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.

Monday, November 4, 2024

Prayers of the People: How We Mite ~ Proper 27, 25th Sunday after Pentecost '24 Yr B

For Sunday, November 10, 2024,  Ruth 3:1-5; 4:13-17, Psalm 127, Hebrews 9:24-28, 
Mark 12:38-44

I need to seek some security for you, so that it may be well with you. [Ruth 3:1b] 

Children are a heritage from the Lord, and the fruit of the womb is a gift. [Psalm 127:4]

Christ…will appear a second time, not to deal with sin, but to save those eagerly waiting for him. [Hebrews 9:28]

 Jesus said, "Beware of the scribes who like to...be greeted with respect in the marketplaces ...They devour widows' houses and for the sake of appearance say long prayers. They will receive the greater condemnation... Truly I tell you, this poor widow...has put in more than...all of them contributing out of their abundance; but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had... [Mark 12:38-40, 43-44]

   The Gospel appointed for this week is the story of the impoverished widow who gives her last two coins to the local treasury, in what we’ve come to know as “the widow’s mite.” A mite is a very small contribution. When I was a kid in Catholic school we were given “mite boxes” in Lent to give our coins to one cause or another. The contrast here is made between this widow giving her very last two coins and those who give large sums out of their wealth with plenty to spare. The wealthy, of course, ran no risk of hunger or homelessness as this piece implies about the unnamed widow. Whatever became of her ~ was she cared for by neighbors, did she truly lose everything in a last moment of supreme generosity? We don’t know. But, perhaps trusting it would be for good, she gave all she had.

   This small slice of Mark’s Gospel comes on the heels of Jesus warning about those who cannot be trusted, those who seek only honor for themselves and devour widows’ houses and for the sake of appearance say long prayers. Jesus is quick to say in effect, that God knows what we carry in our hearts and minds and the mere appearance of faithfulness will not help in the end.
    In the letter to the Hebrews, the writer is clear that Christ will come again ~ not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him as, we are told, Jesus is faithful to those who live in faith and trust.
    As part of the collection of writings for this week, the first sets the stage for the others as often happens. Ruth was a widow with no children to carry on their family lineage.  Because of Ruth’s faithfulness to Naomi, her loving mother-in-law, Naomi saw to it that Ruth found a new husband, conceived a child, and through her love Naomi becomes baby nurse and surrogate grandmother. Ruth trusted Naomi and was rewarded in many ways. Her child became the grandfather of King David, in the lineage of Jesus.
   The Psalm tells us plainly that Children are a heritage from the Lord, and the fruit of the womb is a gift. While not all wombs give birth to children, all of us are the children of parents present or not, good or bad, and of the always-present God who created us. We each are a gift from God called to live in faithfulness and to care for one another. It is not we who determine our lineage, who will become great, who will not. It is not up to us to decide which child, young or old, is worthy, as God lives within us all. We are to seek, expect, and honor the spark of God in everyone.
   Monday, November 11, 2024, is the 106th Anniversary of the Armistice that formally ended WWI, the momentary peace in the world that has never lasted long because we humans deny God’s lineage in ourselves and in others. Abundance of wealth and privilege is not an antidote to the poverty of self-importance. When we fail to embrace the fullness of the Gospel message in how we live our lives, we may discover too late that very much is not enough. How we mite or much from what we don’t or do have and why, only we and God can know.     

 LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY

Leader:  ~ O Lord our God, children are our heritage from You, the fruit of those wombs where hope blossoms in every birth and Your light shines through every tiny face. Guide us to live in ways that honor the You who lives deeply within all the children in this world, in each other, and especially in ourselves as the children of You that we are.

                                                    Holy and Faithful God

RESPONSE:               We put our trust in You 

~ O Lord our God, keep our hearts fearless to carry the words and actions of peace and equity to the halls of government in our World, our Nation, and our Community, to establish for all time that the rights and privileges of some are the rights and privileges of all. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                       Holy and Faithful God

                                                       We put our trust in You

~ O Lord our God, lay Your healing hand upon those weary of the pain, anguish, or fears of this life, and hold fast to those who offer caring help. We now join our voices to pray aloud for those in need…add your own petitions

                                                       Holy and Faithful God

                                                       We put our trust in You

~ O Lord our God, may our grief be calmed as we send our loved ones Home to the eternal splendor of new life in Christ. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                       Holy and Faithful God

                                                       We put our trust in You

~  O Lord our God, we pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions, and memorials, aloud or silently…add your own petitions

                                                       Holy and Faithful God

                                                       We put our trust in You    

~ O Lord our God, ease the path of all who are anointed to call us to Your Word and Sacraments and who inspire us to serve in this world together in Christ’s holy name, until His return. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                       Holy and Faithful God

                                                       We put our trust in You

The Celebrant adds: Creator Lord, Spirit of Hope, 106 years ago tomorrow, Your people breathed a collective sigh of peace and promise for the future, as the misery of World War I was signed, sealed, and finished. But restive humans, never satisfied, keep destroying one another through wars on battlefields and wars of racial, religious, and economic divisiveness and violence. Release us from the poverty of self-importance and complacence, to joyfully accept the abundance of and openly embracing Christ’s Gospel of peace, truth, and justice for all, with all, every day, and everywhere. We ask through Jesus, our Divine Teacher; and through the Holy Spirit, our Wisdom Guide; who together with You are One, Infinite, Eternal God, now and forever.  Amen.   




