Welcome

Primitive religion is not believed, it is danced!

Arthur Darby Nock

Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God;
And only he who sees takes off his shoes;
The rest sit round it and pluck blackberries.

Elizabeth Browning



Monday, June 30, 2025

Frightened

How

Did the rose

Ever open its heart

 

And give to this world

All its

Beauty?

 

It felt the encouragement of light

Against its

Being

 

Otherwise,

We all remain

 

Too

 

Frightened

                     Hafiz ala Daniel Landisky

__________________________________________

 

Racism

It I out there

Free floating

 

It reveals itself in immigrants

Battered and zip-tied

In books removed from library shelves

 

It is present in the war on “woke”

A word emerging from black people

A warning

The streets aren’t safe for you

So keep your eyes open

Stay woke

 

It is woven into the fabric of our culture

Our nation

It looks like oppression and suppression

Justice denied

It is white privilege

Unseen but powerful

 

It is seen every time there is an assault

On diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)

In the failure to admit and seek to address

Systematic oppression

 

Racism is the failure to be open

To the value of another human being

To the reality that the person who is

A different color or culture

(or creed?)

Is a precious soul, a child of God

 

It is the assumption that a person who is

BIPOC

(Black, indigenous, and people of color – any color other than white)

Is less than

 

It is fear

A fear that closes our hearts and minds

A fear that blinds us to our own privilege

A fear that leads to oppression and suppression

And injustice

And inequity

 

And all the miseries of humankind

 

A racist country is not great

It is scared

And in fear behaves badly

 

How can America

Led by people who are (let’s admit it) racist

Ever open its heart

And live out its assertion

That all people are “created equal

that they are endowed by their Creator,

with certain unalienable Rights,

that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness”

 

How does it let go of fear and open its heart and welcome

And embrace the beauty

Implicit in diversity

 

Only by feeling the encouragement of light

Against its

Being

 

By leaning into the One who is love

By letting the light

That has come into the world

Overcome the darkness of our souls

The hardness of our hearts

 

And change the way we see ourselves

And the way we see others

 

It is only then that we will see that there is no

There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free,

There is neither male nor female;

There is neither white nor black

 

that all the colors of the universe

They are simply the one light

scattered

 

It is only then that we will understand that

It was never the case

that the distinctions we so love were valid

 

Jesus did not remove the distinctions

He revealed that they were never really

true

 

And he removed (and continues to do so in the spirit)

With his love

The fear that divides

 

And we must follow him

Into welcome, inclusion, and equity

 

And not follow those

Who would lead us back into fear

 

For there is no fear in love

And we are called

To not be afraid

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Strangers in our own land

One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We’re no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It’s simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.”
― Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark

“In every age it has been the tyrant, the oppressor and the exploiter who has wrapped himself in the cloak of patriotism, or religion, or both to deceive and overawe the People.”
― Eugene Victor Debs

By faith he made his home in the promised land like a stranger in a foreign country; he lived in tents, as did Isaac and Jacob, who were heirs with him of the same promise. 10 For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God.
Hebrews 11:9-10
_________________________________

I think it is time that we admit
That the country we once lived in
That place of promise

Where justice and equity were valued
If not lived
Where the rule of law meant something
Where good, intelligent people were entrusted with governance

No longer exists

And many of us feel like strangers in a strange land.

This is a place of grief, a place of regret
Where justice is subverted
Power abused
Positions of trust exploited

We see but do not understand
We feel our souls assaulted
We watch people be oppressed

We feel as if power has been placed in the hands
of hate and fear, resentment, malice, and malevolence 
and we cannot get it back

that the path into the abyss of tyranny is
inexorable  

How do we live in such a space
As extremists on both poles
Pull us apart
Shredding the fabric of our society

How do we live as a people, oppressed and suppressed,
and maintain our compassion?
How do we remain caring and forgiving
How do we remain generous?
How do we resist what is happening? 
without becoming a part of the destructive cocktail 
that leads to ruin?

Somehow, we must look forward.
We must anticipate that world 
Built and designed by the Sacred
Where justice rolls down like a river
Where all are welcome and valued
Where enmity is discarded 

Somehow, we must hold on to hope
And clothe ourselves with faith and love 
and believe that liberation will come

Living as strangers in this world
Means that we don’t accept the way things are

But instead, resist what is happening.

