Lori’s Monday Reflections 05-13-2024

He is risen! We rejoice, for our Redeemer lives!

So . . . mysticism. Is that a fraught word for you? If so, it’s understandable. Perhaps it brings to mind images of “woo-woo” people who appear to be primarily driven by emotion and/or tend to speak in ethereal ways that don’t seem grounded in reality. Or maybe it feels like things related to mysticism are too subjective and not sufficiently based in the Word—not sola scriptura enough—to be valid. Certainly, abuses and error have occurred when subjective mystical experience has been over-emphasized, so wariness is warranted. But as we’ve discussed before, neglecting the experiential, emotional side of our beings in constant deference to our intellectual side hinders our development as full human persons created in the imago Dei. So, let’s try to define mysticism a bit.

Of course, one of the difficulties about the word “mysticism” is that there isn’t a single accepted definition. I’ll offer part of my take on it here. If you’ve come to an Adult Seminar I’ve led, you’ve likely heard me tell a story from the TV show Mystic Britain. In one episode, the host describes how ancient Britons believed there was a god of this creek, a god of this grove of trees, a god of this meadow. This meant they believed that “every step they took was in sacred space.” Knowing that we believe in the one true God, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen—that phrase, to me, shines light on Christian mysticism: it is in large part a cultivated and practiced awareness that every step we take is in sacred space and allowing that awareness to shape our lives. It is keeping the eyes of our hearts and minds open to noticing God’s presence everywhere at all times, to know that we live in a God-soaked world and are invited to experience God in and with it, every moment, here and now.

How does this idea affect your view on mysticism? Does it make it feel more impractical than ever, or maybe more accessible, somehow? As always, there is no right or wrong response. Please just pay attention to what it stirs up in you and then talk to God about it. Everything is invitation to move deeper into relationship with God! Come back next time as we talk a little more about mysticism, and also science and sunsets.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 05-06-2024

Christ is risen! Hallelujah! Rejoice, because the Living One walks on the road with us!

After introducing the idea last time of letting God love us for us, I think we’ve reached a point on our Emmaus journey where we need to look more closely at the word experience and what it means when talking about our spiritual life and relationship with God. After all, letting God love us for us implies we will somehow experience that love. So, let’s dive in. We’ll start by looking at a couple of quotes from Martin Luther.

You might have heard these words of Luther’s, words that aren’t exactly a resounding endorsement of religious experience: “Grace is the experience of being delivered from experience.” As someone who came from a church world where having an emotional experience of God at every service was held up as the norm, I have a deep appreciation for this perspective. But I think that’s the key: it’s the skewed emphasis on a need for religious experience to validate one’s standing with God that causes bondage, not experience itself.

Now, please consider these words also said by Luther: “This grace of God is a very great, strong, mighty and active thing. It does not lie asleep in the soul. Grace hears, leads, drives, draws, changes, works all in [people], and lets itself be distinctly felt and experienced” [emphasis added]. That sounds like Luther believes that some kind of felt experience of grace is a normal part of Christian life.

I now live in what I understand is a Lutheran place of “and”: ultimately, our faith is neither determined by our experience of God nor dependent upon it, AND experiencing God can profoundly help our faith. Next week, we’ll start to dig deeper into what experiencing God means while looking at a potentially alarming word: mysticism (don’t panic!).

Lori’s Monday Reflections 04-29-2024

Happy Easter! He is Risen! We continue rejoicing as we remember that because Jesus lives, we also shall live!

As we’ve explored more about our relationship with God over the last couple of weeks, I’m aware that we might have dipped our toes into unfamiliar spiritual waters with how we’ve framed the idea of God-in-self and self-in-God. I know I’ve asked before, but I hope you don’t mind me asking again: How do you think about God and your relationship with God in ways like this? I keep asking because I’ve spoken with many people through the years who have felt that spending time thinking about God’s attention to and affection for them personally is selfish or indulgent. The message they “caught” at church, even if it wasn’t explicitly “taught,” was that we’re simply to be conduits for God’s love, letting it flow completely through us to others. Does that feel familiar to you at all? If so, I’d like to ask you to think about this:

God loves you for you. God delights in you for you. God longs to spend time with you because God enjoys you. You! You are the apple of God’s eye. God doesn’t look past you to your neighbor—you are just as valuable to God. God wants to love you simply because you’re you. In other words, you’re not just a conduit for God to use so that God’s love can be poured into someone else. God wants you to be filled with God’s love for your own sake.

So, I invite you to do that—to spend some time in the posture of a fountain, allowing God’s delight in you and for you to bubble up in your inner being, filling the fountain bowl of your heart for your own sake. It is actually incredibly healthy to spend time letting God just love you. Why? Because if you allow yourself to be filled with God’s love for you, the natural result will be God’s love consistently spilling over and flowing from you. We are indeed to let God’s love flow to others, but not at the cost of being filled ourselves. This week, practice letting God love you for you, and if you wouldn’t mind, please email me at lori@flccs.net and let me know what happens.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 04-22-2024

Happy Easter! He is Risen! We still have a few more weeks in the Eastertide celebration of the Living One who once was dead but is now alive forever and ever, so let us keep rejoicing!

