“With God there is always more unfolding,
that what we can glimpse of the divine is always exactly enough,
and never enough.”
-Kathleen Noris
“With God there is always more unfolding,
that what we can glimpse of the divine is always exactly enough,
and never enough.”
-Kathleen Noris
“What is it, namely, that connects the temporal and eternity,
what else but love,
which for that very reason is before everything and remains after everything is gone.”
-Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love
“When someone like me, who will go to superhero lengths to avoid the truth, runs out of options-when I am found out or too exhausted to pretend anymore or maybe just confronted by my sister-it feels like the truth might crush me. And that is right. The truth does crush us, but the instant it crushes us, it somehow puts us back together into something honest. It’s death and resurrection every time it happens.
This, to me, is the point of the confession and absolution in the liturgy. When I first experience it-the part where everyone in church stands up and says what bad people they are, and the pastor, from the distance of the chancel and the purity of her white robe says, “God forgives you”-I thought it was hogwash. Why should I care if someone says to me that some God I may or may not really believe in has erased the check marks against me for things I may or may not even think are so-called sins? This obviously is the problem with religion for many: It makes you feel bad enough that you will need the religion to help you feel good again.
But eventually the confession and absolution liturgy came to mean everything to me. It gradually began to feel like a moment when truth was spoken, perhaps for the only time all week, and it would crush me and then put me back together.
…
And the pastor said, “Fear not, brothers and sisters, God, who is full of grace and abounding in steadfast love, meets us in our sin and transforms us for God’s glory and the healing of God’s world. In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, your sins are forgiven, be now at peace.” Exhale.
-Nadia Bolz-Weber, Pastrix
“[After Christ is baptized] The Word that had most recently come from the mouth of God was, “This is my beloved in whom I am well pleased.” Identity. It’s always God’s first move Before we do anything wrong and before we do anything right, God has named and claimed us as God’s own. But almost immediately, other things try to tell us who we are and to whom we belong; capitalism, the weight-loss industrial complex, our parents, kids at school-they all have a go at telling us who we are. But only God can do that. Everything else is temptation. Maybe demons are defined as anything other than God that tried to tell us who we are. And maybe, just moments after Jesus’ baptism, when the devil says to him, “If you are the Son of God…” he does so because he knows that Jesus is vulnerable to temptation precisely to the degree that he is insecure about his identity and mistrusts his relationship with God.
So if God’s first move is to give us our identity, then the deveils’ first move is to throw that identity into question. Identity is like the tip of a spool of thread, which when pulled, can unwind the whole thing.”
-Nadia Bolz-Weber, Pastrix
And God held in his hand
A small globe. Look he said.
The son looked. Far off,
As through water, he saw
A scorched land of fierce
Colour. The light burned
There; crusted buildings
Cast their shadows: a bright
Serpent, A river
Uncoiled itself, radiant
With slime.
On a bare
Hill a bare tree saddened
The sky. Many People
Held out their thin arms
To it, as though waiting
For a vanished April
To return to its crossed
Boughs. The son watched
Them. Let me go there, he said.
-R.S. Thomas
“Hope begins in the dark,
the stubborn hope that if you just show up and try to do the right thing,
the dawn will come.
You wait and watch and work:
You don’tgive up.”
-Anne Lamott
A prison cell, in which one waits, hopes…
and is completely dependent on the fact that the door of freedom has to be opened from the outside,
is not a bad picture of Advent.
-Dietrich Bonhoeffer
“We often wonder what we can do for others, especially for those in great need.
It is not a sign of powerlessness when we say: “We must pray for one another.” To pray for one another is, first of all, to acknowledge, in the presence of God, that we belong to each other as children of the same God. Without this acknowledgement of human solidarity, what we do for on another does not flow from who we truly are. We are brothers and sisters, not competitor or rivals. We are children of one God…”
-Henri Nouwen, Here and Now
“I have come to believe that when we despair of praise, when the wonder of creation and our place in it are lost to us, it’s often because we’ve lost sight of our true role as creatures-we have tried to do too much, pretending to be in such control of things that we are indispensable. It’s a hedge against mortality and, if you’re like me, you take a kind of comfort in being busy.
The danger is that we will come to feel too useful, so full of purpose and the necessity of fulfilling obligations that we lose sight of God’s play with creation, and with ourselves.”
-Kathleen Norris, The Quotidian Mysteries
“We are also called to accept with compassion and humility the particular fragility, complexity, and incompleteness of each brother. Our diversity and our brokenness mean that the tensions and friction are inevitably woven into the fabric of everyday life.
They are not to be regarded as signs of failure, Christ uses them for our conversions as we grow in forbearance and learn to let go of the pride that drives us to control and reform our brothers on our own terms.”
-Paraclete Book of Hospitality