Friday, October 19, 2018

Where is Hineni?

sent to the Hineni group today:

You may have noticed (ahem) that we have not had a Hineni meeting for quite some time. At first, I was waiting until October, now I am waiting until after the council retreat Nov. 16, but really I have a confession to make.

Confession: I'm feeling a little discouraged by the book, The Externally Focused Church. I haven't actually gotten more than halfway through, so I know it's not fair to make a judgment yet. And it's a good book. So why am I feeling this way? It's because there are a lot of examples in the book of what other churches are doing, and they sound like more than we could hope to do. It's discouraging.

"Compare and despair." That's what a favorite author of mine says and that's what I try to remember. And there is truth in the book:

One of the most effective ways to reach people with the message of Jesus Christ today is through real and relevant acts of service. Honest, compassionate service can restore credibility to the crucial message we have to share. To tell the truth, we must show the truth. (p. 11)

For the most part, though, our churches have forgotten to show God's love. And all too often, what we show doesn't match up with what we tell. (p. 12)

As we've all heard many times, "People don't care how much you know until they know how much you care." (p. 12)

Right? Of course right! So what's the matter with me?!

I read an article lately where the author said we should talk less about discipling and more about being a friend. I like that! When I'm talking to someone, I'm not real clear on how to disciple, but how to be a friend to that person -- that I can figure out. I've been thinking a lot about this. How can we as a church be better friends to others, to each other, to ourselves, to our community?

We will meet again, and we'll keep talking about "Here we are, Lord, ready and willing to do your will." Please pray. For me, each other, and the church.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Feed my sheep



You are all probably familiar with the gospel story where Jesus asks Peter to feed his sheep. The other day as I read and meditated on it, I wondered what it would be like if Jesus were talking to me instead of Peter. We’re all his disciples, so in a way, Jesus does ask this of each of us. I imagined it like this:

When we had finished eating, Jesus said to me, “Mavis, daughter of Louis, do you love me more than these?”

“Yes, Lord,” I said, “you know that I love you.”

Jesus said, “Feed my lambs.”

Again Jesus said, “Mavis, mother of Cori, Luke, and Zach, do you love me?”

I answered, “Yes, Lord, you know that I love you.”

Jesus said, “Take care of my sheep.”

The third time he said to me, “Mavis, sister in the San Jose CRC family, do you love me?”

I was hurt because Jesus asked me the third time, “Do you love me?” I said, “Lord, you know all things; you know that I love you.”

Jesus said, “Feed my sheep. “

(John 21:15-17)


What does that mean for each of us -- feed Jesus’ sheep? What does it mean for San Jose CRC -- feed Jesus’ sheep?

Hineni means, “Here I am, Lord, ready and willing to do what you ask.” What does he ask? Well, Jesus asks if we love him, and when we say we do, he says to feed His sheep.

What does that mean we’ll do?

In the Fall, as the Hineni team starts meeting together again, we will be talking about what feeding Jesus’ sheep means for San Jose CRC. I hope more of you can join us, and everyone continues to pray.

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Summer update, and links

At our last meeting, we decided to take a break during July and August, and come back together in the fall. In the meantime, I promised to email everyone with a link to The Externally Focused Church that we plan to study together next. While looking for links to this book, I found another that is co-authored by one of the same people, plus yet another that is highly recommended as an accompaniment. So there are links to 3 books below. I have not read them all myself but plan to, and I would encourage all of you to. (If purchasing the books is a barrier, email me and I will contact the Council for support.) Note that there is both a paper and Kindle version of each.

I am also sending links to some videos by the authors and about the topic.

I will be communicating with our new pastor, Trent Elders, too. 

Looking forward to learning more about ways to become an externally focused, neighboring church. Please continue to pray, pray, pray as we continue this Hineni journey, ready and willing to accept God's mission for our church!

The Externally Focused Church, by Rick Rusaw and Eric Swanson

The Neighboring Church: Getting Better at What Jesus Says Matters Most, by Brian Mavis and Rick Rusaw  (and no, I didn't pick this one because the last name of one of the authors is Mavis, but how about that!)

The Art of Neighboring: Building Genuine Relationships Right Outside Your Door, by Jay Pathak and Dave Runyon

Good article, "The Externally Focused Small Church"

Good article, "Is Being an Externally Focused Church Enough?"

