Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Lord's Prayer


I recently experienced a Christian meditation group. The word or mantra suggested was "maranatha" which in Aramaic means "Come Lord Jesus" I am told. I did a little research on the internet, looking for maybe a personal word or phrase I might use. I came across The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. I do not know Aramaic so I cannot vouch for it's authenticity. But I am thinking this might be closer its English cousin.
It is beautiful and so very rich

Abwoon d'bwashmaya
O Birther! Father-Mother of the Cosmos/ you create all that moves in light.
Nethqadash shmakh
Focus your light within us--make it useful: as the rays of a beacon show the way.
Teytey malkuthakh
Create your reign of unity now--through our firey hearts and willing hands.
Nehwey sebyanach aykanna d'bwashmaya aph b'arha.
Your one desire then acts with ours, as in all light, so in all forms.
Habwlan lachma d'sunqanan yaomana.
Grant what we need each day in bread and insight: subsistence for the call of growing life.
Washboqlan khaubayn (wakhtahayn)
aykana daph khnan shbwoqan l'khayyabayn.
Loose the cords of mistakes binding us, as we release the strands we hold of others' guilt.
Wela tahlan l'nesyuna
Don't let us enter forgetfulness
Ela patzan min bisha.
But free us from unripeness
Metol dilakhie malkutha wahayla wateshbukhta l'ahlam almin.
From you is born all ruling will, the power and the life to do, the song that beautifies all, from age to age it renews.
Ameyn.
Truly--power to these statements--may they be the source from which all my actions grow.
Sealed in trust & faith. Amen.

by Neil Douglas-Klotz in Prayers of the Cosmos

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Right and Right


Personal theology is a funny thing. My belief system is in a constant upheaval. Which is a good thing. Because it means that I will not allow it to congeal or harden. To form into something, which I must break to change.

World religions. A lot of talk about them all leading to the same God. But do they?
It doesn't feel right, but neither do the alternatives. One authentic God and lots of pseudo-Gods. Or one holy God and lots of evil ones. Or one right God and lots of wrong ones. Is my God right because the culture I grew up in said so? Is it wrong because the culture you grew up in says it is?

Am I the keeper of the flame or a witness to it? Am I the purveyor of the truth or it's distributor? Does my faith have a club with dues or codes or initiation. And if you are not in, you are out?

Does there have to be a right and a wrong? What if we are both right?

Peace


Peace I leave with you, My peace I give unto you: not as the world gives, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. John 14:27



Jesus was leaving.

But though He would be gone in person, He was leaving something behind. Something to bridge the gap between when He would leave and when He would return from the tomb. His peace. How precioius! How necessary. When I think of all they would experience. The confrontation in the garden. The trial and subsequent denial. Judas realizing what he had done. The hiding, the fear, the guilt, the remorse, the disillusionment. Then the beatings their Lord suffered and then the crucifixion! Not only did their Master die on that cross, but with Him all the dreams and expectations. I can only imagine how selfish they felt, thinking about themselves when their Lord was dying, but it was difficult not to. Mortal and spiritual survival was at a premium. How wise Jesus was. He had to make them realize that the peace He gave was not tangible, provable. In the darkest times of our lives, there is no proof sometimes that He is there. There is no evidence of His being, but He is there. Working, planning, conforming, and transforming to bring about His will amidst the mess we create. We must not confuse physical comforts and security with the peace Christ offers. Two tall orders follow to the frightened few. And in each, He is stating we are the gatekeepers. We have the strength and ability to keep anxiety and fear from infiltrating and poisoning our lives. But how? By remembering His words. His precious, powerful, energizing words.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Illegal Contraband


It has been so interesting coming from my traditional-charismatic-fundamental-evangelical life to where I am today. I don't want to put a name on where I am now, because I am through with labels. I will tell you it is a place of freedom, where the works and writings of sages of all religions are no longer taboo. Literally, because I say so.

The funny thing is that I am finding that what I had been taught and warned about, is not happening. I am reading from the Buddhist, Hindu, Moslem, Jewish, and Native American traditions. And lo and behold, I have not been transformed into a follower of any of them yet. The warnings of the evil they contained is not true. Are my fundamental beliefs that strong or are the stories of contamination somewhat embellished? I am not sure.

What I have found is a person or people who are looking for the same thing I am. A relationship with God. They may call Him a Her or The Truth or The Consciousness. But whatever the name or the angle of trajectory, they are trying to find their way just like me. And in each and every thing there are jewels I glean. I do not pick up everything I see, just as I do not retain everything I have been exposed to in my Christian faith. But, oh, the things I will experience and the places I will see!

The journey is made all the sweeter by finding fellow travelers on the highways and byways of this life.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Hope Really Floats


Hope is a flighty word. It is pie in the sky or wish upon a star or genie in a lamp. But it really isn't - if your hope is in Something.

But we don't consider that Hope. Hope is what we place in the stock market, or in a spouse, or in a job, or in our children. All notoriously unreliable. So why do I do it? Because these things give me identity, they give me joy, they give me security. They also disappoint me, hurt me, kick me out, and desert me. So is my hope misplaced or not hope at all. I think I will rename those. They are wishes like when you blow out candles on your cake. Gone with the smoke that whispers from the wick.

Hope is something I place. In hands sure enough to cup me in them. Arms strong enough to lift me up. And love that will never let me fall. Because it never fails. Hope assured.....

