SUNSHINE - EASTER MORNING
Bright - clear sunshine - early
Easter morning - lovely
blue sky - hardly a cloud.
Sun brightens spring
garden -
smiling yellow daffodils - mysterious
blue - pink - white hyacinths.
smiling yellow daffodils - mysterious
blue - pink - white hyacinths.
Aroma touches you a
mile away.
Pink - yellow primrose -
small but not the least.
small but not the least.
Gentle breeze - daffodils shake
their heads in joy.
their heads in joy.
Sunshine covers all - colors
blend together like a concert.
I am happy in the sunlight -
light is celebrating
blend together like a concert.
I am happy in the sunlight -
light is celebrating
the Risen Lord.
Jesus'
life - death - resurrection
overwhelm me. Such a good man -
caught in the web of evil intentions.
overwhelm me. Such a good man -
caught in the web of evil intentions.
Such a good man - Why such an end?
Jesus' passion repeated many times in
suffering of good people -
Jesus' passion repeated many times in
suffering of good people -
innocent but devastated -
endless wars
– violence – hatred.
Sunlight is quiet – strong - clear -
overcame
darkness of the night.
Light – day – night – darkness -
big mystery.
Life has
many turns -
clear sunshine gives me hope.
clear sunshine gives me hope.
Lovely – beautiful –
giving a good ending to a sad story -
our story too!
our story too!
The Father wanted a happy ending
despite it all!
despite it all!
Robert Trabold
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CONTEMPLATIVE PEACE
Robert Trabold
During the 1960’s, there has been a rebirth
of mystical prayer in the West because at that time, Western people encountered
the contemplative paths of the Far Eastern religions. This led to the spread of
New Age spiritualities from the East and also enabled Western Christians to
discover their mystical prayer tradition that had been lost since the
Protestant Reformation. This rediscovery facilitated spiritual seekers to
encounter God – the divine - at their center and still point and brought many
fruits, not the least, a sense of peace with life.
At the heart of the Western mystical
tradition is the reality that in contemplative prayer, we have an experience of
the presence of the absolute at our center and still point. This is a very
dramatic experience and occurs in the silence. Contemplatives cultivate a
discipline of silence so that they can enter into the depths of their person to
have an encounter with the divine. This meeting with God has two defining
characteristics. On the one hand, it is a very close and intimate encounter at
our center touching us with its intimacy. In all human friendships, even in
such a close one as marriage, the other is always opposite to us but in mystical
prayer, the divine is totally within us and we feel this difference from other types
of relationships. On the other hand, as we grow in our contemplative path, we
note that this intimate presence has a sense of mystery; it is something we
cannot completely grasp and is like sand slipping through our fingers. This is
because we are in relationship with God who is transcendent and absolute and so
beyond our comprehension. As a result, there is a sense of darkness and
unknowingness despite such intimacy. For this reason, John of the Cross in his
beautiful poem ‘The Dark Night’ speaks about the closeness and fire of this
friendship as always taking place in the night.
“In a dark night
filled with fires of
love”
(my translation)
Because the intimacy of this
mystical experience of the presence of God, we realize that we are not alone on
the pilgrimage of on earth; at our center and still point is the divine
accompanying us through the years and ups and downs of our human life. This
sense of accompaniment gives us a sense of peace which the world cannot give
and is special because it comes from the absolute. John Main (9-10) mentions
that as we grow in this peace and friendship, we encounter God as the ground of
our being and in this relationship, we find our true selves. We are spiritual
beings open to the transcendent who completes us. We are not taken up entirely
with the things of the world and their fleetingness but center our life on the
presence of the divine within us; we define ourselves as human in this new
relationship with God. We have found ourselves and a sense of peace comes into
our lives because we now have a true picture of ourselves. This helps us very
much find security in facing the trials and difficulties of our human life and
of the world we live in.
In this inner contemplative journey
to discover the presence of God at our center and still point and in which we discover
our true selves, we realize that the divine is calling us to a relationship of
love. In one sense, the absolute is running after us and inviting us to have an
intimate friendship. God, the ground of our being, is compassionate, cares for
us and deeply loves us. In the writings and poetry of the mystics, they express
amazement at this initiative of the divine to reach out to us. The last few
lines of the beautiful poem of John of the Cross, “Flame of Love” describe this
well.
“How gently and
lovingly
you rest on me,
where you alone
dwell;
in your beautiful
breath
full of goodness and
beauty
you gently entice me
to love you.”
(my translation)
“Everything is
ceasing,
I forget myself.
I leave all my cares
forgotten among the
lilies.”
(my
translation)
In conclusion, Western people are
living in the renaissance of mystical prayer originating in the creative times
of the 1960’s. It is a great richness and the many contemporary contemplative
prayer movements, both eastern and western, make this available to us. We
should take advantage of them and grow in the sense of peace which mystical
prayer gives us. Our human life and the world we live in have more than enough
of problems and crisis. The divine – Our Beloved, however, is present at our
center and still point and we are called to cultivate a relationship with
Him/Her, grow in and enjoy the contemplative peace that arises from it.
“I will seduce my
love, lead her into the desert and speak to her heart.”
Hosea, 2, 16.
Main,
John. The Heart of Creation. New York : Continuum,
1998.
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