Gathered Wisdom, Oct 31, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

What could you possibly lose by seeking the peace of another person — by literally making another’s peace your goal?  
-Hugh Prather, How To Live in the World and Still Be Happy

From Well for the Journey

Two offerings from The Wisdom Years – a fall Quiet Day and an Advent book study – will draw us into the bounties and blessings of nature this fall.  Our fall Quiet Day, actually a morning, will offer opportunity to wander the beautiful grounds of Cathedral Park in San Antonio on Nov. 30. Click here for the details.

Our Advent study will embrace daily meditations from the animals using Gayle Boss’s All Creation Waits. We gather on Thursdays Dec. 7, 14, and 21 on Zoom for conversation. Click here for details.

This from a woman who learned how to overcome pain and scars through the ancient Japanese process of repairing broken pottery. It is long but a must-read.

Read the story.

Found in Daily Good.

Who does not love the oh-so-lovable Winnie the Pooh? But that gentle, mellow bear also gets scared sometimes.  Read the response from his little friend Piglet.

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

If we live in the northern climates, we can watch – and learn from – the geese as they fly south. But even if we do not see them, we can imagine what Brother Curtis Almquist describes. We see the lesson of encouragement in the sky.

Read or listen to the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

Why is God so elusive? Why doesn’t God just rise up and demonstrate for once and for all that God is good and just and powerful? Why do bad things happen to good people? Why does evil get away with it? Read Fr. Ron Rolheiser’s response.

Read the reflection.

More about Ron Rolheiser.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

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Gathered Wisdom, Oct. 24, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

When the currents of our life change, drowning us in demands, expectations, and information, that’s when we need something to hold on to that will help us focus and draw back to what is most important in our lives. 

-Martin Lonnebo, Pearls of Life For the Personal Spiritual Journey 

From Well for the Journey


And online by Zoom

Registration opens Nov. 1

Cost of $10
For more info: marjoriegeorge62@gmail.com

For Advent, the Wisdom Years community will read All Creation Waits by Gayle Boss.  it is a gentle read in which we learn from the animals what it means to wait in darkness for the new creation that is coming to us in the incarnation of God’s self.

For the details, click here.

It’s a hard time to stay faithful, says Tiffany Clark. it is hard to look with one eye at Christ’s perfect reign in the kingdom of heaven and with the other eye at the mess that comes when humans reject and oppose that kingdom. She offers some suggestions for how to stay faithful and maintain hope.

Read the article.

Found at Renovare.

We operate, says Fr. Ron Rolheiser, too often out of anger, an anger that parades itself as Godly-virtue, as righteousness, as prophecy, as a healthy, divinely-inspired militancy for truth, for cause, for virtue, for God. The prophets operated always out of love, not out of anger.

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser’s blog.

It takes both the notes and the silence between the notes to make a beautiful piece of music. We remember that Elijah did not find God in the cataclysms of nature but in the silence that followed them. In the silence we realize that God is always with us but we do not always hear it.

Read or listen to the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

A poem by Tash Shadman

And as I want for
Words to come,
Ideas to flow,
Pain to go,
I suffer my judgment of what is so.

Read the rest of the poem.

From Awakin.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Oct 17, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

Be the radiator of peace. Go to the center of your inner being and radiate peace in every direction.
Our wings may be small but the ripples of the heart are infinite.

 -Amit Ray, Compassion
From Well for the Journey Daily Reflection

Jamil Zaki writes about losing a friendship over differing values but realizes that using empathy can restore relationships. Empathy unites individuals, relationships, and teams, says Zaki, but it also can be very fragile. Fortunately there are ways to reignite it.

Read the essay.

From Greater Good Magazine.

“Sometimes the very thing that breaks your heart is also the thing that opens it to warmth and gratitude,” says Ron Rolheiser in this essay about dying. This happens in death, says Fr. Ron. “Our task, in the end, is to do what this man did, die in such a way that our going away is our final gift to those whom we love.”

Read the reflection.

More about Ron Rolheiser.

Jesus shows us the beauty of the downward path, “a path that leads to life and peace and to true greatness,” says Br. David Vryhof of the Society of St. John the Evangelist. Jesus lives a life of humility and teaches us how to do so. Humility is about acknowledging that all we have and all we possess proceeds solely from God’s generous love.

