Monday, July 28, 2014


THE REST IS HISTORY

       I am  making history here on the back porch: by resting!  At rest, I read differently: slowly, chewing the feelings and ideas until they are digestible and fruitful, giving me strength because they are now mine.

   At rest, I can snooze a lot, and dream. The dreams are rich and vital, telling me more than all the books I read!  How about the latest dream:  I have a house full of company – hundreds of men and   women! And no food ready! I think: I can make a big pot of pasta!

   At rest, I can watch great old films – laughing and crying, celebrating the art and the stories.     At rest I can watch and hear opera – singing along and sometime directing the Met Orchestra, weeping when the lovely lady dies…

    At rest, I can pray…relentlessly thanking GOD for blessing with GOD’S surprises all whom I name…confidently thanking GOD for particular gifts for particular folks…continuously thanking GOD for my life and loves

    At rest, I can imagine a world where the Great Reversal is being implemented:
       Where teachers ask and show and do not tell
       Where food is plentiful and healthy and accessible to all
       Where a church includes women (Acts 1:10)
       Where factories making arms are now making solar panels and windmill turbines
        Where we all travel on buses and trains and automobiles are in a museum

      At rest, I can design the next dinner party, the next tea on the back porch: with fruit of the season and sweet southern tea!   At rest, I can wait patiently, in wonder and awe, in thanks and praise, in sweet reveries and excited anticipation for the next of GOD’s surprises.  
      

The rest is, indeed, history!

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Good for Nothing

What a joy it is to be good for nothing! I cook for friends, I read up a storm, I watch brilliant opera from the Met, I swim every day, I walk the dog and (sometimes) vacuum the house and water the plants. I’m good – for nothing! It is called retirement!

      Barbara Brown Taylor has a delightful little book, The Practice of Saying NO. As I read it, she reminded me how blessed I am to be able to be good for nothing. For my daily efforts, I am paid in bird song and deep joy. 

       She also reminded me of my privilege of living Sabbath – this is the seventh day, the day of rest in my long and too-busy life. Although I know that, I am continually devising projects that would tie me in knots for days and weeks of futile work.

       Her little book has me examining ways I can honor this Sabbath
more intentionally – how can I be aware of this joy and deepen it? I hope to keep a true Jewish Sabbath one day a week – in order to be more aware of the daily Sabbath-quality of this quiet life of mine.

       What will that mean?  Taylor quotes Meister Eckhardt, a man of prayer: God is not found in the soul by adding anything but by subtracting.  So, what might my Sabbath look like? 

Hang up the car keys.
Close the computer, turn off the tv and radio.
Listen to the music of the lovely world around me.
Sit still, keep quiet, listen!  Pray!
Play with the dog, walk him around the lake. 
Welcome friends for good long talks, and comfortable silence.


        Now, that’s good for nothing at its best. Strangely, we call it a spiritual discipline.  It will not be easy, but someone has to do it!  And I am glad it is me.