Grace

Grace

“Like the unexpected call of a friend just when you need it most, grace arrives unannounced. A door opens. A path becomes clear. An answer presents itself. Grace is what it feels like to be touched by God.”—Bishop Steven Charleston, Facebook Page.

I stand waiting to walk out and read the Gospel as we sing the hymn before the Gospel: “Dear Lord and Father of Mankind.” I glance at the last verse, and there, faintly written in pencil, just before the beginning of the last line, is the word “softer.” It is in my mother’s distinctive handwriting. I had forgotten that my mother sang in the choir at Grace Episcopal Church in Yorktown, Virginia. So, this must be a directive from the choir director.

My mother has been dead for twenty-five years. We did not always understand each other, but when she died, I wanted to honor her in some way. I decided to start using her personal hymnal/prayer book in church.

Her name has worn off the front cover; the gold cross will soon disappear. The red leather cover is now coming apart, particularly the backboard of the book’s spine. I have not repaired it because, for some unknown reason, what remains of this book, just as she used it, seems to be connecting me to her.

When I saw my mother’s writing, I gasped and sent up a small prayer of thanksgiving. We had some challenging times, but I have begun to feel healing over the years since her death. This morning, in this split second, I felt reconciled with my mother and grateful for her life and support.

Healing family relationships takes time and constant prayer for family members and ourselves. Today, I realize that prayer works. Attempting to connect to an estranged family member through something that the family member treasured over time works.

Valuing what we have in common, rather than remembering our differences, brings healing in life as well as after death. For example, my mother and I shared our love of the Episcopal Church and singing in particular. Today, I felt my mother beside me.

Through this realization, I experienced one more way: God’s Grace continues to heal and care for us over time if we only put ourselves in the position to receive.

 It is Grace that is helping us through difficult times. Our only job is to look for it and see it all around us.

The name of my mother’s Episcopal church in Yorktown also helped! Grace!

Bless you for supporting the ministry of our church and conference center, Camp Mitchell, on top of Petit Jean Mountain, by buying this book in the daily series of writings for the liturgical year, A Daily Spiritual Rx for Lent and Easter.

My mother never saw this book or the other two in the series, but she would have liked it. If you enjoyed this book, could you briefly write a recommendation on its page on Amazon? More thank-yous than I can say for helping support a special camp for Arkansas’s children, youth, and adults!!!

Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

 

 

Children at Dismissal

Church Dismissal

“ He called a child, whom he put among them, and said, “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Whoever becomes humble, like this child, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.”—Matthew 18: 2-5.

One of my favorite parts of the 10:30 service at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church is at the end at the back of the church, when several young children come and help me with the dismissal. They are usually sweet girls, but there is an occasional brave boy. On rare occasions, they even walk down the aisle hand in hand with me to arrive at the back of the church.

There are so many words I would like to say to them. I want them to learn to love being part of a church community, worshiping together. I want them to know they are the future of the world and Christ’s church. I want them to see that this place is open to them for the rest of their lives.

I want them to know this is a safe place. I want them to know this is where they will find a community worshiping a loving God. I want them to know what they can learn from this worshiping community at Saint Mark’s.

This can be the gift they inherit to pass on to their children and grandchildren, as my mother and grandparents did for me. I want them to learn what Jesus said when the disciples asked him who was the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. Jesus pulled a child out of the crowd and said the greatest in the kingdom of heaven are people like these. 

Frederick Buechner writes about our children: “Children live with their hands open more than with their fists clenched. They are people who,…, are so relatively unburdened by preconceptions that if somebody says there’s a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, they are perfectly willing to go take a look for themselves. Children aren’t necessarily better than other people. Like the child in “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” they are just apt to be better at telling the difference between a phony and the real thing.1”  

 Therefore, I must be careful about what I say and always try to speak the truth. Of course, there is no way to tell these amazing children all this. But I can invite them to be a part of the last part of the church service and simply love them for those brief moments at the back of the church before they go home, and remind them this is a place of love.

1Frederick Buechner in Beyond Words.

Joanna Seibert joannaseibert.com. https://www.joannaseibert.com/

Faith, Trust, Love, Healing

Faith =Trust=Love=Healing

“Faith is often understood as accepting something you can’t understand. The Greek word for faith is pistis, meaning “trust.” Whenever Jesus says to people he has healed: “Your faith has saved you,” he is saying that they have found a new life because they have surrendered in complete trust to the love of God.”—Henri Nouwen in You Are the Beloved (Convergent Books 2017).

trust

Henri Nouwen speaks to us this morning about faith in God. He reminds us that often, we see faith as believing or accepting something we cannot explain or understand.  

Jesus, however, says faith is trust, trust in the unconditional love of God for us that never ends. Knowing this keeps us from looking for and demanding love from other people, other things than God. Addictions are love for something other than God. Family misunderstandings are brought about because, in essence, we do not feel loved or cared for by other family members.  

We do not feel appreciated by other friends after all we have done for them. We have given our lives to our work, family, and church, and we perceive they now no longer appreciate us. We have offered conditional love. We have forgotten what unconditional love is like because we have stopped offering unconditional love or believing in it.

Whenever Jesus tells those he has healed, “Your faith has saved you,” he is saying you have surrendered in complete trust to the love of God. The surrender, the trust in an unconditional love continually offered by our God, has healed our hearts and souls even if the physical healing never occurs.

Joanna. joannaseibert.com  https://www.joannaseibert.com/