Videos on The Neighboring Church

Monday, May 28, 2018

Ignatian Contemplation

This Sunday (May 27th), we discussed and practiced Ignatian Contemplation, or Imaginative Prayer. This Jesuit spiritual practice is my favorite. Here is the introduction I passed out to our group.

Ignatius was convinced that God can speak to us as surely through our imagination as through our thoughts and memories. In the Ignatian tradition, praying with the imagination is called contemplation. In the Exercises, contemplation is a very active way of praying that engages the mind and heart and stirs up thoughts and emotions. (Note that in other spiritual traditions, contemplation has quite a different meaning: it refers to a way of praying that frees the mind of all thoughts and images.)

Ignatian contemplation is suited especially for the Gospels. In the Second Week of the Exercises, we accompany Jesus through his life by imagining scenes from the Gospel stories. Let the events of Jesus’ life be present to you right now. Visualize the event as if you were making a movie. Pay attention to the details: sights, sounds, tastes, smells, and feelings of the event. Lose yourself in the story; don’t worry if your imagination is running too wild. At some point, place yourself in the scene.

Contemplating a Gospel scene is not simply remembering it or going back in time. Through the act of contemplation, the Holy Spirit makes present a mystery of Jesus’ life in a way that is meaningful for you now. Use your imagination to dig deeper into the story so that God may communicate with you in a personal, evocative way.

We might initially worry about going beyond the text of the Gospel. If you have offered your time of prayer to God, then begin by trusting that God is communicating with you. If you wonder if your imagination is going “too far,” then do some discernment with how you are praying. Where did your imagining lead you: Closer to God or farther away? Is your imagining bringing you consolation or desolation?

Some people find imaginative prayer difficult. They may not be able to picture the scene easily, yet they may have some intuition or gut reaction to the story. Or they may hear or feel the story more than visualize it. In a spirit of generosity, pray as you are able; don’t try to force it. Rest assured that God will speak to you, whether through your memory, understanding, intellect, emotions, or imagination.

https://www.ignatianspirituality.com/ignatian-prayer/the-spiritual-exercises/ignatian-contemplation-imaginative-prayer
https://www.ignatianspirituality.com/3428/ignatian-contemplation
https://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/easing-contemplation

We used Mark 4:35-41, Jesus calming the storm, as our Scripture reading, and did a "guided contemplation." It struck me - and I mentioned this to the group - that this practice of Ignatian contemplation has a similarity to taking a trip to Israel. I have never gone to Israel myself, but I have many friends and relatives who have, and they have found it transforming. My dad, when he and my mom went to Israel years ago, said, "It was like coming home." After years of study and preaching the Bible, he knew the places so well that they felt familiar. I've read accounts of others who have gone to Israel, and happened to have spoken to a friend just last week who went to Israel. They talk about the way that being on those roads, in those hills, at those places of the Bible stories makes them more real, more "3-D."

For me, Ignatian contemplation does that. I read the story, then use my imagination to play it, kind of like a 3-D movie where I am in it, in my mind. For this session, we read the story of Jesus in the boat with his disciples, falling asleep, the "furious squall" coming, the disciples waking Jesus, asking, "Don't you even care?!", Jesus speaking "Be still," calming the winds and waves, and the disciples' terrified reaction, "Who is this man?!" Then we stilled ourselves, closed our eyes, and I slowly spoke through the story, as if I were one of the disciples. I tried to use our five senses to help with imagining the story. The smell of the sea, the sound of the boats - that clanking kind of noise you hear when boats are rocking on the waves -, the darkening sky, the feel of cold water as it sloshed over the sides of the boat, the cold wind and rain blowing furiously against us, the fear, and the feeling of wonder that Jesus could sleep through it, as if he didn't even care, then that awe-struck, terrified reaction to his ability to calm the storm with just his words, the feeling when he asks, "Why are you so afraid? Do you still have no faith?"

We reflected on what stood out to us after imagining the story together. We thought about how it must have been completely dark by the time the squall happened. How frightening to be in an open sea in the dark in such a storm. We wondered what the disciples were thinking when they woke Jesus and asked if he even cared. The story reminded us that in times of trouble, when we are facing hard things, or our loved ones are sick or dying, how we feel and sometimes wonder, does God even care. Yet God does care. He says, "Be still," reminding us to "Be still and know." Once you start thinking about a story like this, especially together with others, there is so much to ponder!

To end our session, we shared our joys and concerns, lifting each of our prayers to God by saying together, "We lift our prayers to the Lord." As always, we prayed for our church, as we stand saying, "Here I am, Lord." Hineni. We pray, listen, read, and ponder together to discern God's will for our church. We know you all join us in that prayer.

