Blessing 4: Generosity

Lent is typically not the time in the liturgical year to talk about abundance. So, it’s ironic that this year, I am becoming more and more aware of generous abundance in my life during this season where, in so many ways, we are stripped down to the essence of who we are. In no small way, I believe that this simplicity of living leads to generosity of spirit because we come to more fully see and know the presence of God in our midst.

I am becoming more and more aware that scarcity raises awareness of abundance. We remove, and we see with fresh sight how much we still have. We give away, and blessings are abundantly bestowed. We make ourselves vulnerable, and we find mercy in abundant supply. This is the abundant generosity of Lent.

For Generosity

May you feel the emptiness of giving away
something that you value and cherish;
May the pangs of your missed treasure
heighten divine joy when another receives.

May you feel the palpable yearning
that has kept you tethered to desire;
May your spirit come alive with delight
when you realize how much love enfolds you.

May you have the courage to give generously,
and the faith to receive generously.
May you risk emptying your heart,
and experience the wholeness of being beloved.

May your own generosity reveal to others
Divine grace that is not earned, or demanded, or possessed.
And may the lavish generosity of Spirit
Keep us ever mindful of the Source of all abundance.

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Blessing 3: Community

In my faith community, we are reading Diana Butler Bass’ Christianity After Religion for discussion during Lent. Tonight, my small group started discussing “belief in community” as one of the important characteristics of our religious expression. In other words, belief isn’t just a personal phenomenon, but also a community held experience within which we have the individual freedom to wax and wane and question and ponder and discuss…because we hold each other in community. This made me think about the power of community, and how deeply grateful I am for the communal relationships that form my faith and support my growth. Tonight’s blessing is for my community:

Faith in Community: A Blessing

It takes courage to walk to the edge of the water,
To stick out a solitary foot and touch toe to surface,
Testing the waters for their chill or their burn,
Wondering about the depth should one decide to plunge.

Faith is the depth and surface and motion of those waters.
The visitor touching the surface isn’t an intrusion.
Instead, the waters move in response,
Rippling the unspoken question felt in the seeker’s touch.

Blessed are those who question,
And those who ponder.
Blessed are those who feel at peace,
Buoyant enough to move with the waves of doubt.

It is the flowing and fluid motion of community which allows
New questions to surface and old wounds to heal.
Faith is not only in the immersion,
Faith is in the collective response.

20140319-223819.jpg

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Blessings 2: Circles

The image of the circle has been very real and present with me today. The circle was referenced in divine imagery during a lunchtime lecture and has lingered with me throughout my day. Circles appeared in my work life, took the form of full-circle memories and challenged me to consider the ways complex concepts overlapped in my research. Unlike fixed lines and angles, circles are rounded, soft, and expansive. They resonate with my feminine core, find their way into my classroom, and are my preferred arrangement for meetings. In statistics, circles represent the latent, abstract constructs we approximate through linear measurement and structural models. Circles minimize power differentials, invite open sharing, and infer continuity.

In the circle, there is no beginning or end.

Blessing of Circles

If you have ever followed the curve
That extends beyond where you can see,
And then comes lovingly back around to greet you again,
Then you know the blessing of the circle.

If you have reached as far as you can possibly reach
And touch one, who in turn touches another
This motion you began will continue to unfold
And the blessing of this circle will return to find you.

When you feel you are walking in circles,
Returning again to places you have already travelled,
Perhaps the story in the circle may become clear
Because you now can listen at the heart of its origin.

The blessing of the circle is that as it grows,
we do not move further away from our neighbors.
No one is lost at the far extremes.
Instead, our horizon expands to greet each arrival.

May the endings and beginnings in our lives
Reach out to greet each other in welcome.
And may we come to rest in the eternal changelessness
Of the ever expanding shape that unites us.

20140318-221143.jpg

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Blessing 1: Moments of Grace

I feel compelled, during this week where I am Cultivating Sacred Space on the theme of “Blessings” that I write some.  This is not my usual writing style, even though I love the rich imagery and stylistic writing of blessings that others have written.  So, I am going out on a limb and trying to put the daily blessings that I encounter (my small points of light) into words of blessing to share.  

Today, I was struck by moments of unexpected beauty and grace.  This is my wish for each of you today (and Happy St. Patrick’s Day!)

Blessing: Grace in Unexpected Moments

May the unexpected moments of life

catch you blissfully unattached to your own expectations,

and allow you to seize moments of joy.

May you find yourself hearing words

that you didn’t expect to be spoken,

and in hearing them, may your heart be moved.

