Thursday, June 30, 2011

Christianity Is A Witness

"Long ago God spoke to our ancestors in many and various ways by the prophets, but in these last days He has spoken to us by a Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, through whom He also created the worlds. He is the reflection of God's glory and the exact imprint of God's very being, and He sustains all things by His powerful word. When He had made purification for sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, having become as much superior to angels as the name He has inherited is more excellent than theirs." (Hebrews 1:1-4 NRSV)
The Gospel is not presented to mankind as an argument about religious principles. Nor is it offered as a philosophy of life. Christianity is a witness to certain facts - to events that have happened, to hopes that have been fulfilled, to realities that have been experienced, to a Person who has lived and died and been raised from the dead to reign for ever.
- Massey H. Shepherd, Jr. in "Far and Near"

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Behind The Scenes

There is a way of ordering our mental life on more than one level at once. On one level we may be thinking, discussing, seeing, calculating, meeting all the demands of external affairs. But deep within, behind the scenes, at a profounder level, we may also be in prayer and adoration, song and worship and a gentle receptiveness to divine breathings.
- Thomas Kelly in "A Testament of Devotion"

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Returning to God's Ever-Present Love

We often confuse unconditional love with unconditional approval. God loves us without conditions but does not approve of every human behavior. God doesn't approve of betrayal, violence, hatred, suspicion, and all other expressions of evil, because they all contradict the love God wants to instill in the human heart. Evil is the absence of God's love. Evil does not belong to God.
God's unconditional love means that God continues to love us even when we say or think evil things. God continues to wait for us as a loving parent waits for the return of a lost child. It is important for us to hold on to the truth that God never gives up loving us even when God is saddened by what we do. That truth will help us to return to God's ever-present love.
- Henri Nouwen

Monday, June 27, 2011

In Step With The Spirit

Each of us is told in the Scriptures to walk in step with the Holy Spirit. "Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit." (Galatians 5:25) The command is to be in step with the Spirit. It does not tell us to be in step with one another.
Because the Lord leads His children by the same Word and by the same Spirit, much of the time our individual paths will converge. At other times our paths will only be parallel. Sometimes, as the Lord takes each of us through our different lives with different sets of experiences, our paths will differ greatly. Yet, through all of it, His motive is the same. It is not to conform each of us to each other but to conform each of us to Christ. We do not become more like Christ by becoming like each other, just as a hand and a foot are not the same and cannot best complete the body by becoming alike. Each part in its difference is equally important in form and function and each best serves the well-being and wholeness of the body because of those differences.
When believers in Christ hold in common conviction the same core foundational beliefs, conduct their individual lives by the same Scriptures, and walk in step with the same Spirit, they are part of the Body. They are part then, too, of one another whether or not they attend the same church fellowship.
- Susan Kemenyas

Sunday, June 26, 2011

God's Unconditional Love

What can we say about God's love? We can say that God's love is unconditional. God does not say, "I love you, if ..." There are no ifs in God's heart. God's love for us does not depend on what we do or say, on our looks or intelligence, on our success or popularity. God's love for us existed before we were born and will exist after we have died. God's love is from eternity to eternity and is not bound to any time-related events or circumstances. Does that mean that God does not care what we do or say? No, because God's love wouldn't be real if God didn't care. To love without condition does not mean to love without concern. God desires to enter into relationship with us and wants us to love God in return.
Let's dare to enter into an intimate relationship with God without fear, trusting that we will receive love and always more love.
- Henri Nouwen

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Becoming Kind

Kindness is a beautiful human attribute. When we say, "She is a kind person" or "He surely was kind to me," we express a very warm feeling. In our competitive and often violent world, kindness is not the most frequent response. But when we encounter it we know that we are blessed. Is it possible to grow in kindness, to become a kind person? Yes, but it requires discipline. To be kind means to treat another person as your "kin," your intimate relative. We say, "We are kin" or "He is next of kin." To be kind is to reach out to someone as being of "kindred" spirit.
Here is the great challenge: All people, whatever their colour, religion, or sex, belong to humankind and are called to be kind to one another, treating one another as brothers and sisters. There is hardly a day in our lives in which we are not called to this.
- Henri Nouwen

