Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas Greetings

Let Christ be born in you!
Let hope be born, Let love be born.
Let newness of heart be born in you!
Let gentleness be born, Let truth be born.
Let concern for the poor be born in you!
Let generosity be born, Let compassion be born.
Let close communion with God be born in you!
Let prayer be born, Let action be born.
Let the faith to take up your cross and follow be born in you!
And let it lead you in the ways of our Lord,
For the sake of our Lord.
Now and always. Amen.

- Alive Now, Nov.-Dec. 2003

Friday, December 23, 2011

Advent "waiting"

In many ways, Advent is a “not yet” season. Mary and Joseph have not yet traveled to Bethlehem, the infant Jesus has not yet been born, the angels have not yet appeared to the shepherds, and the star has not yet come to rest over the manger. Still, with all these “not yets” embedded in the Advent story, we spend these days and weeks living in faith that God will provide what has been promised—a long-awaited Messiah, a living hope. …

Consider this concept of “not yet” and carry it in imagination to the city, town, or village in which you live. Where is there “not yet” enough for some children to eat, a place for the homeless to live, some afternoon company for a lonely person to receive? Where is there “not yet” leeded leadership in your faith community or needed volunteers in your local community? How might your faith lead you to bring hope to one “not yet” circumstance so that you share in God’s restoring Advent love?

-Pamela C. Hawkins, Behold!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Winter Arrives

Blessing for the Longest Night

All throughout these months as the shadows have lengthened,
this blessing has been gathering itself, making ready, preparing for
this night.

It has practiced walking in the dark, traveling with its eyes closed, feeling its way
by memory by touch by the pull of the moon even as it wanes.

So believe me when I tell you this blessing will reach you even if you
have not light enough to read it; it will find you even though you cannotsee it coming.

You will know the moment of its arriving by your release of the breath you have held
so long; a loosening of the clenching in your hands, of the clutch around your heart;
a thinning of the darkness that had drawn itself around you.

This blessing does not mean to take the night away but it knows its hidden roads,
knows the resting spots along the path, knows what it means to travel
in the company of a friend.

So when this blessing comes, take its hand. Get up.
Set out on the road you cannot see.

This is the night when you can trust that any direction you go,
you will be walking toward the dawn.

-Jan Richardson, theadventdoo.com

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Christmas Thoughts

This year needs Advent;
Needs a keeping space of silence
and of darkness nearing down,
Someplace where all that can be still is stilled
And everything but hope and fear are gone,
Where there is less of me and more of grace.
There in the waiting moments you have willed
Lies healing for an often-wounded soul,
The deep recovery of who I am
Where every whispered longing to be whole I ever breathed is finally fulfilled.
-Jennifer Woodruff
Alive Now, Nov./Dec. 2000

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Christmas Thoughts

Holy Anticipation,
that breathtaking space in-between
what has been, what is, what is-to-come.
Where winter dreams reveal secret longings
and winged angels announce the coming of Love.

You draw us to the edge of Advent possibility
like the song of angels drawing shepherds—
eyes wide and breath held—
waiting, watching.

Come, settle into our living for awhile
and do not let us settle for too little.
Amen.

-Pamela C. Hawkins
Simply Wait

Monday, December 12, 2011

Christmas Thoughts

Loving God, help me be the face of joy
to someone who might be struggling today.
If I am facing struggles of my own,
gently guide my thoughts toward gratitude,
that I may rejoice always in you. Amen.

- Beth A. Richardson
The Uncluttered Heart

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Christmas Thoughts

God calls us to come home for Christmas. God calls us to come back from all those places where we have settled for less than the fullness of life promised to us in Christ.

God calls us back from all the ambitions and possessions we have pursued, thinking they would satisfy us.

God calls us to let go of any bitterness and resistance to forgive that block the light of love from warming us.

Preparing for Christmas means looking deep within ourselves and asking if our hearts are truly at home in the lives we are living.

God calls us to come home and to rest, to be embraced by one who loves us as we are. God offers us a place where we are fully known and also fully accepted.

-Mary Lou Redding
While We Wait

Monday, December 5, 2011

Advent Days

God of comfort, wrap me securely in your nurturing arms.

Let me be your voice, your heart,

your loving touch to someone who needs a word of grace,

a voice of hope, a loving hug

during these sometimes difficult Advent days. Amen.