Continuing with the idea of God-in-self, please sit for a moment with a few more words from Henri Nouwen: “You are the place where God chose to dwell.” Perhaps you can turn Henri’s words into a prayer, saying to God, “I am the place where You chose to dwell; I am the place where You choose to dwell.” Don’t rush. Say it a few times, breathing the words in and out, allowing your heart to open up more and more space for the Triune God to inhabit.

Now, as you keep breathing, rest with these words from Theophilus of Antioch: “It is the breath of God that you breathe—and you are unaware of it.” So, I invite you to become aware, even just for these few moments, that God’s surrounding breath is the air you are breathing, that the fullness of your being—including the truth of who you really are—exists, is sustained, and held within God. And what does Scripture tell us about God? “God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them.”

Thomas Merton says this: “The secret of my identity is hidden in the love and mercy of God.” In other words, who we truly are is held within God. It seems as though Thomas Keating is right: our being exists as self-in-God and God-in-self. He is also right in saying that knowing this has profound implications for our spiritual lives—for our relationship with God—stating that it “supposes that we are to become a living sacrament by being always in the presence of God and in relation to God….”

How is it for you to pray this way and think about your life with God this way? I would love to hear your thoughts about God’s invitation to become a living sacrament. Let’s walk together.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 04-15-2024

Happy Easter! He is Risen! I asked you last time to think about how you understand the meaning of the spiritual life in light of Henri Nouwen’s belief that the whole purpose of Jesus’ ministry was “to bring us to the house of his Father,” not just having our sins forgiven and going to heaven when we die but being embraced into the life and love and relationship of the Trinity now. As we continue to think about our relationship with God, let’s add to the conversation the following ideas from contemplative author Thomas Keating.

Dovetailing with what we’ve already discussed concerning Western theology’s emphasis on doctrine, Keating notices how that way of spirituality leads to the perception of the “self-outside-of-God.” He states that early parts of the Christian tradition tended to focus on the “self-in-God, and God-in-self.” He says, “God is not just with us, not just beside us, not just under us, not just over us, but within us, at the deepest level.” I think we would all say we believe that God is within us, but have we thought much about what that means?

So, with Keating’s words in mind, I ask this unusual question: Where do you picture God spatially in relation to yourself when you’re praying? From talking with many people over the years, I think that most of us have a sense of God as somewhere external to us, whether it’s somewhere high and above us or close and sitting right next to us. Either way, it’s God outside of us and us outside of God. It’s not so much that this image is wrong—God does indeed fill the entire cosmos—it’s just that it’s incomplete, because in Christ and by the Spirit, God has also chosen to take up residence inside our innermost being (see Col. 1:26-27 and Eph. 3:16-19).

What might it be like to “relocate” Jesus from next to you to within you, to imaginatively picture Jesus joyfully dwelling within your deepest self, always present, always loving, always filling you with himself? Might it positively affect your relationship with God to see and engage the infinite God of love within your inner being? I’d love to hear what you think about this idea. Let’s walk together.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 04-08-2024

Happy Easter! He is Risen! As we continue celebrating Jesus’ resurrection, we resume thinking about what it means to have a personal relationship with this risen and very alive Savior.
 
Eastertide, the seven-week celebration of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead, is an excellent time to remember the jaw-dropping, self-emptying nature of the One who came to restore us to full communion with Himself. Because the phrase “personal relationship with God” is used so often in church settings and we have heard it so many times, is it possible that we have become a bit desensitized to its breathtaking meaning? Do we forget how staggering it is to have intimate, one-to-one knowing of the eternally and infinitely loving and present God? Do we forget that this God so longed for us to know him and have face-to-face communion with him that he sent to us from his own heart—from within his own three-personed being—his only begotten Son (John 1:18)?
 
Author Henri Nouwen frames the astonishing truth: “The whole purpose of Jesus’ ministry is to bring us to the house of his Father. Not only did Jesus come to free us from the bonds of sin and death, but he also came to lead us into the intimacy of his divine life [emphasis added]. …we forget that Jesus came to give us his own life. He came to lift us up into a loving community with the Father. Only when we recognize the radical purpose of Jesus’ ministry will we be able to understand the meaning of the spiritual life.”
 
So, how do you understand the meaning of the spiritual life? Does it include being embraced into a loving community—into the house of—the Triune God? How does your understanding dance with the words “a personal relationship with God”?

Lori’s Monday Reflections 04-01-2024

Happy Easter! He is Risen! It has been a little over two thousand years since that first Resurrection Sunday when our two disciples encountered the risen Jesus on the Emmaus Road (Luke 24:13-35). As we begin journeying through this Easter season, let’s walk with them again in that moment, for a moment.

