Gathered Wisdom, Sept 3, 2024

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

Some people go through life trying to find out what the world holds for them, only to find out too late that it’s what they bring to the world that really counts.

-Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables
From Well for the Journey

She expected to be sitting in front of a lovely lake.  Instead she was looking at a large field of oats. Was this what her spiritual director meant by meeting God where he wants to be met?

Read the reflection.

From Joyce Rupp.

Jesus spoke in parables and often about disruption. “Jesus was calling for a radical disruption in his religion, a great spiritual migration,” says Brian McLaren, “and a similar disruption and migration are needed no less today in the religion that names itself after him.” 

Read the reflection.

There is a difference between charity and justice, says Ron Rolheiser. And often, charity gets in the way of justice. Yes we feed the homeless; but do we know how our systems create homelessness in the first place?

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser.

The disciples were terrified when a storm erupted suddenly on the Sea of Galilee. We, too, face many moments of fear in our lives. Jesus may not take away the fearful situation, but he promises to be with us in it.

Read the reflection.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

A mentor is someone who companions and guides us through our Real Work, says Richard Rohr. That work “is always going to be focused on the inside, not the outside. Real Work is second-half-of-life work,” says Rohr.

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

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, Aug 27, 2024

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

Community is first of all a quality of the heart.
It grows from the knowledge that we are alive
not for ourselves but for one another.

-Henri J. M. Nouwen, Bread for the Journey

We treat time as a commodity: We talk about how we plan to “spend” it, and calculate how much we will need to complete a certain task.

But author Christine Valters Paintner invites us to a different experience of time; she encourages us to see time as offering us invitations rather than making demands on us.

Our online fall study will explore our relationship with time using the book Sacred Time. It begins Thursday, Sept. 5.

See the details and register.

“We are called into partnership with Jesus to care about how the world around us does or does not conform to God’s design,” writes Frederick Schmidt.   We do that in part by making daily personal choices that witness to God’s presence in our lives.

Read the reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

At some point in our lives, there will likely be a death, a disease, a disruption to our normal way of thinking or being in the world. We will find ourselves in great disorder. It is necessary if any real growth is to occur, says Richard Rohr.  

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

It is a question so many people ask: How can a loving God allow suffering in this world? Is it about God giving us humans free will? Can we see God as a redeeming God instead of a rescuing God? Fr. Ron Rolheiser offers some thoughts.

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser.

Acoustic ecologist Gordon Hempton takes us on a short journey of natural silence. Hempton defines silence not as the absence of sound, but as a void of noise pollution created by modern life, and warns that, with the pervasiveness of noise pollution, “silence is on the verge of extinction.”

Watch and listen.

From Karmatube.

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, Aug 20, 2024

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

Many of us have lives that are full. We have full bellies, full closets, full calendars, full trash cans, full purses and full email inboxes. But at the end of the day, we are empty. God made us all with a built-in desire to find the meaning to life and to spend time on things that are meaningful.

-Courtney Joseph and Beverly Wise, Ecclesiastes: Wisdom for Living Well

From Well for the Journey

We treat time as a commodity: We talk about how we plan to “spend” it, and calculate how much we will need to complete a certain task.

But author Christine Valters Paintner invites us to a different experience of time; she encourages us to see time as offering us invitations rather than making demands on us.

Our online fall study will explore our relationship with time using the book Sacred Time. It begins Thursday, Sept. 5.

See the details and register.

The world tells us we are not enough: not adequate, not prepared, not smart enough. But Paul, in the letter to the Colossians, reminds us that in Christ we are more than enough. We are inheritors of Christ’s power. 

Read or listen to the sermon from Br. Keith Nelson of SSJE.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

A group of professional people posed this question to a group of 4 to 8 year-olds: “What does love mean?” The answers they got were broader and deeper than anyone could have imagined. Read and enjoy.

Read  what the children had to say.

From Daily Good.

What’s the difference between wise selfishness and foolish selfishness? Feeding the soul of another that also feeds our soul is wise selfishness. An act of loving-kindness is always wise selfishness.

Read the reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

A poem.

On the left there is business
It loves to think and problem solve
Perform so hard it wears you down
If only it would stop to breathe and look around

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.

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To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, Aug 14, 2024

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

Listen: Open a window to God and breathe.
Delight yourself with what comes through that opening.
The work of love is to create a window in the heart ….