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Beggars



"Could it be that beggars know how to open their hands trusting that the crumbs of grace will fall?"


Sue Monk Kidd in When the Heart Waits

Emptying our hands because we cannot receive unless they are. How willing are we to do that? Are they really empty and we just can't see it. That we do not hold them out because we think we own what we imagine is inside it. Maybe I have to get to a point that I could empty them, before I realize they contain nothing but the next thing He will place there.....Hmmmmm

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Peace Squared


My brother's clothes caught on fire when I was 8 and he was 6. He was burned very badly, but survived. I guess the trauma of that day made me very fearful of fire. In the day, open flames were a part of life. There were space heaters and wall furnaces. Fireplace were more open than not. So fire was not something you could totally get away from. Late at night, was the worst. I would stay awake worrying about another fire. Sometimes crying myself to sleep.

I remember my mom coming into my room and holding me. Just her presence was enough. It stayed my fears and allowed me to fall asleep. When Jesus came to the upper room to see the disciples, he said, "Peace be to you". I am thinking that was more a greeting they were used to. But I can only imagine the tangible peace of his very presence in that room. I am here, they did not kill me, I am still alive. Don't worry.

After he showed them his hands and side, he said again, "Peace be to you" Jesus was not one to repeat himself without reason. The men in that room had betrayed him. In the garden when they could not stay awake. Peter in the courtyard, denying he knew him. The others, who were not even there to do that. The second peace was for that part of them. To take away the guilt of what they did not do - their sins of ommission.

Peace squared - way cool.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

The Trial



Guilty

His death, our sin

Convicted of murder

The Judge pronounces the sentence

Life



jo

Old Clothes


I just finished the course I am taking,"Living the Questions". The teachers of the course are my dear friends and the direction of this series was to look at what we believe and more or less question. I have thought of myself over the last year as a progressive, and these friends were the same.

However in the course of lectures, I was uneasy. There were comments about "those folks" that believe in rapture, once saved always saved, literal heaven and hell, creation. They were snidely made and we even laughed at their expense. But it was like being in a crowd of people, picking on a kid with thick glasses and acne and you know you are just one set of contacts and a dermatology appointment from that guy. You are not him anymore, but you don't want him picked on. You have literally been in his shoes.

Several folks in the class mentioned these same feelings to me, afterwards, and I started to think about it. I don't want to go back to the way I believed before, but I don't want to be classified with the other side. A new, more progressive group. I finally realized, I don't want to be on a side. I want to be me.

Kind of like wearing a suit of clothes and they no longer fit. So you change into something more comfortable. And then they grow too short, so you strip and put on another set. This is right. For awhile. And then you change again. The process continues again and again. And then one day, you notice a picture of someone wearing the stupidest set of clothes you have ever seen and you realize you are looking at an old picture of yourself. And you wonder how in the world you could have ever thought that was fashionable or right. And then suddenly, you look down and realize in a few years you will be looking at a picture of yourself with the clothes you are wearing and you will think the same thing.

I don't want to wear another set of beliefs. I don't want to make fun at the other guy - the old me. I don't want to be identified with any sect, tribe, or belief system. I am slowly seeing that I am a free thinker and that God really likes that in me. I can wear or not wear whatever I want,it doesn't have to own me. I realize in my heart of hearts, I really want to be naked so He can clothe me. With Himself. So that when I look in the mirror, all I see is Him in me.

Ahhhhhhh......

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Mary M.

Today I am thinking about Mary Magdalene. Whenever I have pondered the cross, I have thought Of Mary of Jesus. Being a mother, I cannot imagine what it would be like to sit at the cross, seeing your child suffer and die. As mothers, we can filter out all the pain and anguish they may cause in our lives and love them in spite of it. How very painful to see one so pure and spotless, the flesh of your flesh, dying so inhumanely and so unfairly. It boggles my mind and I can't go there today.

But I can go to Mary M., commonly called Mary Magdalene. Just as Jesus was called a Nazrene because he hailed from the town of Nazreth, Mary received her surname from the town she originated, Magdala. I guess it would be like calling one person Mary Blue for her eyes or Mary Blonde for her hair. Something to differentiate between the two. In the gospel of Luke, Jesus exorcised seven demons from her. Prior to that she was said to be a notorious sinner. I heard a preacher call her a disciple of Christ, and for the first time I realized that there were more disciples than the twelve. Joanna, Salome, and the Mother of Jesus were the ones to go to the tomb that Sunday morning after the Sabbath to care for Jesus' body.

The scripture in John tells of the visit of Mary M. to the tomb. After the disciples come and then leave, discovering the tomb empty, Mary is left in the garden. She is asked by, who she sees as the gardener, why she is crying and who is she looking for. She explains she is looking for her Lord. He says one word, "Mary" and she knows it is him. We discussed this in my class this past Easter Sunday. Why did she not realize it was him and why did she suddenly recognize him.

There is something about your name. I have heard more than one NDE story (near death experience) describing the person who is dying going toward the light and he/she hears the voice of a loved one that has passed before them. They say the person's name, many times coupled with words like, "It is not your time yet". They recognize the voice, maybe in the way the person said their name.

Mary perhaps had heard it as he called forth the demons from her ravaged body. As he showed her mercy where none had before. As he thanked her for her support of her ministry. As he might have acknowledged her from the cross. She knew his voice when he called her name.

Oh, to hear him say my name. I can almost hardly wait.