-Beth Richardson, The Uncluttered Heart beth@betharichardson.com

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Thanks for Homes

As we contemplate all that we have to be thankful for"

A soldiers young daughter (her father in the process of being transferred and moved to a distant post) sits on the floor in an airport departure lounge, among her family's meager and ragtag belongings. Sleepy, the girl leans against the packs and lays her head on a duffel bag.

A well-dressed woman walking the concourse, stops when she sees the scene, and pats the little girl on the head. "Poor child," the woman says. "You haven't got a home."

The child looks up in surprise. "But we do have a home ma'am," she answers. "We just don't have a house to put it in." In her wisdom, the little girl knew that home is not what we own, but who we are.

It means a gradual process of coming home to where we belong and listening there to the voice, which desires our attention. Home is the place where that first love dwells and speaks gently to us. (Henri Nouwen)

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Looking for Answers

What kind of life does my heart want?
I find no easy answers to that question,
but I know the answer means
giving up the fantasy of always moving forward
and allowing instead for seasons of dormancy.
And it is always time to listen.
Perhaps the heart’s single greatest desire
is to listen attentively to the voice of God
speaking through scripture, nature, daily events,
and the kind of reflection that leads to expanding self-knowledge. …
My heart wants the kind of life that leaves room for God.

- Elizabeth J. Canham
Heart Whispers

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Today's Gift

This day is a gift from God,
and I open it with prayer and gratitude,
asking that I might use it wisely,
asking that there might be time and opportunity
to serve by sharing what I’ve been given.

- Roberta Porter
Alive Now, July/August 2011

Sunday, October 30, 2011

If we come to Christ
hungry, thirsty,
starving for the friendship of the divine,
we shall be filled
in God’s sacred silence.
- Linda Douty
Rhythm & Fire: Experiencing the Holy in Community and Solitude

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Thought for Today

No one longs for what he or she already has, and yet the accumulated insight of those wise about the spiritual life suggests that the reason so many of us cannot see the red X that marks the spot is because we are standing on it… All we lack is the willingness to imagine that we already have everything we need. The only thing missing is our consent to be where we are.
-Barbara Brown Taylor
An Altar in the World

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Thought for today

Each morning, God's grace awakens us,
each evening, God's peace cradles us.
Compassion is our constant companion,
as we go through work, school, the day.
In every moment, God is present with us;
God whispers words which can change our lives.
Justice is our faithful teacher,
pointing to where we can carry out fairness.
When we find ourselves groping in the shadows,
God's light will provide a way home.
We turn the corner, and hope is waiting for us;
we return home, and find a feast prepared.
-Thom Shuman

Monday, October 3, 2011

Thought for the Day

Many demands upon our time and many opportunities waiting to be explored often fill our lives too full with activities and distractions. When this happens it is not surprising that we grow anxious and lose our sense of peace and tranquility.

Today remember that God and God alone is able to care for all that exists; we can trust our smallest and largest concern to the wisdom and love of God. Peace, hope, calm, and joy are the fruits of placing our confidence in God. May these gifts be yours in abundance.

- Rueben P. Job
A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Thought for the Day

Do not fear what may happen tomorrow.

The same loving God who cares for you today

will care for you tomorrow and everyday;

God will either shield you from suffering or

will give you unfailing strength to bear it.

Be at peace then, and put aside

all anxious thoughts and imaginings.

- - - St. Francis de Sales

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Mother Teresa of Calcutta was once asked
how she could continue to work in situations
of irrevocable hunger and suffering.
"God calls us to be faithful," she said, "not successful."

- - from Gerald G. May, M.D. in Care of Mind, Care of Spirit, p.124.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Prayer for Today

In sacred times of word, wonder, and awe,
in ordinary days of work and play:
in every moment, God is with us.
Whether we are stuck in doubt's mud,
or standing on faith's shoreline:
in every place, God is with us.
In those who teach us
and those who trouble us;
in those who surprise us,
and those who forgive us:
in every person, God is with us.
-Thom Schuman

Thursday, September 1, 2011

FOOD for THOUGHT

"There is an almost universal quest for easy answers and half-baked solutions. Nothing pains some people more than having to think"

- Martin Luther King Jr.


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

I expect to pass through life but once.
If therefore, there be any kindness I can show,
or any good thing I can do to any fellow being,
let me do it now, and not defer or neglect it,
as I shall not pass this way again.

- - - William Penn

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Creative and Divine Surprise

Life overwhelms us at times. We find it challenging to maneuver through the chaos the world imposes so that we might see the order God intends for our lives. Yet God’s intention is wholeness and peace. Peace is not the absence of chaos but the ability to persevere and thrive in the midst of the confusion.