Schedule:

Session 5 - Praying with Scripture - Sunday, June 24, 11:45-12:45

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Prayer is a Craft

I read this article today and thought it is a good one to include in this blog. Learning ways to pray is what we are doing in the Hineni effort.

 A couple phrases that struck me:

...What if prayer is more than simply self-expression? What if prayer is a kind of craft or exercise that shapes us? ,,,
When his disciples found Jesus praying alone in a "solitary place" (Mark 1:35 KJV), they asked him to teach them to pray. He did not tell them, "it's easy; just say whatever comes to mind"; he taught them the Lord's Prayer..

BY THE BOOK
There's much to be said for Christianity as repetition and I think evangelicalism doesn't have enough repetition in a way that will form Christians to survive in a world that constantly tempts us to always think we have to do something new—Stanley Hauerwas
My husband Jonathan and I both grew up in settings where the only undisputed virtue was "authenticity"—he in the raw angst of the punk scene; I in the Slacker days of Richard Linklater's grungy, 90s Austin.
Even as questions about sexuality, morality, and worldview were contested, both those inside and outside of the church agreed that we should be "authentic." Over the past few decades, being "authentic" has become a buzzword and a bit of a social obsession. Stephanie Rosenbloom writes for the New York Times,
Authenticity seems to be the value of the moment, rolling off the tongues of politicians, celebrities, Web gurus, college admissions advisers, reality television stars. . . . The word has been bandied about for ages, be it by politicians or Oprah Winfrey, who popularized the notion of discovering your "authentic self" in the late 1990s after reading Sarah Ban Breathnach's Something More. But "authentic" is enjoying renewed popularity in an age of online social networking and dating, in which people are cultivating digital versions of themselves.
Some of the impulses behind this drive to authenticity are crucial to the Christian faith—we should reject duplicity, and desire to be honest about our emotions, experiences, or opinions. But for many of us who grew up "keeping it real" authenticity carries another meaning: a commitment to self-expression by embracing each feeling we feel in its most unadulterated form. My husband and I subconsciously committed ourselves to this latter view of authenticity, and it was disastrous for our first few years of marriage. It turns out that expressing every emotional impulse, however genuine it may be in the moment, did not form us into the kind of spouses capable of loving each other well, or even the kind who could stand to be in the same room together. Throughout our early years of dating and marriage, we developed practices in our marriage—habits of communication, patterns of expression and response, ways of interacting—that were making us into people who were less capable of love.
Code for Humanity
All of us learn to interact and to communicate by following a script. This script is most likely unconscious; we may have inherited it from our parents or picked it up from friends, movies, or our particular subculture. But these habits—our particular patterns of thinking, speaking, and listening—move us, bit by bit, toward or away from love. Jonathan, the recovering punk, and I, the crunchy Austinite, had to learn this through painful and blessedly humiliating practice. One day in marriage counseling, our therapist quite literally handed us a script. It outlined "active listening"—a way of arguing that, to us, felt utterly contrived, which required the speaker and listener to slow down, to repeat each others' argument charitably, and to affirm the other. We were sent home with "homework": to argue using our script. Following this script did not always capture the genuine emotional tenor of our hearts in the moment, but our habit of dropping f-bombs in every argument wasn't working, so we did our homework; we said "I hear you," we repeated, we affirmed, we nodded, we said our lines. We felt slightly ridiculous—every shred of commitment to "authentic self-expression" was dying a slow death. But we found that while following a script felt a bit awkward, it did not make us lobotomized marriage robots. Instead, it provided banks for powerful emotional currents; it gave structure that we needed to get past ourselves to see and hear the other. Twelve years later, we don't often follow this script word for word because we've internalized its pattern, but in our most intractable conflicts, we still go back to it. We still, years later, need help developing habits and practices that foster love.
Scripted Church
A couple of years ago, I took a friend who was not from my Anglican tradition to church with me. She did not particularly like it. One of her chief complaints was that we said "other people's prayers." She felt that reciting a prayer from the prayer book wasn't really praying. Praying involved a present invocation of our moment before God. If we were feeling Psalm 88, "my companions have become darkness," then it would be dishonest to pray Psalm 118, "Let us rejoice and be glad."