Friday, June 24, 2011

Befriending Our Inner Enemies

How do we befriend our inner enemies lust and anger? By listening to what they are saying. They say, "I have some unfulfilled needs" and "Who really loves me?" Instead of pushing our lust and anger away as unwelcome guests, we can recognise that our anxious, driven hearts need some healing. Our restlessness calls us to look for the true inner rest where lust and anger can be converted into a deeper way of loving.
There is a lot of unruly energy in lust and anger! When that energy can be directed toward loving well, we can transform not only ourselves but even those who might otherwise become the victims of our anger and lust. This takes patience, but it is possible.
- Henri Nouwen

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Being Merciful with Ourselves

We need silence in our lives. We even desire it. But when we enter into silence we encounter a lot of inner noises, often so disturbing that a busy and distracting life seems preferable to a time of silence. Two disturbing "noises" present themselves quickly in our silence: the noise of lust and the noise of anger. Lust reveals our many unsatisfied needs, anger or many unresolved relationships. But lust and anger are very hard to face.
What are we to do? Jesus says, "Go and learn the meaning of the words: Mercy is what pleases me, not sacrifice" (Matthew 9:13). Sacrifice here means "offering up," "cutting out," "burning away," or "killing." We shouldn't do that with our lust and anger. It simply won't work. But we can be merciful toward our own noisy selves and turn these enemies into friends.
- Henri Nouwen

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

The Sound Of Music

Besides theology, music is the only art capable of affording peace and joy of the heart like that induced by the study of the science of divinity. The proof of this is that the Devil, the originator of sorrowful anxieties and restless troubles, flees before the sound of music almost as much as he does before the Word of God. This is why the prophets preferred music before all the other arts, proclaiming the Word in psalms and hymns. My heart, which is full to overflowing, has often been solaced and refreshed by music when sick and weary.
- Martin Luther

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

On The Journey Towards Hope

We were in the taxi shuttle from the airport to the hotel, sharing the ride with another traveler. In the front passenger seat, the young black man from Detroit talked with the driver, who could have been his older brother. The Ebonics-laden chatter bounced side to side in a rapping rhythm much like that of the hip-hop music on the radio.
Then the young passenger told of his travels in the military and his tour of duty in Iraq. I felt the hair rise up on the back of my pacifist neck. I felt my strong prejudice against war. Then the two moved into a conversation of gratitude for the saving presence of Jesus Christ in their lives. My prejudice melted into humility. I suddenly felt a humble reverence for the young Detroit man who, with the grace of God, chose to rise above his dead-end future in the ghetto, to provide some service to those who gave him a college education, and to speak boldly of the transforming power of Jesus Christ.
The long shuttle ride was, for me, a journey from prejudice to humility, from stereotyping to humility, and from pride to humility, understanding that God's grace can work in the souls of people in all socioeconomic strata. I realized how my descent into pride is a thousand times worse than one's descent into living in deplorable ghetto conditions or fighting a war. Humility means that I stand in readiness to embrace all people as my brothers and sisters.
- Jan Davis

Monday, June 20, 2011

Solidarity in Weakness

Joy is hidden in compassion. The word compassion literally means "to suffer with." It seems quite unlikely that suffering with another person would bring joy. Yet being with a person in pain, offering simple presence to someone in despair, sharing with a friend times of confusion and uncertainty ... such experiences can bring us deep joy. Not happiness, not excitement, not great satisfaction, but the quiet joy of being there for someone else and living in deep solidarity with our brothers and sisters in this human family. Often this is a solidarity in weakness, in brokenness, in woundedness, but it leads us to the center of joy, which is sharing our humanity with others.
- Henri Nouwen

Sunday, June 19, 2011

The Joy of Being Like Others

At first sight, joy seems to be connected with being different. When you receive a compliment or win an award, you experience the joy of not being the same as others. You are faster, smarter, more beautiful, and it is that difference that brings you joy. But such joy is very temporary. True joy is hidden where we are the same as other people: fragile and mortal. It is the joy of belonging to the human race. It is the joy of being with others as a friend, a companion, a fellow traveler.
This is the joy of Jesus, who is Emmanuel: God-with-us.
- Henri Nouwen