How?

Paul said it well (Romans 12)
Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.  Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves.  Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervor, serving the Lord.  Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.  Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.

 Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse.  Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn.  Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position. Do not be conceited.

Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everyone.  If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord. On the contrary:
“If your enemy is hungry, feed him;
    if he is thirsty, give him something to drink.
In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.”

Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

It is a big ask
Come, Holy Spirit, come.

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Blame

Blame keeps the sad game going

It keeps stealing all of your wealth

Giving it to an imbecile with

No financial skills

Dear one

Wise

Up

          Hafiz ala Daniel Landisky

_________________________

 

It is so much easier

To place the blame

On those it is easy to blame

 

The immigrant and refugee

That black American we do not quite understand

And whom (perhaps) we fear

That growing population of people

Who are brown, black, and every color of the rainbow

 

Who are “not us”

 

Without a thought

We accept the myths and lies

We make “them” the problem

 

Those people

Those invaders

Those commie, Marxist liberals

Those MAGA faithful

 

It is easy to deflect accountability

For the ills of our country,

Our world

Away from ourselves

 

So easy to make our parents,

Our spouse,

The cause of our disordered souls

Our discontent

 

There is a reason

We confess

Merciful God, we confess that we have sinned against you

in thought, word, and deed, by what we have done,

and by what we have left undone.

We have not loved you with our whole heart, mind, and strength.

We have not loved our neighbors as ourselves.

In your mercy, forgive what we have been, help us amend what we are,

and direct what we shall be, that we may delight in your will

and walk in your ways to the glory of your holy name” 

PCUSA Book of Common Worship)

 

It is our look in the mirror

Our recognition that we are the masters of

Deflection and denial

 

We must always start with ourselves

We must always end with ourselves

 

We have made a mess of creation

We have made a mess of the systems

By which we govern and protect

 

We have made a mess of what Jesus started

 

We have

I have

You have

 

Repentance must almost always

Come before blame

 

Repentance is not shame (and perhaps not blame either)

It is the recognition that we have not

Done everything right

 

It is also an expression of hope

That God will indeed help us “us amend what we are,

and direct what we shall be, that we may delight in [God’s] will

and walk in [God’s] ways to the glory of [God’s] holy name” 

 

The only way we can help make the world better

The only way we help pull the Kingdom of God into existence now,

Is by starting with ourselves,

By walking along the Way

 

By being the change we hope to see

And then with deep humility

give an explanation to anyone who asks us for a reason for our hope.”    Acts 3:15

 

…the fact that we know

we are loved and forgiven

Saturday, June 21, 2025

We need each other

Locke’s great innovation was the idea of an implicit social contract, based on inherent natural rights, whereby free individuals agree to constrain the individual AND the state, by restricting individuals’ freedom to dominate each other and restricting the state’s freedom to dominate individuals.

 

… the common good cannot be divined objectively or authoritatively by any one person or faction.  It must be constantly negotiated.

                    

          Jonathan Rauch, Cross Purposes (Yale University Press)

________________________

 

It’s like a dance

This life

You can do it all by yourself

Making it up as you go along

 

No rules or constraints,

Just freedom!

 

But sometimes, most times

We do not dance alone

 

Like it or not, there are others

People like us, doing the same dance

People not like us

Different, sometimes incompatible

 

We must work together because we occupy the same space

the same homes, towns, states, and country

And yes world

 

We need each other

It seems

Left, right

Liberal, conservative

Secular and religious

 

Paul, in talking about that community we call the church

Said we are radically connected

Like the parts of a body

And the parts must work together

And value one another

 

The eye cannot say to the hand, “I don’t need you!”

And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!”

 

Like it or not, we are interconnected

Even when we pretend as if we aren’t

Even when we sit on the poles of the political

Ideological or

Religious spectrum

 

We need each other

 

Too often, we pretend that we don’t

 

The liberals and progressives go rushing off

Leaving behind, rejecting

Too many things that are embraced by the other side

And become vague

 

The conservatives, in return, reject everything from

The libs and becoming fortified and closed

hard

 

And so here we are

 

And the question is this.

