Monday, July 6, 2015

May the peace of Christ go with you....

a collection of quotes for Miss Anna for your time away from home this summer... 
These are some words I've shared with others as they have gone on adventures 
so I put them together for you as some bread for the journey and as a reminder that I love you so! 
Joy in the Journey

Summer 2015




May the peace of the Lord
Christ go with you,
wherever He may send you,
May He guide you
through the wilderness,
protect you
through the storm.
May He bring you
home rejoicing
at the wonders
He has shown you,
May He bring you
home rejoicing
         once again into our doors.



Oh! May the God of green hope fill you up with joy, fill you up with peace, so that your believing lives, filled with the life-giving energy of the Holy Spirit, will brim over with hope
Romans 15:13 The Message
The world needs people who will allow time for God to recreate them, play with them, touch them as an Artist who is making something beautiful with their lives.
–Don Postema Space for God

This little book is a collection of quotes that I have gathered in my journal over the years.  My prayer is that they will be an encouragement to you in the next couple of weeks when you are away from home.  

You will find a lot of quotes about believing in God’s love for us and being defined by that reality of being a child of God.  You will find quotes about listening, playing, delighting and celebrating.  Many of the quotes have been good reminders that life is not about my performance, but about God’s grace.  Faith is not about me coming to Him with all my ducks in a row, but it is about running to God no matter the circumstance. It is more about letting go and trusting God with our lives rather than trying desperately to hold on to those things that are so dear to us in our lives.

I have so much to learn, and many days, I feel that I am re-learning the same lessons over and over again.  I am hoping that these words will be an encouragement to you over these coming weeks.  I love you to the moon and back!




Day One- Monday, July 6th



Let us ask God for the gift he gave to an unforgettable rabbi, Joshua Abraham Hershel: “Dear Lord, grant me the grace of wonder. Surprise me, amaze me, awe me in every crevice of your universe.  Delight me to see how your Christ plays in ten thousand places, lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his, to the Father through the features of men’s faces.  Each day enrapture me with your marvelous things without number.  I do not ask to see the reason for it all, I ask only to share the wonder of it all.”   Brennan Manning The Ragamuffin Gospel  pg. 103
What a wonderful experience it is when God grants us a moment in which we don’t take anything for granted, but see the world as though it was invented yesterday…. We should pray for the eyes of children again, when they saw everything for the first time.
-John Piper The Pleasures of God  pg 92

24-25"These words I speak to you are not incidental additions to your life, homeowner improvements to your standard of living. They are foundational words, words to build a life on. If you work these words into your life, you are like a smart carpenter who built his house on solid rock. Rain poured down, the river flooded, a tornado hit—but nothing moved that house. It was fixed to the rock. Matthew 7:24-25 The Message

In Matthew 7:24, the idea of building a life out of Christ’s words is based on one word in the Greek—poieo, which in other translations is rendered “do.”  From the Greek word, which is a very active word, we get the English word poet.  A poet is a person who takes words and does something with them, makes something personal and original out of them.  Jesus says, “Be poets. Make something of these words I’ve spoken to you. Make a life, epic and poetic. And make it beautiful.  Make it a work of art.”  That’s something we can all do.  One well-chosen word at a time. One stanza of service at a time.  And with our words and deeds, we can leave something beautiful behind in the lives of others. 
-Eugene Peterson Conversations: The Message with its Translator pg 1497

Day Two- Tuesday, July 7th

   

 ‘I am someone God so loves’ is an message we’re likely to hear from God in contemplation. God is so anxious to tell us this that the only time God is pictured in a hurry in Scripture is when the father ran down the trail to the prodigal son, ‘threw his arms around him and kissed him.’  - Jan Johnson


