Spirit of the Lord

You are holy, Lord, the only God, and Your deeds are wonderful.
You are strong.
You are great.
You are the Most High.
You are Almighty.
You, Holy Father are King of heaven and earth.
You are Three and One, Lord God, all Good.
You are Good, all Good, supreme Good, Lord God, living and true.
You are love.
You are wisdom.
You are humility.
You are endurance.
You are rest.
You are peace.
You are joy and gladness.
You are justice and moderation.
You are all our riches, and You suffice for us.
You are beauty.
You are gentleness.
You are our protector.
You are our guardian and defender.
You are our courage.
You are our haven and our hope.
You are our faith, our great consolation.
You are our eternal life, Great and Wonderful Lord, God Almighty, Merciful Saviour.

St. Francis never shrank from any adjective that portrayed God as connected intimately to us. Francis went out of his way to show those around him that God was not a distant symbol but a force that is intimately involved in our lives. How often do I live that way? How often is my life a witness to a creator that is loving, caring and gentle? Jesus says, “The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has. anointed me to bring good news to the poor. —Luke 4:18. How can I live that more fully? How can I bring good news to the poor? I am surrounded by poor people. They are not always poor in money but poor in spirit. They need an encouragement. St. Francis was great at showing people how much God loved them. Peace.

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Whatever you ask…

“Amen, amen, I say to you, whoever believes in me will do the works that I do, and will do greater ones than these,because I am going to the Father. And whatever you ask in my name, I will do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask anything of me in my name, I will do it.”

These are the last few lines of today’s Gospel. Read these lines more than once. Reflecting on these sentences I’m struck with their promise. Whatever I ask in his name he will do. Today I asked for an end to the Iraq War. I asked for an end to violence. I asked that all our people and all the citizens of Iraq could live in peace. I asked that there be no hostility with Iran. I asked that we experience the peace of Jesus Christ no matter what you worship. I ask God to bless not only America but all the world. I ask God to bless President Bush and all the leaders of the world. I ask God to bless those we would call enemy because we’re all made in the image of the most high. May God bless you and your family and all that you hold sacred. Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world, grant us peace.

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Our beloved son

Tomorrow at 10 AM our son Devin will graduate with a Bachelor of Science from State University of New York at Fredonia. Like all undergrads he’s gone through the maturation-education process of four years of undergraduate study. As parents we will share in his joy at the completion of this milestone event. It seems like only yesterday we were bringing him home from the hospital. How quickly 22 years have passed. He is our beloved son in whom we are well pleased. Peace.

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Peace on Earth

I ran into an old friend this morning. He’s really not that old, but he is a friend. We disagree on many things but over time we’ve not become disagreeable. He’s read this blog and asked me if I ever listened to Bono and U2. I have listened to Bono from time to time. My friend asked me if there was ever going to be peace. He was playing the devil’s advocate. I did a little googling and discovered that Bono has a song called Peace on Earth. Here are the lyrics.

Heaven on Earth
We need it now
I’m sick of all of
This hanging around
Sick of sorrow
Sick of the pain
I’m sick of hearing
Again and again
That there’s gonna be
Peace on Earth

Where I grew up
There weren’t many trees
Where there was
We’d tear them down
And use them on
Our enemies
They say that
What you mock
Will surely
Overtake you
And you become
A monster
So the monster
Will not break you

And it’s already gone
Too far
Who said that if
You go in hard
You won’t get hurt?

Jesus
Can you take the time
To throw a drowning man
A line?
Peace on Earth
Tell the ones who
Hear no sound
Whose sons are living
In the ground
Peace on Earth
No whos or whys
No one cries
Like a mother cries
For
Peace on Earth
She never got to
Say goodbye
To see the color
In his eyes
Now he’s in the dirt
Peace on Earth

They’re reading names
Out over the radio
All the folks
The rest of us won’t
Get to know
Sean and Julia
Gareth and Ann
And Breda
Their lives are bigger
Than any big idea

Jesus
Can you take the time
To throw a drowning man
A line?
Peace on Earth
To tell the ones
Who hear no sound
Whose sons are living
In the ground
Peace on Earth
Jesus
Sing a song you wrote
The words are sticking
In my throat
Peace on Earth
Hear it every
Christmas time
But hope and history
Won’t rhyme
So what’s it worth?
This
Peace on Earth

Peace on Earth
Peace on Earth
Peace on Earth

This song expresses a common frustration. When will there ever be peace on earth? Peace begins with me. Peace.

