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Why prayer requires courage, and courage requires prayer

Photo by stéphane giner

Photo by stéphane giner

How useful and relevant are your prayers in a world like ours, a world that can knock the wind out of the most resilient optimist, a world that needs more courageous action for justice and peace?

Do your prayers strengthen your heart and give you courage to help create what you, in prayer, perceive as God's desire for the world?

Are your actions sustained by the kind of inner life that makes those actions meaningful, useful?

Are they rooted in your deepest values and beliefs?

What's the evidence that they have the potential to bring about the kind of hope and healing our troubled, yet beautiful, world really needs?

In our multidimensional lives and complex world, how can you find the balance between enjoying life and making it possible for others to flourish too?  

In this podcast (a one minute reflection from Sounds True) Matthew Fox, Episcopalian priest and founder of the Wisdom School of Graduate Studies in Oakland, affirms that we can each find integration, meaning, and balance between the inner work of prayer and the outer work of loving the world into wholeness.  

The truth is, the activist life and the mystical life are two sides of the same coin.  

In fact, an activist life may not be worth much without the sustenance of mystical encounter with the divine.  What's more, I don't know how it's possible to live mystically, that is, in deep relation with what's Real, without finding ourselves pressed outward in action for justice, offering ourselves in creative and courageous actions that lead to the flourishing of the creation.

Intention: Take a moment today and honor the interplay between your inner and outer lives. What do you need: a better grounding in prayer that can nourish your work?  Or do you need to adjust your work or activism so that it is better in line with what your prayerful heart desires to see in the world?

Why you would rather shock yourself (electrically) than be alone with God

So you know it’s important to practice some kind of stillness and solitude.  You know it would be good for you—not only your spiritual life with God, but it would do some good for your physical health as well.  The hectic pace you’re living is causing you stress and you know you should do something about it.  Your relationship would benefit too.  Creating a little space and carving out some margins might keep you from those knee-jerk reactions that mean you end up, well . . . mean sometimes.  You know, yelling at the kids, snapping at your spouse, saying something hurtful to a friend, criticizing a coworker.

The problem is, much as you’d like to create some space for stillness, it just isn’t happening.  You sit down to pray or meditate and a million things bounce into your head.  It’s more battle than bliss, and so you give up—feeling guilty and frustrated.  Maybe meditation and resting prayer is for other people, not for you.

Well . . . researchers at the University of Virginia have just reported that, honestly, it’s not just you.  We all have trouble getting still, being quiet.  We avoid open interior space like the plague.  We’d all rather yap at God like the neighbor’s annoying little dog.  Anything but be still . . . quiet . . . doing virtually nothing.  We seem bent on seeking distraction—anything to avoid being with just ourselves, alone with only our thoughts, and with . . . God.    

Leading researcher, Timothy Wilson, says, “We [researchers], like everyone else, noticed how wedded people seem to be to modern technology, and seem to shy away from just using their own thoughts to occupy themselves.  That got us to wondering whether this said something fundamental about people’s ability to do this.”

So, they devised a series of experiments reported at a recent meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.  It’s a story picked up in The Atlantic

“Participants rated the task of entertaining themselves with their own thoughts as far less enjoyable and more conducive to mind-wandering than other mellow activities such as reading magazines or doing crossword puzzles.

“In the most, ahem, shocking study, subjects were wired up and given the chance to shock themselves during the thinking period if they desired. They’d all had a chance to try out the device to see how painful it was. And yet, even among those who said they would pay money not to feel the shock again, a quarter of the women and two thirds of the men gave themselves a zap when left with their own thoughts. (One outlier pressed the button 190 times in the 15 minutes.) Commenting on the sudden appeal of electricity coursing through one’s body, Wilson said, ‘I’m still just puzzled by that.’”

So, being alone with just your thoughts is a problem for others—lots of others—not just you.  We’ll do just about anything to avoid being alone with without distractions.

Maybe there’s some comfort in this.

Maybe it’ll help you to know you’re not alone in not wanting to be alone.

And maybe that’ll help you drop that handy little excuse, “Hey, meditation’s just not my thing.”

It’s not an easy thing for anybody.

But doesn’t mean we shouldn’t practice it.  Frankly, we all need it—like we need air to breathe.  We need to cultivate the ability to create a little distance between the thoughts that bump around in our heads so that we won’t be driven crazy by them.  We need to create the ability to drop our devices and look at nature, or a book, or into someone’s eyes . . . to taste the food we’re eating, to hear—really hear—the sounds around us.

And we need God.  Just God.  No posturing before God.  No yapping at God.  No running from God.  Just being with God, in God.  Growing that sense of belonging to the Beloved, drawn up out of the cramped little spaces of our lives and into the grandeur of the Divine.