One of the tragedies of growing up is that we get used to things. It has its good side of course, since irritations may cease to be irritations. But there is immense loss when we get used to the redness of the rising sun, and the roundness of the moon, and the whiteness of the snow, the wetness of rain, the blueness of the sky, the buzzing of bumble bees, the stitching of crickets, the invisibility of wind, the unconscious constancy of heart and diaphragm, the weirdness of noses and ears, the number of the grains of sand on a thousand beaches, the never-ceasing crash crash crash of countless waves, and ten million kingly-clad flowers flourishing and withering in woods and mountain valleys where no one sees but God…. May we seek a freshness of vision to look, as though it were the fist time…at the personal handiwork of an infinitely strong, creative and exuberant Artist who made the earth and the sea and everything in them…. May you believe that today, this very day, some stroke is being added to the cosmic canvas that in due course you shall understand with joy as a stroke made by the Architect who calls Himself Alpha and Omega.  -John Piper The Pleasures of God  pg 95-6

Joy and delight in the Lord are different in that these states of being are rooted in One who is unchanging and beyond the fickleness of daily life. Joy is indeed rooted in peace, an active peace that wiggles and shakes and laughs out loud. Joy is what one sees in the faces of little ones lost in play. It is precisely this sort of abandon that Jesus holds out to those who would follow after him. In a letter to the church in Philippi, St. Paul noted this difference between “feeling” and “being” when he stated he had learned to be content in any circumstance (Philippians 4:11). These are great promises for everyone who would follow after Jesus, not just those with an apparent special measure of God’s grace. “Do not worry about your life,” Jesus said, “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things (food, drink and clothing) will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:25).  - By The Reverend Tony Welty - Kindergarten Chaplain

Day Three- Wednesday, July 8th, 2015
   
“But Mr. Author, why do you always write about princesses?”
“Because every little girl is a princess.”
“You will make them vain if you tell them that.”
“Not if they understand what I mean.”
“Then, what do you mean?  What do you mean by a princess?”
“The daughter of a King. Very well then, every little girl is a princess and there would be no need to say anything about it, except that she is always in danger of forgetting her rank and behaving as if she had grown out of the mud.  I have seen little princesses behave like the children of thieves and lying beggars, and that is why they need to be told that they are princesses.” 
-George MacDonald, The Princess and the Goblin

On May 28, 1972, the Duke of Windsor, the uncrowned King Edward VIII, died in Paris.  The same evening, a television program rehearsed the main events of his life.  Extracts of earlier films were shown, in which he answered questions about his upbringing, brief reign and abdication.  Recalling his boyhood as Prince of Wales, he said, “My father (King George V) was a strict disciplinarian.  Sometimes when I had done something wrong, he would admonish me by saying, “My dear boy, you must always remember who you are.”  It is my conviction that our Heavenly Father says the same to us everyday: “My dear child, you must always remember who you are.”

EVERYDAY THINGS, relationships with other people, daily work, love of our family — all these may breed saints. . . .  Every hour of the day is holy.  — Carlo Carretto

The Benedictine life . . . simply consists in doing the ordinary things of daily life carefully and lovingly, with the attention and the reverence that can make of them a way of prayer, a way to God.   — Esther de Waal

Day Four- Thursday, July 9th, 2015  

   
Several years ago, Edward Farrell, a priest from Detroit, went on a two-week summer vacation to Ireland to visit relatives. His one living uncle was about to celebrate his eightieth birthday. On the great day, Ed and his uncle got up early. It was before dawn. They took a walk along the shores of Lake Killarney and stopped to watch the sunrise. They stood side by side for a full twenty minutes and then resumed walking. Ed glanced at his uncle and saw that his face had broken into a broad smile. Ed said, “Uncle Seamus, you look very happy.” “I am.” Ed asked, “How come?” And his uncle replied, “The Father of Jesus is very fond of me.”                                                                
 If the question were put to you, “Do you honestly believe that God likes you?”—not loves you, because theologically He must—how would you answer? God loves by necessity of His nature; without the eternal, interior generation of love, He would cease to be God. But if you could answer, “The Father is very fond of me,” there would come a relaxedness, a serenity and a compassionate attitude toward yourself that is a reflection of God’s own tenderness. In Isaiah 49:15, God says: “Does a woman forget her baby at the breast, or fail to cherish the son of her womb? Yet even if these forget, I will never forget you” (jb). -- The Relentless Tenderness of Jesus -Chapter 1 by Brennan Manning