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The kingdom of heaven is within..

“I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven.” I’m blessed. I work in an elementary school and I’m surrounded by hundreds of role models. My neighbor loves practical jokes. Today he borrowed my footstool that looks like a bear cub. When I came off the running track this morning he signalled me to stop by the excercise room and there in the hallway was my bear. My neighbor was grinning from ear to ear like a little child. I thought to myself, “there’s a guy who is living in the kingdom of heaven.” Peace.

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Freedom of thought

Minor Friar has a post today that made me think about imposing my views on others. The temptation to impose my views always exists. The more I react out of fear the more likely it is to happen. His post made me think again of Thich Nhat Hanh. Nhat Hanh has a mindfulness training devoted to Freedom of Thought.

Aware of the suffering brought about when I impose my views on others, I am committed not to force others, even my children, by any means whatsoever – such as authority, threat, money, propaganda or indoctrination – to adopt my views. I will respect the right of others to be different and to choose what to believe and how to decide. I will, however, help others renounce fanaticism and narrowness through compassionate dialogue.”–Thich Nhat Hanh.

In looking at my own work I can see at times this tendency to impose my views. Today as I read the commentaries on the Da Vinci Code I saw many people have emphasized the truthfulness of their assertions. With such an approach there is a tendency to set one against another. Such an emphasis can lead to violence. It may not be an actual striking of blows but such thinking leads to trivialization of another’s arguments and that can lead to violence. Can we eliminate violence from our thoughts and our language? Probably not, but we can become mindful of our language and mindful use of language could be the beginning of a nonviolent dialogue. Peace.

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mindfulness, nonviolence, thich nhat hanh, peace, freedom

Imperfection and nonviolence

“There is so much focus on the distinction between nonviolence and violence, between nonviolent people and violent people. But in reality it’s not that easy to take sides like that. One can never be sure that one is completely on the side of nonviolence or that the other person is completely on the side of violence. Nonviolence is a direction, not a separating line. It has no boundaries.–Thich Nhat Hanh.

This quote comes from one of my favorite authors and it expresses a truth that is too often not appreciated. We/they, us/them arguments are false arguments that leave us as adversaries. Peacemaking requires not only the acceptance of the enemy as he/she is. It requires us first to accept that we are flawed, that no one is completely violent or nonviolent. Living this way helps us accept ourselves and others as we are with all our imperfection. Peace.

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Brian McLaren on The Da Vinci Code

This is an interview from yesterday’s issue of SojoMail. I enjoy reading Sojourner’s Magazine and their regular electronic correspondence. I’m posting it here because I think Brian McClaren makes some valid points. His reaction to The Da Vinci Code is not hysterical and I think that is an approach that has merit. Peace.

An interview by Lisa Ann Cockrel

With The Da Vinci Code poised to go from bestseller list to the big screen on May 19, pastor and writer (and Sojourners board member) Brian McLaren talks about why he thinks there’s truth in the controversial book’s fiction.

What do you think the popularity of The Da Vinci Code reveals about pop culture attitudes toward Christianity and the church?

Brian McLaren: I think a lot of people have read the book, not just as a popular page-turner but also as an experience in shared frustration with status-quo, male-dominated, power-oriented, cover-up-prone organized Christian religion. We need to ask ourselves why the vision of Jesus hinted at in Dan Brown’s book is more interesting, attractive, and intriguing to these people than the standard vision of Jesus they hear about in church. Why would so many people be disappointed to find that Brown’s version of Jesus has been largely discredited as fanciful and inaccurate, leaving only the church’s conventional version? Is it possible that, even though Brown’s fictional version misleads in many ways, it at least serves to open up the possibility that the church’s conventional version of Jesus may not do him justice?

So you think The Da Vinci Code taps into dissatisfaction with Jesus as we know him?

McLaren: For all the flaws of Brown’s book, I think what he’s doing is suggesting that the dominant religious institutions have created their own caricature of Jesus. And I think people have a sense that that’s true. It’s my honest feeling that anyone trying to share their faith in America today has to realize that the Religious Right has polluted the air. The name “Jesus” and the word “Christianity” are associated with something judgmental, hostile, hypocritical, angry, negative, defensive, anti-homosexual, etc. Many of our churches, even though they feel they represent the truth, actually are upholding something that’s distorted and false.

