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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Daily Office

Prescribed Meditations

08 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Janell in Prayer, Soul Care

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Daily Office, Everyday Life, Frederick Buechner, Soul Care

Blue Lobelia in Cobalt Blue

Ever so often I stumble upon truth.

I’m surprised when it happens.  Even when it comes during my normally prescribed meeting time with God.

Oh, don’t get me wrong.  I always expect truth when something of God is let loose in my life.  But it’s when truth comes veiled as a ready response to questions I’ve just posed that I grow still with shock, as if I’ve just been caught with my hand in the cookie jar.

Just a few days ago, I wrote of my tendency to focus more of questions of doing.  Not being.   For “no matter how much time we devote toward self-knowledge, for now, we must be content to scratch the surface…”

What I didn’t know then, was that an answer I wasn’t looking for would come bounding into my world this morning, set loose long ago by Frederick Buechner’s pen, as it scratched out these few words on paper:

“…I believe that in sibilants life is trying to tell us something.  The trees, ghosts, dreams, faces, the waking up and eating and working of life, are trying to tell us something, to take us somewhere.  If this is above all a Christ-making universe, then the place where we are being taken is the place where the silk purse in finally made out of the sow’s ear, and the word that life is trying to speak to us is that little by little, squealing and snuffling all the way, a pig either starts turning into at least the first primal porcine version of a hero, or else is put out of his piggish misery.  At the heart of reality — who would have guessed it?– there is room for dying and being born again.”

It was Buechner’s use of the phrases “sow’s ear “and “silk purses” that first snagged my attention.  For as I acknowledged a few days ago, taking on sow’s ear projects with the hope of turning them into a proverbial silk purse has always been part of who I am.

Buechner scratchings invited me to scratch the surface of my own truth, to see that my doings, my deepest desires, reflect what I most long to become myself.  It’s not just the untended gardens or untended houses that I wish to make silk purses.  Underneath all the doings, it’s me that wishes  to become the silk purse.  I want the sow’s ear part of me to die.  And like the renewal that comes with Spring and Easter, I wish to be born again as a silk purse.

It’s ironic that today’s prescribed med, from Buechner’s Listen to Your Life, was appropriately titled:  Trying to Tell Us Something.

Morning Office

19 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Book of Common Prayer, Daily Office, Everyday Life, Prayer, Psalms

I am officially christening my “Daily Office” as my “Morning Office.”

I no longer dream of spending time with all the biblical readings prescribed by the Book of Common Prayer, though last fall, I had thought by now I would have worked up to three-square meals of biblical reading a day.   But no.  As I have settled into this new spiritual prayer practice, I find my morning readings create enough work to fill my daily life.

Each morning begins with the prescribed Psalms for the day.  I do not like reading the Psalms, as reading a Psalm is like taking some bad-tasting medicine that I pray will somehow do me some good.  It’s a half-hearted reading at best, though it does make me grateful for the Gospel and New Testament readings that follow as second and third course.

My problem with the Psalms is that they remind me of those days when I use to supervise a group of employees.  I always found it hard to manage people, mostly because no one ever dropped in to tell me that work and life was grand.  Instead, my employees would come to lament over the state of our office or whine about what was wrong with whoever or whatever.   And of course, they wanted me to fix it.

The psalmists want God to fix things too.  They hold nothing back for the sake of propriety.  There is no middle way; depending on the number, they burn hot with love or hate — life or death —  or wonder or misery.  I am left to wonder whether these people are too good to be true — or just too true.  Sometimes I just want to close the book on them and say, “Too much information — keep it to yourself, will you?”

When life in the Psalms is bad, prayers sound an awful lot like whining to my ears.  But somehow, I can’t think anything but that God just embraces it all, whatever it is we have to say.  The Psalms show people at their best and people at their worst and as long as people are being true to their experience, I can’t imagine God seeing anything wrong with it.

Created in the image of God who calls himself “I Am Who I AM”, as long as “we are who we are”, then everything is right between God and us — even when everything else is going to pot calling the kettle black.