If we need each other

What is it that the liberals have that the conservatives need

And what do the conservatives have that the liberals need

 

For without connection, balance and diversity are lost.

 

Liberal secularism and liberal faith have strong values

Tolerance, equality, and justice

We need those values,

But we need structures that maintain them and sustain them

And those values need to be rooted in something

Deeper than pragmatic idealism

 

Without the compassion and love of diversity from the left

(Yeah, I know, a paradox)

The right, even in the form of the church, becomes “a divisive, fearful,

partisan, un-Christlike version of Christianity’

a cult of control and domination

 

Without the anchoring provided by the more conservative

Liberalism destroys the institutions and norms we need

Religion, faith, traditional values (the healthy ones)

Get eaten up in the cult of individualism

 

Liberalism destroys the structures and resources that

It cannot replenish.  The center cannot hold

Patrick Deneen declares: ‘Liberalism has failed – not because it fell short.

But because it was true to itself.  It has failed because it succeeded.” Ouch!

 

Conservatism loses its heart.

 

So what do we do?

Where do we go

Neither side seems willing to accept what is valuable

From the other

 

Both are locked down.

 

We have often heard of the middle way, or the third way

Perhaps that is what we need

We rebel against this

It feels like compromise and failure

It feels like enabling

 

But we cannot exist if we are living at the poles

Two vicious extremes

Cut off from one another

 

The eye cannot say to the hand, “I don’t need you!”

And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!”

 

We work best when we are part of each other

When we make a connection that creates balance

 

For in that balance

We find some limits and boundaries

Mostly in place to limit things like power and retribution

And sustain things such as justice,

And we find a freedom that allows us to change, grow, and adapt

The freedom to love

and (above all) accept and embrace diversity

 

This is hard to live into

I know I have not yet

Found the ability to live in the abyss between the extremes

 

But it seems like a goal worth thinking about

Friday, June 20, 2025

Fat faith

The church must stand against the way politics has become a religion and religion has become politics

                     Russel Moore

 

…this religion:  too thin to provide meaning and morals to culture, and thus to reliably support democratic society. A result is what I call a cultural trade deficit…   If, instead [of supporting civic virtues] the church is in cultural deficit – if it becomes a net importer of values from the secular world – then it becomes morally derivative rather than morally formative

           Jonathan Rauch, Cross Purposes

__________________________________________

 

I want a fat faith

A faith that makes a difference

A faith that shapes and transforms

 

I don’t want a faith that lets the world

Squeeze it into its mold (Paul)

But a robust faith that determines

How we live

 

It’s complicated

For in these days, confused souls are not sure

what is faithful and what is not

 

Issues such as abortion, gender,

And immigration

have caused faith to become politics

 

to the point that politics has become a matter of faith

where political ideology

and political leaders

 

have replaced the core values of scripture

and Jesus, yes, Jesus himself

 

and a faith thus made thin

is shredded and destroyed

collapsing under the weight

of the earthly

 

the heart of faith

that which needs to bear the weight

of shaping our world

our nation

has been lost

 

and so we have a collapse

politics and religion falling in upon each other

becoming rubble

a Gaza-like wasteland

 

pummeled continuously

by those who would use faith rather than live it

 

we have let the world squeeze us into its mold

into the shape of fear, hate,

racism

oppression

suppression

 

it is not just MAGA that is responsible

for flash bang grenades

and rubber bullets

and looming martial law

 

it is thin faith

a center that cannot hold

and so our world collapses and

“The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere  

The ceremony of innocence is drowned;

The best lack all conviction, while the worst  

Are full of passionate intensity.”  (Yeats)

 

Forget the economic trade deficit

The spiritual trade deficit is what is destroying us

The powerful surge of fear, judgment, and greed

The need for power

Pouring into the church

Unbalancing it and leaving it impoverished

thin

 

Instead of a powerful surge of

Compassion, kindness, welcome, generosity

And love

Pouring into the world, shaping it

 

I am tired of a thin impoverished faith

I want fat faith

A faith that causes me to welcome the stranger

Love my enemies

Bless and not curse

Give and not horde

 

I know that such faith is usually assailed by the world

It is hung up on a cross to die

It is crucified by a religion that has become politics

And politics that have become religion

 

I know that there may be pain, and what looks like failure

I know that collapse may be inevitable

And that this country, this world

May become a wasteland

 

The powers of the earth

“…have made it an empty wasteland; I hear its mournful cry.

