“Yod, Hey, Vav, Hey”
“Is the name of God, the sound of breathing?”
-Rob Bell, Nooma: Breathe-watch full video here
“Yod, Hey, Vav, Hey”
“Is the name of God, the sound of breathing?”
-Rob Bell, Nooma: Breathe-watch full video here
God be in my head and in my understanding.
God be in my eyes and in my looking.
God be in my mouth and in my speaking.
God be in my heart and in my thinking.
God be at my end and at my departing.
-Sarum Book of Hours, 1514
“And it always seems that just when daily life seems most unbearable, stretching out before me like a prison sentence, when I seem most dead inside, reduced to mindlessness, bitter tears or both, that what is inmost breaks forth and I realize that what had seemed “dead time” was actually a period of gestation.
It is a quotidian mystery that dailiness can lead to such despair and yet also be at the core of our salvation. We express this every time we utter the Lord’s Prayer. As Simone Weil so eloquently stated it in her esssay, “Concerning the Our Father,” the “bread of this world” is all that nourished and energizes us, not only food but the love of friends and faimly, “money, ambition, consideration…power…everthing that gets into us the capacity for action.” She reminds us that we need to keep praying for this food, acknowledging our needs as daily, because in the act of asking, the prayer awakens in us the trust that God will provide. But, like the manna that God provided to Israel in the desert, this “bread” cannot be stored. “We cannot bind our will today for tomorrow,” Weil writes; “we cannot make a pact with [Christ] that tomorrow he will be within us, even in spite of ourselves.” Each day brings with it not only the necessity of eating but the renewal of our love of and in God. This may sound like a simple thing, but it is not easy to maintain faith, hope or love in the everyday. I wonder if this is because human pride, and particularly a preoccupation with intellectual, artisitc or spiritual matters, can provide a convenient way to ignore our ordinary, daily bodily needs.”
-Kathleen Norris, The Quotidian Mysteries
“Awake, O Sleeper,
arise from the dead,
and Christ will shine on you!”
-Ephesians 5:14
Be your genuine self.
Then people will know you as you really are…
Let your life point the way to the soure,
and God himself will welcome.
-Jerusalem Community Rule of Life
IF
I covet any place on earth but the
dust at the foot of the cross,
then I know nothing of Calvary love.
-Amy Carmichael, If
Lay down your arms
Give up the fight
Quiet our hearts for a little while
Things have been spoken
Shouldn’t be said
Rattles around in our hearts and our heads
Let’s feel what we cannot feel
Know what we cannot know
Let’s heal where we couldn’t heal
Oh, it’s a miracle, it’s a miracle
…
Let’s be a miracle
-Sara Groves, Miracle, (story behind the song)
O Lord, my God, what is Thy will for me today?
What task hast Thou before me?
What opportunity hast Thou placed in my way?
Open mine eyes that I may discover Thy Will!
Save me from wasting this new day!
May I turn it into eternal profit!
-Dr. J. H. Jowett
“If you cannot express yourself well on each of your beliefs, work and study until you can. But you must be willing to go through God’s winepress where the grapes are crushed. Then the time will come when that very expression will become God’s wine of strength to someone else. Try to state to yourself what you believe to be the absolute truth of God, and you will be allowing God the opportunity to pass it on through you to someone else.”
-Oswald Chambers
O God, we turn to Thee as little children, wearied with the day, turn home.
We are wearied with the conflict of life, its burdens, its sore defeats, its perplexities, and disappointment,
and sometimes we grow weary with what we call its pleasures and its successes.
We turn to Thee for rest.
Open Thine arms, we pray, that we may rest in Thee;
O take us to Thy heart! Through Jesus Christ our Lord,
Amen.
-Ralph Cushman, Pocket Prayer Book, 1941