Jeremiah learned to live persistently toward God because God had lived persistently toward him.  The laments express the suffering that God’s people experienced during and after the fall of Jerusalem, the most devastating disaster in their history.  At the very center of this dark time, and placed at almost the exact center of the lament, is this verse: “God’s loyal love couldn’t have run out, his merciful love couldn’t have dried up. They’re created new every morning.
God’s persistence isn’t a dogged repetition of duty. It has all the surprise and creativity, as well as all the certainly and regularity, of a new day. Sunrise. When the spontaneous and the certain arrive at the same time.”   -Eugene Peterson Conversations: The Message with its Translator pg 1261

Day Five- Friday, July 10th, 2015

   
I know that when I am most monstrous, I am most in need of love, When my tempers flare out of bounds it is usually set off by something unimportant which is on top of a series of events over which I have no control, which have made me helpless, and thus caused me anguish and frustration.  I am not lovable when I am enraged, although it is when I most need love.  One of our children when he was two or three years old used to rush at me when he had been naughty, and beat against me, and what he wanted by this monstrous behavior was an affirmation of love. And I would put my arms around him and hold him very tight until the dragon was gone and the loving small boy had returned.  So God does with me. I strike out at him in pain and fear and he holds me under the shadow of his wings.  Sometimes he appears to me to be so unreasonable that I think I cannot live with him, but I know that I cannot live without him.  He is my lover, father, mother, sister, brother, friend, paramour, companion, my love, my all.  – Madeleine L’Engle The Irrational Season
Choosing joy... I think that joy is much more than a mood. A mood invades us. We do not choose a mood. We often find ourselves in a happy or depressed mood without knowing where it comes from. The spiritual life is a life beyond moods. It is a life in which we choose joy and do not allow ourselves to become victims of passing feelings of happiness or depression.  I am convinced that we can choose joy. Every moment we can decide to respond to an event or a person with joy instead of sadness. When we truly believe that God is life and only life, then nothing need have the power to draw us into the sad realm of death. To choose joy does not mean to choose happy feelings or an artificial atmosphere of hilarity.  But it does mean the determination to let whatever takes place bring us one step closer to the God of life.  - Henri Nouwen

To pay attention, this is our endless and proper work.  –Mary Oliver

 Day Six- Saturday, July 11th 
   
Ten times a day something happens to me like this - some strengthening throb of amazement - some good sweet empathic ping and swell. This is the first, the wildest and the wisest thing I know: that the soul exists and is built entirely out of attentiveness.  –Mary Oliver

One Sunday, he asked me to sit up close to the pulpit.  He wanted me to hear his sermon, he said, and as I listened to him talk about the beauty of God’s creation and our duty to be awed by it, all of a sudden I heard him telling the congregation about a little girl who kept tadpoles in a birdbath so that she could watch over them as they turned into frogs, and how her care for those creatures was part of God’s care for the whole world. 
It was as if someone had turned on all the lights- not only to hear myself spoken of in church, but to hear that my life was part of God’s life, and that something as ordinary as a tadpole connected the two.  My friend’s words changed everything for me.  I could no longer see myself or the least detail of my life in the same way again.  When the service was over that day I walked out of it into a God-enchanted world, where I could not wait to find further clues to heaven on earth. Every leaf, every ant, every shiny rock called out to me- begging to be watched, to be listened to, to be handled and examined.  I became a detective of divinity, collecting evidence of God’s genius and admiring the tracks left for me to follow: locusts shedding their hard bodies for soft, new winged ones; prickly pods of milkweed spilling silky white hair; lightning spinning webs of cold fire in the sky, as intricate as the veins in my own wrist.  My friend taught me to believe that these were all words in the language of God.”
-Barbara Brown Taylor The Preaching Life


Instructions for living a life. 
Pay attention.  Be astonished. 
Tell about it.
 –Mary Oliver

Day Seven- Sunday, July 12th

   

