor
Thy Driver-on-the-Road Neighbor
Thy Cranky Neighbor
Thy Mentally Ill Neighbor
Thy Politically-Wrong Neighbor
and ALL of Thy Other Neighbors! 
and help me to love Me, as You do.


*Søren Kierkegaard [1813-1855] was a Danish philosopher, theologian, poet, social critic and wrote extensively on Christian Ethics, psychology, and the philosophy of Religion.  He often focused on personal choice and commitment and the art of Christian love. He was a strong critic of some of his philosopher contemporaries such as Swedenborg, Hegel, Goethe, and Hans Christian Anderson. It is impossible to distill his vast work into a small space as his work continues to influence the discussions of intellectuals and religious philosophers to this day. Fear and Trembling and Either/Or are two of his most well known works still being read today.





All compositions remain the property of the owner of this blog but may be used with attribution and edited for local use as long as they are not sold or charged for in any way. For more information or comments, contact: Leeosophy@gmail.com

























All compositions remain the property of the owner of this blog but may be used with attribution and edited for local use as long as they are not sold or charged for in any way. For more information or comments, contact: Leeosophy@gmail.com