I am a hole in a flute that the Christ’s breath moves through— listen to this music.
- Daniel Ladinsky, inspired by Hafiz, “The Christ’s Breath,”Love Poems from God: Twelve Sacred Voices from the East and West(Penguin Compass: 2002), 153. Used with permission
Therefore, dear Sir, love your solitude and try to sing out with the
pain it causes you. For those who are near you are far away... and this
shows that the space around you is beginning to grow vast.... be happy
about your growth, in which of course you can't take anyone with you,
and be gentle with those who stay behind; be confident and calm in front
of them and don't torment them with your doubts and don't frighten them
with your faith or joy, which they wouldn't be able to comprehend. Seek
out some simple and true feeling of what you have in common with them,
which doesn't necessarily have to alter when you yourself change again
and again; when you see them, love life in a form that is not your own
and be indulgent toward those who are growing old, who are afraid of the
aloneness that you trust.... and don't expect any understanding; but
believe in a love that is being stored up for you like an inheritance,
and have faith that in this love there is a strength and a blessing so
large that you can travel as far as you wish without having to step
outside it.
. . . The wordcontemplation must press beyond the constraints of religious expectations to reach the potential for spiritual centering in the midst of danger. Centering moments accessed in safety are an expected luxury in our era. During slavery, however, crisis contemplation became a refuge, a wellspring of discernment in a suddenly disordered life space, and a geo-spiritual anvil for forging a new identity. This definition of contemplation is dynamic and situational. . . .
As unlikely as it may seem, the contemplative moment can be found at the very center of such ontological crises . . . during the Middle Passage in the holds of slave ships . . . auction blocks . . . and the . . . hush arbors [where slaves worshipped in secret]. Each event is experienced by individuals stunned into multiple realities by shock, journey, and displacement. . . . In the words of Howard Thurman, “when all hope for release in the world seems unrealistic and groundless, the heart turns to a way of escape beyond the present order.” [1] For captured Africans, there was no safety except in common cause and the development of internal and spiritual fortitude. . . .
The only sound that would carry Africans over the bitter waters was the moan. Moans flowed through each wracked body and drew each soul toward the center of contemplation. . . . One imagines the Spirit moaning as it hovered over the deep during the Genesis account of creation [Genesis 1:2]. Here, the moan stitches horror and survival instincts into a creation narrative. . . . On the slave ships, the moan became the language of stolen strangers, the sound of unspeakable fears, the precursor to joy yet unknown. The moan is the birthing sound, the first movement toward a creative response to oppression, the entry into the heart of contemplation through the crucible of crisis.
- Barbara A. Holmes,Joy Unspeakable: Contemplative Practices of the Black Church, second edition (Fortress Press: 2017), 45-46, 50, 52.
"It is simply opening yourself to receive. The presence of God is like walking out of a door into the fresh air. You don't concentrate on the fresh air, you breathe it. And you don't concentrate on the sunlight, you just enjoy it. It is all around."
- From a lecture by Thomas Merton, to the monks at Gethsemani
From Pope Francis' homily, September 6, 2018. From Vatican News HERE.
“There are people who go through life
talking about others, accusing others and never thinking of their own
sins. And when I go to make my confession, how do I confess? Like a
parrot? ‘Bla, bla, bla… I did this, this…’ But are you touched at heart
by what you have done? Many times, no. You go there to put on make-up,
to make-yourself up a little bit in order to look beautiful. But it
hasn’t entered completely into your heart, because you haven’t left
room, because you are not capable of accusing yourself.”
And so that first step is also a grace: the grace of learning to accuse oneself, and not others:
“A sign that a person does not know,
that a Christian does not know how to accuse himself is when he is
accustomed to accusing others, to talking about others, to being nosy
about the lives of others. And that is an ugly sign. Do I do this? It’s a
good question to get to the heart [of things]. Today let us ask the
Lord for the grace, the grace to find ourselves face to face with Him
with this wonder that His presence gives; and the grace to feel that we
are sinners, but concretely, and to say with Peter: 'Depart from me, for
I am a sinner'.”
Society is thirsty for entertainment and holiday. We think that a "successful" person is one who can afford different kinds of pleasure. But this mentality slips towards the dissatisfaction of an
anesthetized existence of entertainment that is not rest, but alienation
and escape from reality. Man has never rested as much as today, yet
man has never experienced as much emptiness as today.
True rest is a moment of contemplation, of praise.
It is a time to look at reality and say: how beautiful life is. to say to God: thank you for your life, for your
mercy, for all your gifts.
Make peace with life because life is precious.
Peace is chosen, it cannot be imposed and cannot be found by chance.
In the end, “all is grace”. For, as the Psalmist assures us, in God alone do our souls find rest.
