Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Riitta's blog: Have I ever told you?

Riitta's blog: Have I ever told you?: Have I ever told you why I decided to stay here in Canada and not to go back to Finland ? There was a man with a young family in my pr...

These are the stories and moments of our lives that are full of grace.  Embrace all your experiences and take them to heart.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Easter Season

This is the season of Easter; a time to reflect on resurrection encounters with the Holy One.  The sermon from Sunday talked about the disciples and other Jesus' followers gathered in a room, with the door clotsed.  The reflection had us think about what happens, how we gather, after a loved one dies in our own day. We reflected on communities that gather for survival, for protest, for meals, to share hope. Gathering in community, with people who understand, becomes a sacred place where Jesus comes and says, "Peace be with you".
 In the mourning and fear of the future unknown, weeping and tears become a sign of the resurrection.  As we cry together, for ourselves, each other, the world, Christ visits amidst the vulnerability, suffering, and compassion.
Erich Weingartner in his writing calls people to "Worthy Weeping".  What a way to bring resurrection.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Part 3 -The Cloth

EASTER

A night ago, two nights in fact
I fell asleep in the shadow of the cross
Dazed and confused
I woke in the wee hours of this morning
As soft young hands were folding me
Laying me gently down on a hewn shelf
The air was misty, surreal.

It was a tomb.
Confounded I went with the One to the tomb?
Three sunrises ago?
Serving once again,
Without knowing -Touching, smelling, seeing- the One
I was there at the end, in death -a shroud.
The end.

Ordinarily I would say so
Yet, I woke up to no ordinary end.
I woke up.
Dead - now alive –What kind of a miracle is this?
Particles in the air twinkled
A light peeked in the tomb from outside
And the One rose as if from sleep,
 In each movement, in the rising
The One grew warmer and brighter. 
The tomb was filled with a warm presence,
Penetrating every fold and fibre
Inundated with such power, energy, life
As the light grew so bright,
It was more than I could take, I turned away
 and the One – vanished in the light.
Again alone with no sense of being alone.
Alone in the tomb
Pulsating Hope
Breathing a fullness of life
Drunk in the awe of a miracle
I stayed in the tomb.

That’s where they found me
The women
Bearing spices and whispering to themselves
The young man spoke –I had forgotten his presence
Him too basking in miracle
He told the women not to be alarmed;
Go tell Peter -
And with that the air within the tomb changed,
The warmth left
The light receded,
Beckoning us to follow
-there was nothing left in the tomb.
The One, no longer there to be encountered,
I was scooped up and with the women scurried away
Taken, to show the disciples.

We fled.
The women in terror
I in amazement
Not that you notice in your Bible
Lost in translation,
 Mark ends the story, “They were afraid for ...”
Dot. Dot. Dot.

I was there in the dot, dot, dot
In a room in Galilee
With the followers
Those who had encountered the One
Mourning, sharing memories, being a community.
Life regulated to ordinary tasks
drying dishes, washing babies, binding wounds, cleaning chaos, wrapping bread, carrying bundles;
yes, ordinary tasks repeated a hundred times in a lifetime...
but there is nothing ordinary about the every day.
We had learned this on the way to the cross
Ordinary is bound with miracle
With the possibility of encountering the One.

The stories, the dot, dot, dots ...
Trickled in.
I was there in the ordinary moments of life
Later on Easter morning, the handkerchief in the gardener’s pocket
The blanket on the beach when the One shared fish over a fire
The folds of cloth stretched out with the words “Peace be with You”
The cloak sharing whispers on the road to Emmaus
Years later, lining the saddle of the donkey going to Damascus
The bed sheets as the scales fell from Paul’s eyes
I was there a million times, for a million miracles
A million encounters with the One
In the ordinary.

The bonnet taken off as a child was baptized
In the apron of a mother’s lap when the story was told
On the table in the breaking of the bread
Coverings sheltering the homeless
Clothing on the naked
Towels drying washed feet
Wherever the words were remembered
“I give you a new commandment, love one another”
It is here in the simplicity of three words,
Love one another
Where the miracle is birthed, incarnate, wrapped in swaddling cloth
Given as gift
It’s an encounter of the One; it is the One
Resurrected!

I am but a simple cloth that was there
That wishes to be there, here
-with God, in God, through God-
Serving as a cloth
Giving my all, my everything
To bring resurrection in each movement,
 in the rising
The One growing warmer and brighter. 
The tomb that is this world filled with a warm presence,
Penetrating every fold and fibre
Inundated with such power, energy, life
As the light grows so bright,
The world
Pulsates Hope
Breathes a fullness of life
Is drunk in the awe of a miracle

I am there in the ordinary tasks of life
Serving you in the every day –serving others through you
The One is encountered
Touched, seen, smelled, heard
Resurrected!
I am but a simple cloth holding a miracle
 in the ordinary just around the corner
expect me, expect the One
Love. Resurrected!

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Part 2 - The Cloth


GOOD FRIDAY

It was the wee hours of this morning when I was discarded in the garden
Fallen away as a Jesus’ follower ran away
to get away
from the hoard, the angry mob, the violence;
anger and hate –for one who could change everything
their fortunes, their position, their status quo
and so they bound and took the One. –Jesus was gone
I alone was left to pray in the garden.

It was the wee hours of this morning when women came through the garden
Starting their day, on the way to the market
Woven baskets over their arms
On the way to trade their wares
To gather produce, herbs, and spices for their family meals
As one women swished past,
I was swept off the ground, folded; reverently placed in a basket beside some eggs
To be traded, kept, used

It was later, after the sun had risen and the street was full of people
That the day changed from ordinary to a sad kind of miracle
All along the street people in a mass crowd
were encountering the One,
touching, smelling, seeing
But not how the One was expected –
The One was suffering, thirsting, crying
Weak in the knees -human beyond human
Humiliated under the weight of a cross.

