Wednesday, November 6, 2013

2nd November Trinity 2010, Spiritual Sun Calls

2nd Trinity November
Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis) or
Rev. 3, 14-22 (Laodicea)

Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis)

And to the angel who penetrates the congregation of Sardis write:

Thus speaks he who has power over the seven creating spirits of God and over the seven stars: I know the consequences of your deeds, for one says of you that you live, and yet are dead. Awaken, and strengthen what remains in you, that is otherwise about to die, for I have not found that your works possess reality before my God.

Remember how you were once receptive for all the workings of the spirit, and for all words which came from the spirit. Care for them in your soul in inner loyalty. Change your heart and mind.

If however you do not awaken, I will come over you suddenly like a thief, and you will not know at which hour I will come over you.

But you have some names in Sardis whose souls have not been darkened by illusion and addiction to the senses. They will walk with me in white garments, for they are worthy of them.

He who overcomes, he shall be clothed with white garments, and I will not wipe out his name from the Book of Life. I will speak out his name and acknowledge him before my Father and his Angels. He who has ears to hear, let him hear what the spirit says to the churches.


2nd November Trinity
November 7, 2010
Revelation 3: 1-6, to Sardis

Sunflowers are so called because they keep moving their faces toward the sun in its course across the sky. They know that their life and strength, their power to live, comes from the sun. Anchored on the earth, it is their ability to orient themselves toward the sun that helps keep them alive.

The creating words and the creative working of the spirit are what keep our spirits, our souls and our bodies alive. The Creating Word is our spiritual sun. Anchored here on the earth, the light of the Word of God keeps us alive.

The reading today reminds us to remember: ‘Remember how you were once receptive for all the workings of the spirit, and for all the words that came from the spirit. Care for them in your soul in inner loyalty. Change your heart and mind.’ Rev 3:3

Our spiritual Sun is calling to us. It is asking us to remember Him, to remember the Logos, the creating Word of God, who took on human form. He is asking us to remember the source from which our lives flow, our spirit-sun, and to turn our faces toward Him.

We know this; it is natural to forget. But it is up to us to remember, to turn our will toward a conscious re-connecting. Only thus can we continue to truly live. Only thus can Christ community grow.

And so, in the words of the poet, we might also hear further words of the spirit-sun speaking to us:

May the light of your soul guide you.
May the light of your soul bless the work
you do with the secret love and warmth of your heart.
….May the sacredness of your work bring healing, light and renewal to those
who work with you and to those who see and receive your work.[1]






[1] John O’Donohue, “May the light of your soul guide you.”


Tuesday, November 5, 2013

2nd November Trinity 2011, Be the Sun

2nd Trinity November
Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis) or
Rev. 3, 14-22 (Laodicea)

Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis)

And to the angel who penetrates the congregation of Sardis write:

Thus speaks he who has power over the seven creating spirits of God and over the seven stars: I know the consequences of your deeds, for one says of you that you live, and yet are dead. Awaken, and strengthen what remains in you, that is otherwise about to die, for I have not found that your works possess reality before my God.

Escorial Beatus, Seven Churches
Remember how you were once receptive for all the workings of the spirit, and for all words which came from the spirit. Care for them in your soul in inner loyalty. Change your heart and mind.

If however you do not awaken, I will come over you suddenly like a thief, and you will not know at which hour I will come over you.

But you have some names in Sardis whose souls have not been darkened by illusion and addiction to the senses. They will walk with me in white garments, for they are worthy of them.

He who overcomes, he shall be clothed with white garments, and I will not wipe out his name from the Book of Life. I will speak out his name and acknowledge him before my Father and his Angels. He who has ears to hear, let him hear what the spirit says to the churches.

2nd November Trinity
November 6, 2011
Rev 3: 1-6

Blake, Angel with One Leg on Land and One on Sea
White is the color of purity, the color of the spirit. In today’s reading we hear that those in white are souls who stand clear shining in truth. And part of the greater truth in which the souls in white stand, is that there is a spiritual world, a spiritual world in which dwell spiritual beings, beings who are not perceived by the senses; beings who only leave their footprints, as it were, in the sensory world.

Those in white have overcome the addiction we human beings have, the craving for sensory proofs. Those in white, aligned with the spirit, have stopped cherishing comfortable untruths, the comfortable illusions, especially the illusion that the material world is all that there is.

Those in white are radiant, like the sun; they shine in a luminous world most of us don’t see. As Angelus Silesius said of that world:


My spirit once in God will eternal bliss become
Just as the sun’s own ray is sun within the sun.