This is real prayer, the purest prayer.  But it’s not easy.  And it’ll never become easy if we keep salving our need for distraction by avoiding the fact that we need to drop absolutely everything and be alone for a little while with nothing but ourselves . . . and God.

Yeah, you and a lot of us would rather, it seems, shock ourselves electrically than sit for fifteen minutes with nothing else to do.  But if we take time and train ourselves to step away from distraction, we will find ourselves shocked by what we encounter in that open space—Something we can’t get anywhere else.

If you need a guide to this kind of prayer, see my guide to the Jesus Prayer here.

And here’s another short reflection on the need for contemplative space in our busy lives.


The Simple Way of Jesus

Jesus calls us to an utterly simple life.  “Love one another,” Jesus says repeatedly in the Gospel of John.  But that doesn’t mean it’s easy.  This love isn’t an emotion we muster up.  Rather, it’s a reality we enter into.  Jesus isn’t commanding us to find a way to love, as if loving is something difficult for us, something foreign to our species.  Although, when we look around ourselves so much of what we see makes it look like anger and bitterness, brokenness and violence are the more natural to us than love.  But Jesus tells us that our enmity toward one another and toward creation is because we’ve grown so foreign to ourselves, so distant from God and our our God-breathed nature.  Sin is that condition, that inner dissociation, from not only God and others, but from our truest selves.  

Image by by Oras Al-Kubaisi

In the Gospel of John, Jesus tells us that when the Spirit comes (John 14.15-21) we will become what and who we were made to be.  “On that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you” (14.20).  We will come home in the truest sense of the world—home to God, home to ourselves, home to our relationships with others (14.23).  No more of that distance between us that is haunted by sin and enmity.  Instead, unity, oneness, and harmony are the natural condition of our existence, the reality we’re all yearning for (Acts 17.26-27).

All this was given, as promised (John 14.20), on the day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit was poured out (Acts 2).  While it’s true that much of the world is dull and blind to this outpouring, or rejects it entirely, doesn’t mean it hasn’t come—that the Spirit is not at work.  Sometimes the Spirit moves like a mighty wind; other times, the Spirit’s secretive, like breath—a presence that is making life possible whether we acknowledge that life-giving Force or not.

The earliest disciples struggled with this slow-moving awakening.  “How is it that you will reveal yourself to us, and not to the world?” (14.22).  Why don’t you just make it clear and easy, Jesus?  Why all this stealth?  Why not use a trumpet, like Caesar does, for goodness’ sake?

Because, according to Jesus, that’s not the way God works.  Jesus reveals the truth of God in the most ordinary way.  Nothing spectacular.  Nothing sensational.  Just the ordinary love shared between ordinary people in ordinary ways.  When we love we are living in God and God is living in us.  We don’t have to go anywhere to find God.  We don’t need a new book, a conference, a pastor or priest, a guru or imam.  To know God, we simply need to do what Jesus commanded, “Love one another.”   For when we love, we lack nothing.  All we truly need is given to us.  We come home (John 14.23), truly home—to ourselves, to our relationships, to God.  And when we do the world changes, bit by bit, turn by turn, toward the wholeness of God.

This Pentecost (June 8th) we’ll remember all this.  We’ll hear again the invitation of Jesus to embrace the Spirit, the Advocate, the Comforter . . . to enter more fully into this utterly simple way of Jesus: the way of love.  

So, here’s my invitation to you this summer:

1.  Pray.  Practice a simpler form of daily prayer this summer.  Enter into a few minutes of silence and stillness.  Invite the Holy Spirit to draw you into the love of God.  Then simply and reverently pray the words: “I love you.”  At first these will be your words toward God, and then you may find that they seem to become God’s own words toward you.  Pray and listen.  Then rest in this experience of simple and deep affection—yours for God and God’s for you.

2.  Look.  Take regular notice of those who are different from you, and nurture your love for others.  The opportunity to do this will come to you every day . . . several times each day.  The clerk at the store.  A neighbor.  Folks walking or driving beside you.  Someone in the media.  Your teenager or parent.  A voice . . . a body type . . . an opinion . . . a behavior.  Look for ways these differences show evidence of God’s amazing diversity and the way that diversity represents the grandeur of God.

3.  Do.  Love is an act.  Do something this summer that regularly moves you to live out the simply way of Jesus, “Love one another.”  Of course you might do something for another that’s out of the ordinary.  Help a homeless person.  Care for an elderly neighbor.  Become an advocate against some injustice that casts an ugly shadow upon a person, a creature, or some part of God's larger creation.  But don’t ignore loving those right around you—in your family, friendships, and workplace.