I also think that the whole issue of male domination is huge and that Brown’s suggestion that the real Jesus was not as misogynist or anti-woman as the Christian religion often has been is very attractive. Brown’s book is about exposing hypocrisy and cover-up in organized religion, and it is exposing organized religion’s grasping for power. Again, there’s something in that that people resonate with in the age of pedophilia scandals, televangelists, and religious political alliances. As a follower of Jesus I resonate with their concerns as well.

Do you think the book contains any significantly detrimental distortions of the Christian faith?

McLaren: The book is fiction and it’s filled with a lot of fiction about a lot of things that a lot of people have already debunked. But frankly, I don’t think it has more harmful ideas in it than the Left Behind novels. And in a certain way, what the Left Behind novels do, the way they twist scripture toward a certain theological and political end, I think Brown is twisting scripture, just to other political ends. But at the end of the day, the difference is I don’t think Brown really cares that much about theology. He just wanted to write a page-turner and he was very successful at that.

Many Christians are also reading this book and it’s rocking their preconceived notions – or lack of preconceived notions – about Christ’s life and the early years of the church. So many people don’t know how we got the canon, for example. Should this book be a clarion call to the church to say, “Hey, we need to have a body of believers who are much more literate in church history.” Is that something the church needs to be thinking about more strategically?

McLaren: Yes! You’re exactly right. One of the problems is that the average Christian in the average church who listens to the average Christian broadcasting has such an oversimplified understanding of both the Bible and of church history – it would be deeply disturbing for them to really learn about church history. I think the disturbing would do them good. But a lot of times education is disturbing for people. And so if The Da Vinci Code causes people to ask questions and Christians have to dig deeper, that’s a great thing, a great opportunity for growth. And it does show a weakness in the church giving either no understanding of church history or a very stilted, one-sided, sugarcoated version.

On the other hand, it’s important for me to say I don’t think anyone can learn good church history from Brown. There’s been a lot of debunking of what he calls facts. But again, the guy’s writing fiction so nobody should be surprised about that. The sad thing is there’s an awful lot of us who claim to be telling objective truth and we actually have our own propaganda and our own versions of history as well.

Let me mention one other thing about Brown’s book that I think is appealing to people. The church goes through a pendulum swing at times from overemphasizing the deity of Christ to overemphasizing the humanity of Christ. So a book like Brown’s that overemphasizes the humanity of Christ can be a mirror to us saying that we might be underemphasizing the humanity of Christ.

In light of The Da Vinci Code movie that is soon to be released, how do you hope churches will engage this story?

McLaren: I would like to see churches teach their people how to have intelligent dialogue that doesn’t degenerate into argument. We have to teach people that the Holy Spirit works in the middle of conversation. We see it time and time again – Jesus enters into dialogue with people; Paul and Peter and the apostles enter into dialogue with people. We tend to think that the Holy Spirit can only work in the middle of a monologue where we are doing the speaking.

So if our churches can encourage people to, if you see someone reading the book or you know someone who’s gone to the movie, say, “What do you think about Jesus and what do you think about this or that,” and to ask questions instead of getting into arguments, that would be wonderful. The more we can keep conversations open and going the more chances we give the Holy Spirit to work. But too often people want to get into an argument right away. And, you know, Jesus has handled 2,000 years of questions, skepticism, and attacks, and he’s gonna come through just fine. So we don’t have to be worried.

Ultimately, The Da Vinci Code is telling us important things about the image of Jesus that is being portrayed by the dominant Christian voices. [Readers] don’t find that satisfactory, genuine, or authentic, so they’re looking for something that seems more real and authentic.

Lisa Ann Cockrel is associate editor at Today’s Christian Woman.

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Da Vinci Code, Brian McClaren

Brother if you don’t mind…

Last night I began to read the “Engage” workbook that we received at last weekend’s Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation retreat. It’s very good reading and I wanted to share one of the stories from the book with you. I hope it challenges you to think of implementing nonviolence in your life. Peace.

“Brother, if you don’t mind, there is a cloud of glass
coming at us. Grab my hand, let’s get the hell out
of here!”

by Usman Farman

Published in Pace Bene’s book, Engage: Exploring
Nonviolent Living.

The following is an excerpt from a speech delivered
two weeks after the attack on the World Trade Center
in September 2001.

Read More…

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nonviolence, September 2001, pace e bene, peace