One of the intriguing elements in the Emmaus story for me is how Jesus comes to the disciples uninvited (v. 15), and then, after “he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself” (v. 27, NIV), he showed willingness to continue on without them until they did invite him to stay (vv. 28-29). It was only then, after they urged him to remain with them, that he assumed the role of host and was revealed to them in the breaking of the bread. I believe this reflects one way Jesus engages all of us. He graciously shows up and joins us on our journeys, walking with us and pointing us to deeper Truth, until our hearts burn for more of him. Then, instead of forcing us to accommodate him, he lets the fiery hunger ignited within us move us to invite him to stay. Once we do, he shows us hospitality, feeding us with his own resurrected, abundant, and eternal life. God creates the hunger, and then God satisfies it.

This truth about who our self-giving God is might be why this single-lined invocation found in The Church of England’s Night Prayer (Compline) service is an unwavering magnet for my soul: “Come with the dawning of the day and make yourself known in the breaking of the bread.” By God’s grace, Jesus ‘arises’ every morning, impregnating each day with the possibility to behold his resurrected life anew, to welcome his grace and mercy anew, to receive his eternal life anew. Thanks be to God.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 03-25-2024

We will keep it simple this Holy Week. Remember that our God is not just a transcendent and holy God we worship; in the humanity of Jesus and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, God is also an imminent Person we love. Please spend some time this week contemplating this quote from Ruth Haley Barton:

“As challenging as it is, walking with Christ during Holy Week is part of our discipleship. It is an act of love and friendship with Christ, a gift of staying present with him during the hardest and most unnerving part of his journey. We do this because he has asked us to remain near him, awake and alert. It is the gift of ourselves, which is the truest gift we have to give.”

Let’s walk together with Jesus through this week.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 03-18-2024

Before reading today, please take a few moments with God and consider these questions together: What do the words “personal relationship with God” mean to you? What do they mean for you?

As alluded to in the last Emmaus, over the past few hundred years the Western Church has championed a reasoned and intellectual (left-brained) faith. While good and necessary, it has left the emotional (right-brained) side of the human person largely spiritually impoverished. In parallel with what Pastor Travis said recently in the Ekklesia’s ‘From the Pastor,’ neurotheologian Jim Wilder puts it this way: “When we neglect right-brain development in our discipleship, we ignore the side of the brain that specializes in character formation. Left-brained discipleship emphasizes beliefs, doctrine, willpower, and strategies but neglects right-brain loving attachments, joy, emotional development, and identity. Ignoring right-brain relational development creates Christians who believe in God’s love but have difficulty experiencing it in daily life….” I’m convinced that God desires for us to deeply experience his love in daily life, and that experience comes from a personal, face-to-face relationship, where each beholds the other.

Now, please consider these words sung by the Psalmists, words we are also invited to sing:

As a deer longs for flowing streams,
    so my soul longs for you, O God.
My soul thirsts for God,
    for the living God. (Ps. 42, NRSV)

You, God, are my God,
    earnestly I seek you;
I thirst for you,
    my whole being longs for you…. (Ps. 63, NIV)

How lovely is your dwelling place,
    Lord Almighty!
My soul yearns, even faints,
    for the courts of the Lord;
my heart and my flesh cry out
    for the living God. (Ps. 84, NIV)

Longing, thirsting, seeking, crying out, fainting, yearning. This is compelling language of desire. It is language of deep personal relationship.

How are you feeling about your personal relationship with God? Do you find yourself wanting something more, maybe something deeper? Do you want to want something deeper? Pay attention to the desires of your heart—they are the whispers of the Spirit drawing you into deeper communion with God (Psalm 37:4). I’ll leave you with this quote from Aslan, the Jesus character in C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia, to a child: “You would not have called to me unless I had been calling to you….” If your heart is calling out for more of God, it is a reflection that God is calling out for more of you. Please feel free to come talk to me if you would like to explore these ideas in your spiritual life. Let’s walk together.

Lori’s Monday Reflections 03-11-2024

Last week we considered how important it is to our spiritual health and growth to behold God. Because God is Personal, forever existing in an eternal relationship between Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and because in Christ God has invited us to dwell inside that relationship with The Three-in-One, I believe we’ve all experienced times of beholding God, even if we haven’t recognized them as such. Perhaps you’ve experienced moments of transcendence while watching a sunrise, or looking at the vastness of the night sky, or gazing into the eyes of a child, or singing a hymn of praise. If you have, is it possible for you to put words to that moment of bumping into the Holy, of brushing up against the Divine? What was it like? Can you identify how it may have changed you, how it moved your heart? If you can, consider talking with God about it right now, expressing thanks or, praise or whatever feels appropriate to you.

Maybe that’s not your story. Maybe you can’t identify a time when something like that happened, where you surely experienced God. That wouldn’t be unusual because, overall, our society isn’t very good at thinking and teaching that paying attention to those kinds of things is good and holy and healthy; we’re much more focused on the value of intellectual study (and it is valuable) than on emotional experience (which, indeed, is also valuable). I would ask, though, if you might be able to recognize within yourself even just a desire for that kind of moment. If so, you’re in good company.

Scripture sings with language of desire for beholding and being with God. We’ll look at some of those verses next time. Until then, consider holding this word in your heart while thinking about your relationship with God: longing. (hint: look at Psalm 84:2, NRSV)

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