The matron who had swept me from the garden
Folded me, reverently placed me in her basket
Stopped –
She stopped in the street
As if no crowd was present
She stopped
at the sound of the One crying;
Turning she looked at the One eye to eye
And she reached for me
Gently taking the folds of cloth in her soft hands
She walked to the One
And holding his cheeks in her hands wiped away the tears
The sweat –and for an instant, the pain.

The narrative of the Stations of the Cross says that the matron’s name was Veronica.
She choose to be present with Jesus along the way to cross,
offering him a cloth to wipe his face,
legend says that an imprint of Jesus’ face was left on the cloth
I was there that morning
Through the hands of compassion I encountered the One
Wiped and gathered his tears, took for an instant some of the pain.
Looking at the cloth of my existence
I was the same cloth, no material face
Yet I was changed –I had intimately encountered the One
My fabric was transformed in a miracle!
Perhaps I glowed different, was whiter than snow
But from that moment every other place I end up
With me, is the presence of the One
His suffering, his pain, his tears
Tears that have a miraculous power –to love
Especially love for the unlovable.

And that’s why today is different
The One is encountered as we once again let the Word of the Passion penetrate-
Walking the way to the cross
We as the matron in Jerusalem are invited
 to practice Presence –in suffering; in pain; in tears
To be present for God, in God, as God dies
Wiping God tears
We wipe our own
With compassion we seek out and wipe the tears of others
Others who suffer, are in pain, those crying –
It is here that the miraculous arises
and the presence of the One is all around
         and the world
Encounters God who dared to love –humanity
That is a miracle in itself.

As we come to the end of the walk, 
As we lay ourselves at the foot of the cross
It is here that we find
The vera icon –the true picture
The cross
Ultimate, intimate love.

It is here in our own suffering, pain, and tears
That we are exhausted by guilt, shame, humility
It is all laid down
Poured out
And as the last words are heard
 
-it is finished-
As the last breath is exhaled  -
Inside us dies too
 A love so intimate, a love so extravagant
And me so undeserving
I will curl up and rest here, at the bottom of the cross
To soak in the remaining Presence
Of the One
Despised, forsaken, a miracle in disguise
In this moment I am my all and yet nothing,
In the shadow of the cross

Part 1 -The Cloth


MAUNDY THURS.

“The Cloth”

I was there in the ordinary moments of life:
drying dishes, washing babies, binding wounds, cleaning chaos, wrapping bread, carrying bundles;
yes, ordinary tasks repeated a hundred times in a lifetime...
but there is nothing ordinary about the every day.
It was a long time ago now
when I was changed to believe that everything, everyone, every moment is sacred.
It was an ordinary day in an ordinary time of history,
one day ran into the next, and the next –
but, the tasks of those days turned out not to be ordinary after all
in the way you think of ordinary;
as a place where nothing is expected –no surprise, no drama, no nothing.
Yet, it was in the supposed ordinary where I encountered the One.

It started as a warm feeling.
The realization that there was a presence that couldn’t be touched,
couldn’t be seen, couldn’t be smelled
until, that is, the presence grew and was birthed as a baby.
And then the One was encountered-
touched, seen, smelled, heard
And my tasks changed such that they were done with a love I can’t explain.

I was there in the ordinary moments of life:
Tasks I had done before but now in them I saw the One, touched the One, smelled the One
In every movement
I expected surprise, warmth –a million miracles.
It is true I was there:
The swaddling cloth wrapping incarnation in a stable
The bands that fell off lepers healed,
The strips of cloth holding fast Lazarus as he rose from a tomb
The cloth containing a little boy’s lunch; fish and loaves multiplied to feed thousands
The extra cover at night as Nicodemus approached the One
I was there keeping off fog on a sleeping Messiah as the fishermen faced a growing storm
The cloaks placed on the royal pathway mixed with palms,
prostrated in prayer as the One entered Jerusalem.

A woman unwrapped from within the folds of my cloth an alabaster jar of ointment,
 Jesus feet washed with her tears, anointed with oil, wiped with hair, with a towel
She saw what I saw.
She felt the One –encountered the One
She was touched by the miracle found in ordinary,
and did the extraordinary,
out of intimate love anointed him the Messiah, the One.

I was there in the ordinary moments of life,
  the One wrapped me into the holy story, drew me into relationship
by simply being present in my serving such that it is;
it was this night –a night of all nights
that I was encountered by the One:
as a cloth on the table when sacred bread was broken, taken, shared;
around Jesus waist and wiping the feet of reluctant disciples;
a prayer shawl on the shoulders that went out to the garden to pray.

It was an ordinary night
But one like no other.
I could feel it,
The deep saturated words of the One hanging in the air –
Touching tension, smelling fear, breathing love
A miracle so big that words were heavy
So actions took over.
The One with grace and decorum fed the disciples in a new way
The One washed their feet: a host, serving
The One prayed and prayed and prayed.
Words not enough to contain forgiveness, love, communion.

How else could this not so ordinary miracle come to an end?
It seems as but a dream, a vision of the ultimate plan.
And yes, for the miracle in the ordinary to continue it came to an end
In the garden
I was there to see the miracle walk away
Men came to take the One and he just went away
No fight, no flight; just a look that said
I’ll see you in the ordinary, keep watch and pray.
I was there in the garden,
a robe that falls away in the commotion and remains left behind
–discarded –
left with “the look” from the one.
I stayed and prayed;
 waiting for a million miracles
-discarded-
foreboding of the night and day that was yet to come.




Advent Shelter: Devotion #11

SHELTER: The Example of an Innkeeper – by Claire McIlveen   ‘Twas in another lifetime, one of toil and blood When blackness was a vir...