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 4, 2023
Meditation Moment in Holy Week ~ Tuesday '23
Monday, April 3, 2023
Prayers of the People: Again and Always Risen! Indeed! ~ Easter Day '23 Yr A
Jesus said to her, “Mary!” She turned and said to him in Hebrew, “Rabbouni” (which means Teacher)…Jesus said to her…”go to my brothers and say to them I am ascending to my Father…” Mary Magdalene went and announced to the disciples...”I have seen the Lord…” [John 20:16-18]
LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY
Leader: ~ O Christ, Risen! On this Day the Lord has acted! We will rejoice and be glad in it. In the midst of the darkness and fear in this world, let us revel in the Divine Light of Your Glorious Resurrection.
~ O Christ, Risen! Especially in these uncertain times, grant
ever increasing amounts of prudence, integrity of purpose, compassion, and
mercy, to all the political leaders of this Earth, this Nation, and this
Community. We pray especially for: add your own petitions
~ O Christ, Risen! Lavish Your healing grace and hope upon all who are ailing in body, mind, or spirit, and all who give them daily care. We now join our voices to pray aloud for those in need… add your own petitions
~ O Christ, Risen! Our grateful hearts commend to You those we
love, who have risen with You into the heavenly peace and splendor of life
everlasting. We pray especially for… add your own petitions
~ O Christ, Risen! We pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions, and memorials, aloud or silently… add your own petitions
~ O Christ, Risen! Infuse the leaders of Your Church with limitless
energy and interior peace, as they strive in ever more creative ways, to guide
our prayer and encourage us to follow Your Truth. We pray especially
for: add your own petitions
Meditation Moment in Holy Week ~ Monday '23
One of the disciples, Judas Iscariot, makes a snide comment about the expensive perfumed ointment that Mary used saying that it could have been sold and the money given to the poor. He didn’t care about the poor. He was in charge of the money and also a thief skimming money for himself off the top of whatever had been donated to the group of Jesus and his disciples. Jesus, supportive of Mary's actions, told Judas that Mary had purchased the jar of Nard in preparation for Jesus' own death and burial and that, "You always have the poor with you but you do not always have me."
Meanwhile, a great crowd was assembling to see Jesus and Lazarus together. The chief priests were not at all pleased at this development, especially after throngs of excited people along the entry route into Jerusalem the day before. They decided that they would put both Jesus and Lazarus to death as all that was being said and the miracle of raising of Lazarus were turning Jews away from the religious authorities of the Synagogue toward this Jesus. The chief priests felt threatened by this new and powerful prophet.
Sweet Jesus,
On this Monday in Holy Week, the Gospel speaks of You relaxing at dinner with friends and being pampered as we go about the busy-ness of everyday life. How unaware are we, as were the disciples on that day, of the significance of this week in our own lives as Christians?
The Sanhedrin were plotting against You, and we are making lists of necessities for Easter Day, including bunny-shaped chocolates and marshmallow peeps in brightly colored baskets with plastic grass and hard-boiled eggs dyed in multiple colors. Where else in the world on this day in our time are executions being planned and carried out against innocent people? How many unknown women, men, and their children will be brutalized for their religious beliefs, their race, gender, ethnicity, who they love, or simply because they seem to be a threat to some person or group in power?
Grace us with Your spirit Lord, let us, Christians, Your followers, hear and pay attention to that still small voice inside that tells us to take a moment today to stop, reflect, and pray. Remind us to give thanksgiving for the ordinary parts of a day that make up an extraordinary life for the many of us that don't have to fear murderous persecution. Have we realized today why it is that we're privileged to be gathering fun fillings for an "Easter Basket?" It's only Monday and much more than shopping and preparing an Easter Feast is yet to come during this very sacred, Holy Week. amen.
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Saturday, April 1, 2023
Meditation Moment in Lent ~ Day 34, Give Up, Take On, Pray
I'm not sure it's invisibility that I
would find comfortable, perhaps just aloof and observing from an overhead vantage point or from my own personal pedestal. There are times when I like being close enough but far enough away, keeping everyone at arm's length. Then I can dish in
my own head with clever if less than kind judgments, point my finger (an invisible
one) at those who are merely common in their small lives,
while I in my brilliance could solve all personal and global issues if I
allowed them close enough to impart my wisdom.