Myself I must be sun, whose rays must paint the sea,
The vast and unhued ocean of all divinity.[1]


www.thechristiancommunity.org



[1] Angelus Silesius, in Cherubinic Wanderer
Picture by William Blake, The angel with one foot on the sea and one on land.






Monday, November 4, 2013

2nd November Trinity 2012, No Body But Yours

2nd Trinity November
Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis) or
Rev. 3, 14-22 (Laodicea)

Rev. 3, 1-6, (Sardis)

And to the angel who penetrates the congregation of Sardis write:
Escorial Beatus

Thus speaks he who has power over the seven creating spirits of God and over the seven stars: I know the consequences of your deeds, for one says of you that you live, and yet are dead. Awaken, and strengthen what remains in you, that is otherwise about to die, for I have not found that your works possess reality before my God.

Remember how you were once receptive for all the workings of the spirit, and for all words which came from the spirit. Care for them in your soul in inner loyalty. Change your heart and mind.

If however you do not awaken, I will come over you suddenly like a thief, and you will not know at which hour I will come over you.

But you have some names in Sardis whose souls have not been darkened by illusion and addiction to the senses. They will walk with me in white garments, for they are worthy of them.

He who overcomes, he shall be clothed with white garments, and I will not wipe out his name from the Book of Life. I will speak out his name and acknowledge him before my Father and his Angels. He who has ears to hear, let him hear what the spirit says to the churches.

2nd November Trinity
Nov. 4, 2012
Rev 3; 1-6

Once a group of idealistic young people decided to start working on a small biodynamic farm. Their enthusiasm and desire to change the world led them into deep conversations long into the night. Naturally this led them to sleep in late. When a guest pointed out to them that the goats had long been crying out to be milked, they answered that their deeply spiritual conversations were more important.

Much too often, our thoughts and ideals fail to translate themselves into actual effective deeds and habits. We are perhaps under the illusion that thinking good thoughts is sufficient. Perhaps we lack the will to translate them into actions. We fail to bring our habits and actions into congruence with our ideals. And thus we fail to bring our ideals into the earthly.

In today’s letter to the community, the angel brings us the message from Christ: I have not found that your works possess reality…. Care for the workings of the Spirit…. Walk with Me…. Overcome your illusions.

As a community we may ask ourselves: what are the ideals of a Christ community? Do we only think we are such? What does a Christ community do? Perhaps these words from Theresa of Avila give us a hint of an answer:

Christ has no body now but yours
No hands, no feet on earth but yours
Yours are the eyes through which He pours out
compassion on this world
Christ has no body now on earth but yours.[1]


Sunday, November 3, 2013

2nd November Trinity 2013, Inner Warmth

Rev. 3, 14-22 (Laodicea)

And to the leading angel of the community at Laodicea write: Thus speaks the Amen, he who strengthens all spiritual working with his own being, the witness trusted and true, the ground of all divine creation:

I see through your deeds. You are neither cold nor hot. You should be either cold, or hot. But since you are lukewarm, I am about to spew you out of my mouth.

You say: I am rich, I have my fortune, and I don’t need anything else. But you do not know that you are wretched and pitiable, a beggar blind and naked. I counsel you to acquire from me

gold that is purified in fire, that you may become truly rich;
and garments to clothe yourself, so that the shame which lies in your nakedness may not be revealed;
William Holman Hunt
and a salve to anoint your eyes, that you may see.

I AM he who disciplines all whom he loves, calls them to account and refines them through trials of destiny, thus drawing them into the stream of cleansing.

Therefore generate warmth [be eager] [strengthen yourself] and change your heart and mind.

Behold, I stand before the door and knock. If someone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him, and share the meal with him, and he with me.


He who overcomes, to him I will give the power to sit with me on my throne, just as I have been raised to the throne of my Father through the victory of the spirit. He who has ears to hear, let him hear what the spirit would say to the churches.


2nd November Trinity
November 3, 2013
Revelation 3: 14 – 22

Here on earth, if one wants to lift up something and have it remain elevated, one has two choices. One can either continue to hold it up with one’s own muscular effort, otherwise it falls; or else one can place it on a stand.

In the world of spirit, however, things are a little different.  In terms of spiritual effort, we do need to exert ourselves. We need to become spiritually ‘muscular’, to whatever extent we can, so that we can raise the content of our souls and spirit, elevate them. Yet there always comes a moment when we must let go, when of necessity we turn again toward the earthly.

We will receive help in holding up our efforts, so that they don’t fall. We do so
Oleg Shuplyak
by addressing Christ, the Amen, the One to whom we appeal at the end of every prayer. He promises to add His strength to our spiritual efforts, helping us to become stronger in our inner work. And when we must let go, we offer our efforts to Him, as a sacrifice on the altar of His being. He will accept them, hold them, transform them for us. He is always waiting at the door between worlds.