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Prayers of the People: The World at Peace ~ 5th Sunday in the Season of Creation*

For Sunday, November 10, 2024; Readings: Micah 4:1-4, Psalm 85**, Rosemary Power***, 
Matthew 5:1-17

[T]hey shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not life up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore… [Micah 4:3b]

  Turn, revive us, nourish our joy…I listen to God speaking, “I…speak peace, peace to my faithful people who turn their hearts to me…Love and faithfulness embrace, peace and justice kiss…** 

  Creator Lord of the unclaimed place and of clashing claims, of no one’s land where some have homes, in danger zones, in human souls, in nations’ claims: we are all guilty. We build barriers to hide what we fear to see, we draw lines in other people’s hearts, we trample underfoot what others hold dear, we wear wounds unhealed with anger, we defend ourselves from other people’s rights. Drive out the demons that divide neighbours. [Seven Days, Rosemary Power] ***

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are those who mourn…the meek…those who hunger and thirst…the merciful…the pure in heart…the peacemakers…the persecuted…You are the light of the world…let your light shine before others… [Matthew 5:1-17]

*The Season of Creation originated in the Anglican Church of South Africa and was formalized in 2008. It is designed for us to explore our faith from a Creation perspective. We use Biblical and other readings, chosen locally, that pertain to the specific theme of each of the 7 weeks of the Season. Alternate readings used are posted with asterisk. 

Click here for more information about: Season of Creation ~ In The Beginning

Week V's Theme is: 
The World at Peace

    The World at Peace.  Of course! Who doesn't want that? Yet the concept is exponentially large and is well beyond the scope of my abilities to achieve alone. It then remains a mere concept, too big to be a goal, and reduced to a conversational platitude. Or, is it? When you think of world peace how do you define it? Is it merely the end of all war on the planet or are there other considerations? A few formal definitions describe it as the absence of war, a cessation of hostilities, and/or tranquility. In an ironic construct, whole armies are deployed ostensibly to achieve peace by ending war ~ where am I in that? The words of Rosemary Power say it clearly: We build barriers to hide what we fear to see, we draw lines in other people’s hearts, we trample underfoot what others hold dear, we wear wounds unhealed with anger, we defend ourselves from other people’s rights. Of course no army is ever really deployed to make peace but rather for power and control, domination, and/or subjugation. It’s so much easier, isn’t it, when war or violence or riots are far away from me and, after all, what could I possibly do to help? In watching or just reading the news, a day doesn't go by when my anxiety and frustration levels aren't challenged even by headlines or political comments on social media, and I find myself, also ironically and sadly, highly intolerant of the intolerance of others as my blood pressure rises.
    Others wiser than me have said that peace begins within oneself. And so I must earnestly search to find some peace within myself, somewhere. Perhaps by breathing very deeply in and out regularly, stepping away from the noise of all that disturbs a tranquil moment. Listening to the birds ~ even when they’re fighting ~ calms me. The laughter of children makes me laugh; as puppies and kittens and butterflies, and turtles sunning on a rock warm my heart. Even in the depth of winter's cold, there is the peaceful quiet of a snowy day. 
    As I breathe deeply again, the feisty, feckless, fuming, and fraying world is still there, but within it I can find a small moment of inner peace that remains. Yet I must not simply live into a false peace-filled denial in which I only love those who love me. It is the quietly, steadily, holding fast within myself, that calls me to return to a place of quiet regularly, in prayer, meditation, and in simple moments of beauty, and then I must give it out so that I can offer a smile, a kind word, and some serious restraint in response to a severe difference of opinion. World Peace, it seems, does, frighteningly, begin within me, at least in some ways. We must have peace ~ and hope and joy ~ at our core that centers and steadies us. We can support, defend, write, march, care about and join organizations that give us useful tools to at least help those who are in the midst of war whether in their homes, on our streets, or far across the globe.
    Yet first I and you must each invite the Lord to build a house within us, to seek and sustain the joy that helps us to radiate God’s Eternal Light from the windows of our souls. Let us follow the teaching we are given in Matthew’s Gospel for today ~ The Sermon on the Mount ~ to find even small ways to mingle a moment of peace-filled breath with all the air that flows around this fragile Earth, our island home.**** Will we end war ~ sadly, no. But from me, peace is in my hands for one person, one moment, one less argument, one less angry retort, one full moment of intention and attention to breathe the breath of God toward and for another may be all the peace and perfection we have to give; and to give that is what we are called to do. We are Christ’s ambassadors of continuing hope, inner joy, and the peace that surpasses all understanding [Philippians 4:7] and for each and every phrase of The Sermon for all and everyone, evil and good, righteous and unrighteous ~ as it still and always not ours to judge who is worthy. Within myself and out into the ether I say:

You cannot take my hope away
  nor steal my inner joy
  no matter all the plots and schemes
  no matter intent or ploy.
My peace will continue
  to grow and to give
  to all I encounter
  each day that I live.

LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY

Leader:  ~ O God-Within-Us at schools, shopping malls, and borders, in anger, complacency, and peril, energize us to discover and embody Your Peace within ourselves so fully, that it radiates through us to reveal Your love-without-end to all.

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger 
RESPONSE:               We put our trust in You

~ O God-Within-Us, as you come into our midst, impel us to vigorously witness for peace to every governing authority on this Planet, in this Nation, and in every Community. May our own words and actions break down all walls of separation, that hide only what we fear to see, to flood your love through us to the whole of Your Creation. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger
                                                      We put our trust in You

~ O God-Within-Us, lay Your healing hand upon those weary of unhealed wounds, fear, and isolation, and hold fast to those who offer caring help. We now join our hearts to pray for those in need… add your own petitions

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger
                                                      We put our trust in You 

~ O God-Within-Us, turn our grief to joy for those we have sent Home to never die again and now raised in eternal splendor to new life in Christ. We pray especially for… add your own petitions

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger
                                                      We put our trust in You

~  O God-Within-Us, we pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions, and memorials, aloud or silently… add your own petitions 

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger
                                                      We put our trust in You              

~ O God-Within-Us, ease the path of all who are anointed to call us to Your Word and Sacraments, inspiring us to serve in this world together in Christ’s holy name. We pray especially for: add your own petitions

                                                      O Lord, in Safety and in Danger
                                                      We put our trust in You

The Celebrant adds: Creator Lord, Spirit of Hope, 106 years ago tomorrow, Your people breathed in the promise for the future at the official end of World War I. Yet we restive humans continue wars on battlefields, social media, in parking lots, and in threats about benches; wars of racial, gender, religious oppression, and more. Hold us closely as we strive to fill the needs of our neighbors, cry out for justice for the downtrodden, and work to flourish the peace, truth, and the universal love in Christ’s Gospel for all of us, every day, everywhere. We ask through Jesus, our Divine Example; and the Holy Spirit, our Wisdom Guide; who together with You are One God, now and forever. Amen.  

 

**Psalm 85:7-14: Turn, revive us, nourish our joy. Show us mercy, save us, Lord. I listen to God speaking: “I, the Lord, speak peace, peace to my faithful people who turn their hearts to me.” Salvation is coming near,  glory is filling our land. Love and faithfulness embrace, peace and justice kiss. Fidelity sprouts from the earth,  justice leans down from heaven. The Lord pours out riches, our land springs to life. Justice clears God’s path,  justice points the way.    [From The Psalter: A faithful and inclusive rendering, Liturgy Training Publications (International Committee on English in the Liturgy, Inc.), 1994.]

***2nd Reading: Seven Days

   Creator Lord of the unclaimed place and of clashing claims, of no one’s land where some have homes, in danger zones, in human souls, in nations’ claims: we are all guilty. We build barriers to hide what we fear to see, we draw lines in other people’s hearts, we trample underfoot what others hold dear, we wear wounds unhealed with anger, we defend ourselves from other people’s rights. Drive out the demons that divide neighbours.
   Jesus, in the land where your feet were tired, where you carried the oppressor’s burden, broke the chains of the prisoners, demolished walls, made wounded lives blossom, and set our hearts free to turn and to serve: may you be the potter in our lives’ neutral zones; in divided land, may justice return.
   Spirit of hope, may those who build houses live in them, those who plant olive trees harvest them, may they shelter under fig trees, give water to strangers, tell stories to children, keep Covenant with God.   
   As we honour the graves of our neighbours may we face those we fear, cry justice for the oppressed, tell of love without end: may peace flourish till the moon fails.

~ Rosemary Power, From Seven Days - Stories and reflections for the World Week for Peace in Palestine and Israel by members of the Iona Community, 2018

****The phrase this fragile Earth, our island home, is from Eucharistic Prayer C, in the US Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, 1979. See bcponline.org, page 370





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