Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Listening in the Coastlands

Since the beginning, people have sought God the most in the liminal, or in-between, places of the world.  Holy men have gone to the deserts on the borderlands between one country and another, places that are neither here nor there.  Prophets have found God on mountains, where the earth meets the sky.  Beaches are places of spiritual connection for most people--partly because the ocean is so powerful, but partly because beaches are liminal spots, where the sea and sky and land meet.  Somehow it's easiest to find God in those in-between places.  Even the moments when you are in-between sleep and wakefulness can be special times of peace and connection to God.

"Wonga Beach, Qld Australia" by Jan Smith
**Creative Commons info in footnote
Yet the borderlands can be frightening places as well.  While mountaintop experienced can be exciting, the thought of a fall is terrifying.  Beaches might be beautiful, but the undertow can kill.  Desert vistas are stunning, but beware the scorching sun, the frigid nights, and the danger that might lie beneath any rock.  Even that place between sleep and wakefulness can bring haunting imaginations and fearful thoughts.

Sometimes we find ourselves living in the coastlands.  Lingering sickness can put regular life on hold.  Joblessness causes uncertainty as you dangle between the past and the future.  Yet not all of our coastland experiences are negative.  Pregnancy is an in-between time that promises that nothing will be the same as it used to be, but still the little one is not here yet.  Marriage engagement is past the point of dating, but the wedding day hasn't arrived.  These metaphorical coastlands are dramatic places to be, wonderful places to visit, but you don't really want to live there.  Unfortunately, sometimes we feel stuck on the borders, at the coasts, on the summits--and it's hard to tell what comes next.

This is where listening to God becomes very important.  In Isaiah 41:1, God says, "Listen to me in silence, O coastlands; let the peoples renew their strength."  In those liminal, in-between places of your life, listening is more important than ever.   It's only through silence that strength can be renewed.  Rather than trying desperately to tread water, it's better just to quietly float, and let God carry you.  You can trust Him to hold you up.

The Lord continues: "Let them approach, [and] then let them speak; let us together draw near for judgment."  Too quickly in our conversations and in our prayers we jump hastily into talking.  We listen little, filling the air instead with our own words.  God's counsel is to first approach in silence.  Quietly attend to the people in your life.  See what they have to say.  Silently sit before God without saying a word.  Centering Prayer is a great way to quietly approach God and listen.  Only after a time of silent listening should you speak your thoughts to the Lord.  Then you and God together can draw near to one another in the kind of partnership where you can judge or discern God's will.

Do you find yourself living in the coastlands of life right now?  Do these in-between places fill you with fear or with awe?  God advises you to listen in silence.  Quietly approach God and attend to His presence before you say anything at all.  It is in listening that you can determine your next step, your next breath.  As Habakkuk 2:20 says, "The Lord in his holy temple; let all the earth keep silence before him."

The following is a meditation using the Protestant Prayer Beads.  I hope that by contemplating God's Word, you will find His will in those in-between places of your life.




Invitatory - Isaiah 40:28-29*
28 Have you not known? Have you not heard?
The Lord is the everlasting God,
    the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He does not faint or grow weary;
    his understanding is unsearchable.
29 He gives power to the faint,
    and to him who has no might he increases strength.


Cruciform - Isaiah 41:1a
Listen to me in silence, O coastlands;
    let the peoples renew their strength;


Weeks - Isaiah 41:1b
Let them approach, then let them speak;
    let us together draw near for judgment.


Benedictory - Isaiah 40:30-31
30 Even youths shall faint and be weary,
    and young men shall fall exhausted;
31 but they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength;
    they shall mount up with wings like eagles;
they shall run and not be weary;
    they shall walk and not faint.






*All scriptures are taken from the ESV.
** http://www.flickr.com/photos/26085795@N02/5151233404/in/photolist-nnvDgY-nkyV1x-nxY9Ud-pdzTmR-aDD87u-dwBkrf-bJVEZz-cd6Wzj-btm1E4-6qc6qN-dELWGP-5QXd9M-dhwHo5-8Rcqe3-4zyHt6-54564D-dpG9eg-bGudU4-6ct8Zf-4A3tnr-cAWhKS-mEWFPP-5syggv-4zCXXo-Mi216-nYESVN-o7PVkv-4AErME-7wfjiL-a4bVoP-pCak9W-2GBBD5-nQJ4xr-dXxUZm-7sJ2nU-oEWp1N-pGujda-h6KXhq-acj54L-5ppxTV-rAoSeA-4xGSH5-3SYBW-upYRW-dFRTDK-oXoWEy-n6wDiJ-9LSrWv-pJXp8r-jXTRL.  No changes made.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Contemplation: The Temple Within

Today is the fourth day in our 45th week, reading the Bible through in a year.  Our scriptures today are:  Ezekiel 40-42; John 14.

A couple of days ago, at our Virginia Baptist state convention, I went to a breakout session that was led by members of the Epiphany Institute of Spirituality, a group of Baptists who are seeking to go deeper with God by reclaiming some ancient contemplative traditions.  They led us in a time of contemplative prayer and worship, followed by a Q&A session about contemplative Christianity.  


