Thursday
Aug052010

the seed of god

The seed of God is in us.

Given an intelligent

and hardworking farmer,

it will thrive and grow

up into God, whose seed

it is; and accordingly its

fruits will be God-nature.

Pear seeds grow into

pear trees, nut seeds

into nut trees, and

God seeds into God.

+ Meister Eckhart 

Dear God, make us intelligent, hardworking farmers, one to another.  Let us grow into our true nature.  Challenge us.  Nourish us.  Thrive in us, and let us thrive in you.  Amen.

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Thanks to Geoff Quinn for these beautiful, farmer's market pears!

Tuesday
Jul272010

sabbath

The way the light comes through the window at such an impossible angle. 

The deep blue ocean that lives in your daughter's eyes. 

The beautiful bowl of a spoon and the way it reflects the entire world. 

The sweetness of water.  

Bird song.  

Lightning bugs. 

Love.  Love.  Love.

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SALT is organizing an online community that will hold Sabbath together this August.  Imagine what we will discover when we slow down, unplug, eat, pray, sing, and stay attentive to God's presence all around us.  Shall we?

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Thanks to Clare Reid for this beautiful bunny!

Thursday
Jul222010

sundowning

During the day, her mother’s confusion was manageable, more or less.  They would wake up, have their tea and toast, and walk around the house, noticing which flowers were waxing and which were waning.  After their mid-morning nap, they would have lunch, and then settle into a long game of cards or — her mother’s favorite — dominoes.

“My mother is fine all day long,” she’d say to the doctor.  “But at night she gets so agitated, so confused.  She sees things that aren’t there.  She thinks the house is always being broken into, and when I try to help her, she backs away from me like I’m a stranger.”

The doctor nodded.  “We call that ‘sundowning,’” he said. “When the sun goes down, dementia rises like the moon.”

He went on to suggest some calming pre-bedtime rituals:  warm milk, soft music, maybe a night light.

“Think about when you were a child,” he said.  “When the light drained out of your room and the darkness poured in — it can be very disconcerting, very disorienting.”

Psalm 107 is a psalm of lament.  It's a song sung by a disoriented soul watching the light drain out of the world, and the shadows of death and pain pour in.  It's a psalm sung, for example, by someone caring for an aging parent, someone who has been newly diagnosed, someone who is lonely, scared, or suffering.  And yet, this is how the psalmist begins:  “O give thanks to the Lord, for God is good; God’s steadfast love endures forever.”

At first glance, it seems harsh and unfeeling to command the daughter whose mother is evaporating to give thanks to God.  But the deep wisdom in Psalm 107 is this:  God is with her.  God lives and breathes and moves in the valley of the shadow of death and dementia, making mugs of warm milk, playing dominoes, and whispering into the darkness, “Let there be light!  Let there be hope!  The sun will not go down on my people!”

As people of faith, this is what we are called to believe, who we are called to be, and what we are called to proclaim.  The psalmist makes this very clear:  “Oh, thank God — God is so good!  God’s love never runs out.  All of you set free by God, tell the world!”

In Mary Oliver’s tender, powerful collection of poems, Red Bird, she takes the psalmist’s charge to heart.  Even in the valley of the shadow of grief, even in the very presence of death, her eyes and ears are open to the grace of God throughout creation.  Meadowlarks, crows, hummingbirds, sparrows, and red birds all sing of a God who is at work in the world, often hidden, but never gone.  In the poem, “Sometimes,” Oliver sums it all up with her instructions for living a life:  

Pay attention.  Be astonished.  Tell about it.

Tell us about it!  Where do you hear God's whispers, even in the shadows?

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Thanks to the anonymous artist who captured this bathing beauty!

Tuesday
Jul202010

delight

"I never knew gardening could be such a restorative and healing exercise. My mother's garden seemed like a chore — something we had to tend to before we could have fun. 

But now I have my own garden and I find that I can sit for hours gently pulling weeds here, thinning things out there, and delighting in how dirty my little ones get digging in the warmth of the sun.  

As sure as God turns mourning into dancing, this particular chore has been turned into pure delight."

Tell us: what gives you delight?

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Thanks to Zoe Krohne for her delightful words and to Holly Wolsey Soper for the cherry tomatoes.  Both word and image were submitted through "a thousand words." 

Thursday
Jul152010

sing

Jesus said to his disciples:  Therefore I tell you, don't worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear.  For there's more to life than food, more to the body than clothing — isn't there?

Look at the ravens:  they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them.

Can any of you add a single hour to your life by worrying?

Consider the lilies, how they grow.  They neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was never decked out like one of them.  But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you — you of little faith!

Life is beautiful — and God provides!  

+ Luke 12:22-29

Loving God, from ink black ravens to lemon yellow lilies, from the biggest whale to the smallest snail, you hold everything in your strong, open hands.  Help us to remember and sing about how beautiful life was, is, and ever shall be, world without end, Amen.

Tell us, where are you finding beauty in your life right now?

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Thanks to Osmany Rodriguez for posting super cool LA street art!