And then my something
in my head breaks out into:
Oh Lord it's Hard to be Humble: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYKWch_MNY0
*Anne Lamott, is an American political activist and author of
non-fiction and novels all largely autobiographical and with her signature wit,
humor, and self-deprecation. Tackling alcoholism, single-motherhood, and
depression, Lamott brings us in to everyday American situations with
down-to-earth, sometimes irreverent vocabulary and structure that cuts directly
to the center of life.
Friday, March 31, 2023
Meditation Moment in Lent ~ Day 33, Give Up, Take On, Pray
~ Albert Einstein* [1879-1955]
Don't Judge a Fish by its Scales
I cannot count the
times I have felt diminished by being told I wasn't capable of x or
that I couldn't possibly achieve y for a variety of reasons such as
being too young, too old, too stupid, and once because I have red hair. I've also been elated by the encouragement of or compliment by some I respect and admire,
and even by strangers. How easy it can be to shake or make self-confidence, to
thwart or inspire development. How fragile we,
who-pretend-even-to-ourselves-we-are-not, often are. Let’s get over it!
*Albert Einstein,
German-born, is an icon of theoretical physics, a Nobel Prize winner, with such an enormous catalog of many intellectual and scientific achievements to his credit that his name has become
the synonym for genius. He was visiting in the US in 1933 when
Hitler came to power and he never returned to Germany. He became a US citizen
in 1940 and warned President Roosevelt of the possible weapon development in
Germany that would become the Manhattan Project in the US leading to the atomic
bomb. Einstein later denounced the use of nuclear fission for weapons but had
been worried that Germany would develop it first. His career in the US was with
the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University in New Jersey which
lasted until his death in 1955.
Thursday, March 30, 2023
Meditation Moment in Lent ~ Day 32, Give Up, Take On, Pray
Betrayal comes in many forms and guises and when discovered it is deeper than a knife in the heart. It can feel as if the depth of that knife is fatal and at times, for myself, I wanted it to be so. But it is survivable ~ out of everyone I've ever known there have been only a few who have willingly mislead or intentionally deceived me, and one or two that I’m aware of, who didn't trust me enough to tell me the truth. As with any trauma, however deep or embedded in our hearts and souls and psyches, with help as needed, we can move forward. Today is all we have in this Earthly existence. Living in past anguish prolongs it. Counting the ones we can and do trust, relieves it and steadies the ground of our being that theologian Paul Tillich described, even if we are, understandably, a bit wary for a time.
Dear
Jesus,
Betrayal in my life pales in comparison to Yours. While You saw it coming and predicted it to the very people who would
betray You, perhaps in Your humanness You still hoped that it would not come to
be.
As for me, learning to trust after discovering a
betrayal was very difficult and very painful. I have moved on but the faint
echo of the hurt is still there yet fading with the time that passes. So, for
today, I will give up needing to replay the anguish in
my mind and take on making certain that I am not one
who will ever deceive another or cause any emotional harm. I will pray to
trust my own instinct about people and accept that I will sometimes be
disappointed, and may disappoint others. AND I will concentrate on all the many many others who have been and
are grace-filled gifts in my life. This is proof enough that I can have faith
and trust in others as I have in You. More importantly, whatever happens
in human relationships, I know that my faith and trust in You will
always be well-placed. amen.
*Thomas
Moore, is a writer, psychotherapist influenced by Jung and James Hillman. He is
also former monk, and has been a professor at Glassboro State College and
Southern Methodist University. Dr. Moore has authored Care of the
Soul, which was on the NY Times bestseller list for almost a year, and Soul
Mates among 30 other books on soul, spirituality, and depth psychology,
and lectures internationally on ecology, psychotherapy, and religion.
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
Meditation Moment in Lent ~ Day 31, Give Up, Take On, Pray