Sunday, October 9, 2011

Quote from Fr Symeon Burhold

No images of Fr Symeon
Burhold are available.
His article on "Divine
Energy" can be found
in "The Inner Journey:
Views from the
Christian Tradition".
The world is radiant with God’s presence, with divine energy. He is dynamically present in all things as their creator and all things participate in the divine energy to the extent that he acts upon them and they are patient to his touch. In Christian tradition, it is the human person who is most capable of this participation.  We are believed to be made in the image and likeness of God and, on the basis of the ancient axiom that knowledge and vision occur with likeness, the Church has affirmed that man can behold God with the eye of his soul, or heart.  So our heart's gaze can be fixed upon God.  To sin is literally to fall short of this vision of God and to deal with things merely as objects of our own gratification and convenience.  - Fr Symeon Burhold, "Divine Energy" 


TALK ABOUT IT: Sin as falling short of our capacity to behold God
DO IT (INNER PRACTICE): Beholding God
DO IT (OUTER PRACTICE): Dealing with everything differently





Sunday, October 2, 2011

Quote from Rabbi Rami Shapiro


Yom Kippur This Week 
  
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement (At-One-ment, October 7th at sundown) is the culmination of all this effort [of asking forgiveness from family and friends, and of honoring all creation as a manifestation of God]. We have made peace with our neighbor, peace with nature, and now it is time to make peace with God.  

For me, making peace with God is about remembering that God isn’t about salvation or damnation, reward or punishment. God is about reality, for God is reality. I make peace with God by realizing that life is wild, unpredictable, often horrifying, and yet always hopeful. I remind myself to not expect things to be other than they are, and to be thankful for all that they are. With this act of radical acceptance comes radical forgiveness, and, for me, this is what Yom Kippur is all about.  - Rabbi Rami Shapiro “Beyond Religion”, Jewish Fall holy Days, Tuesday, September 20 (blog address http://rabbirami.blogspot.com/)


TALK ABOUT IT: Yom Kippur ~ Making Peace with God 
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Episcopal Church of Reconciliation Questions of Faith
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Discuss :: Choose “Yom Kippur ~ Making Peace with God” to begin or join a discussion. 
DO IT: INNER PRACTICE: Radical Acceptance 
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Practicing Spirituality with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Share :: Choose “Radical Acceptance” to share your experience as you practice accepting God and life as it is.  
DO IT: OUTER PRACTICE: Radical Forgiveness 
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Faith in Action with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page. 
  3. Share :: Choose “Radical Forgiveness” to share your experience in practicing seeking and extending forgiveness. 

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Quote from Bishop Kallistos Ware


11-09-25
In the Greek Christian tradition, the person is often described as being at the center of creation, at the crossroads.  The human person is seen as a microcosm reflecting the whole creation, both material and spiritual.  In this way, the human person is the bond of creation, the bridge - the marriage song of creation.  The human person is called to be the mediator. We are called to unite.  We are called to take material things and make them spiritual.  Though they remain material, we raise them to a higher level.  And because each of us in made in the Image of God, it is the task of each of us to be the priest of creation, to take the creation and to offer it back to God. - Bishop Kallistos Ware, “Image and Likeness” 



TALK ABOUT IT: The Human Vocation
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Episcopal Church of Reconciliation Questions of Faith
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Discuss :: Choose “The Human Vocation” to begin or join a discussion. 
DO IT (INNER WORK): Re-imagining Yourself
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Practicing Spirituality with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Share :: Choose “Re-imagining Yourself” to share your experience as you practice identifying yourself as a mediator of the material and the spiritual, as a priest of creation offering it back to God. 
DO IT (OUTER WORK): Offering Creation
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Faith in Action with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page. 
  3. Share :: Choose “Offering Creation” to share your experience in actually exercising your role as a mediator of the material and the spiritual, as a priest of creation offering it back to God.  