    The whole land is desolate, and no one even cares.”  Jeremiah

 

But Love can create streams in the desert

Until the dry land is glad

And out of the rubble of human hate and deceit

Joy, hope, peace, and love

Will blossom (Isaiah)

 

I believe

Lord help my unbelief

Thursday, June 19, 2025

Grace is not transactional

Our success-driven culture scorns failure, powerlessness, and any form of poverty. Yet Jesus begins his Sermon on the Mount by praising “the poor in spirit” (Matthew 5:3)! Just that should tell us how thoroughly we have missed the point of the gospel. Nonviolence, weakness, and simplicity are also part of the Western shadow self. We avoid the very things that Jesus praises, and we try to project a strong, secure, successful image to ourselves and the world. We reject vulnerability and seek dominance instead, and we elect leaders who falsely promise us the same.

 

I can see why my spiritual father, St. Francis of Assisi, made a revolutionary and pre-emptive move into the shadow self from which everyone else ran. In effect, Francis said through his lifestyle, “I will delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure.” He lived so close to the bottom of things that there was no place to fall. Even when insulted, he did not take offence. Now that is freedom, or what he called “perfect joy”!  

          Richard Rohr – Daily Meditations

______________________

 

How can I profit you?

Let me count the ways.

 

Any leader who has any savvy at all

Knows that the way to recruit followers

Is to make it all about them

 

Their wants, needs, fears, and yes

Hope

 

In 1860 Abraham Lincoln’s slogan was “Vote Yourself a Farm”

1920   Warren G. Harding promised a “Return to Normalcy.”

In 1928, Herbert Hoover promised “A Chicken in Every Pot and a Car in Every Garage.”

In 1956, Dwight Eisenhower offered “Peace and Prosperity.”

In 1980, Ronald Reagan asked, “Are you better off than you were four years ago?”

 

And Trump?

Trump offered people power and wealth, too.

 

Dominance seems to be woven into the fabric of our being

The need to win (so much winning we get tired of it)

The need to dominate and control

To succeed and accumulate

 

There are anomalies

St Francis of Assisi, who said

“I will delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure.”

 

Quite a mission statement

 

And people such as Gandhi, Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr.,

Mother Theresa and Pope Francis

 

Who, though imperfect and flawed

Had servant hearts

 

But we live in a top-down, power-over world

Where the goals are to be in a position of power

And to “have” as much of everything as one possibly can

 

So we value those people with power

And actively devalue those who do not

Indeed, our very goal is to put as many people

“Beneath us” as we possibly can

 

We assume those with wealth must inherently be

richer, wiser, harder working, better

than those who happen to be poor

 

We know this is true, whether we want to admit it

Or not

 

We tend to avoid and ignore looking at our dysfunctional relationship

With power and wealth

With winning and domination

 

So we don’t admit to ourselves.

Or confession to God, our addiction to domination

 

Which is why very pious (in the legitimate sense) people

Can embrace an ideology that is fundamentally

“Not Jesus’

 

Which is why we now have in power a movement whose core values are

Reclaiming White Privilege (aka Racism)

Using power ON others (not FOR others)

Retribution (rather than reconciliation)

Exclusivity rather than inclusion

Radical safety rather than vulnerability

The accumulation of resources by a few,

Rather than the use of resources for the common good

 

We have become fearful hoarders.

People who must win at any cost

People who make others less so we might be more

 

We have become people willing to

Demonize, neglect, deport, suppress, oppress others

For our own benefit

 

I don’t think Jesus would be very popular today

Not in America

Can you imagine a candidate who said

Love your enemies":

Turn the other cheek

Sell everything you have and give to the poor

 

The way of Jesus is hard.

 

O God of love

Forgive us when we become addicted to strength and success

Forgive us when we reject vulnerability and seek dominance instead,

Help us to be people who like Francis

delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure

 

Who do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit.

But in humility value others above ourselves,

And look not to our own interests but to the interests of others.

 

Give us the mindset of Jesus.