-Connie Davis Rouse, Upper Room Disciplines, 2008


Monday, August 1, 2011

We must be the change we want to see in the world.

Note: The following was sent from Jerusalem to the District Office as District Superintendent Rev. Sharon Moe began her July trip with the Kids/Youth for Hope program.

————————————–

Dear Friends in Ministry,

Birds chirp outside my window in the courtyard of the Knight’s Palace Hotel. I was awakened at 7:00 am with wild and joyous pealing of bells. A car or two honk in the distance. Another bell telling me it’s quarter to 9:00 am–”better get a move on to church,” it says. Breakfast, with lots of hot coffee, rolls and zatar (look it up), boiled eggs and stewed fruit. Many other choices, but why take too much? Most of all, lots of hot coffee. This morning (our second here in Jerusalem) I began with praying the beads. My friend Peter makes such beautiful Anglican Prayer Beads and writes rituals for prayers that reach deep inside and span the needs and realities of the entire world. This morning’s prayer used phrases and prayers (adapted) from many current and ancient sources. The prayer for the Cross: ”We must be the change we want to see in the world.”

The prayer for the Invitatory Bead: ”Jesus said, ‘Come, follow me.’” The Cruciform Beads: ”For it is in giving that we receive; it is in forgiving that we are forgiven; it is in surrendering our lives that we discover eternal life.”

Then the prayer goes on for The Weeks:

Where there is fear, be – through me – Love;

where there is discord, be – through me – Unity;

where there is doubt, be – through me – Faith;

where there is grief, be – through me – Comfort:

where there is numbness, be – through me – Joy;

where there is despair, be – through me – Hope;

where there is conflict, be – through me – Peace.

The Prayer for The Weeks repeats four times, and then the prayer concludes with the initial prayer sequence, and finally: ”We must be the change we want to see in the world.”

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Patient Trust (Part 3 of 3)

Only God could say what this new spirit
gradually forming within you will be.
Give Our Lord the benefit of believing
that his hand is leading you,
and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself
in suspense and incomplete.

- - - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin SJ

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Patient Trust Part 2 of 3

And so I think it is with you.

your ideas mature gradually - let them grow,

let them shape themselves, without undue haste.

Don't try to force them on,

as though you could be today what time

(that is to say, grace and circumstances

acting on your own good will)

will make of you tomorrow.

- - - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, SJ


Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Patient Trust (part 1 of 3)

Above all, trust in the slow work of God

We are quite naturally impatient in everything

to reach the end without delay.

We should like to skip the intermediate stages.

We are impatient of being on the way to something

unknown, something new.

And yet it is the law of all progress

that it is made by passing through

some stages of instability -

and that it may take a very long time.

- - - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, SJ

Friday, July 8, 2011

In the midst of my busyness, O Lord,
remind me to slow down and savor each moment
as a gift from you.

As I move frantically from thought to thought, project to project,
remind me that you are a God of abundance, to scarcity,
and there is time enough for all that you have called me to do.

- Katherine L. James, “Midday Prayer”, Alive Now, July/August 2011

Monday, July 4, 2011

Happy Birthday America

If we have not peace
it is because we have forgotten
we belong to each other.

- - - Mother Teresa


Sunday, July 3, 2011

Prayer

Praying is no easy matter. It demands a relationship in which you allow someone other than yourself to enter into the very center of your person, to see there what you would rather leave in darkness, and to touch there what you would rather leave untouched.
-Henri J.M. Nouwen

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Happy Living!

I am that living and fiery essence
Of the divine substance
That glows in the beauty of the fields.
I shine in the water, I burn in the sun
And the moon and the stars.
I sustain the breath of all living.
I am life.

- - - Hildegard of Bingen

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Summer God, you dance in on golden sunbeams.
Like soil that must be plowed or turned over,
so I must prepare to receive your warmth and
the planting of your message in my heart.
Open me to receiving the seed of hope
and the promise of growth.
Plant your Spirit deep within me
and make my life fruitful and bountiful. Amen.