The way of Jesus is utterly simple and do-able: “Love one another.” 

It’s a way that has immense power to change the world.

Recovering the kind of leadership we need

A lot of us are cynical about leadership today.  And sometimes we’re not just cynical toward our leaders, we’re hostile.  It's certainly hard being led today, but try being a leader.  Leadership invites criticism, resistance, and sometimes even violence.  Gone are the days when leaders were granted automatic authority and respect.

And to a large degree, leaders have done this to themselves.  

We’ve now lived through a long, dry season of marginal and oftentimes rotten leadership.  Corporate moguls have ransacked their companies.  Politicians seem unable to break out of ideological gridlock.  Religious leaders have betrayed public trust.  So have teachers and parents and coaches and so on.  Not a lot of them, of course, but a few rotten apples have soured a lot of us on the whole bushel basket.

Years ago, when I was in business school (a BS in Business Administration with a minor in marketing), Robert Greenleaf's Servant Leadership was highly influential.  Today, there's a renewed summons to a kind of leadership that's truly spirited--that is, resourced by an inner vision and outer practices that cultivate the common good.

For example, Pope Francis has caught the world's eye with his humble and courageous vision and habits. Corporate executive Chris Lowney's delightful new book, Pope Francis: Why He Leaders the Way He Leads is a sign of this call to renew leadership.

And in this brief TED Talk, Simon Sinek explores the way leaders create communities where we feel safe and from that sense of leader-inspired safety, organizations and communities flourish. 

Of course, I see in this renewal a glimpse of Jesus himself, who protects and serves and sacrifices for those he leads.  For too long pastoral ministry has mimicked the corporate world of leadership, and the results aren't good.  

The corporate world is looking for new models.  Maybe we in the church should return to ours. 

Holy Week: The Way of Success

Success.  What is it?  How do you achieve it?

Arrianna Huffington, the baroness of a global media empire, used to think the path was up, up, up.  Until she crashed.  

"I was successful by all standards, but I was clearly not successful if I was lying in a pool of blood in the floor of my office," Huffington told HuffPost Live's Caroline Modarressy Tehrani, recalling the tumble that left her with a broken cheekbone.

Huffington went through rounds of doctor's appointments in an effort to identify what prompted the fall.

"I thought I might have a brain tumor," she remembered. But then she discovered that "what was wrong with me was the way I was leading my life. And what was wrong with me is what's wrong with a lot of people."

She had to redefine her life by redefining what she considered success and the path to achieve it.  She thought the path was up, up, up.  But she found that often in life you have to go down to go up.  You have to enter deeply into your real humanity.  You have to taste suffering and savor it.  You have to lose things in order to find what’s most important.

It’s Holy Week, and one of the gifts it gives us is a realistic map for the journey of our lives

The week begins on a high—the entrance of Jesus into Jerusalem amid the acclamations of the crowds chanting from Psalm 118.  That psalm includes the prayer, “Save is, Lord.  We beseech you, give us success!” (118.25).

From that high, the week quickly descends into danger, suffering, and trauma.  Huffington found herself on the floor of her office in a pool of blood.  Jesus too sheds blood . . . and dies . . . and rises from it new.  For Jesus, the way up is down (Philippians 2.5-11).  And what’s true for Jesus, is true for the rest of us.  

My point is, Holy Week is a map for the living of our lives.  And walking the way of Holy Week trains us in that way of life.

“Lord, we beseech you, give us success!”  The way isn’t up, up, up.  It will include your failures and struggles with addictions.  That way will require honesty about what fears enslave you, the courageous confrontation with your compromises, your dangerous drives, the pain that binds you.

And the truth is that you can and will rise from it all.  New.  Beautiful.  Powerful.  Free.  Joyous.

This is why I’m crazy enough to call Holy Week the Divine [and human] Comedy.  A comedy isn’t silly, thigh slapping slapstick.  Comedy as history’s best artists have understood it, is a work that has a happy ending.  And Holy Week is such a work . . . a real work of art.

Walk its way.  Embrace your humanity.  Enter deeply into the clay of your life—even the most wounded places within.  There is a happy ending.  It will end well.  And that’s not slapstick.  It’s the way of creation.

“Look at a grain of wheat and you’ll know what I mean,” Jesus says.  “Unless it falls to the earth and dies, it cannot break open and ripen into its glorious fruitfulness.  So with you.  And to show you what I mean, watch me.  I’ll show you the way” (John 12.24).

That’s the best of comedy.  And in the midst of the struggle of life we all need a little of its hope to hold onto.  

Peace to you all.  And a blessed, transforming Holy Week to you.