Wednesday, March 2, 2016

WALKING THROUGH LENT TO EASTER




STILLNESS AND QUIET

Robert Trabold


Hardly anything moves – no wind
neither bushes nor trees swaying – surprising
for a winter’s day at the seashore.
Everything is in suspended animation
blinding sunshine gives same impression
even its gentle warmth is motionless.

Vast blue sky does not move
no clouds to break it up
all is still!
Not even vastness of the sky
disturbs silence.

Is this why I came to the sea?
I leave behind my hectic life
house cleaning – garden pruning – e-mails
anti-war demonstrations – neighborhood meetings.
Am I looking for something else?
Is someone pulling me to the seashore?

Stillness - emptiness
start fires burning within me.
I am waiting – catch my breath
my eyes are straining – Absolute overwhelms me.

My Beloved is knocking at my inner most door
a door He can only knock at.
No one else can enter so deeply within me.

Fire burns – my heart beats faster
my breathing speeds up
my whole body trembles.
My Beloved is touching me – wooing me
to love
I lay back my head - rest in
ecstasy.


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JOURNEY THROUGH LENT TO EASTER
 
 
Robert Trabold
 
 
            We entered the month of March and continue our journey through Lent and reach Holy Week and feast of Easter.  This is a rich time in our Christian life because it brings us to important events of our faith.  During Lent, we take time for prayer and fasting or other penances to remind us that we are pilgrims on earth and we constantly have to take stock of our life so that we follow the way of Jesus more and so reach our eternal destiny. In Holy Week, we are reminded of the momentous events in the life of Jesus - His suffering and death and ultimate victory on Easter Sunday. In this journey through Lent to Holy Week, our faithfulness to meditation can help us enter into these Christian mysteries.  In our daily contemplative prayer, we take 20 minutes, twice a day to sit in silence in an attempt to encounter the Divine. We do not try to think about God and solve deep theological questions.  Rather it is an attempt by us to touch God’s presence present at our center and still point. This journey to our center in silence is a capsule of our spiritual journey through Lent. We discover in a deep way to meet the Lord without many words and thoughts but touch someone who loves us and want us to reciprocate this love.
 
            In one sense, our daily contemplation is a journey to the ground of our being, to our origin, to the point from where we come. We leave behind our thoughts, desires and plans and sit in silence.  It is a silence of love where we meet the Beloved who wants to walk with us on earth and lead us to eternal life. In contemplation, we attempt to orientate ourselves completely to God. We want Him/Her to be the center of our human journey and desire to orientate all our values and activities as Jesus wants us to do. We enter into an area of simplicity in our life in which all other things find their place. We are not overwhelmed by the complexity of all the movements of the world but put them in perspective. We see things as Jesus saw them and not have the things of the world dominate us.
 
            To reach this point, we have to focus our attention and do this by reciting faithfully our mantra. The mantra helps us put aside all thoughts, words and images and so that we can touch the Divine around whom we want to orientate our life and respond to the love with which the Lord showers us. We are not torn in many ways with which the world tempts us. Our journey in daily contemplation is a capsule of what our journey through Lent to Easter Sunday should be. During the weeks of Lent with our extra prayer, penances and other good practices, we want to refocus our life. The world has many things and movements which can and do pull us in many directions. The concentrated and simple experience we have of Jesus in contemplation helps us find this good focus of our life. For twenty minutes, twice a day, we attempt to be in God’s presence and put other things aside. This simple experience can be a model of the refocusing of our life during Lent in our journey to Easter Sunday.
 
 
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