Read the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

We can spend all of our time and energy obsessing over past mistakes or fearing what the future will bring. But neither of these option is good for us or for our world. Better to live consciously, moment by moment, giving thanks for each day’s gifts.

Read the short meditation.

From Joanna Seibert.

When you tend what you value, what you value thrives. Appreciation allows you to become more intimate with what is. And it also changes what is.

Listen to the 3-minute meditation.

From Grateful Living.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Oct 3, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

The world has not really tried divine love as Mother love. But when it does, divine love may break upon us with fresh and unexpected intimacy…. 

-Sue Monk Kidd, The Dance of the Dissident Daughter 
Found in Well for the Journey Daily Faith Reflection

Tomorrow, Oct. 4, is the day we especially remember and give thanks for St. Francis of Assisi. In his sermon on joy for the day, Br. Geoffrey Tristram recalls visiting the town of Assisi in Italy and offers three suggestions for connecting with joy in our lives.

Read or listen to the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

Growing older, says Alice Fryling, is a moving target. Some days we appreciate the ability to spend more time in quiet and less time rushing. Other things, like loss of energy, we don’t welcome. Fryling finds comfort and direction in the words and actions of Jesus.

Read the essay.

From the DePree Center of Fuller Seminary.

“When we were children, we used to think that when we were grown-up we would no longer be vulnerable. But to grow up is to accept vulnerability. To be alive is to be vulnerable,” said Madeleine L’Engle. And often, adds Terry Hershey, we are not comfortable in our own skin.

Read the reflection.

From Terry Hershey’s Sabbath Moment.

We think we should be doing more. Our offering to God of our time and energy is too paltry to have significance, we think. Fred Smith reminds us that God has set us in a certain place for a certain task, and no matter how big or small it is, it is enough.

Read the essay.

From The Gathering

Nothing is wasted in nature or in love, says poet Laura Gilpin in this short excerpt from her longer poem.

Read the poem.

Found in Daily Good.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Sept 19, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

-Pueblo Prayer 
Found in Well for the Journey

Thich Nhat Hanh introduced the concept of mindfulness in his home country of Vietnam and the entire world. His inspiration was his experience of war in his own young life in Vietnam. “A Cloud Never Dies” tells the story of this humble young Vietnamese monk and poet whose wisdom and compassion were forged in the suffering of war.

Watch the biographical video. (It is about 30 minutes long.)

From Karmatube.

For Native Americans, interrupting someone who is talking is seen as bad manners or even stupidity. “People should regard their words as seeds says Ella Cara Deloria, a Yankton Dakota educator. “They should sow them, and then allow them to grow in silence.”

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

Most cultures value humility as a virtue to be emulated. Humility teaches us to see that there is always more to learn and different perspectives to be considered. This articles offers eight different varieties of humility to think about and learn from.

Read the article.

Found in Daily Good.

Writer Andrea Gibson confesses that “what we are truly craving can only be found with gratitude, and what taught me to be grateful was not what’s sweet about this life, but what’s sour.”

Read the essay.

From Grateful Living.

What response is there to God’s staggering generosity in the act of creation? What do we give back to the one who gave us everything? “We give thanks. We bow in honor. We dare to draw near — boldly, because permission has been granted, and trembling because God is infinite personal energy and only fools approach that lightly,” says Brian Morykon of Renovare.

Read the essay.

From Renovare.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Sept 12, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

May you know yourself to be a miraculous co-creator with God of the wonders and beauty of creation. And may your work, if only a tiny fraction of it, be a source of joy, pride, and dignity. For in that moment, you will discover what it means to share in the divine life of God.

Br. James Koester, SSJE
Read More  

We each have a picture of God, whether or not we are aware of that. We may believe that God is an unloving tyrant, or a divine candy machine, or a scrupulous bookkeeper of our sins. Dallas Willard has pointed out that since we live at the mercy of our ideas, we would be wise to reflect carefully on those that we have about God.

Read the essay.

From Renovare.

A life of spirit, regardless of the path we choose, begins with a person’s acceptance that they are part of something larger than themselves, says Mark Nepo. “We are meaning-seeking creatures,” says Nepo, “looking for what matters though we carry what matters deep within us.”