- Larry James Peacock
Openings: A Daybook of Saints, Psalms, and Prayer

Friday, June 17, 2011

At the beginning,
God of Imagination,
you finger-painted
sunrises and sunsets
on the blank canvas of chaos.
You sang creation's cantata,
while suns, moons, and stars
kept watch over your delights.
You laughed, while
lions, tigers, and bears
danced joyfully in the meadows,
and everything that
wiggles, creeps, crawls
clapped their hands in time.
-Thom Schuman

Monday, June 13, 2011

Pentecost


Pentecost - The birthday of the church - The coming of the Holy Spirit

Made of common earth, fashioned of ordinary matter, we are called to a humus-born humility that cautions us against acting like we have all the answers and know all of God’s designs for creation. Yet the story of Pentecost bids us to remember what the Spirit can do with dust. Pentecost reminds us that the Spirit draws us together and gives us to one another so that we may hear and see and know with greater clarity. This day challenges us to open ourselves beyond the limits of our individual lives to the Spirit who sets us ablaze for the healing of the world.

In this Pentecost week, are you seeking the presence of others who will deepen your understanding? Where do you go to hear and see what you cannot hear and see on your own?... Where are you turning your ears, your eyes, your heart, your mind to perceive the presence of the Spirit and the path to which it is drawing you?

-Jan Richardson, www.thepaintedprayerbook.com

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Where Are You?

Why do we continue to hold on to the notion that life--or our spiritual growth, or spiritual healing, or spiritual inspiration--begins someplace other than where we are right now? Why is it so easy to begin the sentences in our mind with "if only..." or "when..."?

I invite you instead to give yourself the permission to. . .

Regain the foolishness of wonder

Embrace the sacred in the daily

Celebrate gooseflesh

Radiate compassion

Find God in the ordinary

Live playfully

Spill laughter

Invite serendipity

Allow Spiritual Renewal to be a journey

Savor the moment

Delight in life, knee-deep in the sights, smells, sounds and textures of the day

And remember that Grace is a gift given to all.

Without exception. Period.

-Terry Hershey

www.terryhershey.com

Saturday, June 4, 2011

On a summer morning
I sat down
on a hillside
to think about God
a worthy pastime.
Near me, I saw
a single cricket;
it was moving the grains of the hillside
this way and that way.
How great was its energy,
how humble its effort.
Let us hope
it will always be like this,
each of us going on
in our inexplicable ways
building the universe.
-Mary Oliver
"Song of the Builder"

Monday, May 30, 2011

What does your heart see?

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry wrote: "And now, here is my secret, a very simple secret: It's only at the heart that one can see rightly. What is essential is invisible to the eye."
Our heart has eyes and our heart has hands.
Let's just make the decision that we're going to make our heart be the place we look from for the rest of the day. Right now, pause for a moment and let your heart show you how wonderful it is to be alive, how blessed you are to have a breath of life and how blessed you are to be able to choose what you pay attention to.

What is essential is invisible to the eye. It's only with the heart that you and I can see rightly, so let us look from the heart today and make it a great day.

-Mary Morrissey,

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Peace is not something you must hope for in the future.
Rather, it is a deepening of the present,
and unless you look for it in the present
you will never find it.
-Thomas Merton

Monday, May 16, 2011

Living Well

Living well through loss involves learning how to grieve. Grieving teaches us to live again in the absence of someone or something significant. Grieving isn’t just a time of unbearable emptiness and tears but a whole process of becoming a new person shaped by the memory of what is lost, not defined by it.

Grieving enables us to become a person who has experienced a divorce, not a divorced person. It enables us to become a person who has lost a partner, not a widow. It enables us to become a person who has experienced the loss of a job, not a loser. Grieving enables us to know ourselves who lose something when change occurs, not as people who are losers.

- Dan Moseley

Lose, Love, Live: The Spiritual Gifts of Loss and Change

FYI INFO

Want to know what is happening in the United Methodist Churches? Check out "Channels" for great information.
http://www.pnwumc.org/attachments/-01_Channels43_screen.pdf

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Easter Week # 2

Where shattered hearts are made whole,
where wounded souls are healed,
where life is stronger than death:
there, the stone has been rolled away.
Where the lonely become our friends,
where a stranger is welcomed home,
where hope is stronger than despair,
there, we find Jesus walking.
Where closed wallets are opened,
where the anxious find serenity,
where love is stronger than hate:
there, Jesus is opening our eyes.
The stone has been rolled away!
Jesus is our companion on the journey!
Our eyes are opened to the needs of others!
Alleluia! Christ is risen!
Alleluia! Christ is with us!
-Thom Shuman

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Post Easter Blessings

The risen Christ walks beside us—awaiting our invitation to stay with us, break bread with us, interpret life for us, give us hope, and share in thanksgiving. May we, like the disciples before us, have our eyes opened to recognize Christ as he comes to walk beside us this day.