This debate about whether prayer should be original and spontaneous or fixed and recited is not a new one. Evangelicals can pin "extemporaneous" prayer against "other people's prayers" and deem the latter inauthentic. We can see prayer as a means of self-expression—a way of voicing our most raw fears, needs, and joys before God. Formulas and imitation seem like enemies of self-expression. If prayer is primarily self-expression before God, then we figure it should come naturally; it should be our words.
But what if prayer is more than simply self-expression? What if prayer is a kind of craft or exercise that shapes us? What if God uses prayer to "act back on us," to form us? What if set liturgical prayers are an ancient tool that reframe our perspectives and desires so that we might learn to pray in ways that are beyond us?
For most of church history, Christians understood prayer not primarily as a means of authentic self-expression, but as a learned way of approaching God. The earliest prayer book of the church was the Psalms, which have been prayed, memorized, and sung in every language and time throughout the history of Judaism and Christianity. The repetition, memorization, and internalization of the Psalms produces a formidable historical memory, making faithfulness possible in each moment of the church, in times of abundance or times of sorrow. As Christopher Hall reminds us,
The goal of praying the psalms daily, even hourly, is not vain repetition. It is the forming and shaping of human character. . . . Without doubt the Spirit could have provided a different prayer book for us or no prayer book at all.
But, he continues, with words that inform the use of any prayer book or set prayer,
The Holy Spirit knows we need help learning how to pray; the Spirit knows we are apt to stumble and perhaps lose our way if we exclusively rely on our own words and thoughts in prayer. The point is that it is our thoughts, words and actions that need remolding, reshaping. We need mentors in prayer. . . . If we listen carefully, immersing ourselves in his words and life, our own disposition will change, in prayer and out.
Here's an embarrassing confession: As a young, über-churchy kid with ample WWJD bracelets, I always thought prayer was pretty easy. My understanding of prayer consisted of drumming up words to speak to God, and I love words so I loved prayer. I was well into my late twenties when, in a dark season of disappointment and heartache, I realized that there was more to prayer than I had known. After decades of authentic self-expression before God, I ran into the limit of where my words could take me. I needed other ways of prayer. I needed a script.
Prayer molds us; it forms our beliefs (hence, lex orandi, lex credenda—the law of prayer is the law of belief), and it shapes our dispositions and actions toward God and the world, moving us toward or away from love of God and neighbour. Just as receiving a "script" from our marriage therapist didn't stifle us but made room for us to enter the "craft" of marriage, which is bigger than our own experiences and feelings, so patterns of prayer draw us out of ourselves into the larger story of Christ's work in and through his people over time. We situate our own moment, experience, and "authentic self" in a larger story of redemption. We join others in the gift and practices of approaching our trustworthy God.
Something in Common
In this process of being shaped through prayer, we need our historic community, the communion of saints. We need "other people's prayers" to tutor us in this craft. When his disciples found Jesus praying alone in a "solitary place" (Mark 1:35 KJV), they asked him to teach them to pray. He did not tell them, "it's easy; just say whatever comes to mind"; he taught them the Lord's Prayer, a pattern of prayer to shape their own prayer habits. Christians over the centuries have honed practices of prayer. Beyond the Lord's Prayer and the Psalms, other Christian leaders have written prayers both for gathered worship and for private devotion. My own tradition's prayer book, the Book of Common Prayer, pulls from and simplifies a number of different sources of prayers and liturgies from the Christian tradition—for instance, the Collect for Purity is drawn from an eleventh-century eucharistic liturgy, and the Great Thanksgiving is based on a third-century prayer in Hippolytus's prayer book, The Apostolic Tradition. In our current moment, as we drown in a torrent of words with our near-constant self-expression on social media, inhabiting the ancient, enduring prayers of the church is perhaps more needed than ever.
These historic prayers call me out of the kinds of extemporaneous prayer that come most naturally to me. In doing so, they reshape me, reminding me of kingdom priorities and hinting at depths in the spiritual life that I can yet scarcely imagine. Robert Wilken, writing about the prayer practices of monks, says,
Prayer comes first, because without regular and disciplined prayer there is no genuine spiritual life. And prayer for the monk means something very specific: reciting the strophes of the psalms. Left to our own thoughts and words prayer moves on the surface. The psalms loosened their tongues and gave them a language to read the book of the heart and to enter more deeply into conversation with God.
