Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Peace to You


Contemplating   “Peace to You”
I recently ran across this quote by modern mystic Valentin Tomberg,

“Modern Science has come to understand that matter is only condensed energy.  Sooner or later science will also discover that what it calls energy is only condensed psychic force, which discovery will lead, in the end, to the establishment of the fact that all psychic force is the condensation, purely and simply, of consciousness (i.e. Spirit).” 

I have this mental image of a microscope peering into a table or a feather or into my own hand.  The magnified image shows that what I saw on the surface, what I thought was static and solid, is actually composed of pure flowing energy.  The energy itself is then somehow magnified and I discover that there is something even less dense than energy itself, it is prayers and attention and presence, a lighter and more spacious essence than even energy.  But then those prayers are in some mysterious way examined to reveal that there is even a more basic, pure, spacious, fundamental building block that gives form and life to those prayers and that something or better someone is what we call Spirit or God or Life, Truth, Love, Peace or whatever name we choose to use.  

A closer look at the hand image reveals that it is not actually made with lines but with words.  “Peace” and “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give you” from the Gospel of John 14:27 are what makes the image materialize.  This, in my mind, is what we are all made of at the deepest most sacred most ineffable level.  Our true, holy, pure essence (the image of God) is here at (actually within) our literal fingertips.  To realize that this deep peace is cursing through our bodies as well as through the bodies of all those around us, and then to ever so clumsily allow this indescribable “Isness” to form and animate and guide us, this is what our life is truly about. 

1.   What comes to mind as you look at this image?
2.   If at our core we are made of something good and wonderful why do we humans cause so much destruction and pain in the world.
3.   What are some things that seem to hinder you from living a life out of peace and love?

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Non Sequitur


Contemplating “Non Sequitur”

We claim to be different.  But from our appearances, from our actions, from our business dealings, from the way we spend money, from what we watch on TV, from our vacations, from what we eat, from the houses we live in, from the cars we drive, from the words we use, from how we treat our neighbors, from our health, from what we worry about, from being truthful, from how we dress, from what we read… it is difficult to see any difference at all.   Is there really any difference?

1.  What catches your attention about this doodle?
2.   What scriptures come to mind?
3.   Do you believe we are supposed to be different from the world outwardly and inwardly?  If so how? 
4.   Can you think of Christians who are obviously different from the world?  In what ways do they stand out? 
5.   How was Jesus inwardly and outwardly different from the world? 
6.   How is God calling you to be different? 

Monday, July 9, 2012

How the World Ends


Contemplating  “How the World Ends”                                               

In her book Pilgrim at Tinker Creek Annie Dillard mentions the idea that the universe looks more like a great thought than a great machine. She says, "The question of who is thinking the thought is more fruitful than the question of who made the machine, for a machinist can of course wipe his hands and leave, and his simple machine still hums; but if the thinker’s attention strays for a minute, his simplest thought ceases altogether." This idea of God’s amazing and loving ability to keep the universe in existence by sheer thought really catches my attention. Especially since I can hold an uninterrupted thought for what, 30 seconds?
1.   What do you think of the idea of God keeping everything together by thought?
2.   What’s your attention span?  How long do you think you can hold a thought?  Try it.
3.   What tends to distract you?  How would you label these distractions (worries, fears, regrets, planning, ego, etc)?
4.   How might your day be different if you could give complete attention to everyone you met and everything you did?

Monday, July 2, 2012

Be Transformed


Contemplating  “Be Transformed”

I like it that the NIV translation uses the word "pattern" in Romans 12:2. The spiritual life is about noticing the patterns we are stuck in. Prayer practices, or spiritual disciplines, help us break free from these patterns. Once we begin to break free, once we begin to be truly transformed, those around us are affected in very deep ways.  "When one person finds peace, thousands are saved."
1.   Why do you think it is so difficult to notice the patterns of the world we are currently stuck in?
2.   How is it that prayer practices help us break free from patterns?
3.   What patterns do you need to break free from?
4.   Do you agree with the intriguing ancient quote "When one person finds peace, thousands are saved"? Why or why not?