
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Every creature is a word of God.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Lord, please, for the sake of thy people, hear our prayer!
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
My peace I give to you...
-Meister Eckhart
"When I get the promotion, I'll be a success."
The peace of God is something radically different. It is a peace which the world does not and cannot give. It is a peace which passes our ability to understand. It is a peace that cannot be pursued nor obtained, but a gift to be received and accepted which is most difficult for many of us to understand. We ask ourselves, "What must I DO to find peace?" We don't have to DO anything, we need BE. We need to BE open God and the movement of the Holy Spirit. We need to be open to grace, open to love, open to acceptance, open to the possibilities of God, open to the Word of God, open to the gift of Christ. There is nothing to pursue, nothing to accomplish, nothing to achieve, nothing to acquire, no goal to reach. We must simply BE in God and God in us.
Can we stop in the maddening pursuit of things? Can we rest in the gift of God's peace? Can we trust in God's goodness? Can we believe that true peace, holy peace, lasting peace can be found only in God? Only then will we be at peace.
May the peace of God be with you!!!
Paul+
Saturday, March 12, 2011
What do I want?
What is it that God wants for me that I do not want for myself? -Meister Eckhart
For as long as I can remember, an obsessing question has been “What do I want to do with my life?” I've spent countless hours envisioning and planning my future. I've dreamed and formulated plans. I've dreamed again and re-formulated the plans. I've tried to look into the crystal ball to see what I was to do and who I was to be. I envisioned myself, at some point in time, satisfied and content for having successfully accomplished my goals and having reached my glorious destination.
As Christians, however, we are called to make a radical paradigm shift. Our EGO, the great Trinity of Me, Myself, and I is to be replaced by GOD, the true Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, our Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. As Christians we are called to get our egoistic selves out of the way and to change from an Ego-centric to Christo-centric way of being. The obsessing question then changes from “What do I want?” to “What does God want?”
Even more challenging is the question “What does God want for me that I don’t want for myself?” With this new world view, we ask ourselves very different questions. What does God want me to change that I don’t want to change. What does God want me to be that I don’t want to be? What does God want me to do that I don't want to do?
We fear these questions because we often think that we know what’s best for our lives. If God wants what I want that's great, but what happens when I don't want what God wants? We resist the truth that God's plan for our lives is better than our plan. In fact, it's far better than what we could ever imagine. God only desires what's best for us. God will only lead us in ways that will draw us closer to the fullness of who God created us to be. God's plan is good and perfect for those who will open themselves to the working of God in their lives, and open themselves to the possibilities and opportunities that God presents.
I've spent far too much time and energy trying to answer the wrong question. Instead of "What I want for my life?" the better question is, "What does God want for my life." For the plans and dreams of God for me and my life are beyond anything I could ever imagine...even if it's something I thought I never wanted.
Holy and Loving God replace my trinity with your Holy Trinity, and my desires with your desires, and my longings with your longings, but when they are not give me the wisdom and courage to follow your ways not mine. Amen.
Lent: A time for healthy choices
I believe that Lent is a misunderstood season. For some this is a time to put on sack cloth and ashes and to suffer for Jesus. Let's really show God our love by seeing what we can give up or what we can take on, all to prove ourselves worthy, a mad test of endurance and survival until Easter. Lent is NOT the ultimate test in fasting and self-denial, but I believe we are called to something radically different.
Lent is not spiritual "boot camp" for the truly faithful. It is not a time to be endured, but rather a time to intentionally model healthy Christian living. It is an annual "check-up" in which we take our spiritual pulse and check our vital signs. It is a time for healthy choices for mind, body and spirit. It is not a season solely for fasting, but for feasting, as well. We fast from those things which do not work for our good and we feast on those things which bring us closer to a holy life.
As we live more fully into this season, I invite you to make healthy choices for your mind, body and spirit. Healthy choices which include both fasting and feasting. Fast from judging others; Feast on Christ dwelling in them.
Fast from fear of illness; Feast on the healing power of God.
Fast from the words that pollute; Feast on speech that purifies.