-From Rumi’s poem “Open the Window” published in
Love’s Ripening: Rumi on the Heart’s Journey

Br. Lain Wilson came up against his own limitations in the bicycle trip. He could not push one more rotation of the pedals. How do we react when we meet our limitations? Can we allow them to teach us something instead of seeing them as failure?

Read the essay.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

We tell our stories because we all have survived something. “Our stories are a witness to the next generation and an opportunity to understand the universal as well as the particular in tales of trauma, healing, and survival,” says Barbara Holmes.

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

Fr. Ron Rolheiser of Oblate Seminary reports that students from various Christian denominations have come through their PhD program in the 15 years of its existence. Happily, he says, not one of them has left his own denomination for another. That is part of the goal – not to foster conversion to another denomination but to strengthen the love and understanding of our own denomination. That will bring Christian unity.

Read the reflection.

From Ron Rolheiser’s blog.

Our sacrifices may not be grand, but every sacrifice we make for another person is applauded in the kingdom of God. And the first sacrifice we are called upon to make is to listen to others, especially to those with whom we disagree.

Read the reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

Is it really hard to hug a cactus? A sweet children’s book tells the story of Felipe the cactus whose family did not believe in giving hugs. So he went in search of some. Hint: the balloon thing didn’t work so well.

Read about it.

From The Marginalian.

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, July 16, 2024

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

I pray that I may serve by doing what is mine to do, knowing I will remember and forget, find and lose, knowing too that your infinite grace is everywhere when I choose to be attuned.

-Danna Faulds, “Prayers to the Infinite” 
From Well for the Journey

There are going to be tears and holes in the fabric of our lives. That is when we must remember our history – that Christ has always been with us, has always rescued us. “Remember your past, draw on your past, how you’ve been provided for, sustained, protected, healed, empowered up until now,” says Br. Curtis Almquist.

Read the reflection.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

To be able to laugh at your most embarrassing moments in the past; To side with your former adversaries, if only for a glancing moment; To experience prayer as the automatic breathing of petitions for others’ good; and other short bits of wisdom.

Read the reflection.

From Joanna Seibert.

It was out of deep grief that Paula D’Arcy’s heart was opened. “Now that suffering was a lived experience, I realized there was so much I needed to change about how I understood life,” she says. “I had to move beyond my old conclusions.”

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

How long does it take to become more like Jesus? Oh, a lifetime or so. “Transformation almost always happens at a pace slower than we would expect or desire,” says Carolyn Arends.

Read the reflection.

From Renovare.

That is the wrong question, says Fr. Ron Rolheiser. The real question, especially at this stage of life, is “How can I help?” “A non-negotiable part of meeting Jesus,” says Rolheiser, “means being sent out, and not just alone on some private spiritual quest or individualized ministry. It means being called into community . . .”

Read the reflection.

From the blog of 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, July 10, 2024

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

The compassion that I am learning to offer myself expands outward into compassion for others, as well. 

-Katrina Kenison, Magical Journey
From Well for the Journey

We may think that the tapestry of our life is ended. But perhaps there is a new tapestry to weave in these later years.

Read the reflection.

From William Martin.

Fr. Ron Rolheiser reminds us that “gospel” means “good news,” not “good advice.” The gospels, says Rolheiser,  “are not so much a spiritual and moral theology book that tell us what we should be doing but are more an account of what God has already done for us.” Zacchaeus is our model.

Read the reflection.

From the blog of Ron Rolheiser.

The baby eagle grew up in a chicken coop and consequently thought he was a chicken. A naturalist came along and convinced him he was really an eagle. What is your reaction to this interesting fable? Would you have left the bird alone to be a happy chicken, or keep urging him to embrace his true nature?

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

Br. Lucas Hall reminds us that God is not simply a concept – a set of principles or a series of instructions that we simply need to download into our brains and then we’ll be good. God is active, because life is active. Life moves. Life responds. We are invited to participate in that living.

Read the reflection.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

The ego insists on knowing and being certain; it refuses all unknowing, says Richard Rohr. “We cannot grow in the great art form, the integrative dance of action and contemplation, without a strong tolerance for ambiguity, an ability to allow, forgive, and contain a certain degree of anxiety, and a willingness to not know—and not even need to know,” says Rohr.

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

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, July 4, 2024

Grant, O God, that your holy and life-giving Spirit may so
move every human heart [and especially the hearts of the
people of this land], that barriers which divide us may
crumble, suspicions disappear, and hatreds cease; that our
divisions being healed, we may live in justice and peace;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(BCP page 823)

O God, you have bound us together in a common life. Help us,
in the midst of our struggles for justice and truth, to confront
one another without hatred or bitterness, and to work
together with mutual forbearance and respect; through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen.
(BCP page 824)

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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To learn more visit our website.

