Nouwen: Forgiveness

Nouwen: Healing our hearts Through Forgiveness

“How can we forgive those who do not want to be forgiven? But if our condition for giving forgiveness is that it will be received, we seldom will forgive! Forgiving the other is an act that removes anger, bitterness, and the desire for revenge from our hearts and helps us to reclaim our human dignity. We cannot force those we want to forgive into accepting our forgiveness. Forgiving others is first and foremost healing our own hearts.” Henri Nouwen, Henri Nouwen Society, Daily Meditation, from Bread for the Journey, January 27, HarperSanfrancisco, 1997.

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This past weekend I was with an amazing group of women in Searcy, Arkansas, as we talked about forgiveness. One of the first questions from two of the women was, “How can I forgive someone who has harmed me or someone I love when they do not see that they have done any wrong?”

These are the hardest situations for me to forgive as well. I think I am doing well, but then I hear how the people involved see no wrong doing on their part, and an angry dragon puts his head up again. The anger is nothing like the initial event, but it still endangers my body and my mind and my soul.  I am allowing the people and the situation to continue to harm me unless I can transform that energy into something useful for my body and the world.

I think of a a small church related school that I and many others were involved with several years ago that was closed overnight. Most of us have worked through the abrupt closing and have moved on. We will all carry a scar, but for the most part the wound is healing.

 Most of us decided that if we cannot forgive those involved in the closing, or those who did nothing to prevent it, they are still hurting us. They take up space in our minds, our life, our bodies, and our relationship with others. We all have prayed to transform the huge amount of energy generated by this hurt into something positive. We all are now seeing gold deep down in this pain.

I often go to a place where I remember the children and teachers and school board singing as they walk out in pairs at the conclusion of the school’s closing graduation as each carries a small lighted candle out into the world. What I do see every day is the light each of those involved at this school now bring to so many other schools, homes, churches, and places of work. We have been sent out to share what we learned from that experience, the relationships,  the love, the kindness to others, the acceptance of others, the belief in a very loving God. There was so much light at that school. That is why it was so hard to leave, but we have now been commissioned to carry out the light we received there into the larger world. We can make a difference in so many other lives, and so many have been doing just that.

Joanna joannaseibert.com

 

 

Nouwen: Roots

 Nouwen: Trees and Needing Praise

“Trees that grow tall have deep roots. Great height without great depth is dangerous. The great leaders of this world - like St. Francis, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King, Jr., - were all people who could live with public notoriety, influence, and power in a humble way because of their deep spiritual rootedness. Those who are deeply rooted in the love of God can enjoy human praise without being attached to it.” Henri Nouwen, Henri Nouwen Society, Daily Meditation, from Bread for the Journey, 1997 HarperSanFrancisco.  

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Nouwen gives us an amazing sign of when our connection to God is thin. When we are needing the praise and adoration of others, we are not “rooted” in God. Living off of the praise of others is living on the surface. Needing the positive opinion of others is like a “stop sign.”

Stop! We are going in the wrong direction. Turn around. Go and sit or walk outdoors. See that there in Nature is something greater than ourselves. Remember that a loving God loves us so much that God created all this for us to care for and enjoy.

Talk to a spiritual friend. Do one of the many, many spiritual exercises we most often do best to reconnect to God. Re-examine our rule of life.

Reach out in love to someone else, especially someone in need. Make eye contact. Look for the light of Christ in them.  Connect the Christ in us to the Christ in the other person. I think this is one of the ways of nurturing that our souls need to make deeper roots.

Joanna  joannaseibert.com

Charleston: Spiritual To Do List

Charleston: Spiritual To Do List

“ (1) Be grateful for the blessings I have received, (2) Be attentive to the needs and feelings of those around me, (3) Be kind to all creatures great and small, (4) Speak gently and truthfully,

(5) Listen to what others are saying, (6) Watch for the presence of the sacred, (7) Honor the diversity that creates community, (8) Share what I have to help sustain life, (9) Practice a holy patience with myself and others, (10) Let prayer embody all of the above.”

Steven Charleston, Daily Facebook Posting, October 8, 2016

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Bishop Steven Charleston is a native American retired Episcopal bishop who writes a daily message on his Facebook page that inspires thousands of people. He has to keep changing his page because the page maxes out with  too many friends on it! Many of his writings are included in this blog.

I am daily grateful to Wanda Dunwoody from St. Luke Episcopal Church in North Little Rock who brought Bishop Charleston to our Episcopal Church Women (ECW) Women’s Institute Conference when she was ECW president.  Note that gratitude is at the top of Bishop Charleston’s spiritual to do list. It is also the key to 12 step recovery.

When a message comes from more than one discipline, I see it as a sign of truth. The heart of spiritual direction is helping others see how God is working in their life and follow that insight with gratitude for that presence. We are each surrounded by spiritual friends like Wanda who keep bringing to us the knowledge of God’s presence. Look around and give thanks.

Joanna joannaseibert.com