What is important to Christ is that we make a strong effort to generate inner warmth. It is this fire of the heart that allows our work and prayer to rise, like the smoke of the incense on the burning coal. And offering our warm efforts to the divine allows for inner transformation. It creates in us a slow and gradual change of heart and mind, held, carried and strengthened by Him whose being is Love.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

1st November Trinity, 2007, Soul's Sunlight

1st November Trinity
Revelation 1, 1-20

This is the unveiling of the being of Jesus Christ, which proceeds out of the divine world for those who would serve him. To them shall be revealed what must of necessity happen in the future and which powerfully presses into world events. God formed this revelation in imagery and sent it through his angel to his servant John. And so John speaks as a witness to everything he saw, that is, to the Divine Word, and to the life of Jesus Christ, which serves as a testimony. Blessed is he who knows how to read the prophetic words, and blessed are those who know how to hear them, and all who take what is written in this book into their souls; for time presses.
John, to the seven congregations in Asia:

Grace and peace to you
From Him who is, and who was, and who is coming
And from the seven creating spirits before his throne
And from Jesus Christ.
By his witnessing he is the archetype of trust.
He is the first born from the realm of death,
He is the leading spirit of the Kings on earth.
He has turned to us in love, and by the power of his blood
He has released us from the spell of sin which lay upon us.
He has established us as true kings and made us into priests
before the divine Ground of the World, his Father.
To him belongs all light of the spirit and all power of soul from aeon to aeon. Amen.

See: he comes in the realm of the clouds.
All eyes shall see him, also the eyes of those who pierced him.
And men down the ages will lament about him. Yes. Amen.
I am the Alpha and the Omega,
Thus speaks the Lord our God
who is, and who was, and who is coming
the divine ruler of the world.

I, John, your brother and your companion in all trials and also in the inner kingdom and in the power of endurance which we possess through our one-ness with Jesus: I was on the island of Patmos. There it was granted to me to receive a share of the divine Word and to bear witness to the sufferings of Jesus.
On the Lord’s Day I was lifted up to the world of spirit, and I heard behind me a mighty voice like the sound of a trumpet. It said: write what you see in a book and send it to the seven congregations: to Ephesus, to Smyrna, to Pergamum, to Thyatira, to Sardis, to Philadelphia and to Laodicia.
And I turned to see him whose voice was speaking to me. And as I turned I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the lampstands, a figure like that of the Son of Man:
clothed with a long billowing garment,
encircled round his breast with a golden band;
his head and his hair shining white like snow white wool,
his eyes like a flame of fire,
his feet like burnished bronze glowing in a furnace,
his voice like the rushing of many streams of water.
In his hand he held seven stars;
from his mouth issued a sharp two-edged sword
and his face shone, as the sun shines in its full radiance.

And when I saw him, I fell at this feet and was as if dead. But he laid his right hand upon me and said:
“Do not be afraid. I am the first and the last, and the living one. I was dead, and look! I am living and I bear the life of the world through all aeons. Mine is the key to the realm of death and of the shades. Write down what you see: what is now, and what is to come.

The secret of the seven stars, which you see in my right hand, and of the seven golden lampstands is this: The seven stars are the picture in the spirit for the angels of the seven congregations, and the seven lampstands are the seven congregations themselves.”


1st Sunday November Trinity
October 28, 2007
Revelation 1:1-20

The sun shines like a great globe in the heavens. It illuminates the sky and the earth, giving objects clear outlines, delineating light and shadow, shining on everything in an equally objective way. It draws growth upward. Its light is so intense that we cannot gaze at it directly.

Today’s reading unveils the dead and risen Christ as a being like the sun:
Head and hair shining white…
Eyes like a flame of fire…
Feet glowing…
Breast encircled with gold…
Face shining like the sun in its full power.[1]

The intense light of His being reveals all, both light and shadow, in an entirely objective way. In His light we see ourselves as the creatures of light and shadow that we are. Yet his gaze also contains another element. It is the fire, the living force and power of love. He shines on us in love, coming to our aid, banishing fear, helping us to rise and stand. Bathed in his light, objective but not judging, we are helped and healed, encouraged to grow.

Thomas Aquinas says:

Nothing in existence is turned away.[2]

The delight a child can know,
My Lord confesses He experiences
Whenever He looks at you.

God sees nothing in us
That He has not given.[3]

He is our soul’s sunlight. In Him we rise and grow.






[1] Rev. 1: 13-16
[2] Thomas  Aquinas, “The Mandate”, in Love Poems from God, by Daniel Ladinsky, p. 127
[3] Thomas Aquinas, “ Whenever He Looks at You”, Ibid., p. 132. 