Saturday, June 18, 2011

No Juice

One spring our family was driving from Fort Lauderdale to Tampa, Florida. As far as the eye could see, orange trees were loaded with fruit. When we stopped for breakfast, I ordered orange juice with my eggs. "I'm sorry," the waitress said. "I can't bring you orange juice. Our machine is broken." At first I was dumbfounded. We were surrounded by millions of oranges, and I knew they had oranges in the kitchen - orange slices garnished our plates. What was the problem? No juice? Hardly. We were surrounded by thousands of gallons of juice. The problem was they had become dependent on a machine to get it.
Christians are sometimes like that. They may be surrounded by Bibles in their homes, but if something should happen to the Sunday morning preaching service, they would have no nourishment for their souls. The problem is not a lack of spiritual food but that many Christians haven't grown enough to know how to get it for themselves.
- Leroy Eims in "The Lost Art of Disciple Making"

Friday, June 17, 2011

Choosing Joy

Joy is what makes life worth living, but for many joy seems hard to find. They complain that their lives are sorrowful and depressing. What then brings the joy we so much desire? Are some people just lucky, while others have run out of luck? Strange as it may sound, we can choose joy. Two people can be part of the same event, but one may choose to live it quite differently than the other. One may choose to trust that what happened, painful as it may be, holds a promise. The other may choose despair and be destroyed by it.
What makes us human is precisely this freedom of choice.
- Henri Nouwen

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Healing Our Memories

Forgiving does not mean forgetting. When we forgive a person, the memory of the wound might stay with us for a long time, even throughout our lives. Sometimes we carry the memory in our bodies as a visible sign. But forgiveness changes the way we remember. It converts the curse into a blessing. When we forgive our parents for their divorce, our children for their lack of attention, our friends for their unfaithfulness in crisis, our doctors for their ill advice, we no longer have to experience ourselves as the victims of events we had no control over.
Forgiveness allows us to claim our own power and not let these events destroy us; it enables them to become events that deepen the wisdom of our hearts. Forgiveness indeed heals memories.
- Henri Nouwen

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Forgiving in the Name of God

We are all wounded people. Who wounds us? Often those whom we love and those who love us. When we feel rejected, abandoned, abused, manipulated, or violated, it is mostly by people very close to us: our parents, our friends, our spouses, our lovers, our children, our neighbours, our teachers, our pastors. Those who love us wound us too. That's the tragedy of our lives. This is what makes forgiveness from the heart so difficult. It is precisely our hearts that are wounded. We cry out, "You, who I expected to be there for me, you have abandoned me. How can I ever forgive you for that?"
Forgiveness often seems impossible, but nothing is impossible for God. The God who lives within us will give us the grace to go beyond our wounded selves and say, "In the Name of God you are forgiven." Let's pray for that grace.
- Henri Nouwen

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Communion With God

Jesus, like all other religious leaders, taught [people] to pray, that is, He taught them to look away from the world of ordinary sense impressions and to open the heart and spirit to God; yet He is always insistent that religion must be related to life. It is only by contact with God that a better quality of living can be achieved - and Jesus Himself, as the records show, spent many hours in communion with God - yet that new quality of life has to be both demonstrated and tested in the ordinary rough-and-tumble of plain living. It is in ordinary human relationships that the validity of a [person's] communion with God is to be proved.
- J. B. Phillips

Monday, June 13, 2011

Healing Our Hearts Through Forgiveness

How can we forgive those who do not want to be forgiven? Our deepest desire is that the forgiveness we offer will be received. This mutuality between giving and receiving is what creates peace and harmony. But if our condition for giving forgiveness is that it will be received, we seldom will forgive! Forgiving the other is first and foremost an inner movement. It is an act that removes anger, bitterness, and the desire for revenge from our hearts and helps us to reclaim our human dignity. We cannot force those we want to forgive into accepting our forgiveness. They might not be able or willing do so. They may not even know or feel that they have wounded us.
The only people we can really change are ourselves. Forgiving others is first and foremost healing our own hearts.
- Henri Nouwen