As proved by hours next to my first-grader as she sounds out picture books, learning to read requires sitting with someone who can help and guide, someone who has reached further depths in the practice. These inherited prayers are Christ himself, through our older brothers and sisters, sitting with us as we trip over our own neuroses, grudges, distractions, and self-obsession, learning to "read the book of the heart."
I don't want to paint prayer as a sort of competition—where some are the prayer MVPs and others are sidelined. I know that my three-year-old's meandering prayers and stumbling words delight God. And yet she can grow in her prayer life; she can learn to pray. Certainly there are times for prayers that are raw outpourings of emotion and cries for help from God. Yet I enter rhythms of prayer—day in and day out, on Sunday through the liturgy and each day through the daily office—that train my "muscles" in prayer, that teach me to stretch in prayer in ways that don't come naturally. Here is an example: in my own spontaneous prayer, I often forget to praise God simply for the sake of praising him. Quite instinctively, I thank him for good things when good things abound, but praising God for his character is something I have to take up as a discipline. Here's another: in extemporaneous prayer, I hardly ever pray for political leaders (in spite of Paul's admonition to do so). And when I do, I frankly don't know what to say. I'm cynical enough about politics that it's hard for me to pray for politicians without a bit of ire or irony—and yet, each week in church I "pray for all who govern and hold authority in the nations of the world; That there may be justice and peace on the earth." This trains me in a way of prayer, teaching me how to pray for those I find it hard to pray for.
One particularly instructive prayer practice for me has been using set prayers to pray for enemies. When I've been deeply wronged, the prayers that come naturally are for my own vindication or that God would show the other guy what a jerk he's being, but those prayers do little to shape me into a person capable of loving my enemies. But praying inherited prayers inches my heart toward forgiveness and love, even in spite of myself. In the Lord's Prayer, we ask that we may be forgiven as we "forgive those who have trespassed against us"; in the Jesus Prayer, that Christ would "have mercy on me, a sinner"; and in the Book of Common Prayer, that "in your good time enable us all to stand reconciled before you, through Jesus Christ our Lord." This kind of prayer practice opens up new possibilities. My heart, through prayer, begins imagining a kind of ethic of forgiveness that my conscious will can't yet reach.
Prayer as Ergonomics: Fixing Our Posture
These practices of prayer do not just shape our prayer lives or worship style; they shape us. They form us into people who move differently through the world, and they bring us back to "spontaneous" prayer with new habits and patterns—and new hearts. Think of a professional ballerina. Watch her exit the dance studio or performance stage, and still she holds herself differently than the rest of us. My friend who is a professional dancer shows more bodily grace and coordination while pouring her coffee or taking out her trash than I do at my best moments. Her long training in her craft has taught her to carry herself differently, even away from her time of "exercise."
In the same way, these inherited prayers shape us so that when we feel tired or harried or annoyed at our bickering kids or when we sit in an empty room alone after hearing heartbreaking news, our minds—our very neural pathways—are tuned to ancient words of longing, hope, and worship. These allow us to live differently, to stretch in prayer, to walk with a different kind of grace.
A few years ago, an Orthodox friend told me about her practice of praying the Jesus Prayer throughout the day, and it has become an important prayer practice for me. Two weeks ago, I got a call that my dad was back in the hospital. This time, they said, it was heart failure, words that scared me and pushed all other words out of my mind. As I drove to the hospital to see him, I felt sad, but mostly I felt numb. The shock of bad news left me blank. I wanted to pray and could not find words. In this moment of crisis, I couldn't drum up words to capture the wide range of emotion I felt—the peaks of fear, the whispers of anxiety, the uncertainty of how to respond, the quaking vulnerability, the glimmers of hope, the longing for better for my dad. And with my mind blank, habit kicked in. As I drove down the road and walked the fluorescent hospital halls, I found myself turning the Jesus Prayer over and over in my mind: "Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner. Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on Dad, a sinner." These are words given to me by the church—they our "other people's prayers"—but in that moment, they were the most honest, the most intimate, even the most authentic thing that my heart could utter.