Friday, November 1, 2013

1st November Trinity 2008, Spiritualizing Matter

1st November Trinity
Revelation 1, 1-20

This is the unveiling of the being of Jesus Christ, which proceeds out of the divine world for those who would serve him. To them shall be revealed what must of necessity happen in the future and which powerfully presses into world events. God formed this revelation in imagery and sent it through his angel to his servant John. And so John speaks as a witness to everything he saw, that is, to the Divine Word, and to the life of Jesus Christ, which serves as a testimony. Blessed is he who knows how to read the prophetic words, and blessed are those who know how to hear them, and all who take what is written in this book into their souls; for time presses.
John, to the seven congregations in Asia:
Grace and peace to you
From Him who is, and who was, and who is coming
And from the seven creating spirits before his throne
And from Jesus Christ.
By his witnessing he is the archetype of trust.
He is the first born from the realm of death,
He is the leading spirit of the Kings on earth.
He has turned to us in love, and by the power of his blood
He has released us from the spell of sin which lay upon us.
He has established us as true kings and made us into priests
before the divine Ground of the World, his Father.
To him belongs all light of the spirit and all power of soul from aeon to aeon. Amen.

See: he comes in the realm of the clouds.
All eyes shall see him, also the eyes of those who pierced him.
And men down the ages will lament about him. Yes. Amen.
I am the Alpha and the Omega,
Thus speaks the Lord our God
who is, and who was, and who is coming
the divine ruler of the world.

I, John, your brother and your companion in all trials and also in the inner kingdom and in the power of endurance which we possess through our one-ness with Jesus: I was on the island of Patmos. There it was granted to me to receive a share of the divine Word and to bear witness to the sufferings of Jesus.
On the Lord’s Day I was lifted up to the world of spirit, and I heard behind me a mighty voice like the sound of a trumpet. It said: write what you see in a book and send it to the seven congregations: to Ephesus, to Smyrna, to Pergamum, to Thyatira, to Sardis, to Philadelphia and to Laodicia.
And I turned to see him whose voice was speaking to me. And as I turned I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the lampstands, a figure like that of the Son of Man:
clothed with a long billowing garment,
encircled round his breast with a golden band;
his head and his hair shining white like snow white wool,
his eyes like a flame of fire,
his feet like burnished bronze glowing in a furnace,
his voice like the rushing of many streams of water.
In his hand he held seven stars;
from his mouth issued a sharp two-edged sword
and his face shone, as the sun shines in its full radiance.

And when I saw him, I fell at this feet and was as if dead. But he laid his right hand upon me and said:
“Do not be afraid. I am the first and the last, and the living one. I was dead, and look! I am living and I bear the life of the world through all aeons. Mine is the key to the realm of death and of the shades. Write down what you see: what is now, and what is to come.

The secret of the seven stars, which you see in my right hand, and of the seven golden lampstands is this: The seven stars are the picture in the spirit for the angels of the seven congregations, and the seven lampstands are the seven congregations themselves.”

1st November Trinity
Nov. 1, 2008
Rev. 1: 1-20

When God created us, he first created the human archetype. He said, “Let us make the human being in our image, after our likeness.” Genesis 1:26  We can barely begin to imagine the glory of that image of the human being in the heart of God.

On earth, when small children begin to draw people, they create stick figures. Only after many years of practice and development of talent could a person attempt to paint a depiction of the archetype of the human being in living color.

Today’s gospel paints a mighty rendering of the Divine Human Being. He is the archetype, the image of the Human Being spiritualized. This is why John struggles to describe him using so many similies – hair like snow, like wool, eyes like flames, feet like bronze glowing in a furnace. This spiritualized Divine Human Being calls himself the first and the last. He is the picture that harkens back to how God made us in the beginning. He is also the picture of what the human being will be at the end of time – light-filled, radiant like the sun.

We human beings are currently at the stick figure phase of our development. We are encased in matter, spiritually inept, childlike. But standing before us is the image of the goal of human evolution, the image of our spiritual maturity, the Son of Man. John calls him the archetype of trust and faith. He is the picture of God’s trust in humanity. Because of what Christ Jesus did, the divine world can have faith and trust in humanity. For God sent into human form Christ, who accomplished His mighty deed of death, resurrection and ascension. Christ fulfilled the great human archetype on earth. He achieved the spiritualization of the human form.

