Category Archives: The Love that Changes Me

Faster

Tuesday, September 9, 2003

Two weeks in a row, I’ve gone to Tuesday’s Children.  It’s such a blessing to know these friends.  Although I still haven’t written something to take for editing, it is an encouragement to hear other women talk about writing, sharing their struggles to write and offering their drafts for critiquing.  It offers me hope.

Even now, at home, as I hope to write significant pieces, I walk away from the kitchen stove, a small voice following me.  Jane, you needn’t response to each life event with an essay.  Relax.  Judy came to the meeting today with her idea for an article.   Slow and deliberate.   It struck a chord.  I am wound up, a dog just released from her chain, barking and running everywhere, yet never arriving, and never saying anything worth the bark.

Jesus is the Master of moving with deliberation.  Only three years to save the world, yet he had so much time.  Time to pray.  Time to speak at the well.  Sitting on the Mount, he never hurried his sermon to the needy.  Time to eat and collect the scraps.  And time to retreat, to walk on water, to calm the storm, go to the other side of the lake, and land again alone with time to pray.  Even as the people pressed in upon Him, lowered the sick for him to heal, and prompted His rage for their violation of God’s house of prayer…even during all that Jesus accomplished during His short ministry, never do I sense urgency, a quickened pace to get there fast, an impatient tone because He is interrupted on his way by the hand of a woman on the hem of his robe.

Slowly and deliberately, Christ set about to change the world, one person at a time, He shared the gift of life.  Never did he despair that his message would die with him on the cross.  Peter, do you love me?  Feed my sheep.  Calming the distress of the disciples, he assured them greater things still will you do.

Greater than Christ?  And yet, as holy links in God’s chain, each apostle fulfilled his duty, slowly and deliberately, witnessing to the miracle of salvation they were privileged to share.  Walking across the continent, lingering years in Ephesus, Corinth, Rome and beyond, they laid the foundation of faith for the disciples after them.  One faithful witness at a time, down through the centuries, whether in a full life or one shortened by martyrdom, each person doing his part, a steady procession of witness moving forward and sharing the gospel, with deliberation, knowing that the inexhaustible supply of time belongs to God.

We aren’t called to be fast.  We are called to be faithful.

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
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Seek and Ye Shall Find…

SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND…

…KNOCK AND THE DOOR SHALL BE OPENED

As humans, we seem always to be seeking.  I am no exception.  Today I have a recollection of seeking an urgent answer from my mother in seventh grade.  I don’t know why, of all my life’s searches, this one should remain such a vivid memory 35 years later.

We stood at the kitchen sink, Mother washing the dishes while I was drying them.  I was close to thirteen years old. But that night, my mind was neither on washing or drying. I was trying to pull every ounce of courage together to ask my mother for her permission.

In band at school, sitting next to Janet, I had noticed she was allowed a special privilege.  She seemed so much more mature than I because of it.  But I didn’t know how to approach my mom.  Would she think I was silly, too young, out-of-line, premature?  Would she ask me for reasons?  I didn’t have any.  I just wanted it.  Could I wait?  Yes, but I didn’t want to.  Please.  I kept repeating my silent prayer: please, please, please, please.

Finally, lacking any better plan, I did what most kids do when they get ready to jump into a cold swimming pool.  One, two, three, take a breath, ready or not, here I go:  “Mother, can I shave my legs?”  Without taking her eyes off her dishes, without taking an extra breath or raising an eyebrow, Mother answered, “Yes.”

That was it.  No questions.  No more conversation.  I had my way.  My search was over.  I just raised my eyes as a thanks and focused on drying the plate in my hand.  It hasn’t been that easy since then.

I think the hardest part of “searching” as an adult is that often we’re not sure what we want or who’s in charge of granting it.  Of course, there are the obvious adult searches when we are asking for loans and looking for jobs.  But once we are getting money and paying money, there’s a whole life ahead of us.  Never mind.  We always seem to find something to seek after.  But, unlike the nervous awkward teenager at the kitchen sink, adults seem to have lost patience with seeking through requesting.  This is the era of assertiveness.

Whole workshops and shelves of books have grown up for the express purpose of giving us adults “permission” and instruction on how to be assertive.  We are shown how to “seek” assertively:  power suits, power lunches, direct eye contact, firm handshakes, let them know that you want it.  Now.  You deserve it.  Stand your ground.  Don’t be limp-wristed, willy-nilly.  No more Mr. Nice Guy, please, please, please.  You deserve the best.  Take it.  You’re worth it.

It sounded good to me over the years.  I bought professional suits and bold eyeglass frames, watched my handshakes for signs of limpness, and tried to keep a steady stare when speaking with someone.  No weakness here.  No wonder I never prayed.