May you catch a glimpse of beauty

in a place where you least expected to see it,

and in that glance, may you see the hand of God.

May others see the Light in you

in the quiet and luminous ways that spirit shines,

and may you share that connection as a Holy moment.

May the grace of the unexpected moment

fill you with the blessing of Divine Presence

and bring you continued growth for the journey you travel.

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Blessings: Week 2 of Cultivating Sacred Space

This second week of Lent, the theme that found me in the midst of the lectionary readings was “Blessings.” It is also fitting that with St. Patrick’s Day approaching, this is a week when the lyrical lilt of Irish Blessings can speak to us with a bit of wit and wisdom.

Please feel free to follow along the journey of “Blessings” this week, including several daily practices which integrate some of my favorite blessings written by John O’Donohue.  Just click on the image or link below to redirect to the interactive image.

photo 2 (1)

http://stthomasrichmond.org/article/blessings

Here, on my own blog, I will be focusing my daily writing on the theme of “Blessings” as well.

Here’s a blessing to begin the weekly journey.  Wishing you abundant blessings today, and always…

An Irish Blessing

May the blessing of light be upon you.

Light on the outside,

Light on the inside.

With God’s sunlight shining on you,

may your heart glob with warmth,

like a turf fire

that welcomes friends and strangers alike.

May the Light of the Lord

shine from your eyes

like a candle in the window,

welcoming the weary traveler.

May the blessing of God’s soft rain be on you

falling gently on your head,

refreshing your soul

with the sweetness of little flowers newly blooming.

May the strength of the winds of heaven bless you,

carrying the rain to wash your spirit clean

sparking after in the sunlight.

May the blessing of God’s earth be on you.

And as you walk the roads,

may you always have a kind word

for those you meet.

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Holy Ground 6: Writing

The first full week of Lent is drawing to a close.  I have been “Cultivating Sacred Space” along with my faith community, and I have been writing on the theme of Holy Ground to correspond with the theme.  The past week has also been Spring Break (or as I like to call it, “The week my students don’t have classes.”)  It did give me a break from my usual routine, that I will admit.  I worked at home more frequently, I didn’t have meetings or prep work to do, and I had the flexibility during the day to attend to some important work with my church that needed to get done as well.  All throughout the week, I had carved out and protected Friday as a day to write.

By Thursday, there were so many demands looming on my Friday that I thought I would have to call the whole writing thing off.  I went to choir practice nevertheless.  I got home from choir in a completely different frame of mind, and I wrote an entry on my blog as has become my Lenten practice.  I found some mental stamina returning, and I burned the midnight oil, accomplishing what I needed to do so that I could still keep my own “writing retreat” Friday.  As my head hit the pillow Thursday night for what I knew would only be a few hours of rest, I realized the irony of the week’s theme and my stubborn insistence on carving out a writing day.  Writing is my Holy Ground.

I spent the entire day yesterday writing.  I started with my book project, which is going to be with me for quite some time.  I think of myself as “in training” for that writing marathon  which I hope to engage in this summer.  I push ahead in my organizational structure a little further each time I work on it, but stop when I hit a wall.  I take that as “enough for now” and I pull back a little.  I am being good to myself, because this is the first project of its magnitude in my life.  I recognize that the journey of writing is just as important as the destination.

After a break for lunch, I took up some not-for-public-consumption writing about my spiritual journey.  I write about the journey a lot, even on this blog, but there are some pieces that I am still working through and the words that come through me are both healing, and at times prophetic.  Having the solitary time to reflect, write, reflect more, write more was liberating and fed my soul.  Writing in that context is both therapeutic and growth-oriented.  I wrote more than I thought I would yesterday.  I kept my driven-to-outcomes nature at bay (mostly) reminding myself that the process has its own rewards.  I slept last night, and the images in my dreams told me some very important things about how far I had come, and where my steps are leading.  It was the time I needed, and those words were what needed to emerge.

As I close this week, I know this last reflection also needed to find a voice.

Writing is my Holy Ground.

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Holy Ground 5: Benediction

Most of this day, I did not feel like I was on holy ground.  It wasn’t that it was a particularly bad day.  It was a day that started early, was filled with a lot of duties, contained a few disappointments, sported several highs, and most notably involved a lot of work and not a lot of rest.  In other words, a fairly typical day in my sometimes over-committed world.  I achieved what was on my to-do list, managed to eat a granola bar and some crackers and cheese on the fly between meetings, and made it home for a whole 30 minutes to sit at the dinner table with my family before heading back out to choir practice this evening.

