Author Archive

The Right Attitude For Reading Spiritual Writing

June 27, 2024

The Desert Fathers were weird in many ways. Especially to our modern, materialistic minds. Most of us have never met a recluse seeking spiritual insight.

So many of us are partially university trained into an excess of criticality.

I picked up this thought in my reading this week:

“If we wish to understand the sayings of the Fathers, let us approach them with veneration, silencing our judgments and our own thoughts in order to meet them on their own ground and perhaps to partake ultimately—if we prove able to emulate their earnestness in the search, their ruthless determination, their infinite compassion—in their own silent communion with God.”

Yes, we can rush so quickly to judgement without first checking our attitudes at the door. We pick up the books with open hands and open hearts to let some drop of wisdom touch the tongue of our mind.

An understanding of the thoughts can come later.

Breath

June 26, 2024

Let us pause and consider our breathing.

With intention we slow our breathing.

Inhale…exhale.

Under stress, the breath comes quickly,

raising blood pressure,

ready to face the enemy.

Slowing breath with intention,

our body slows,

mind focuses on breath and spirit

blood pressure drops.

The ancients knew the connection

between breath and spirit, vital life force.

Ruach in Hebrew, 

Pneuma in Koine Greek, 

Prana in Sanskrit.

Inhale spirit;

Exhale worry, fear, hate.

Calm Is Contagious

June 25, 2024

Calm is Contagious

So is Fear.

Which do you choose?

A quest for certainty

June 24, 2024

I once taught a class focusing on Roger Williams, an early proponent of church-state separation, in the American colonies in the 1600s. He was instrumental in the founding of Rhode Island as a place to escape Puritan rule in Massachusetts.

While we were in Quebec, we learned about the quiet revolution where people rebelled against the Catholic Church’s intrusion into government. It seemed as if the Catholic Church was running everything telling people how to live the minutest part of their lives. The result was a separation of church and state and reaction against the church such that these days few people attend mass, even though they somewhat identify as Catholic.

During my university years, I did much reading about the early middle ages in Europe, where Bishops and Cardinals of the church, and indeed even the pope, exerted much influence over the kings and princes of Europe. Of course, then came the reformation leading to extended and prolonged wars between protestants and Catholics. After more than 100 years of war, no wonder Europeans, tired of such extreme religious fervor.

Humans must have a need for certainty. In this era look at Iran, where a religious government took over from an only mildly corrupt secular government. It has lasted for some years, but people are growing tired, even there, of the extreme religious intrusion into daily life.

Even in America founded on the idea of separation of church and state there is a movement of religious fundamentalism seeking to install a Christian government trying to have the government intrude minutely into peoples daily lives. 

I was just reading in Matthew’s Gospel chapter four about the beginning of Jesus ministry. Matthew says that theme was gods kingdom. Not our kingdom, but gods kingdom.

I stand amazed at the number of humans seeking to replace God with themselves—in the name of God.

Some of us simply wish to follow Jesus’ call to love and service.

Make It Work

June 21, 2024

We recently vacationed in Québec City. Our tour guide on a walking tour explained the history of the city from the coming of the first French explorers to politics in the 1960s and again in the 1980s. You may recall that the country held two referendums in Quebec to find the sentiment of the people toward staying in Canada.

The first vote was not close, but a second vote a decade later tallied almost a 50/50 split. This told the rest of Canada that something must be done.

Politicians worked out a compromise making Quebec sort of a “nation within a nation.” It does not have embassies or passports, but it does have some special prerogatives within the nation.

The guide had two phrases. The first was, “it means nothing.” The notion of the “nation within a nation” isn’t exactly true. But his second phrase is something that could be used within American (and many other countries) politics, as well as within the general Christian movement in the world—We make it work.

In so many areas of life stubbornness, tempers, lack of empathy, closed minds get in the way of working things out.

We should also be able to say, “We make it work.”

Practice What You Preach

June 20, 2024

A 19th Century critic of the Christianity of his day, but what could easily be the Christianity of today, observed, “Christians have never practiced the actions Jesus prescribed them.”

I remember a teacher remarking when I was in high school, “Do what I say, not what I do.”

Some people have derisively shouted at another, “Practice what you preach.”

Today’s news reading informed me of several (many?) church leaders whose sexual exploits either with same sex or opposite sex victims have come to light forcing even more resignations of high profile preachers.

Jesus left a command twice about loving one another and loving our neighbors. Not the kind of “love” those preachers and leaders practiced. Rather Jesus showed us with stories like the Samaritan who cared for the injured traveller. 

Heaven

June 19, 2024

I had one friend during my high school years. We shared interests in tennis, chess, and electronics. He lived across the street from me with his wife and three kids. He was a superb craftsman. He was also a Seventh-Day Adventist. I read some of Ellen G. White’s books. I cannot explain the theology.

One day we were walking home from the tennis courts as he explained heaven to me. “When we are in heaven, everything is perfect. We will play perfect games of tennis.”

I replied, “How boring that would be!”

I’ve studied the Bible for decades. I have no real clue that would tell me facts about the afterlife.

However, I do know that Jesus’ first message was to announce the Kingdom of Heaven was here, surrounding us, infusing us. In this life. Helping us live with-God.

I find debates about some future heaven tedious. Arguing from assumptions is only an intellectual game. I think I’ll just follow Jesus in the Kingdom of Heaven right now. I hope I can live up to the expectations of being a follower.

How to Love

June 18, 2024

I wrote yesterday of intentional love riffing off the words of the Apostle Peter.

Peter continued to describe that love (just in case you are confused):

Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, 

since love covers a multitude of sins. 

Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. 

As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, 

as good stewards of God’s varied grace.

Just as in a song I used to sing back in the 70s–Love is something you do. Not always something that you feel, but it’s real.

Intentional Love

June 17, 2024

Intentional Love

The instruction came to me

Practice intentional Love

Not accidental, nor obligatory

Practice love with intent, on purpose.

Not mindlessly, nor solely from duty;

As Jesus loved, so shall we love.

His last instruction to all of us.

Leave your study this morning 

With intent to show love with every action.

Empty Yourself

June 14, 2024

Have you ever met someone so full of themselves that there is no room left for empathy?

Perhaps it is that person in the mirror in the morning?

The world revolves around them, they think. For some that is a deeply seated feeling where they just feel and know that others are merely accessories. They exist to serve us, bolster our esteem, bring us things, console us.

A jar is only useful when it is empty. Think of the potentials of an empty jar. It can save lives by ferrying water. It can bring grain to the hungry. It can be a tool to help us share from our bounty to someone in need.

We can only be useful (and healthy) through the emptying of our selfish thoughts and cravings. Empty, we now can feel empathy for another so that we may reach out in love to serve where needed. A kind word, a meal, a ride to the doctor.

We empty ourselves before meditation in order to allow room for the entrance of the Holy Spirit. Filled with the spirit—or even just a half-tank—we have the energy for service and caring and love.