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Quote from Philip Newell


Christ is the memory of what we have forgotten.  He remembers the dance of the universe and the harmony that is deep within all things.  He is the memory also of who we are.  He shows us not a foreign truth but a truth that is hidden in the depths of the human soul.  He comes to wake us up, to call us back to ourselves and to the relationship that is deep within all things. The emphasis is not on becoming something other than ourselves but on becoming truly ourselves.  Christ discloses to us the sacred root of our being and of all being. ~ Philip Newell, “Christ of the Celts”




TALK ABOUT IT: What is Spiritual Amnesia?
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Episcopal Church of Reconciliation Questions of Faith
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Discuss :: Choose “What is Spiritual Amnesia?” to begin or join a discussion. 
DO IT (INNER WORK): Bearing the Sacred
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Practicing Spirituality with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Share :: Choose “Bearing the Sacred” to share your experience with the practice of dying to self.
DO IT (OUTER WORK): Serving the Sacred
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Faith in Action with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page. 
  3. Share :: Choose “Serving the Sacred” to share your experience with growing in wisdom. 

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Quote from Richard Rohr


The ability to stand back and calmly observe our inner dramas, without rushing to judgment, is foundational for spiritual seeing.  It is the primary form of “dying to the self” that Jesus lived personally and the Buddha taught experientially.  The growing consensus is that, whatever you call it, such calm, egoless seeing is invariably characteristic of people at the highest levels of doing and loving in all cultures and religions.  They are the ones we call sages or wise women or holy men.  They see like the mystics see. 
Now do not let the word “mystic” scare you.  It simply means one who has moved from mere belief systems or belonging systems to actual inner experience.  All spiritual traditions agree that such a movement is possible, desirable, and available to everyone.  In fact, Jesus seems to say that this is the whole point!  (See, for example, John 10:19-38.) ~  From The Naked Now: Learning to See as the Mystics See, pp.30, 32-33

TALK ABOUT IT: What is mysticism? 
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Episcopal Church of Reconciliation Questions of Faith
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Discuss :: Choose “What Is Mysticism?” to begin or join a discussion. 
DO IT (INNER WORK): Dying to self
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Practicing Spirituality with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page.
  3. Share :: Choose “Dying to Self” to share your experience with the practice of dying to self.
DO IT (OUTER WORK): Becoming sages
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Faith in Action with Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this page. 
  3. Share :: Choose “Becoming Sages” to share your experience with growing in wisdom. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Quote from C.S. Lewis

In the same way, the Church exists for nothing else but to draw men into Christ, to make them little Christs.  If they are not doing that, all the cathedrals, clergy, missions, sermons, even the Bible itself, are simply a waste of time.  God became Man for no other purpose.  It is even doubtful, you know, whether the whole universe was created for any other purpose.  ~ From "Mere Christianity"



TALK ABOUT IT: Human destiny 
  1. Go to Facebook Page: Episcopal Church of Reconciliation Questions of Faith
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this quote. 
  3. Comment :: Use the Comment tab to comment on this quote.
  4. Discuss :: Use the Discussion tab to start a discussion on this quote about human destiny.
DO IT (INNER WORK): Mistaken Identity 
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Practicing Spirituality With the Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this quote.
  3. Comment :: Use the Comment tab to comment on this quote.  
  4. Discuss :: Use the Discussion tab to share your inner work on identifying with your Christ Self rather than with your ego self.
DO IT (OUTER WORK):  Being Christ to Others
  1. Go to Facebook Page :: Faith in Action With Church of Reconciliation
  2. Like :: Use the Like tab to like this quote. 
  3. Comment :: Use the Comment tab to comment on this quote.
  4. Discuss :: Use the Discussion tab to share a story about your attempts to be the eyes, feet, and hands of Christ to others.  


Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Expect Miracles

FROM THE SERMON FOR JULY 10, 2011
"The Parable of the Sower" Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23

What I hear that goes back to the Jesus of history is a parable, which he told to communicate his experience, his vision, his passion for one thing - the one thing he was always trying to share - the Kingdom (the Empire, the Domain, the Reign, the Reality, the Presence, the Dream) of God.

I hear, "The Kingdom of God is like this..."