-Rueben P. Job
A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God

Monday, April 25, 2011

Easter Blessing

If you are looking for a blessing, do not linger here.

Here is only emptiness, a hollow, a husk

where a blessing used to be.

This blessing was not content in its confinement.

It could not abide its isolation,the unrelenting silence,

the pressing stench of death.

So if it is a blessing that you seek,

open your own mouth.

Fill your lungs with the air that this new

morning brings and then release it with a cry.

Hear how the blessing breaks forth in your own voice

how your own lips form every word

you never dreamed to say.

See how the blessing circles back again wanting you to

repeat it but louder, how it draws you, pulls you

sends you to proclaim its only word:

risen

risen

risen.


- Jan Richardson

www.thepaintedprayerbook.com


Saturday, April 23, 2011

April 23

Jesus,
lover of life,
you died today.
You died as a hungry child
You died as a soldier in battle
You died seeking justice
You died in a tornado
You died in a hospital bed
You died in the street
You died alone, away from home.
Jesus,
lover of life,
hear my crying
for those who die today
and for the pain that is in me and in the world.
Amen.
(Adapted from)
-Ruth Burgess
Wild Goose Publications

Friday, April 22, 2011

Maundy Thursday Reflections

To wash the feet of a brother or a sister in Christ, to allow someone to wash our feet, is a sign that together we want to follow Jesus, to take the downward path, to find Jesus' presence in the poor and the meek. Is it not a sign that we too want to live a heart-to-heart relationship with others, to meet them as a person and a friend, and to live in communion with them?
-Jean Vanier

Monday, April 18, 2011

Holy Week

Many blessings to you this Holy Week.
This week embodies the most passionate aspects
of our faith: suffering, pain, and death...
giving way miraculously to life-out-of-death,
Resurrection. The "springtime" that Lent
has promised finally comes into being
as we embrace our identity
as God's "Easter people."

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Lenten Signs of Hope

O loving Christ who waits for all
to move forward,
to change inward,
to love outward.
Wait now with me as I long and learn to become more like you.
Guide me to wait with the lost,
to stand with the weak,
to have a heart for the brokenhearted.
Amen.

- Pamela C. Hawkins
The Awkward Season: Prayers for Len

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Lenten Messages of Hope

What is the gift of sorrow? It is so natural to want to come up with a positive side to sorrow. “God must have wanted me to learn [fill in the blank].” I think that the gift of sorrow is the same gift that we receive during Lent, Holy Week, and Easter. The gift of sorrow is God’s loving and compassionate presence with us—in whatever we are experiencing. God in Christ walked through the human experience of suffering. And God cradles us in our tears, our hopelessness, our grief, and our sorrow.

- Beth Richardso

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Lenten Messages

Show me the Way, O Christ,

to care for those who are hurting,

and weeping, and starving.

Teach me the way, O Christ,

to forgive those who are lying,

and wounding, and excluding.

Be light in the dark

and bread for the journey

that I might become

a living prayer for you in the world.

Amen.

- Pamela Hawkins

The Awkward Season: Prayers for Lent


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Lenten Messages

Sometime, O God, my thirst for you is pushed aside, ignored, or simply quenched by something other—something reasonable, something more popular—than you. But you never go away, never stop, never leave the depths of me. Like an underground spring, you are fresh and free, breaking through. Help me prepare a place for you in the caverns of my soul. Amen.

- Pamela Hawkins
The Awkward Season: Prayers for Lent

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Lenten Thoughts

Our culture tells us to seek a comfortable life with little risk. We are supposed to set goals, make plans and stick to them. We play it safe by staying in places and with people that we know well. We all seem so awfully busy trying to just keep up that we don’t have much time for out-of-the-ordinary requests, surprises or spontaneity. And who has time to even listen for where the voice of God is calling us?

But what are we missing out on when we don’t? What are we missing by not venturing into the unknown? To name a few, we are missing opportunities to assist a stranded stranger, eat meals with a new immigrant family, help a sick neighbor and converse with our enemies. Ultimately, we are missing out on opportunities to become more human.

-Jodi Beyeler, news bureau director, Goshen College. From Goshen College Lenten Devotions

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Lenten Messages

The forty days of Lent celebrate the dismembering, disequilibrium, and dying that are preludes to the creative transformation of Eastertide. It is a season of being changed and emptied so that new life might come to birth in us and resurrection be found in us as well.