Sometimes I need 
only to stand 
wherever I am 
to be blessed. 
  –Mary Oliver

Contemplative prayer:
Jesus, How I love to say your name!
The syllables murmur like a meadow brook.
Thank you for loving me, for wanting to be with me.
How I long for you to take me away with you! To new places of adventure.
New places of intimacy. New places of service.
Protect me from the little foxes that might destroy our relationship, especially the foxes of complacency and ingratitude. You have given me so much , and given it all so freely,
Help me to be attentive of every gift, and appreciative of every gift. 
Consume me with your love. May the flame that burns in you for me,
ignite my heart to burn for you. Forgive me for the times I have been unresponsive to you,
How that must have hurt you. Grant me a fuller taste of your love for me
so I might fall more fully in love with you. Give me a fresh taste of your wine, Jesus.   -Eugene Peterson  

Prayer…is waking up to the presence of God no matter where I am or what I am doing. When I am fully alert to whatever or whoever is right in front of me; when I am electrically aware of the tremendous gift of being alive; when I am able to give myself wholly to the moment I am in, then I am in prayer. Prayer is happening, and it is not necessarily something I am doing. God is happening, and I am lucky enough to know that I am in The Midst.  An Altar in the World  by Barbara Brown Taylor pg 178


Day Eight- Monday, July 13, 2015- HAPPY 13th!!!!  

   
When Christians speak of the mystery of the incarnation, this is what they mean: for reasons beyond anyone’s understanding, God has decided to be made known in flesh.  Matter matters to God. The most ordinary things are drenched in divine possibility.
An Altar in the World  by Barbara Brown Taylor pg 201

The artist Georgia O’Keeffe, who became famous for her paintings of flowers, explained her success: “In a way, nobody sees a flower, really, it is so small, we haven’t time- and to see takes time, like to have a friend takes time.”   The practice of paying attention really does take time. Most of us move so quickly that our surroundings become no more than the blurred scenery we fly past on our way to somewhere else.  We pay attention to the speedometer, the wristwatch, the cell phone, the list of things to do, all of which feed our illusion that life is manageable.  Meanwhile, none of them meets the first criterion for reverence, which is to remind us that we are not gods.  If anything, these devices sustain the illusion that we might yet be gods-  if only we could find some way to do more faster.  Reverence requires a certain pace.  It requires us to take detours, even side trips, which are not part of the original plan.  An Altar in the World  by Barbara Brown Taylor pg 24

I have an adult friend, Irene, who wakes up every morning and says, “Thank you so much, God, for the wonderful privilege of being Irene.” She’s thrilled by the idea that no one else in the world gets to be Irene. She knows that being Irene is an exquisitely precious gift reserved solely for her, and she aims to enjoy it to the fullest. I find it interesting that her very name means “peace”.  Irene is a woman at peace with herself because she loves being Irene.  How rare this is among adults! Yet all children, given half a chance, instinctively know they are precious and beautiful.  The Mystery of Children pg 138
Do human beings ever realize life while they live it—every, every minute? –Thorton Wilder Our Town

Day Nine- Tuesday, July 14, 2015 

   
But Jesus came and opened my ears to another voice that says, “I have molded you with my own hands, and I love what I have made. I love you with a love that has no limits, because I love you as I am loved.  Do not run away from me. Come back to me—not once, not twice, but always again.  You are my child.  How can you ever doubt that I will embrace you again, hold you against my breast, kiss you and let my hands run against your hair? I am your God—the God of mercy and compassion, the God of pardon and love, the God of tenderness and care.  Please do not say that I have given up on you, that I cannot stand you anymore, that there is no way back.  It is not true. I so much want you to be with me.  I so much want you to be close to me. I know all your thoughts. I hear all your words.  I see all your actions and I love you because you are beautiful, made in my own image, an expression of my most intimate love.  Do not judge yourself.  Do not condemn yourself.  Do not reject yourself. Let my love touch the deepest, most hidden corners of your heart and reveal to you your own beauty, a beauty, that you have lost sight of, but which will become visible to you again in the light of my mercy.  Come, come, let me wipe your tears, and let my mouth come close to your ear and say to you, “I love you. I love you. I love you.”  -Henri Nouwen The Road to Daybreak

Do more than exist; live! Do more than hear; listen!
Do more than agree; cooperate! Do more than talk; communicate!
Do more than spend; invest! Do more than think; create!
Do more than work; excel! Do more than share; give!
Do more than consider; commit! Do more than forgive; forget!
Do more than help; serve! Do more than see; perceive!
Do more than read; apply! Do more than receive; reciprocate!
Do more than advise; help! Do more than encourage; inspire!
Do more than change; improve! Do more than reach; stretch!
Do more than grow; bloom! And do more than dream; do! 