- Pope Francis, homily at Casa Santa Marta, September 5, 2018
"There are two spirits, two ways of thinking, of feeling, of acting:
that which leads me to the Spirit of God, and that which leads me to the
spirit of the world. And this happens in our life: We all have these
two ‘spirits,’ we might say. The Spirit of God, which leads us to good
works, to charity, to fraternity, to adore God, to know Jesus, to do
many good works of charity, to pray: this one. And [there is] the other
spirit, of the world, which leads us to vanity, pride, sufficiency,
gossip – a completely different path. Our heart, a saint once said, is
like a battlefield, a field of war where these two spirits struggle."
- Pope Francis, September 4, 2018 from Vatican News HERE
In his homily at this morning's Casa Santa Marta Mass, September 3, 2018, Pope Francis said,
“The truth is meek. The truth is silent. The truth is not noisy."
Even in a family, Pope Francis said, there are times when a discussion
of politics or sports or money escalates into a truly destructive
argument;
"in these discussions in which you see the devil is there and
wants to destroy—silence. Have your say, then keep quiet.”
Francis was commenting on the Gospel story of the day from Luke that
describes how Jesus reacted when he returned to Nazareth and met with
opposition from his former neighbors after commenting on a passage from
the prophet Isaiah.
He said the Gospel story helps us “to reflect how to act in daily
life, when there are misunderstandings” and “to understand how the
father of lies, the accuser, the devil, acts to destroy the unity of a
family, of a people.”
He recalled Jesus’ silent composure on that
occasion, when people wanted him to do miracles as he had done
elsewhere, but when he chose instead to comment on the prophet’s words
and they got furious and the atmosphere quickly changed “from peace to
war.” Jesus adopted “silence” when confronted with the devil.
Pope Francis said that those who attacked Jesus “were not persons,
they were a pack of wild dogs that threw him out of the city. They did
not reason. They shouted. Jesus stayed silent. They took him to the top
of the mountain to throw him down, but he passed through their midst and
went away.”
“With his silence,” he said, Jesus wins against “the wild dogs”; he wins against “the devil” that “sowed lies in the heart.”
Pope Francis said that Jesus’ dignity shines through “this silence that
triumphs” over his attackers, as it would also on Good Friday when they
shouted “crucify him!” after praising him on Palm Sunday.
He acknowledged that what Jesus did is not easy, but “silence wins,
through the Cross.” He emphasized that
“the dignity of the Christian is
anchored in the power of God.”
“May the Lord give us the grace to discern when we should speak and
when we should stay silent. This applies to every part of life: to work,
at home, in society.”
Excerpted from reporting by Vatican correspondent, Gerard O'Connell for America Magazine HERE.
Handwritten notes and poems by Robert Lax, courtesy of the Lax archives at St. Bonaventure University
"Bob Lax was a potential prophet, but without rage. A king, but a Jew too. A mind full of tremendous and subtle intuitions, and every day he found less and less to say about them, and resigned himself to being inarticulate. In his hesitations, though without embarrassment or nervousness at all, he would often curl his long legs all around a chair in seven different ways, while he was trying to find a word with which to begin. ... Lax has always been afraid he was in a blind alley, and half aware that, after all, it might not be a blind alley, but God, infinity."
Some accuse Pope Francis of being
confusing when he does not aggressively defend the righteous and condemn
the sinners, imposing rules, defining with papal infallibility the
lines we cannot cross, etc. But they do not understand that, in reality,
what he is confusing is the evil spirit that motivates them.
In a world where politicians and
religious leaders debate and insult each other through tweets, Francis,
with his way of resisting aggression through dialogue, “stands firm (Ephesians 6:13) but with the same attitude of Jesus,”[26]
and opens around him a different political space, that of the Kingdom
of God, in which the Lord is the real champion of the battle, not us.
This “passive resistance of evil” –
the same that Bergoglio has always emphasized as the grace which
belongs to the people, and upon which they build patiently and wisely
their culture[27]
– amends, among other things, three attitudes that are typical of a
“politics of aggression” and are at the basis of all partisan politics.
Bergoglio describes these behaviors as they present themselves in the
Passion of our Lord. The first one is the behavior of the people who
“persecute those who they believe to be weaker.”[28]
The powerful did not dare to oppose Jesus when the people followed him,
but they were brave enough to do so when, after having been betrayed by
one of his own, they saw him weakened. The second attitude is
characterized this way: “At the root of all cruelty there is a need to
unload one’s own faults and limits […] the mechanism of the scapegoat is
repeated.”[29]
The third attitude belongs to those who, like Pilate, in the face of
such ferocity decide to wash their hands of it and walk away.[30]