-Wendy Wright, The Rising

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

March Thoughts

When Jesus asserted that we should love our neighbors as ourselves, he was expressing once again the profound theological truth that our love for ourselves and for others is intimately connected in the intricate ecology of life. We cannot wisely love others until we know how to love ourselves — and do it! In the dynamic and interdependent fabric of life, our wholeness and well-being and the wholeness and well-being of others are indivisible. Indeed, we cannot achieve our vocation in life apart from one another.

- Bruce G. Epperly

Holy Adventure



We need to find God, and he cannot be found in noise and restlessness. God is the friend of silence. See how nature--trees, flowers, grass--grows in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence. We need silence to be able to touch souls.

-Mother Teresa


Friday, February 25, 2011

Looking for God?

We need to find God, and he cannot be found in noise and restlessness. God is the friend of silence. See how nature--trees, flowers, grass--grows in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence. We need silence to be able to touch souls.
-Mother Teresa

Monday, February 21, 2011

Love self & others

When Jesus asserted that we should love our neighbors as ourselves, he was expressing once again the profound theological truth that our love for ourselves and for others is intimately connected in the intricate ecology of life.


We cannot wisely love others until we know how to love ourselves — and do it! In the dynamic and interdependent fabric of life, our wholeness and well-being and the wholeness and well-being of others are indivisible. Indeed, we cannot achieve our vocation in life apart from one another.

Holy Adventure by Bruce GF. Epperly



Thursday, February 17, 2011

When We Walk our Talk

When we see you sharing your hope
with the poor, the immigrant, the stranger;
when we watch you build a ramp
for those in wheelchairs;
when we experience your willingness
to help us in spite of our stubbornness;
when we hear your call to love
over our yearnings to hate:
we know what holiness looks like,
God of Creation.

When you refuse to speak harshly
to those who judge you;
when you wipe away the tears
of those who would hurt you;
when you choose to respond nonviolently
to those who would crucify you:
we know what peace looks like,
Light of the World.

When we hear you whisper
of fair play and justice;
when you fill our hands with grace
to be shared with others;
when you build our lives
on the foundation of Christ's peace and love:
we know what power looks like,
Spirit alive in us.
AMEN
-Thom Shuman

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

LOVING ONE ANOTHER

O God:

Enlarge my heart, that it may be big enough

to receive the greatness of your love.

Stretch my heart, that it may take into it all those

who, with me, around the world, believe in Jesus Christ.

Stretch it, that it may take into it all those who do not know him, but

who are my responsibility because I know him.

And stretch it, that it may take in all those

who are not lovely in my eyes, and whose hands I do not want to touch;

through Jesus Christ, my Savior. Amen.


Sunday, February 13, 2011

February Thoughts

O God of all times and places, of all peoples and nations,
though our lives are filled with moments of misery,
days of despair,
periods of pain,
times of trial,
years of yearning,
we pray for your comfort and strength on each day of life’s journey
as we walk in the light of your enduring grace.

- Jerry Oakland
The Upper Room Worshipbook, 2006

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Thoughts for Jan. 25

Never lose an opportunity of seeing

anything that is beautiful,


for beauty is God's handwriting

-- a wayside sacrament.

Welcome it in every fair face,

in every fair sky, in every flower,

and thank God for it as a cup of blessing.

-Ralph Waldo Emerson



Monday, January 17, 2011

Monday Jan. 17

Christ's light which comes to us
cannot be kept — hoarded, hid, suppressed.
Christ’s light which comes to us
must beam through our lives,
shine on our paths,
and go from us, to be made more in the sharing.

–Roberta Porter, Alive Now, January/February 2005

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

New Year Thoughts

It is very difficult to discern the voice of God in our own time. It seems impossible to know what a meaningful and relevant ministry is today, since technology and globalization make everything much more complex. However, the memory of It suffering is there in los pueblos (in the peoples of every corner of this earth that suffer), and it interrupts history. These interruptions can help us claim our humanity as people of God–again listening to the voice of God and recognizing the accompaniment of God as we walk with those who suffer–in our own suffering or our memory of suffering.

Creator God, help me reflect upon my own reality and the suffering around me. Empower me to walk in your reality as I remember the suffering of others. Amen.

- Cristian de la Rosa

From “Walking with el Pueblo”, in The Upper Room Disciplines 2010


New Year Thoughts

Saturday, January 1, 2011

NEW YEAR Thoughts

A new year symbolizes another chance for seeing our lives through the lens of gratitude. Thank you, O God, for all you have given us. And thank you most of all for the newness of mind and soul that you offer to us always!

-www.explorefaith.org