Fasting on Crumbs

04 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

A Tree Full of Angels, Common Book of Prayer, Daily Office, Everyday God, Everyday Life, Macrina Wiederkehr, Our Town, Prayer, Soul Care

During a sleepless night last week, I gathered up The Book of Common Prayer and headed toward my favorite chair.  For as long as this book and I have lived together, we’ve been nothing more than a bit of window dressing in each other’s lives.  Now was the time to undress the window, to see what layed beneath our mutual coverings.  I wiped away the fine coating of dust resting on its gold edges, then sat down to peruse its unfamiliar interior.  It’s examination of me will come later, as we begin to keep regular hours.

For a few weeks now, I’ve been thinking of praying the Daily Office.  And that evening, with the answer literally at my fingertips, I wondered how best to keep the Office’s divine appointments.  The recommendation is to divide the three daily readings into a morning and evening prayer practice; alternatively, the editors suggest a feast of all three readings in one sitting.

But desiring a bit more structure — no, needing some semblance of prayer rhythm in my life — I ignored both recommendations for my own three course meal plan, which was to pray at first light, after lunch and before retiring to bed.   But what seemed do-able in the dark quiet of the night has not been so in the light of busy full days.  In a week’s passage of time, I’ve yet to keep my second and third Office appointments.  

It’s the same with all my life.  Rather than feast on bread, I fast on crumbs.  Or maybe, as I wrote to a good friend yesterday, I scatter time here and there — a few crumbs toward gardening, a few toward spiritual direction matters, a few on the contemplative prayer class that I facilitate, and more than a few here in this web log.  Then there’s everyday life — the cooking, laundry, housekeeping; the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker — and with no intention to do so, I find myself burning the proverbial candle at both ends.  And I wonder why it’s hard to sleep.

But sometimes, in spite of my fast crumbled lifestyle, I sit down to  a ‘just right’ bite of spiritual nourishment.  Macrina Widerkehr’s A Tree Full of Angels offered that perfect sustenance for yesterday, given a backwards glance at my last few posts.  In a chapter titled, Gather Up the Crumbs, Sister Macrina writes:  

“Why aren’t we saints?… I want to suggest a common cause.  The reason we live life so dimly and with such divided hearts is that we have never really learned how to be present with quality to God, to self, to others, to experiences and events, to all created things.  We have never learned to gather up the crumbs of whatever appears in our path at every moment.  We meet all these lovely gifts only half there.”

Sister Macrina goes on to counsel that EVERYTHING in our lives can be “a stepping-stone to holiness” if only we allow ourselves to be nourished on the crumbs of life, the experiences of what life has to offer us in the now.   That I call my contemplative prayer group Everyday God makes me wonder if maybe it shouldn’t be called EveryTHING God.  Would a name change open my eyes wider to see a bit of  God-splendor in all my everyday crumbs?     

As I read Sister Macrina’s words, my mind drifts back to the recent story of my uprooted Civil War Daffodil and I realize that Cosmo’s unearthed treasure became my own grace-filled crumb.  Such it can be with all of life, whether I plant myself three times a day in front of The Common Book of Prayer or not.  As with Hansel & Gretel, crumbs are all I need to lead me toward home and God, as long as I don’t allow the hungry hands of clock gobble up my attention. 

So why does it now hit me square between blind eyes that these thoughts about crumbs, accompanied by the rhythm of my daily crumbs, also respond to my haunting question of the week.  This question is the sort to leave behind crumbs hard to shake off; one appropriately given life by the ghost of Emily, the heroine of Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play, Our Town.

The question is posed in that famous final scene of the third act, where a heartbroken ghostly Emily decides to run away from her visit to the living, in favor of re-joining the rest of the dearly departed at the Grover’s Corners graveyard.  Beseechingly, Emily looks for a crumb of  hope as she asks the Stage Manager about the blindness of humanity.   

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

“No”.  Then after a thoughtful pause, “The saints and poets, maybe — they do some.”

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

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