On days like this, I sometimes think, “maybe I’ll just skip choir this week…” but that almost never happens.  The initial impetus for getting me out the door in the evening is a commitment to my singing partners.  We have a small choir, with four altos on a good night.  A missing voice is noticeable, and it affects our rehearsal and our Sunday singing.  This commitment is laudable, and I am trying to pass on this value to my daughter.  Honestly, though, it isn’t really what keeps me coming back.

There is something about singing in community that blesses my spirit.  We are all in one space, making a joyful noise that is even sometimes a beautiful noise.  We have a strong and experienced director, and amazing vocalists in our midst who shine in different ways at different times.  We are old and young and in-between.  We drag ourselves after work, or we rush out leaving the kids tasked with homework and hoping for the best, or we decide that retirement from work doesn’t mean retirement from life so we show up and we sing.  We are all in different places when we arrive, but after a few minutes, we are on the same page amid the music notes, the lyrical melodies, the sharps and the flats (and our own sharps and flats).  We are a community of common melody, often harmonious with the ability to laugh at our (more than occasional) discord.

Sometimes, we don’t sound like we are all on the same page.  Sometimes, one section finishes a song before the others (and maybe even will announce, “we won!”)  We practice hard, and work our way through familiar and challenging tunes.  We hope, eventually, to end all in the same place.  By the time Sunday morning comes around, we generally do.  That place where we end, many times, is even holy.

I rushed into choir tonight, ten minutes late (which for me is “right on time”).  I pulled out my music and started singing.  I couldn’t settle my mind down at first, as my thoughts were swimming with emails I had yet to send, calls I hadn’t yet returned, and several connections that needed to be made before morning.  But, somewhere in the midst of Ave Verum Corpus, I could feel a visceral change in my body posture.  I was relaxing, noticeably.  I settled into a strong singing posture.  My breathing began to deepen, my lungs filled beyond their quick, hurried breaths of the rest of my day.  My own tempo moved from vivace to andante and eventually a non-rushed, easy adagio.  Music had worked into my body, mind, and spirit and created holy ground.

As we ended our rehearsal, we departed by singing the Lutkin benediction as has become our custom.  This is our musical prayer, a collective embrace of our communal spirit that reminds us that we are blessed by each other’s presence, and blessed by Divine Presence.  In choral music, the whole is always greater than the sum of its parts.  I have felt God in that space for as long as I can remember, no matter what my theological beliefs were or what descriptors I put upon the experience.  I could feel that presence in our benediction tonight, as we prayed vocally to be blessed and kept in the knowledge and love of God; to be at peace.  My voice echoed with others, and I remembered our choir friend at whose funeral we sang this benediction last year; I sometimes think I hear his deep bass resonant beyond the voices in the room.  I think of my choir friends and I gathering around at send-offs of people to whom we lovingly said good-bye as they left for lives and ministries in new places.  This sung prayer was our musical gift to them, a sustained prayer of blessing on their journeys.  As I sang tonight, I noticed that I had closed my eyes,  that our director was no longer directing but had simply joined the singing.  I heard one voice raised in collective harmony.  Holy Ground.

A benediction, an invocation of divine blessing.  Tonight, I have been to choir.  I am blessed and I am at peace.  And this is the real reason why I will be back week after week.

Tonight, this benediction is my Holy Ground.

Lutkin Benediction

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Holy Ground 4: Roots

When I think back to the first ground I remember, I picture the yard of my Gramma’s farmhouse. It was often muddy, which was a delight for my toddler feet but likely a huge nuisance for her. My parents and I lived upstairs in that house during the earliest years I can remember. We would walk downstairs and into the “barn room”/mud room where all the boots, jackets, and outer remnants of farm life were stored in tall, wooden closets. The room had a pungent odor, as one can probably imagine. Even though our time living on the farm was relatively short, I have an affinity for that particular sensory experience. Immediately on the other side of that room, separated by an always closed door, was my Gramma’s kitchen. The scents there were familiar, homey, comfort foods in total contrast to the barn smells. Yet, they are linked in my mind, cemented during a time in my life where both were profoundly associated with home.

When I think about the Holy Ground of my earliest memories, though, it isn’t in the house itself. My earliest holy ground was the flower garden outside the barn. Whether it was amid the tall, lanky gladiola growing to be used in church urns, or the unfurling of magical moonflowers at dusk each summer night, I loved that space. My Aunt Joyce would work in the garden until she and the weeds would finally have an all-out battle and she’d call it quits. In the fall, we would dig up bulbs from the glads and hang them in repurposed nylon stocking bags in the cellar to avoid freezing under the winter snow. In their place, we might put in some tulip bulbs and daffodils we had split and separated. The spring bulbs would patiently wait under the snows, pushing their way up even before all the drifts had melted. My favorite were the tiny grape hyacinths that came back year after year; along with snowdrops and crocus, these would be the first sign after the long winter to remind us spring was returning. In the summer, the yearly return of hollyhocks would delight me, making the blossoms into dolls with remnant toothpicks sticking together the buds and the blooms.