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

Windows are to be looked through, but often they are just overlooked. A window is “a portal, and a horn of plenty, an altar, an avenue whose significance is vital and imperative to life,” says writer Pavithra Mehta. “if you do not have a meaningful relationship with windows, then it is possible, that you have some difficulty perceiving grace,” she says.

Read the reflection.

From Daily Good.

When someone you love is angry with you, it may be that you are the recipient of that person’s anger but not the cause of it. You may be the one safe place where this person can lash out without fear of retaliation and have his or her bitterness absorbed. “But this can be very hard to accept, even when we understand why it’s happening,” says Fr. Ron Rolheiser. 

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser blog.

When Brother Jim Woodrum looked at the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31), he found that the rich man had probably committed no crime in his acquisition of wealth. Rather his was the sin of omission: He never saw Lazarus lying at his gate.

Read or listen to the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Aug 29, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

We are all better than we know. 

If only we can come to discover this, 

we may never again settle for anything less.

-Kurt Hahn, co-founder, Outward Bound

From Well for the Journey

It is our ability to imagine what does not yet exist, and then to create it, that is unique to our species, says writer Geneen Marie Haugen. “The human imagination may be our greatest unacknowledged and underutilized innate capacity,” she says.

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

If you have lost a loved one, you will resonate with this remembrance of the days of death. It is the little details that embed themselves in memory.

Read the reflection.

From Orion Magazine.

When Jesus tells his followers to watch and be awake, (Mark 13:33–35) he is not threatening us or talking about punishment. He is reminding us to be fully conscious to his presence among us all the time. We say, “Christ will come again,” but Christ is already and always here. We are called to participate in the “sacrament of the present moment.”

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

What is idolatry? Most of us are not making a golden calf in the basement, but we diminish God in very many ways. “Whenever we conceive of God as somehow being defensive, exotic, anti-enjoyment, less compassionate and intelligent than ourselves, and preferring orthodoxy to compassion, we are breaking the first commandment. Such is idolatry,” says Fr. Ron Rolheiser.

Read the reflection.

From the blog of Ron Rolheiser.

Donna Savastio started making a rug as a gift for her sister. But when she developed Alzheimer’s disease, she could no longer follow the intricate instructions to complete the rug. Out of seemingly nowhere someone showed up who offered to complete the rug.  He was from Loose Ends, a program that matches volunteer knitters, quilters and other crafters with projects left unfinished when a person dies or becomes disabled. 

Read the story.

Found in Karuna News.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom Aug 22, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

To be human is about regaining what has been lost in the shuffle when life has been relegated to keeping score and making waves…. To be human is about gardening the soul.

-Terry Hershey, Soul Gardening

Renowned scripture scholar Gerhard Lohfink says we can experience time right now as it will be experienced in eternity.  It happens whenever we’re in adoration of God. It is then that we stand in pure wonder, pure admiration, ecstatic awe, entirely stripped of our own heartaches, headaches, and idiosyncratic focus. “God’s person, beauty, goodness, and truth overwhelm us so as to take our minds off of ourselves and leave us standing outside of ourselves,” says Fr. Ron Rolheiser.

Read the reflection.

From the blog of Ron Rolheiser.

Imagine a flame in a dark cave. It shows its own surroundings, but it also reminds us of how much more there is of that cave that we do not yet know. We see, says writer Colin Walsh, “that life isn’t about reaching firm conclusions anyway, but about opening yourself to the possibility that you might be wrong, that there’s always more to learn.”

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

The little girl was delighted when she found the penny on the post office floor – several times.  What delights us? What brings us joy? And can we take the risk of sharing those moments with others?

Read the reflection.

From Terry Hershey.

The idea of biblical justice, says Shane Claiborne, was not getting what you deserve. “Rather, it was making right what was done wrong, restoring what had been destroyed, healing the wounds of an offensive act. It was about bringing balance and wholeness back to the community, which is why you often see scales as an icon for justice.”

Read the reflection.

From the Center for Action and Contemplation.