Fast from discontent; Feast on gratitude.
Fast from anger; Feast on patience.
Fast from pessimism; Feast on optimism.
Fast from bitterness; Feast on forgiveness.
Fast from self-concern; Feast on compassion.
Fast from gossip; Feast on purposeful silence.
Fast from problems that overwhelm; Feast on prayers that sustain.
Fast from worry; Feast in faith.
-"Lenten Fast" by William Arthur Ward
Here's to a healthy life in Christ,
Paul+
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
The truth shall set us free!
A human being has so many skins inside, covering the depths of the heart. We know so many things, but we don't know ourselves! Why, thirty or forty skins or hides, as thick and hard as an ox's or bear's, cover the soul. Go into your own ground and learn to know yourself there.
- Meister Eckhart
As we begin this holy season of Lent, we are invited to embark on a sacred pilgrimage. We are invited to journey into the depths of our soul. A journey many of us may prefer not to take. Perhaps it's because we are afraid of what we may discover. A part of ourselves that we would rather not admit exists. Knowing the truth of one’s self calls for naked openness and vulnerability that we don’t often allow ourselves to experience.
Truth can be a bitter pill to swallow, but as the scripture says, "Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." (John 8:32) For far more powerful than the truth of our sins and shortcomings is the truth of God’s abundant love. We need not fear nor dread this journey. It is a journey to freedom. We are held captive by deceptions of our own creation and we are freed by Christ’s loving embrace.
So, as we begin this time, let us hear the call, and accept the invitation to embark on this most holy journey. Let us remember that we do not go on this journey alone. We are invited by God, accompanied by Christ and comforted by the Holy Spirit. And if we dare journey into the depths of our soul, there I believe we will find truth and this truth does not bring condemnation nor captivity, but rather forgiveness and freedom. Freedom to be more truly the people God created us to be.
Let us go into our own ground and learn to know ourselves and there I pray we meet the Holy One and the truth shall set us free. Amen.
Friday, March 4, 2011
La Virgen de Guadalupe
This past Sunday, I had a most remarkable experience. I visited the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in LaCrosse, Wisconsin. A caravan made the trip from Minneapolis to La Crosse. Driving a van packed with new latino friends, we made our way to the shrine. It was the Sunday for the monthly Spanish service.
With great eagerness and expectation, latino pilgrims made their way up the hill to the shrine. Our friends were the musicians for the service, an extended family that formed a mariachi group. They had spent hours of practice and preparation, for this was not just another occasion to perform, this was a chance to play for the La Virgen de Guadalupe and they prayed that their offering would be pleasing to God.
Immediately, as the first note of broke through the reverent silence, my eyes began to burn with tears. For I had heard some of their stories. Stories of suffering and hardship. Stories of fear and oppression. Stories of hope and joy. Stories of Christ and redemption.
After the mass had ended they were allowed to play for thirty minutes until the next service was to begin. The group then stood before the altar looking only at the cross and painting of Mary. They were not "performing", they were offering songs of thanksgiving and celebration. They were offering prayers for all those who suffer from the ravages of poverty and oppression. They were lifting up countless millions of people who long for a better life for their children. They held in their hearts all those who find themselves as aliens in a foreign land and dream of home.
When they had finished, I commented on the visibly humble and faithful spirit with which they sang. I said, "They were singing as if they believed that La Virgen de Guadalupe was really there." The leader of the mariachis, Chalio, when hearing this had a curious look on his face and simply said, "She was there."
We say, "We are in the presence of God." We say, "Come Holy Spirit and fill this place." We say, "Christ is here with us." We say, "These are the gifts of God for the people of God. The holy food and drink of new and unending life in him." But do we really believe it, or are these simply "sayings" and things we hope to be true?
May we come before the presence of the Living God with the same eager expectation. May we sing and pray with the same faith and humility. May we long to offer our lives as gifts that are pleasing to God. May we experience the same sense of presence and spirit when we come before the altar of our Lord - for he is there!
Gracias a Dios ahora y para siempre!
In Christ,
Paul+