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

SJCRC Hineni Update - May 18, 2018

Sent in the church e-newsletter May 18, 2018

We’ve been talking about “Hineni” for quite a while, so most of you know this by now, but just in case, “Hineni” means “Here I am” in Hebrew, with the connotation of “Here I am, ready and willing to do your mission.”



We began our focus on discerning what our mission is by praying together. This is part of becoming internally strong in order to become externally focused. Several people who are able to meet together and pray are called the Hineni Team, and we have had 3 sessions so far.

We are learning about and practicing different types, or methods, of prayer at each session. We all know that having a good prayer life is vital to our relationship with the Lord, praying at least once a day, in reality praying all day. Like with many other things, the way you are most able to pray -- the way that the prayer seems meaningful, that you feel the connection between yourself and God -- differs according to your personality, to what fits in your routine, to what feels natural, and so on. Therefore, we are exploring some various methods of prayer and our hope is that one (or more) will become a habit -- and that our prayer life will help us become internally strong.



Praying together is a big piece of this process. You’ve heard the saying, “The family that prays together stays together.” That applies to church families, too! Personal prayer is vital, and so is “corporate” prayer -- praying together. We hope and trust that as we pray together, we will become closer to each other and to God, a true community of believers.

I have found the Jesuit spiritual practices helpful to me, so we are learning about and practicing some of those. There are all kinds of ways to pray so we could keep trying different ones for a long, long time. I picked a few to start, and have invited the Hineni team and all of you to suggest others. Here are the sessions we have completed and have planned so far.

  • Session 1 - Praying in Color - Doodling and decorating while holding thoughts and prayers in mind.
  • Session 2 - Examen - A Jesuit practice of reviewing your day with God, noticing what comes to mind, asking yourself whether each experience brought you closer or away from God, and looking toward tomorrow.
  • Session 3 - Lectio Divina - A Jesuit practice of reading a Scripture passage 3 times, meditating and praying about it, noticing what words and phrases strike you and why.
  • Session 4 (this Sunday, 5/20) - Ignatian Contemplation - A Jesuit practice of “imaginative prayer,” reading a Scripture passage and imagining being in the story it tells, noticing how God is bringing you closer to him through what you envision and think.
  • Session 5 (Sun. 6/24) - Praying with Scripture - Using the words of Scripture, with our own names or names of our loved ones, as a personal prayer.

Our next phase of discerning God’s will for the church will be looking at what we can do to be externally focused. We will use the book The Externally Focused Church by Rick Rusaw and Eric Swanson. This book comes highly recommended by our interim pastor, Vance Hayes. I will keep you updated as to when we begin that second phase.

ANYTIME you wish to give suggestions, ideas, feedback of any kind, please email me at mavis@sanjosecrc.org or call or talk to me! Also, ANYONE can join the Hineni team or come to the sessions ANYTIME!

I keep a blog about the Hineni process at http://sjcrcchurch.blogspot.com/. Please feel free to sign up to follow it and receive notifications as I add to it.

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Lectio Divina (divine reading)

Our third session was about Lectio Divina (pronounced LEK-tee-oh Di-VEEN-a). In Latin, it literally means "divine reading."

I found a website that had some specifics about Lectio Divina in a group and individually. I used the group exercise and it was a good way to practice this type of reading/praying/meditation for our groups.

Here is the description of the method we used:

Lectio Divina as a Group Exercise

The same text from the Scriptures is read out three times, followed each time by a period of silence and an opportunity for each member of the group to share their thoughts about the reading.

First reading - hearing a word or passage that touches the heart. When the word or phrase is found, the group's members take it in, gently recite it, and reflect on it during the silence that follows. After the silence, each person shares which word or phrase has touched his or her heart.

Second reading - "hearing" or "seeing" Christ in the text. Each ponders the word that has touched the heart and asks where the word or phrase touches his or her life that day. Then, after the silence, each member of the group shares what he or she has "heard" or "seen."

Third and final reading - experiencing Christ "calling us forth" into doing or being. Members ask themselves what Christ in the text is calling them to do or to become today or this week. After the silence, each shares for the last time.

http://www.beliefnet.com/faiths/catholic/2000/08/how-to-practice-lectio-divina.aspx

The same website has a good description of Lectio Divina for individuals, and I put that on our handout so people had that as well.

As with the other practices and prayers we've looked at, there are many ways that people practice Lectio Divina. A web search yields all kinds of them! James Martin, SJ, who I call my favorite Jesuit, has a few videos where he describes the practice. He uses a method of asking yourself 4 questions. I think this is a great approach, but I like to keep it simpler than that. Having to remember 4 questions could be a bit taxing for my tiny brain.

We had a good session but it was with just two people in the group -- a couple. I actually had begun to leave and was locking the church door when they walked up. It's a little discouraging that attendance has dipped so much, but I try not to let it discourage me. People are busy, it's not surprising, and even more than that, this is in God's hands, not mine.

You cried when I went to the hospital

Photo by  Kaboompics .com  from  Pexels I come from a family of 4 children. The youngest in the family, my sister Jan, contracted spinal...