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Forgiveness, the Way to Freedom

To forgive another person from the heart is an act of liberation. We set that person free from the negative bonds that exist between us. We say, "I no longer hold your offense against you" But there is more. We also free ourselves from the burden of being the "offended one." As long as we do not forgive those who have wounded us, we carry them with us or, worse, pull them as a heavy load. The great temptation is to cling in anger to our enemies and then define ourselves as being offended and wounded by them. Forgiveness, therefore, liberates not only the other but also ourselves. It is the way to the freedom of the children of God.
- Henri Nouwen

Saturday, June 11, 2011

There are two sides to forgiveness: giving and receiving. Although at first sight giving seems to be harder, it often appears that we are not able to offer forgiveness to others because we have not been able fully to receive it. Only as people who have accepted forgiveness can we find the inner freedom to give it. Why is receiving forgiveness so difficult? It is very hard to say, "Without your forgiveness I am still bound to what happened between us. Only you can set me free." That requires not only a confession that we have hurt somebody but also the humility to acknowledge our dependency on others. Only when we can receive forgiveness can we give it.
- Henri Nouwen

Friday, June 10, 2011

On The Journey Towards Hope

Last week, my aunt died. Frances was eighty-two years old and had struggled with cancer for the past few years. When I visited Auntie Frances, as we called her, about two weeks ago, I barely recognized the frail, hairless old woman who lay curled on the bed. But the moment she began to speak in that throaty, kind voice, I knew it was the same Auntie who had warned me a hundred times to "be careful!" when I was leaping into the pool with my cousins. I told her that several of her grandchildren were in the house, just wanting to be near her, and that they loved her so much. She said, "I know. I'm so blessed, so grateful. I have a wonderful life."
I left Frances' house that night knowing, in a whole new way, what hope is. You see, my aunt's life wasn't always so wonderful. She had struggled through a difficult marriage, the early death of her husband, and the sole responsibility for an ailing and very demanding mother. But in the last ten years of her life, she embraced living as if none of that mattered. She became a kind of social butterfly, tooling around town in her minivan. She dressed in salmon and shocking pink. And she managed to make everyone feel like the most special person in the world.
In her seventies, after decades of struggle, my aunt embraced life. At the end, she didn't ask God why her life had been so hard. She just jumped in the water with her friends, and knew she was truly and deeply blessed.
Frances was of French Canadian descent, and her children asked me to sing a French hymn, "Beau Ciel," at her funeral. Beautiful Heaven. The place where, as the hymn says, we will see our God "face to face." I think I already have.
- Lisa Cataldo

Thursday, June 09, 2011

The "Everywhereness" Of God

God is closer than we think. He is never farther than a prayer away. All it takes is the barest effort, the lift of a finger. Every moment - right now, as you read these words - is the "one timeless moment" of divine endowment, of life with God.
"This is my Father's world," an old song says, "He shines in all that's fair...In the rustling grass I hear Him pass, He speaks to me everywhere." The Scriptures are full of what might be called the everywhereness of God's speaking. "The heavens are telling the glory of God;... day to day pours forth speech."
He talks through burning bushes and braying donkeys; He sends messages through storms and rainbows and earthquakes and dreams, He whispers in a still small voice. He speaks (in the words of Garrison Keillor) in "ordinary things like cooking and small talk, through storytelling, making love, fishing, tending animals and sweet corn and flowers, through sports, music and books, raising kids - all the places where the gravy soaks in and grace shines through."
- John Ortberg in "God Is Closer Than You Think"

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Forgiveness, the Cement of Community Life

Community is not possible without the willingness to forgive one another "seventy-seven times" (see Matthew 18:22). Forgiveness is the cement of community life. Forgiveness holds us together through good and bad times, and it allows us to grow in mutual love.
But what is there to forgive or to ask forgiveness for? As people who have hearts that long for perfect love, we have to forgive one another for not being able to give or receive that perfect love in our everyday lives. Our many needs constantly interfere with our desire to be there for the other unconditionally. Our love is always limited by spoken or unspoken conditions. What needs to be forgiven? We need to forgive one another for not being God!
- Henri Nouwen