My first attempts at prayer came when I was on my knees.  I was on my knees in pain and anguish.  In failure.  In desperation.  Power and assertiveness had not worked.  They had not fixed our family when we struggled through a collapsing adoption.  They had not fixed relationships when my children and I locked in battle.  They had not healed the cancer in my father, and six years later, in my mother.

Our assertiveness had not overcome the power and assertiveness of others in my husband’s office, who interpreted power as the ability to pulverize people.  They didn’t bring reconciliation with a sister who shunned me.  I could no longer stand at the kitchen sink with anyone and appeal to their loving mercy.  In desperation, I sat in church, turned my eyes up to the cross and the stained glass windows, and let the feelings of my heart float outward and upward.  Words weren’t needed.  The pain was so deep I couldn’t formulate a request.  In complete and total submission, I prayed, “Please. Help.”

America is not an easy place in which to pray.  Firstly, we are bombarded with so much power and assertiveness, it never occurs to us that we need to pray.  Once prayer comes to mind, we are overwhelmed with all the possibilities of what we might pray for:  success, health, wealth, happiness, love…the list grows.  It would be selfish to pray for everything.  (Well, there are some people who will tell you that you can have it all!  Whatever that means.)  So which prayer should we start with?

My friend Marion touched me one Sunday morning in church with her comments.  Her husband of almost 50 years was dying of cancer.  She told the congregation she had prayed constantly to God throughout the months, wishing of course to have Bill cured and returned in health to her.  Then it struck her that perhaps this was a “bit too demanding,” and she simply asked God to take care of Bill and love him for her.

I remembered those same thoughts as I nursed my mother in those very same months.  Maybe curing Mother to leave her on earth was not in God’s plan or in Mother’s best interest either.  I prayed for God to take her in his hands, either here on earth or in heaven.  I prayed for God to let me accept Mother’s journey as part of his plan and to let me feel peace in submitting to the divine plan He has for all of us.

I think He is working to answer my prayers. Perhaps He sees I have given up power lunches, and I am thinking of giving away my Dress for Success suits.  They get in the way of prayer.  What I need now, and needed all along, is submissiveness, not assertiveness.

Prayer has become a “pop culture” phenomenon in the last year.  But just like so many things in America, I fear we are latching onto the words and looks of prayer without realizing that we need a new heart of prayer.  There is no way to remain assertive and also submit a prayer to God.  Assertiveness is based on being “full of ourselves.”  Prayer is based on being “less,” on being “empty,” and being “still and quiet.”

Prayer is an opening of my soul to a higher, better power and asking to be filled with a spirit purer than what any human can conceive.  Prayer is simple.  It is not improved by human ingenuity.  It is guileless.  With practice, it is unending, becoming a song of submission and praise that fills the day and keeps me looking ever upward, ever outward, and forever humble.

 

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The MOTHER TERESA READER

A LIFE FOR GOD

Be sincere in your prayers.  Do you know how to pray?  Do you love to pray?  Sincerity is nothing but humility, and you acquire humility only by accepting humiliations.   All that has been said about humility is not enough to teach you humility.  All that you have read about humility is not enough to teach you humility.  You learn humility only by accepting humiliations.  And you will meet humiliation all through your lives.

The greatest humiliation is to know that you are nothing.  This you come to know when you face God in prayer.  When you come face to face with God, you cannot but know that you are nothing, that you have nothing.  In the silence of the heart God speaks.  If you face God in prayer and silence, God will speak to you.  Then you will know that you are nothing.  It is only when you realize your nothingness, your emptiness, that God can fill you with himself.

When you become full of God, you will do all your work well, all of it wholeheartedly.  We have our fourth vow of wholehearted service; it means to be full of God.  And when you are full of God, you will do everything well.  This you can do only if you pray, if you know how to pray, if you love prayer, and if you pray well. …

God is a friend of silence.  We cannot find him in noise or agitation.  Nature–trees, flowers, grass-grows in silence.  The stars, the moon, and the sun move in silence.

The apostles say, “We will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.”  The more we receive in our silent prayer, the more we will be able to give in our active life.  Silence gives us a new vision of things.  We need that silence in order to get through to souls.  What is essential is not what we say but what God tells us and what he tells others through us.

Jesus always waits for us in silence.  In silence he listens to us; in silence he speaks to our souls.  In silence we are granted the privilege of listening to his voice. …

Prayer enlarges the heart until it is capable of containing God’s gift of himself.  Ask and seek and your heart will grow big enough to receive him and keep him as your own. …

Souls of prayer are souls of great silence.

 

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