Monday, November 27, 2017

Paula's Prayer Meeting November 16, 2017


I missed this meeting and I thank Natalie for providing me a copy of the handout. I see that the message is about living now or today to the fullest and not waiting for tomorrow to do it.

I did not get to ask what music was played during the meeting. I chose a non religious song by the late John Denver called Today to go with the light yet highly meaningful theme of the handout. 







To reinforce the idea of the so called sacrament of the present moment, I am sharing this beautiful reflection from Richard Rohr's Everything Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer.

 The contemplative secret is to learn how to live in the now. (Saints knew and taught this long before Eckart Tolle re-taught it in our time, but many Christians still called him “New Age.” Jean-Pierre de Caussade, S.J. already spoke of this as “the Sacrament of the Present Moment” in his classic book of spiritual direction in 1735. My book, Everything Belongs, came out in 1999, the same year as Tolle’s immensely helpful book, The Power of Now.)
The now is not as empty as it might appear to be—or that we fear it may be. Try to realize that everything that we really need is right here, right now. . . .  When we’re doing life right, it means nothing more than it is right now, because God is always in this moment in an accepting and non-blaming way. When we are able to experience that, taste it, and enjoy it, we don’t need to hold on to it nor are we afraid to let go of it. The next moment will have its own taste and enjoyment.
Because our moments are not tasted—or full—or real—or in the Presence—we are never fulfilled and there is never enough. We then create artificial fullness and distractions and try to pass time or empty time with that. God is either in this now or God isn’t in it at all. “This moment is as perfect as it can be” used to be a mantra we would repeat at the community of New Jerusalem in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Perhaps this quote from Psalm 46:10 can be your entranceway into the now, if you slow down in this way:
Be still and know that I am God.
Be still and know that I am.
Be still and know.
Be still.
Be.












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