What is my purpose now, we ask.  Now that I am retired, now that the kids are grown, now that I can’t do everything I used to be able to do, does God still have need of me? Emphatically, yes. In this 6-week study, starting September 7, we will use Parker Palmer’s book Let Your Life Speak to look at what our faith and experience have taught us and how we can continue to offer our skills and talents for God’s kingdom. 

Click on the link for all the information: https://wisdomyears.org/let-your-life-speak/

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Aug 15, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

O God, help me to believe in beginnings and in my beginnings again ….

Ted Loder, Guerrillas of Grace
From Well for the Journey

When someone we care about is hurting, our first instinct is to try to make it better. But not only is that unhelpful, it can actually be harmful, says Maria Popova.

Read the essay and watch the animated video.

Found in Daily Good.

Front porches are the original social media. From the porch one can talk to neighbors about the goings-on up and down the street, even from the required distance of COVID. Porches are “the perfect vehicle to get outside without leaving home,” says writer Charlie Hailey in Orion magazine.

Read the essay.

Found in Daily Good.

When we think of shepherds, we envision young boys out in the fields with staff and slingshot.  But in biblical times, girls were more often shepherds than we realize. Perhaps we need to read the Bible stories we thought we knew so well looking for new insights.

Read the short reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

The psalmist declares he meditates on God all night (Ps 63:6). But meditation is not just thinking. Christian meditation, says Joyce Huggett, engages every part of us — our mind, our emotions, our imagination, our creativity and, supremely, our will. Meditation establishes a connection with God.

Read the essay.

From Renovare.

What is my purpose now, we ask.  Now that I am retired, now that the kids are grown, now that I can’t do everything I used to be able to do, does God still have need of me? Emphatically, yes. In this 6-week study, starting September 7, we will use Parker Palmer’s book Let Your Life Speak to look at what our faith and experience have taught us and how we can continue to offer our skills and talents for God’s kingdom. 

Click on the link for all the information: https://wisdomyears.org/let-your-life-speak/

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Aug 8, 2023

A weekly curated collection of essays, poetry, and reflections for your spiritual journey.  From The Wisdom Years.

There are moments when all hope threatens to harden into cynical despair, when our compromises with the powers of the world threaten to exile us from God, our neighbor, and ourselves. It is there, at the brink of the grave, that Christ stands most ready to save, most eager to hold our loss in the fire of love, most able to transfigure everything.

Br. Keith Nelson, SSJE
Read More

What is my purpose now, we ask.  Now that I am retired, now that the kids are grown, now that I can’t do everything I used to be able to do, does God still have need of me? Emphatically, yes. In this 6-week study, starting September 7, we will use Parker Palmer’s book Let Your Life Speak to look at what our faith and experience have taught us and how we can continue to offer our skills and talents for God’s kingdom. 

Click on the link for all the information: https://wisdomyears.org/let-your-life-speak/

From Richard Rohr: “We each have different faces and different colors of skin; some of us have hair, some of us don’t; some are tall, some are a little shorter. If we are living out of the false self, all we can do is measure, compare, evaluate, and label.” Rohr adds that when we know our true self, we know our identity comes from God’s love.

Read more.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

We try and try to find a “final truth,” but as long as we are trying to find this kind of certainty, it is pretty much guaranteed that uncertainty and doubt will always be nipping at our heels, says writer Joan Tollifson. “And that nipping produces a kind of anxiety in us, an uneasiness, which sets us up to be easily attracted to people and systems that offer seemingly comprehensive answers that explain how the universe works.”

Read the essay.

From Awakin.

All of us want to be more loving in our hearts. Theologian Howard Thurman teaches that will only happen when we live in connection with the Holy Spirit, the divine within us. Then we will know the fruit of the spirit as we put ourselves in position to connect to God within.

Read the reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

Nobody gets to heaven without a letter of reference from the poor, said James Forbes. Fr. Ron Rolheiser adds that the prophets of old said, “The quality of your faith will be judged by the quality of justice in the land. And the quality of justice in the land will always be judged by how widows, orphans, and strangers are faring while you are alive.” 

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser’s blog.

Gathered Wisdom is an offering of The Wisdom Years, a ministry devoted to the spiritual journey of the last third of our lives.

If this post was forwarded to you, sign up to receive Gathered Wisdom in your email by subscribing at wisdomyears.org.

To learn more visit our website.