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

From Death to Birth

If we can ever get deep into our hearts that death is transition and not annihilation, that death is a movement from one context of living to another, then it becomes clear to us even at the end of our life in history that every exit is an entrance, every experience of death is also the prelude to an experience of birth. It can give rise to an enormous sense of hope that God is able to give us new places to grow and new things to become. We cease to be totally afraid of death and see it as moving into another arena of God's everlasting growing.
- John Claypool in "Hopeful Coping with Grief"

Monday, June 06, 2011

The Power Of Listening

Once Mother Teresa was asked, "When you pray, what do you say to God?"
She answered, "I don't say anything; I listen!"
Intrigued the inquirer asked, "When you pray, what does God say to you?"
Mother Teresa's answer was, "He doesn't say anything. He listens!"
It is in such listening that we hear the soft still voice that, paradoxically, says nothing. But the stillness in such times of prayer moves more powerfully than an earthquake, a hurricane, or a raging forest fire.
- Tony Campolo in "Following Jesus Without Embarrassing God"

Sunday, June 05, 2011

Community, a Quality of the Heart

The word community has many connotations, some positive, some negative. Community can make us think of a safe togetherness, shared meals, common goals, and joyful celebrations. It also can call forth images of sectarian exclusivity, in-group language, self-satisfied isolation, and romantic naiveté. However, community is first of all a quality of the heart. It grows from the spiritual knowledge that we are alive not for ourselves but for one another. Community is the fruit of our capacity to make the interests of others more important than our own (see Philippians 2:4). The question, therefore, is not "How can we make community?" but "How can we develop and nurture giving hearts?"
- Henri Nouwen

Saturday, June 04, 2011

Community Supported by Solitude

Solitude greeting solitude, that's what community is all about. Community is not the place where we are no longer alone but the place where we respect, protect, and reverently greet one another's aloneness. When we allow our aloneness to lead us into solitude, our solitude will enable us to rejoice in the solitude of others. Our solitude roots us in our own hearts. Instead of making us yearn for company that will offer us immediate satisfaction, solitude makes us claim our centre and empowers us to call others to claim theirs. Our various solitudes are like strong, straight pillars that hold up the roof of our communal house. Thus, solitude always strengthens community.
- Henri Nouwen

Friday, June 03, 2011

The Voice in the Garden of Solitude

Solitude is the garden for our hearts, which yearn for love. It is the place where our aloneness can bear fruit. It is the home for our restless bodies and anxious minds. Solitude, whether it is connected with a physical space or not, is essential for our spiritual lives. It is not an easy place to be, since we are so insecure and fearful that we are easily distracted by whatever promises immediate satisfaction. Solitude is not immediately satisfying, because in solitude we meet our demons, our addictions, our feelings of lust and anger, and our immense need for recognition and approval. But if we do not run away, we will meet there also the One who says, "Do not be afraid. I am with you, and I will guide you through the valley of darkness."
Let's keep returning to our solitude.
- Henri Nouwen

Thursday, June 02, 2011

The Value Of Praise

Don't underestimate the value of praise. There is something about expressing your appreciation to God in words, song, and meditation that solidifies your faith. The Book of Psalms is the Bible's hymnal of praise. The more you praise God for being who He is - a loving God who judges righteously - the more you can act upon your belief of what He is - eternal love.
- Josh McDowell in "Evidence for Joy"

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Yearning for Perfect Love

When we act out of loneliness our actions easily become violent. The tragedy is that much violence comes from a demand for love. When loneliness drives our search for love, kissing easily leads to biting, caressing to hitting, looking tenderly to looking suspiciously, listening to overhearing, and surrender to rape. The human heart yearns for love: love without conditions, limitations, or restrictions. But no human being is capable of offering such love, and each time we demand it we set ourselves on the road to violence.
How then can we live nonviolent lives? We must start by realising that our restless hearts, yearning for perfect love, can only find that love through communion with the One who created them.
- Henri Nouwen