One lady had a hard time grasping how you could have an entire worship service without a sermon.  Her died-in-the-wool Baptist roots had a difficult time thinking outside the box that she'd been raised in.  She just couldn't get it.  "What do you mean by contemplative?" she asked, more than once.  Then, I think I saw a light bulb went off over her head when Michael Sciretti, one of our presenters, told her that the root word for "contemplate" and "contemplative" is "temple."  So to contemplate is to go into the temple of your heart and meet one-on-one with God.  1 Corinthians 3:16 says that we are God's temple, so to meet with Him in contemplation is to go on an inner journey through the temple, into the Holy of Holies.


In today's scriptures, we read about Ezekiel measuring out a visionary temple, with all its many chambers.  Jesus says in John 14:2-3 (ESV)"In my Father's house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you?  And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also."


We have heard these words from John 14 in many funerals, when the preacher talks about Heaven.  The beauty of contemplation is that we don't need to wait until we die to enter the Father's house.  Just as God designed the temple in Jerusalem with apartments for priests to live in, so God desires for us to dwell in His inner temple, here and now.  Living a contemplative lifestyle means making God's house, your home.  


The Epiphany Institute of Spirituality's website states:  "The Epiphany Institute of Spirituality (EIS) exists to reclaim and revive these early Baptist emphases within our own historical tradition through adapting teachings and practices of contemplative streams of Christianity from the Latin West, Greek East, and Syriac Orient."  Workshop presenter Randy Ashcraft put it this way:  "We are open to all traditions that point to Christ."  Jesus said it like this:  "In my Father's house are many rooms."  


Authentic Christianity is open Christianity--a faith that is open to all traditions that point to Christ.  I'm proud to call myself a Baptist--but I'm a Christian first.  This means I've got to be open to all Christian traditions that lead to a deeper walk with Jesus.  Limiting myself to Baptist expressions prevents my exposure to forms of Christian prayer, meditation, contemplation, and understanding of the Bible that might otherwise enrich my spiritual life.  


Even within the Baptist tradition, most of us are unaware of the depth of contemplative thought that has been expressed through our rich history.  Michael Sciretti has written a book entitled Entempling: Baptist Wisdom for Contemplative Prayer.  In this book, Sciretti quotes many famous and less-than-famous Baptist preachers and authors, pointing to a stream of contemplation that has run through the centuries of Baptist thought and practice.  Sciretti's work can be used both as aid to personal devotion, and as a tool for corporate contemplative worship.  Of this book, musician Drexel Rayford (also an EIS presenter) says, "Dr. Sciretti has pulled together wisdom from a long ignored 'spring.' Anyone who drinks of this water will experience a unique sort of soul-thirst quenching. I highly recommend it!"  C.S. Smith says, "The editors of this book are trusted spiritual directors of the highest order, both of whom have had positive impact on my life... So pleased that this book has come into being."  Why not follow the link to Amazon and pick up a copy for yourself?


In John 14:1 (ESV), Jesus says, "Let not your hearts be troubled."  The word "trouble," according to the Online Etymology Dictionary, comes from the Latinturbulare, from the Late Latin turbidare, "to make turbid."  To let your heart be troubled is to allow it to become like water churned by a storm.  Don't let your heart be turbid.  Let it be the opposite of turbid.  Instead, let it be like the stormy sea that was calmed when Jesus said, "Peace, be still."  Let it be peaceful and still, like the sea of glass before God's throne (Revelation 4:6).

I pray that you'll find Jesus' peace in His temple--in contemplation.  I pray that His temple, His Father's house with many rooms, will be a shelter for you.  I pray that in that temple, you'll be at peace, that you'll be still, and that you'll know that God is God (Psalm 46:10).

Abiding: Holy Inactivity

In John 15 (ESV), Jesus makes the analogy of a vine and branches.  As the vine draws its nourishment from the branch, so Christians need to draw our sustenance from Christ.


“I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit. Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you. Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing. If anyone does not abide in me he is thrown away like a branch and withers; and the branches are gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned. If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples. As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. 10 If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in his love. 11 These things I have spoken to you,that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.

One way to think of abiding in Christ is the practice of the Logos Prayer.  How better to let Jesus' words abide in you (v.7) , than to meditate on them?  By sitting quietly, repeating God's Word in your heart, you abide in the word, and you allow it to abide in you.

To abide is to rest, to live, to dwell.  This holy inactivity isn't laziness.  On the contrary, it's from our times of resting that we receive the wisdom and energy we need in order to perform the many tasks to which God has appointed us. Abiding in the Word cleanses you from the world's dirt and grime (v.3).  It helps you to share God's cleanness with others, because it's only when the Word abides in you that you have it to give to those around you.

Contemplative Prayer is also abiding.  When you simply sit in God's presence, silently soaking in your nourishment from the Branch, you grow to be a healthy vine.  The vine doesn't struggle to suck its life from the branch--it simply abides, and lets the branch fill it.  In contemplative prayer, we simply abide in Christ, allowing Him to fill us, feed us, complete us.

I hope that you'll practice Contemplative Prayer and meditation on God's Word every day.  By doing so, you abide in Christ, and you allow Him to abide in you.  And the fruit of that kind of holy inactivity is sweet!