What was holy about this ground? It was, and is, rich with history. I knew my Mom played in this yard as a child, and I still picture my cousins and I frolicking around, avoiding chores, making noise and being family together. It smelled of fresh grass, manure, sweet blossoms, and baking hay. It tasted of cow-fresh milk served in big pitchers, and the loganberry drink mix bought in big concentrated jars from the Schwann’s delivery man. It was holy with nature, family, daily struggles, and simple rewards. We all called that place home.

Today, even now, I realize how rare it is to really have a homestead that is such a shared memory for a whole family. Anyone in my maternal clan can say, “The farm” and we are right back in that space together, sharing that Holy Ground of our roots.

I am grateful tonight for that formative Holy Ground: my roots, my family, my memories.

20140312-211756.jpg

In response to: Musical Reflection: The Holy Ground (RUNA) | Sacred Space at St. Thomas

Musical Reflection: The Holy Ground (RUNA)

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Holy Ground 3: Spring

I am writing about Holy ground this week in my Lenten reflection and writing. The joy of my day today was the unexpected appearance of Holy Ground as I strolled with my daughter on a day trip to Williamsburg. It was her “winter break” from school and my “spring break” from classes…and we had one day of overlap where we could road trip together.

I originally planned some work meetings and she planned to lounge around. But, over the weekend, she wondered if we could take a road trip. I realized we were about to let the daily grind get in the way of a rare Mom-Daughter day. So, I reworked my schedule, she started on her homework early, and by lunch-time we were on the road.

This has been a particularly snowy winter for Virginia, but today the sun was shining and temperatures rose into the 70’s. We walked every square foot of Colonial Williamsburg, loving the chance to shed our jackets and feel warmth and sunlight. We walked until our feet ached. We were still breathing in springtime when we walked right by the path that was supposed to lead us back toward home. Trying to cut back to our missed path more quickly, we ducked into some of the gardens that are open for viewing in the colonial city. Ducking from yard to yard we wandered past the gnarled vines and still winter-parched soil…and right into this amazing array of daffodils in full bloom. We may have extended our walk with our missed turn, but we were richly rewarded for the detour.

Sometimes, we find our Holy Ground on the road less travelled, when we seize the moment for what it offers. Grateful for the Holy Ground that found me unexpectedly today amid daffodils, vines, and mom-daughter time.

20140311-205651.jpg

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Holy Ground 2: Labyrinths

Anyone who is following the Lenten “Cultivating Sacred Space” journey with me probably has realized that labyrinths are an important symbol of my holy ground. The labyrinth offers a sacred space for me. Walking the labyrinth is a deep journey of contemplative prayer that has called to me and offered me stillness and connection with Divine Presence across chapters of my spiritual journey. The labyrinth (and its various forms) are as deeply rooted in Christian faith as they are in ancient, pre-Christian spirituality. The confluence of these traditions is especially significant to me, linking our human desire to connect with Divine Presence as central to our very existence.

When I close my eyes and reflect on “Holy Ground” in my life, I see my foot taking a step into the Labyrinth. What is interesting about that image is that I see my foot, that very first step. While I am walking the labyrinth, my thoughts dissipate into the journey. I have moments I recall from specific labyrinth walks, some of which I have talked about before on this blog (Windows of Grace, Walking the Labyrinth, Spiritual and Religious). These are holy times that have held meaning and significance to my journey. I walk labyrinths when I travel, when I retreat, and as a part of my spiritual direction.

The path I walk on each labyrinth journey eventually becomes a cadence of prayer and meditation. But, that very first step I take is pure intention turned into action. With that first step, I offer something up. I place the state of my heart, mind, and spirit into the action of my body and I move forward. My footstep becomes a prayer, a holy connection with God. That step is my Holy Ground.

If you see me this Lenten season, you will see me wearing a labyrinth pendant. This is my symbol of spiritual connection, reminding me that every step I take in my day is a part of the journey of my faith. Each step follows that same intention with which I begin the labyrinth journey: to seek God in all things, to find Christ in each person. To continue a journey in faith, open to where the path leads and the journey emerges. Each day is Sacred Space. Each step is Holy Ground.

20140310-200710.jpg

Posted in Lent 2014 | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment