Category Archives: Grace for the journey outside the limits of a specific religion.

The Timing of Miracles in Lives Differs

It’s a lovely sunny day in Memphis. I’m as usual playing on face book before getting serious about unpacking my mess of decades of writing in hopes of gathering some together to describe my spiritual journey. The point being, that I am convinced that the timing of it differs from person to person. But if open to mystery, to miracles past our understanding, even if finally only in old age, we can recognize that amazing connection of God to our daily lives. It can be in the timing of really small things or recognizing God’s hand in the large and even scary aspects of our lives. I know that I was a weak person and needed immense doses of grace early on to keep on keeping on. But, there are times in all our lives when our natural strengths are not enough. And if we are naturally strong people we may not recognize our limits as gifts. Because they open us to grace in ways beyond our understanding. To the strong it may seem like failure to need that grace, but it’s the gift of Jesus’ life as a human being. His journey is our journey complete with miracles beyond human understanding, because we too have the Spirit of God within us and surrounding us. God is as alive and well in our times and our lives as God was in Jesus’ life, suffering, death and resurrection. The timing of our need for and openness to God’s interventions is different from one person to another. But ultimately we are all called to experience our limits and need for God’s active participation in our daily lives. Admitting our natural limits is harder for the strong than the weak. But it is part of the spiritual journey. The Spirit is within us and outside us. We are a tiny, but needed part of God’s plan for humanity. But recognizing our personal limits and need for an awareness of our connection to God is part of God’s plan for humanity.

The “Guts” of my Faith

Trying to kind of sum up my faith and understanding of the spiritual in life.

Is there something/someone worth calling God? Yes! Why do I believe this? Because I’ve experienced unexplainable timing miracles over and over in my life and because when I separated Jesus from any religion, it became clear that Jesus fleshed out these things: 1. UNCONDITIONAL LOVE; 2. that we ALL are loved: and we are ALL created and called to love one another(even our enemy) just as WE are loved. 3. God’s essence (Spirit) is in everything and everyone if we are open to it. We are an essential part of the whole, but we individually are not equal to the whole. 4. Life, both as individuals and as humanity, is a school for the spiritual journey of evolution in loving, and we are learning to love still on the day we die. 5. We are not all dealt the same hand, so it is impossible to judge how well anyone is playing their hand. Only God knows that. 6. No person or group has all the truth and nothing but the truth. 7. We are part of God and God is part of us, but we are not the whole. 8.The Scriptures are letters from God written by people in earlier and more primitive cultures, but we hear God through the Scriptures with the understanding of the culture we are living in. with its differences AND its limits. 9.Truth and fact are not the same. Some Scriptures teach truth through metaphorical stories. The details are not facts, but the truth they are illustrating is real. 10. Jesus FLESHED out not only the Love of God for all humanity, but also the stages of growing into Loving as God Loves. His WAY is our WAY. He is the witness that we unfinished human beings can grow from the selfishness of an infant’s needs to the freedom to Love others more than ourselves, even those who seem to be our enemies, but who play a crucial part in our growing free to Love. 11. We not only can love our enemy, but choose to trust God when we feel abandoned just as Jesus ultimately did on his cross. 12.This life is not all there is. 13. Jesus as a person in History is not the only way to learning to love as God loves. But Jesus has definitely been my personal way, so I that is what I have to share.

At 87 I am still on my personal journey so may understand more tomorrow, but will not know it all in this life, just my God given personal potential through the grace of being loved. I pray for people, even those connected to cars broken down on the highway this way: “God, be with that person and their loved ones. Give them the grace they need physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually to become the person you created them to be. I ask this in Jesus’ name, who fleshed our Your love for us. Amen.”

Jesus Chose Love Over Power

Jesus chose love over power. And paid the price. Jesus fleshed out the Love of God. That was his WAY and the WAY we are called to also.

The early world of dog eat dog, of the fallen get left behind, of only the physically strong survive began to evolve into partnerships, into family, into tribe, into country, now into world, and soon into universe. It grows past hunter/gatherer to social networks of different skills working for the whole. Eventually we will all need each other across our differences, in fact because of our differences.

In our current world we often see greed as the root of all evil, but greed is just a way to power and power is still seen as safety.

Jesus was not about safety. Jesus lay down his life. He chose to be vulnerable even knowing the consequences. Because he knew that death was not the end. And survival is not the goal. Love is.

Jesus being fully human and fully divine is a paradox and our minds don’t deal with paradoxes well.

The problem for us is identifying with both. Divine implies bigger than life. And the human Jesus showed us what that means in the resurrection. Being human doesn’t mean bad or evil. It means “unfinished.” We come into the world dependent and needy and greedy. With the grace of knowing there is more than survival and pleasure we can become able to love, to value ourselves and others equally because life is not about personal survival but about humanity becoming Love which is Divine.

Humanity has the seed of the Divine within …….the Spirit of God , of Love. Like the fig tree we can yield the fruit of that Spirit. But it’s a spiritual journey from need to Love and that takes the grace of being Loved. And that’s where Jesus comes in. The journey of life is a hard one with hard choices and without the grace of knowing Love up close and personal it’s impossible. But we are different from one another from birth, so the journey won’t be exactly the same for us. But it is always a journey from need to Love.

For me that has been graced by knowing that imperfect and unfinished as I am, I am Loved by the creator of all , the whole, the great I AM and Jesus fleshed both that Love and the WAY , (the choices) to become Loving out for me.

I don’t personally think a creator, a father, a mother, would only have one way of loving and giving grace to love, so billions of their children would never know that Love. But for me it has been Jesus. I could not have come this far without that grace of being known and Loved. I don’t think we come into the world equal in ability, opportunity, freedom, cultures, so we are not cookie cutter children of God. Each of us comes with different strengths and weaknesses; physical, mental, emotional, situational, cultural, etc. which is what makes judging impossible.

The seed of the Spirit is in us. What awakens it and strengthens it will differ, like with Cornelius and his family. No one has a monopoly on God or grace. We can share our source of Grace, such as Jesus, but unless we Love like Jesus, it will not find soft fertile ground.

Scripture contradicts itself, such as the difference in the Gospel accounts of Jesus carrying or needing help carrying His Cross. The Gospel of John says Jesus did not need help carrying His cross. When I first hit a time when I felt I simply could not go on, I opened to the story of Simon of Cyrene helping Jesus carry his cross and realized some times we all need help and got an immediate phone call offering the help I needed. Years later when feeling overwhelmed again by circumstances, I opened to the Gospel of John that said Jesus carried his own cross and heard that as God telling me that now His grace was sufficient. And it was.

The Spirit speaks to us through the Scriptures in different ways at different times in our journeys. Do not make a God of one part of Scripture. Our personal journey’s from need to Love are different from each other’s and even at different times in our own lives. Jesus’s life is the WORD of God fleshed out for us and different people at different times need to hear different things. Do not set a Scripture in Stone and make a God of it.

Ultimately, each day has challenges to grow in Love in our own personal journey. But not necessarily in the same way as our parents, our pastor, or our best friend, but always in one of the ways and choices that Jesus made sometimes through tears, heartbreak, frustration, and even anger…..but ending with Love. “Father, forgiven them. They know not what they do.”

Humility: The Key to the Kingdom of God

Well I finished Rohr’s book. Since I underlined almost all of it and my memory is flakey, I’m going to reread it and probably post small pieces that really hit where I’ve been and where I struggle now. This is a brilliant priest theologian, activist that has been on a similar journey to mine with just timing differences. I’m a eighty-seven year old woman, married for sixty-years, mother of five with a passel of grands and great grands. My life on the surface level has been nothing like Rohr’s. But spiritually we both grew up Catholic, experienced the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, spent years focusing on equal rights for all and a better life for the poor, and recognized that most of Christianity, including Catholicism, has missed the point of Jesus. That point being that every human being, every pitiful failure, mean as a snake, self-centered, lustful, or just lazy one of us is tenderly and unconditionally loved by God.

Dying to self is not a popular goal and it takes at least all of this life time to even make a dent in our focus on self. But we are only called to play the hand we are dealt and nobody’s dealt a Royal Straight Flush. Recognizing that is the key to humility which is the key to experiencing the kingdom of heaven here. That can free us of judging ourselves and others as bad children. We are all unfinished. At eighty-seven I’m still in a process, a life-time journey literally fueled by the grace of the Love of God fleshed out in Jesus. That grace is poured out for a journey that progresses by a mix of inches, temporary stops and occasional leaps. But the journey is for us to fulfill only our personal potential…..no one else’s and has nothing to do with being loved and everything to do with knowing we are loved. When we are open to that we can pass it on and join with God in bringing about His kingdom on earth. But, don’t get too overwhelmed, or too dependent on seeing results………the time line is eternity. This isn’t heaven. And sometimes things have to get worse in order to get better. Our primary challenge is letting God’s grace of Love make us better. It’s a partnership that doesn’t work when we think we are wise and good enough to do it by ourselves. That’s the key and importance of “walking humbly with our God.” It takes focus, listening, watching, and particularly an openness to all the possibilities so God can show us when we persevere in seeking his will.

I want to pass on something important for men and women that I learned the hard way. In fact ,Rohr is the first person I have ever heard say that it is the reason women outlive men. We can allow ourselves to cry. It’s not weakness. We weep, but persevere. Tears are literally healing, emotionally and physically and spiritually. Jesus wept, so should we. There are plenty of things in this world that need to be wept over. We cry our hearts out. Then get up, wipe our tears away and take God’s hand like a small child and keep on keeping on.

Hugs to all you guys. We are not alone ever!

Sometimes It’s Lonely Being Weird

I don’t have much to give, but what I do have, I’d like to share with you. I’d like to share my own journey, but not because yours will be the same. What I’d like to pass on is that life is a journey and the only constant is change. So, the idea of being open to  a new stage of your journey opening up for you is something I hope will ease your transitions.  And sometimes the hardest parts are the fertilizer for growing more loving.

I grew up in a religion, but fairly early on questioned a lot of it. Because I didn’t know any better, I connected and limited the idea of a God to religion so when I became disillusioned with religion, I stopped believing in God.

Since I just naturally look for possibilities to make life better, I figured it was up to us to make our world better if there was no God. I became active in the Civil Rights movement to help give African Americans equal rights. I tutored children in a ghetto school who could not read and worked with a Catholic organization that was trying to get better jobs for African Americans, though I was no longer Catholic or Christian. After a while I realized that because of prejudice, learning to read would not actually give black children or adults a chance at better jobs. 

Meanwhile in my group of educated, supposedly Christian, white friends who were lawyers, doctors, and scientists, I witnessed not just disinterest, but a fear of and even hate many had for African Americans who were trying to get equal rights. Obviously neither religion nor a college education overcame prejudice.

Then, when Martin Luther King’s March on Washington came through Nashville, I was answering the phones in the NAACP’s office while the buses were stopping there. A number of young men, who belonged to organizations that were much more militant and violent than Martin Luther King’s, came into the office. Their obvious hatred of me and bullying , just because I was white, were scary. I went home convinced that we were going to have a bloody race war in America. And that terrified me for both my own children and for those sweet, friendly young black children I had tutored.

Martin Luther King and his Christian non-violent movement saved us from that.

I realize now that his willingness to not only devote his life to helping others, but to suffer and risk dying for them, came from his relationship with Jesus. He believed Christianity was about experiencing the love of God first hand and passing it on, even to our enemies.

I need to explain why, as someone who lived in the South most of my life, I was not consciously prejudiced. My father was an intelligent man, whose personality made him open to questioning the status quo. It was the hand he was dealt at birth, even though most of his family were not like this. He was a newpaperman with an insatiable desire for knowledge. He devoured history, philosphy, science, literature, and theology. He was also a frustrated idealist, who wasn’t always able to handle the gap between reality and his vision of how things should be without sometimes dulling the pain with alcohol. Idealists are not perfect, not even ones like Martin Luther King, who cheated on his wife even though he knew Jesus and was willing to die for others. But idealists are frequently willing to spend and lose their life trying to make life better for the powerless, including idealists who because of Jesus actually try to not hate those who hate them. So, I wasn’t taught to hate either side, even after our house was bombed when my newspaper editor father supported an African American for a place on the school board in the early fifties in Houston, Texas.

As I became more aware of the hatred on both sides of the race issue, I decided that we needed ways to change people’s attitudes, not just laws. So, I went back to college to study psychology. And though I eventually realized that many people don’t see a need to change, psychology helped me in my own personal struggle to cope with the gap between reality and the ideal.

In my personal life at the time of my search for ways to help people become more loving and open to those different from themselves, I lived a life of pleasures available to those who were affluent. When one of the couples in our social group decided to give up their sizeable income, their home, and lifestyle to work full time for Campus Crusade for Christ, that got my attention. They had always seemed to be  rather average well to do American Christians. But this was a whole new ballgame and though I didn’t understand it, I envied anyone who believed in something enough to give up all the perks of being affluent Americans.

The key to their change seemed to be that they had taken a leap from just attempting the minimum love in the ten commandments, into “Here I am, God. I am yours.” This opened them up to a growing give and take relationship with an accessible Jesus who fleshed out the unconditional love of God. Not an easy leap for a “show me” kind of person like me. But several women I met from Campus Crusade spoke about new self awareness and the grace to change. That revived a tiny bit of my lost hope that people could change.

A warning here: Everyone’s journey is unique. Humans are not cookie cutter beings. And everything from inborn personality types, to genes, family traditons, life experiences, wounds and gifts, and current trends in our particular culture will influence our personal journeys. The only inherent similarity is that a journey involves accepting a need for growth through change.

Along the seeking phase of my journey I had read the Bible all the way through. I found contradictions that seemed to me to be because of human evolution. Not having studied the Bible much, a lot of the claims of the New Testament definitely sounded against the laws of nature, as we currently understood them anyway. And when I asked my church going Christian friends about miracles, they didn’t seem to believe them relevant in the present times anyway. Since the New Testament was about miracles and changed lives with people becoming willing to die for what they believed God wanted, I have to admit that I felt some disappointment.

Another warning: In retrospect about my taking a leap that changed my view and gave me a source of love and strength, I can see how slowly and carefully God prepared me for that leap. There is again a unique journey with tiny steps that prepare us for the leaps. And someone pushing us either too soon or to a decision that is not part of our own journey, will not work for us. Studying psychology and having some therapy helped heal wounds I did not know I had. Wounds that kept me from being able to believe I was loveable. I’m a theory person, who is mostly oblivious to the concrete world around me. Abstract issues and theories were very little help in my role as a wife and mother of five children. I felt hopelessly inadequate all the time. Feelings of inadequacy keep us so focused on ourselves, that we have nothing left for loving others. Being accepted with compassion when I admitted I didn’t think I was capable of really loving anyone was the beginning of a new important stage of my journey. Knowing with BOTH mind and heart that we are loved just as we are is what frees us to begin growing more loving all our lives. It’s not a smooth journey even then, because there are deeper wounds and even new wounds that have to be healed to make our next leap in loving. But there are lots of sources helpful for healing. Growth is a life long process. And for all any one knows for sure, it might be longer than that!

As far as religion goes, the mystics of the world religions, both Judeo-Christian and others, agree that everything is one. So, whatever we do affects the whole. The mystics are the people whose lives are focused on seeking and encountering aspects of God. But, others also experience that oneness. Once I had experienced it, I found it’s a reality that undermines my justification for rejecting others different from me, ultimately even those that hate or hurt me.

I finally realized that either thinking I can know God fully or that I know there is no God is hubris. Even Einstein saw that. As close as I can come to describing God is Love. And for me, Jesus is not only a model of how to grow in love, but an actual expression of that Love that can become the source of healing, freeing, strengthening, guiding, and Love growing in us. He has also been my source of faith for and experiences of what we, in our ignorance, call miracles.

Though I searched in many places in and outside of religions, I found God only when I was ready to risk saying, “Jesus, if you are who you claimed to be, the Love of God expressed for us, then I want you as my Savior and Lord.” And for me that meant, “I want you as my guide, my best friend, as my go to source of the grace of Love,  healing, wisdom, strength, comforting, forgiveness, and growth in loving myself and all others.” In other words, a source of Love/grace that can save me from my selfishness.  I have no way of knowing how anyone else’s journey will be nurtured.  I know and love people who have come to believe as I do, that the purpose of life is learning how to truly love unconditionally, but they learned this through other ways.  I share my process in case it helps anyone else, but I don’t believe it’s the only way to grow in Love.  I do believe that however we come to believe in and experience unconditional love, it has to be with both mind and heart. 

Jesus gives God a face. The God who is way beyond understanding gives me a glimpse to help me trust that all of us tiny people, who are floating helplessly in a giant universe or perhaps even more universes, matter. We are tiny, but integral, parts of the whole.

This was something that made a difference for me… a beginning of a journey that has involved a lot of scary opening up to trying to understand and love people different from me……including fundamentalist Christians……and people whose prejudices I don’t share …..those who scorn my faith…. and those who hurt me or who cannot forgive me for hurting them.

It is not easy being weird. And as an evangelical, “born again” Christian and a liberal Democrat, who once danced for sheer joy at the awesomeness of God when reading a book describing evolution in the micro to the macro of our universe; as a person with several generations of intelligent, spiritual, and loving homosexual partners in my immediate family, as a person who recognizes truth in metaphors, so doesn’t take all the Bible literally, but has experienced the presence of Jesus, sheer overwhelming joy from the Love of God, and too many “miracles” to limit God in anyway, I definitely am a rare bird…..in other words…..weird.

No two journeys are exactly alike. And they call us to change often along the way.  And even with grace that’s not easy. But the joy of knowing we are all loved at each stage, even when we falter, makes it worth the struggle.

Reborn, Renewed, Healed, Sustained, Empowered Over and Over by the Love of God Fleshed Out in Jesus Christ

 Oh yes! This really speaks to my condition!

“I deeply know that I have a home in Jesus, just as Jesus has a home in God. I know, too, that when I abide in Jesus I abide with him in God. “Those who love me,” Jesus says, “will be loved by my Father” (John 14:21). My true spiritual work is to let myself be loved, fully and completely, and to trust that in that love I will come to the fulfillment of my vocation. I keep trying to bring my wandering, restless, anxious self-home, so that I can rest there in the embrace of love.” – Henri Nouwen

Henri Nouwen expresses the cries of our hungry hearts so well.

And Richard Rohr captures the concepts and spirit of our seeking minds.

These two men technically belong to the Roman Catholic Church, but their hearts, minds, and spirits were never limited by it.  They belong to the universal catholic church and speak to ALL of us and call us to the freedom of belonging first to Jesus Christ as the Love of God fleshed out for us.

And to me as a woman, Anne Lamott, technically a Presbyterian, fleshes out a woman’s journey with Jesus Christ so honestly that it frees us from the stress of pretending we’ve got it all together.  And that helps us keep on getting back up when we’ve fallen and opening our hearts to the freeing, life changing Love of God expressed in Jesus.

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