Day Ten- Wednesday, July 15, 2015

      

The vitality of God be mine this day
the vitality of the God of life.
The passion of Christ be mine this day
the passion of the Christ of love.
The wakefulness of the Spirit be mine this day
the wakefulness of the Spirit of justice.
The vitality and passion and wakefulness of God be mine that I may be fully alive this day.
The vitality and passion and wakefulness of God
be mine that I may be fully alive. --Celtic Prayer—

In the many details of this day
Let me be fully alive,
In the handling of food
And the sharing of drink,
In the preparing of work
And the uttering of words,
In the meeting of friends
And the interminglings of relationship
Let me be fully alive to each instant, O God,
Let me be fully alive
-Sounds of the Eternal: a Celtic Psalter

Celebrate God all day, every day.  I mean, revel in him!  Philippians 4: 4 The Message

Day Eleven- Thursday, July 16, 2015 

   

What each of them might be thought to mean separately is less important than what they all mean together.  At the very least they mean this: LISTEN.  Listen. Your life is happening.  You are happening… A journey, years long, has brought each of you through thick and thin to this moment in time as mine has also brought me.  Think back on that journey.  Listen back to the sounds and sweet airs of your journey that give delight and hurt not and to those too that give no delight at all and hurt like hell… The music of your life is subtle and elusive and like no other- not a song with words but a song without words, a singing, clattering music to gladden the heart or turn the heart to stone, to haunt you perhaps with echoes of a vaster, farther music of which it is part.  The question is not whether the things that happen to you are chance things or God’s things because, of course, they are both at once.  There is no chance thing through which God cannot speak-  even the walk from the house to the garage that you have walked 10,000 times before, even the moments when you cannot believe there is a God who speaks at all anymore.  He speaks, I believe, and the words he speaks are incarnate in the flesh and blood of our selves and our own footsore and sacred journeys.  We cannot live our lives constantly looking back, listening back, lest we be turned to pillars of longing and regret, but to live without listening at all is to live deaf to the fullness of the music.  Sometimes we avoid listening for fear of what we may hear, sometimes for fear that we may hear nothing at all, but the empty rattle of our own feet on the pavement… ”Be not afraid, for lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.”  He says he has been with us since each of our journeys began.  LISTEN FOR HIM. Listen to the sweet and bitter airs of your present and your past for the sound of him…
-       The Sacred Journey by Frederick Buechner

"The significance and ultimately-- the quality-- of the work we do is determined by our understanding of the story in which we are taking part." -Wendell Berry


And the theologian Frederick Buechner tells us that to be called is to find that place where our deep gladness meets the world’s deep need – the intersection of gladness and need is what it means to be called.

Day Twelve- Friday, July 17th, 2015 

   

Toward the end of his life, Henri Nouwen said that prayer had become for him primarily a time of “listening to the blessing.” “The real work of prayer,” he said, “is to become silent and listen to the voice that says good things about me.” That may sound self-indulgent, he admitted, but not if it meant seeing himself as the Beloved, a person in whom God had chosen to dwell.  The more he listened to that voice, the less likely he was to judge his worth by how others responded to him or by how much he achieved.  He prayed for God’s inner presence to express itself in his daily life as he ate and drank, talked and loved, played and worked.  He sought the radical freedom of an identity anchored in a place beyond all human praise and blame.  I too have found that prayer means far more than telling God what I want him to do.  Primarily, it means putting myself in a place where God can “renew my mind”, where I can absorb my new identity as God’s Beloved, which God insists in mine for the believing.
– Philip Yancey
May God bless you with discomfort at easy answers, half truths, and superficial relationships, so that you may live deep within your heart.
May God bless you with anger at injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people, so that you may work for justice, freedom and peace.
May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, starvation, and war, so that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and to turn their pain in to joy.
And may God bless you with enough foolishness to believe that you can make a difference in this world, so that you can do what others claim cannot be done.   - Franciscan Benediction

