"In order to find God in ourselves, we must stop looking at ourselves, stop checking and verifying ourselves in the mirror of our own futility, and be content to be in [God] and to do whatever [God] wills, according to our limitations…" – Rev. Thomas Merton (1915-1968) I.
Journal of Sacred Work
Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.
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7 responses to “Days 269-270 – Finding God in Ourselves – A Two-Part Meditation”
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Thank you for the reminder that I was created in the image of God. Inspite of my flaws. I can then see the image of God in others.
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I just love how God’s plan is intertwined with my study and the people I worship with and work with. My study last night and this morning is Saint Paul’s attempt to help the Romans understand where to find God (Romans 10:8). He is near you, in your mouth (proclamation of our belief)and in your heart (our core belief). If we are all created in His image, then He has written Himself in our hearts. We then choose to believe that or not. I proclaim the Jesus is in me, God has written this on my heart and I believe in Him.
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I often wonder if questionable objects of creation are done so to confuse us. Often the undesirable color of an item (fabric, room, garden, etc.), or food dish becomes beautiful when paired with something else neutral. It’s as though we are tested on curiosity to peel back the obvious blight to see the treasure. I smile when I remember past popular songs about the “ugly woman” who was really beautiful and treasured (and were hits). And, the ugly cake that my grandmother knew was gorgeous on the inside. So, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
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My brother really likes T Merton. I recently gave him a book of his writings. Thanks for the meditation. I am rereading all the Jane Roberts Seth books. They have always spoken the most directly to me. I had just read something in the chapter” Affirmation, Love Acceptance and Denial” along these lines. ” Many people who consider themselves truth seekers and spiritual are filled with false humility. They often use religious terms to express themselves. They will say,” I am nothing,but the spirit of God moves through me, and if I do any good it is because of God’s spirit not my own,” He goes on to say–“Now: In those terms you Are the power of God manifested. You are not powerless. To the contrary. Through your being the power of God is strengthened, for you are a portion of what He is. You are not an innocuous lump of clay through which He decides to show Himself. You are He manifesting as you.”
“You are He manifesting as you” now I like that!!!!LikeLike
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Yesterday, I listened to an interview with Rabbi Sharon Brous on NPR’s Speaking of Faith. Rabbi Brous recalled those wooden stacking dolls that you open only to find another inside, and another, and another, until you reach the inner core, and the littlest doll looks a lot less like the outer dolls. She made the analogy of the inner doll as our inner essence of Light. This Light may be deeply hidden and almost forgotten within us, but as you say, it is always present. This is why I believe the inner journey is so important; to reconnect with that Holy presence and experience communion when we are in quiet stillness, to listen Love’s guiding whisper.
Yet too often, we wage a battle of wills between our ego’s desire to be the author life and the gift of Creation, in a cycle of endless suffering. We resist acceptance of God’s unconditional Love for us, which is beyond appearances, beyond polarities, beyond all form… because we fear surrendering means loss, rather than abundance.
I can look beyond most people’s flaws to see their goodness but what challenges me is how to love someone who perpetrates unspeakable crimes. Especially, how do I forgive unthinkable acts of hate and violence? To love someone who has committed such evil-well, surely, I fear them. Perhaps, that is because if I look too closely I might discover the horror of the same potential within me. Maybe that is it…I hate their crime but beneath all the loathing and warped perceptions is still God’s Light. Then it becomes, for me, an act of forgiveness and that is the beginning of all healing.
This brings me to my last point. I believe our thoughts are the seeds that become our reality. These are important questions that you ask of us, Erie. Thich Nhat Hahn teaches the importance of watering the good seeds within us, which will bear good fruit and good deeds.
To heal begins within and then expands outwards to help others heal and with increasing awareness we can begin to help heal our world.LikeLike
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Are the flaws we believe we experience and/or see, just feelings and/or reflections of just part of human beingness??
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I read something amny years ago, which has always held true. Inside he person is a soul, waiting to be spoken to in a soft voice, and longs to conncect to that person who is speaking. I try to look deep inside first, then get the person somehow to smile, and then I see the soul. It isn’t always possible, but I do have success on a regular basis.
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