"Like a sower sowing seeds indiscriminately.  So much so that they are nearly all wasted on the shallow path, on rocky soil, in the thorns.  And yet somehow the most amazing, unexpected thing happens.  Somehow, some of the seeds find good soil and the harvest is even more extravagant than the sower himself."

In the time of Jesus, a seven fold crop was a good year. A ten fold crop was truly abundant.  But this harvest is thirty fold, enough to feed a village for a year.  And sixty fold, double that.  And one hundred fold.  That's retirement!  If you had a hundred fold crop, you'd never have to farm again - ever!

How could such a thing ever happen?!  Well, the Kingdom of God is like that.  Who could guess?  Who could even imagine such a thing as the Kingdom of God?

How could such a thing ever happen?  It's a miracle.

In the darkest times, in the ordinary times, in the mundane, in the least expected moments, the Kingdom of God springs up all around us, and within us.  That non-geographical place where heaven and earth, divine and human, come together and become one.

"The Kingdom of God is at hand."  In fact it is "within you," says Jesus.  How could such a thing ever happen?  It's a miracle.

That's what I hear that goes back to the original context, to the Jesus of history himself.

But even more important is what we hear Jesus saying to us here and now.   What do you get out of this parable?  How is Jesus using this story to touch you, to speak to you, to transform your life?

I can tell you what I hear, and encourage you to share what you hear.

What I hear is, "Expect miracles!" And as I hear that, I realize I'm thinking about this church.  "Expect miracles."

I'm thinking about how isolated and cut off we had become from our diocese, from our community, and even from our own fellow Episcopal churches....  But what I hear is "Expect miracles!"  In the darkest times, in the most ordinary times, in the mundane, in the least expected moments and ways, expect miracles.

So then I think of the priest who I had a breakfast meeting with recently who said, "Frankly, I'm surprised.  I didn't think this church was going to make it, but you guys had the highest percent of your congregation that supported Episcopal night at the baseball game this year.  I'm impressed!"

And I think of a woman in California who is receiving a prayer shawl from this church from a person in this community who's not even a member of this church but who received the healing gift of a prayer shawl himself and is passing on the gift of a prayer shawl to his sister.

I think of a boy's baseball team that's in Houston, Texas, today at their world series playoffs, whose coach's wife texted me from Houston yesterday, "We're doing great. Thank you for your prayers!"  And I think of the picnic we're planning in the park on the 23rd to celebrate the hard work of "our boys" and to get to know their families.

I think of all the members of this church who showed up yesterday at Cliff Maus Village working shoulder to shoulder with Episcopalians from across Corpus Christi, and interacting with some of the residents with whom we hope to develop relationships in the future.  When's the last time you can remember our church getting involved like that with other churches in making God's dream for this world come true?

I think of the plans for the blessing of backpacks coming up on August 20, which we're hosting for the neighborhood so that we can begin to establish ourselves as a caring presence in the community.  And I think of the father of one of the baseball boys in the park whose eyes lit up when he heard that we were going to collect backpacks for some of the kids at Cliff Maus Village and include them in the "blessing of the backpacks", and who said, "Oh I want to donate some backpacks for that!"

I think of the beach cleanup we have scheduled for August 27th to show our care and appreciation of God's world, and how that's expanded to eight churches because we have also initiated a memorial event with these eight other churches (including Muslim and Jewish congregations) for the tenth anniversary of 9/11.

And I think of the men who stood in line for a pair of clean socks the last time John McDermont and his wife went out by themselves to distribute clothes to the homeless, and they ran out.  "I'm so sorry", John said, "but next month I'll be back with my church, and we'll have ten times as much!"  And that's where many of our members are right now - distributing clothes to the homeless.

"Expect miracles!" How else do you explain what's going on with this church?  Still struggling to pay our own light bill, and yet the Kingdom of God is springing up all around us, and within us.  The Dream of God is coming true for us, and through us...  "The Kingdom of God is like this."  "Expect miracles!"

That's what I hear.  Can you hear that?  Do you hear anything else?  Anything different?  Anything more?  What else do you think Jesus might be trying to say to you?  Keep listening, and keep sharing.  The more we listen together, the better we hear.