Because of Christ Jesus, humanity’s goal is again within reach for all of us. For whatever one human being achieves on earth becomes accessible to all of us. He embodies the promise that our work on our human development, our work in the spirit, our work of spiritualizing matter will one day bear fruit. This is the new belief, the new faith that the Divine world has in us. One day we too will join Christ in the Human Form Divine. One day we too will be light-filled, radiant like the sun.
 
St. Augustine pictured:

…an eternal day, consecrated by the radiating
resurrection of Christ, and prefiguring
…not of spirit only, but of the body, too.

There we shall rest and see, see and love,
love and praise. This is what shall be
in our exalted end without end.[1]





[1] St. Augustine, “The Eighth Day”, in Love’s Immensity, Mystics on the Endless Life, by Scott Cairns, p. 48. 

Thursday, October 31, 2013

1st November Trinity 2009, The Grace of Beginning

1st November Trinity
Revelation 1, 1-20

This is the unveiling of the being of Jesus Christ, which proceeds out of the divine world for those who would serve him. To them shall be revealed what must of necessity happen in the future and which powerfully presses into world events. God formed this revelation in imagery and sent it through his angel to his servant John. And so John speaks as a witness to everything he saw, that is, to the Divine Word, and to the life of Jesus Christ, which serves as a testimony. Blessed is he who knows how to read the prophetic words, and blessed are those who know how to hear them, and all who take what is written in this book into their souls; for time presses.
John, to the seven congregations in Asia:
Grace and peace to you
From Him who is, and who was, and who is coming
And from the seven creating spirits before his throne
And from Jesus Christ.
By his witnessing he is the archetype of trust.
He is the first born from the realm of death,
He is the leading spirit of the Kings on earth.
He has turned to us in love, and by the power of his blood
He has released us from the spell of sin which lay upon us.
He has established us as true kings and made us into priests
before the divine Ground of the World, his Father.
To him belongs all light of the spirit and all power of soul from aeon to aeon. Amen.

See: he comes in the realm of the clouds.
All eyes shall see him, also the eyes of those who pierced him.
And men down the ages will lament about him. Yes. Amen.
I am the Alpha and the Omega,

Thus speaks the Lord our God
who is, and who was, and who is coming
the divine ruler of the world.

I, John, your brother and your companion in all trials and also in the inner kingdom and in the power of endurance which we possess through our one-ness with Jesus: I was on the island of Patmos. There it was granted to me to receive a share of the divine Word and to bear witness to the sufferings of Jesus.
On the Lord’s Day I was lifted up to the world of spirit, and I heard behind me a mighty voice like the sound of a trumpet. It said: write what you see in a book and send it to the seven congregations: to Ephesus, to Smyrna, to Pergamum, to Thyatira, to Sardis, to Philadelphia and to Laodicia.
And I turned to see him whose voice was speaking to me. And as I turned I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the lampstands, a figure like that of the Son of Man:
clothed with a long billowing garment,
encircled round his breast with a golden band;
his head and his hair shining white like snow white wool,
his eyes like a flame of fire,
his feet like burnished bronze glowing in a furnace,
his voice like the rushing of many streams of water.
In his hand he held seven stars;
from his mouth issued a sharp two-edged sword
and his face shone, as the sun shines in its full radiance.

And when I saw him, I fell at this feet and was as if dead. But he laid his right hand upon me and said:
“Do not be afraid. I am the first and the last, and the living one. I was dead, and look! I am living and I bear the life of the world through all aeons. Mine is the key to the realm of death and of the shades. Write down what you see: what is now, and what is to come.

The secret of the seven stars, which you see in my right hand, and of the seven golden lampstands is this: The seven stars are the picture in the spirit for the angels of the seven congregations, and the seven lampstands are the seven congregations themselves.”

1st November Trinity
November 1, 2009
Revelation 1: 1-20


Today is revealed an image of the being who stands behind all humanity, who is the meaning of all human life. He is an ever-living being, born out of the death of the old, glowing with the life-giving radiance of the sun, shimmering in radiant power purity. He is a being who lives through all deaths, who is the new beginning beyond and through all endings. He leads us through all our own endings, through all our own greater and smaller deaths, through all our transformations. He leads us by example, until we too will be able to say with Him: I am the living one; I was dead and look! I am living…
 
And so at this time of endings and beginnings, we can hear the poetic words:

In out-of-the-way places of the heart,
Where your thoughts never think to wander,
This beginning has been quietly forming,
Waiting until you were ready to emerge….

Though your destination is not yet clear
You can trust the promise of this opening;
Unfurl yourself into the grace of beginning
That is at one with your life's desire….

Soon you will be home in a new rhythm,
For your soul senses the world that awaits you.[1]





[1]  John O'Donohue, “For a New Beginning”, in To Bless the Space Between Us, pl 14