Day Thirteen- Saturday, July 18th  

   

Abba, I surrender my will and my life to you today, without reservation and with humble confidence, for you are my loving Father.  Set me free from self-consciousness, from anxiety about tomorrow, and from the tyranny of the approval and disapproval of others, that I may find joy and delight simply and solely in pleasing you.  May my inner freedom be a compelling sign of your presence, your peace, your power, and your love.  Let your plan for my life and the lives of all your children gracefully unfold one day at a time.  I love you with all my heart, and I place all my confidence in you, for you are my Abba.  - Ruthless Trust by Brennan Manning

Trappist monk Basil Pennington captures this simplicity when he writes,
“A father is delighted when his little one, leaving off his toys and friends, runs to him and climbs into his arms. As he holds his little one close to him, he cares little whether the child is looking around, his attention flitting from one thing to another, or if he is intent upon his father, or just settling down to sleep.  Essentially the child is choosing to be with his father, confident of the love, the care, the security, that is his in those arms.  Our Centering Prayer is much like that. We settle down in our Father’s arms, in loving hands.  Our mind, our thoughts, our imagination may flit about here and there; we may even fall asleep; but essentially we are choosing to remain for this time intimately with our Father, giving ourselves to him, receiving his love and care, letting him enjoy us as he will.  It is very simply prayer. It is very childlike prayer. It is prayer that opens out to us all the delights of the Kingdom. 
-       from A Glimpse of Jesus by Brennan Manning


Day Fourteen- Friday, July 24, 2015

                                                                           

…But the fact is, whether of not this method is adequate for putting a person in contact with the risen Lord, it’s certainly a sound one both spiritually and theologically, and the method is certainly conducive to making a person feel the infinite treasures of the love of Christ. Try it for yourself:

Recall the presence of the risen Lord with you. Tell him that you believe that he is present to you.  Reflect on the fact that he loves and accepts you just as you are now. Take time out to sense his unconditional love for you as he looks at you lovingly and humbly.  Speak to Jesus- or just lovingly stay in silence and communicate with him beyond words.

A soul- deep emphasis on the love of Christ, what the ancients called “devotion to the heart of Jesus”, so vigorous in the past, so much on the decline today, would flourish once again if people would understand that it consists essentially in accepting Jesus Christ as love incarnate, as the manifestation of the unconditional love of God for us. Anyone who accepts this truth is bound to experience fruits beyond all expectations in his or her own prayer life and ministry. 
-       from A Glimpse of Jesus by Brennan Manning


Stop. 
Pay attention to what is troubling you in your mind, heart, body, and soul. Welcome Christ in the midst of all that concerns you.(Welcome Him four times or more until you really hear.)  Let go of your desire for power and control over the situation, to be right.Let go of your desire for affection and esteem from others. Let go of your desire for security. Let go of your desire to change the way things are.  Welcome Christ again.  Rest in the healing power of God.
--Adapted from The Welcoming Prayer by Father Thomas Keating.

Day Fifteen- Saturday, July 25, 2015   

   

The problem with basing your understanding of God’s love for you on the circumstances of your life, apart from the fact that God forbids it, is that circumstances fluctuate more often than the seasons.  Christianity offers no assurances that your life will not at times be filled with tremendous difficulties and disappointments.  Many, if not most people, attribute an understanding of God with circumstances. They say, “God must not love me because…My business is not prospering…I’m still not married…My marriage is terrible… I haven’t been able to get a job… My health is suffering, etc.”  God’s love is seen as fluctuating wildly.  There is no security in that. However, what John says implicitly in this passage is that it is not by our outer circumstances or by our emotions that we determine whether God loves us.  In essence he says, “Don’t look there. Appearances and feelings can be deceiving.  Look instead on two irrevocable gifts of God: He has given us his Son (vs. 9, 10, 14) and he has given us His Spirit (vs. 13).  According to John, there is no other irrefutable and infallible evidence of his love: “This is how God showed his love among us.” It is in realizing that he has given you his Son and his Spirit that you are made certain of his love. Good circumstances are no guarantee of his love just as troubles are no guarantee of his displeasure.  When you are tempted to look at your circumstances and draw the conclusion, “God doesn’t care about or love me,” you must fix your eyes instead on these two gifts and find yourself lost in the wonder that anyone could be so lavish and generous towards you.  No other piece of evidence can be strong enough to overthrow the testimony of these.                                                  - Disappointment with God  by Philip Yancey  


