Sunday, February 7, 2010

Sunday Reflections


It's Sunday and I'm taking some time to reflect. Typically, Sunday has been a day to rest, reconnect with family and friends, attend a service, and well... just chill! (lol. It's not nearly as chilly in North Carolina as places that are now buried in two feet of snow... Alas, that brings back memories of my Pennsylvania youth and a few frosty winters in Wisconsin!)

Today though, my thoughts are focused mainly on spirituality and the sacred. I've been on a long, winding journey of discovery and learning, putting my spiritual beliefs together, taking them apart again, and acting on them as best I can. Looking back, it's easy to see that this journey has shaped my life and formed the person I really am.

I've gradually come to understand that a relationship and deep connection with God is far more important than a church or synagogue or mosque, more expansive than religion. Don't get me wrong, I continually read and try to learn about God and to live in ways that are consistent with what I "get" of the teachings of Jesus. Those relationships give me solid footing and I must return often. I've also found out that it's important to meet with others that seek to know more, so I attend religious services and participate within that spiritual "homebase." Our shared times can give us connections, renewal, different perspectives, rituals, common prayer, joyous experiences, and so much more. I don't want to underrate the power or necessity of that!

My life has also led me on spiritual quests of discovery and greater awareness. I've been blessed to see many sacred places... near and far. God often shows up in the beauty of a mountain waterfall, in a rainbow, in a field of flowers. Or in the eyes of a child or the smile of someone that cares. There are many ways to "know" when one seeks God.

But, I want more. My consistent wish is to relate and deeply connect to others, including those who have a rich spiritual history and passions different than mine. So, I "reach in to reach out"... and, increasingly, read books that challenge me to think, have more conversations with others/myself/God, ask more questions, and live more fully into what I am learning...into what God is showing me...

One of my most recent reads is The Faith Club, a book about three women- a Christian, a Muslim, and a Jew- and their journey to learn about different faiths and each other. It's a fascinating book and helped me fill in the pieces of my understanding. I needed that! The book also offers a tool for developing a local Faith Club. I'm still thinking on that one...

Similarly, I have been inspired by Mitch Albom's book Have a Little Faith. That book is about a man's search for meaning when he is given an unusual request: an elderly rabbi asks him to deliver his eulogy. This book also moves between faiths as the author weaves the storyline between Christian and Jewish faiths, African-American and white worlds, and impoverished and well-to-do lifestyles.

My hopes and prayers have been reinvigorated by this reading and my on-going search. My life and work has deepened. My teaching increasingly encourages students to step outside the classroom to make connections between "book learning" and "real life experiences", which tend to lead them/us into new possibilities... That's heady, life altering stuff. It's also very humbling...There is so much that can and must be done. The journey continues.

Alas, today's time for my reminiscing is over... It's time for other forms of renewal. It's Sunday after all and that's what I do. But, dear readers before you also move on, I encourage you to pause to look at my photo of a sacred space in France, Mont St. Michel. And, visit your own sacred spaces, if only in your mind's eye. Reflections are important, grounding, renewing... I'd like to encourage you to a little time today for that.

Let me end with a powerful prayer that blesses me even on the most hectic days! Hopefully, it will bring inspiration, love and light in your life, too...

May the Lord bless you and keep you,
May the Lord make his face shine upon you and be gracious to you,
May God give you grace never to sell yourself short,
Grace to risk something big for something good,
Grace to remember that the world is now too dangerous
for anything but truth; and too small for anything but love.
So, may God take your minds and think through them,
May God take your lips and speak through them,
May God take your hearts and set them on fire.
May God lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.