Gathered Wisdom, June 25, 2024

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

Seas and winds, mountains and trees, sun, moon, and stars, and all the animals and people have become sacred windows offering us glimpses of God.

-Henri J. M. Nouwen, Bread for the Journey

Yes, some days are hard. When there is little and we want for more, we see only the lack. Can we instead give thanks for what we have, what has been given, like the manna in the wilderness.

Read the reflection.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

The mystic John of the Cross said we have three essential struggles in life: to get our lives together, to give our lives away, and to give our deaths away. But what can it mean to give our deaths away? “How we die leaves behind a legacy, a particular spirit, which either nurtures or haunts those left behind,” says Fr. Ron Rolheiser.

Read the reflection.

More about Ron Rolheiser.

The young man wanted to be exceptional, so he piled up accomplishments in every arena of his life.  Then one day he saw a flower. He named it Fran.

Read the reflection.

From Sabbath Moment.

In his anger and distress, the biblical Job wishes he had never been born. He finally feels his feelings. He acts out. “I am convinced that people who do not feel deeply finally do not know deeply either,” says Richard Rohr.  Job’s grief becomes both “whole and holy.”

Read the reflection.  

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

A community as a body has more wisdom, strength, and courage than any one of us alone, says Thich Nhat Hanh. “This is called community building. It is the most precious work a monk, nun or layperson can do,” he adds.

Read the reflection.

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.

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Gathered Wisdom, June 18, 2024

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

God’s invitation is not for the select few, but rather for all who long to drink deeply from the well of eternal life. And that is good news, no matter where you are from, your situation in life, or what others think of you.

Br. James Koester, Society of St. John the Evangelist
Read More

Dolphin lovers know that they are best seen when seas are calm, not choppy. Just so, says Joanna Seibert, when the waters of our lives are stormy, it may be hard to see the path ahead. We must find a sacred place each day where we can rest in calm seas.

Read the reflection.  

From Joanna Seibert.

A Vietnam combat veteran worked for years to overcome his insomnia. Then one day he discovered that it was in the midst of suffering and confusion, that healing and transformation could take place, if he stopped trying to escape.

Read the story.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

Thinking about how little rest African American slaves got, this  thought-provoking reflection offers an invitation for us to let go of all the “doing,” be still, and focus our attention on enjoying God.

Read the reflection.

From Renovare.

We misunderstand the biblical story about Jesus driving the money-changers out of the temple. It is not justification for losing our tempers and being angry with those who differ from us. It is about everyone’s access to God.

Read the reflection.

From Fr. Ron Rolheiser.

the edges of things are always deceptive.
because we are taught to believe
in endings and beginnings.
 
but the truth is:
There Are No Borders.

Read the rest of the poem.

From 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.

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Gathered Wisdom, June 11, 2024

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

Take a few moments to contemplate the question: “What gifts do I bring to share with my Earth family?” Go within and take an inventory of all the qualities that make you who you are …. Today, commit to seeking new ways to open up the gift you are by sharing it with others. 

-Dennis Merritt Jones, The Art of Being

From Well for the Journey

A seed grows into a flower through the mud and mess of nature without questioning nature’s plan. In the same way, “We can only meet what is truly here now, deeply and earnestly, and choose to keep opening to what is,” says writer Lucy Grace.

Read the reflection.

From Awakin.

A blind man went traveling alone. When people realized that he was blind they invited him to squeeze things as a way of perceiving them. So it is in our lives: we may have to “squeeze” life to find the reality of it.

Read the reflection.

From Terry Hershey’s Sabbath Moment.

Our society seems to be in the grip of fear these days, not unlike the fear the disciples experienced when the storm came up while they were fishing (Matthew 8:23-27). “Our country is more polarized than at any time in recent memory,” says Bro. David Vryhof, and fear is the result.

Read the sermon.

From Society of St. John the Evangelist.

How must we pray? Sit down. Sit down alone. Sit down alone in silence.

Read the reflection.

From Center for Action and Contemplation.

How must we pray? Sit down. Sit down alone. Sit down alone in silence.

Fr. Ron Rolheiser recalls a seminary professor of great wisdom who taught that at the least we must pray the Lord’s Prayer every day. It is, says Rolheiser, both a challenge and a consolation.

Read the reflection.

From 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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