The goal of education and formation for the ministry is continually to recognize the Lord’s voice, his face and his touch in every person we meet. 
      Henri Nouwen

Day Sixteen- Sunday, July 26, 2015

   

 “Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean he no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity or are persecuted or are hungry or cold or in danger or threatened with death?… No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ who loved us. And I am convinced that nothing can separate us from his love.”    Romans 8:35-38 New Living Translation

I don’t know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know: The only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve.
-Albert Schweitzwer

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.  - Margaret Mead

In Psalm 46:8, the psalmist says, “Attention, all! See the marvels of God!” In other words, “Quit rushing through the streets long enough to become aware that there is more to life than your little self-help enterprises.”  (-Eugene Peterson Conversations: The Message with its Translator pg 825)

Today, I yield myself to you.
May your will be my delight today. May your way have perfect sway in me.
May your love be the pattern of my living. I surrender to you my hopes,
my dreams, my ambitions. Do with them what you will, when you will, as you will.
I place into your living care  my family, my friends, my future.
Care for them with a care that I can never give,
I release into your hands my need for control,  my craving for status, my fear of obscurity.
Eradicate the evil, purify the good, and establish your kingdom on earth.
-Richard Foster

Day Seventeen-  Monday, July 27, 2015    

   

When the brilliant ethicist John Kavanaugh went to work for 3 months at  “the house of the dying” in Calcutta, he was seeking a clear answer as to how best to spend the rest of his life.  On the first morning there he met Mother Teresa.  She asked, “And what can I do for you?” Kavanaugh asked her to pray for him.
            “What do you want me to pray for?” she asked.  He voiced the request that he had borne thousands of miles from the United States.  “Pray that I have clarity.”
            She said firmly, “No, I will not do that.” When he asked her why, she said, “Clarity is the last thing you are clinging to and must let go of.” When Kavanaugh commented that she always seemed to have the clarity he longed for, she laughed and said, “I have never had clarity; what I have always had is trust.  So I will pray that you will trust God.”
            “We ourselves have known and put our trust in God’s love toward ourselves.” (1 John 4:16). Craving clarity, we attempt to eliminate the risk of trusting God.  Fear of the unknown path stretching ahead of us destroys childlike trust in the Father’s active goodness and unrestricted love.
  - Ruthless Trust by Brennan Manning

It’s not about making the best with what you’ve been given. It’s about first recognizing what you’ve been given. Then it’s about seeing the One who gave it to you. And finally, it’s about the process of yielding what you’ve been given back to the One who gave it to you in the first place.  It’s not about performing or overachieving or mastering. It’s about the process of learning to live in the freedom of knowing that it’s not up to you to do anything. It’s about God.  It’s about having the courage not to pick up the ball after you’ve dropped it. It’s about growing in your willingness to let God take care of the ball. It’s about understanding that God has already provided (through Jesus) a solution – not just for eternity, but also for everyday.
-        David Thomas and Steven James How to Hit a Curve Ball, Grill the Perfect Steak & Become a Real Man

Deliver me, Oh Jesus, from the desire of being loved. Deliver me from the desire of being extolled. Deliver me, Jesus, from the desire of being honored and praised, from the desire of being preferred and consulted. Deliver me from the desire of being approved. Deliver me from the desire of being popular. Deliver me, Jesus, from the fear of being humiliated, from the fear of being despised, from the fear of suffering rebukes, from the fear of being stereotyped, from the fear of being forgotten, wronged, ridiculed, suspected.  Deliver me from these things, I pray.  – Mother Teresa

No comments:

Post a Comment