Make us servants

 

Monday, June 16, 2025

The path to the abyss

smoke whirls

as flash grenades echo

and assailants

better armed than combat troops

trod heavily

 

faces covered

 

bullies

the hands and feet

of a movement that prizes

power

and seeks intimidation

 

we do not know who they are

these furtive intimidators 

 

we do know that this is not

greatness

this is not democracy

 

this is terrorism

 

the yield of seeds planted

by clever souls

the seeds of fear and resentment

of racism

 

they march

these denizens of tyranny

seeking the tired, the poor

those who endured oppression and violence

and have come here

yearning to breathe free,

the refugee and the immigrant

 

no longer welcome

in the land of freedom

no longer welcome in a land that consumes

but does not give

 

too afraid, too resentful

too greedy

to welcome the stranger into its midst

 

to embrace those who

if welcomed

would flourish, and in flourishing,

enrich this land

 

who would work, and raise families

and be our neighbors

 

we have demonized these precious souls

deemed them dangerous and unworthy

accused them of eating pets

and made them the enemy

 

are there wicked people among

those who have come?

por supuesto

 

but fewer among them

than among those who are so proud

to be an American

 

but till we dehumanize them

and round them up like livestock

we line them up

hands zip tied behind their backs

we detain them without due process

and deport them

to places unknown

 

or send them back to certain death

 

what have we become?

this land

this United States

this self proclaimed “Christian Nation?”

 

this is tyranny looming,

a dark cloud of oppression looming

growing

obscuring the light until all

is darkness

 

true religion, Jesus said

is taking care of the vulnerable in your midst

it is feeding the hungry, clothing the naked,

giving water to the thirsty

taking care of the sick

 

it is fighting for justice

 

so what do we do

in these days, as armed men march

and justice is denied?

 

Jesus said we can be sheep or goats

we can side with the vulnerable

or ignore them

but that siding with the poo

and welcoming the stranger is not optional

 

America first (and only) is not the path to greatness

it is the path to the abyss

taken

one masked militant

one zip tied immigrant

one injustice at a time

 

even as the darkness encroaches

we cannot fight hate with hate, evil with evil

violence with violence

 

we must stand, yes

and speak, yes

and act, yes

 

but the way is clear

 

We must learn to do good;

seek justice,

correct oppression;

bring justice (Isaiah 1)

 

that is Yahweh’s way

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Can we move On

Pádraig Ó Tuama has a wonderful poem about Peter

poor Peter, wallowing in his grief

and sense of inadequacy

 

there on the shore of the sea

aimlessly fishing

 

Peter, sitting by the fire

his love questioned

not because the questioner did not know,

but because the questioned needed to know

 

do I love him

more than fish, a campfire

the old normal

 

Peter, weeping

Lamenting

 

“I drank from miraculous new waters and then

I faltered while the devil sauntered downtown.

I am the pebble in your crown.

Jerusalem’s new clown.

 

I’ve let you down,

I’ve let you down,

I’ve let you down,

I’ve left me damnwell down

Jesus, you know everything I said,

And then I wept.

 

‘Are we beyond all this?

can we move on?’ he said…

‘can we move on?’ he said…

and let’s move on, ‘ he said to me”  (Ó Tuama)

 

Ah, beloved

how many times have I let you down

have I let me down

have I let those I love and serve down?

 

How many times have I denied

through my thoughts, words, and deeds

love

 

your love

that passes all understanding

that is poured out on all people

all creation?

 

How many times have I spoken in anger

slipped into hate, wandered into resentment

 

how many times have I failed to remember

that you love me

in spite of it all?

 

More than three,

that is for damn sure

 

Jesus, do not let me linger

in the place of guilt, shame, and lament

it is time to embrace

forgiveness

and move on

 

not the same, never the same

not to mindlessly wander down the same paths

and end up back in the same place

by the same campfire

eating the same fish

 

it is time to move on

bearing witness to your love

for me, for them, for all

in my little town

my poor country

 

to the ends of creation…

because you love me

and I love you

Friday, June 6, 2025

inching along

and he is inching towards glory

with only his own story on his back

he has patched up holes that opened

where his coverings have cracked

and some shoes were never meant for hiking, so

he left them far behind

there are things he needs

on journeys such as these

food and love and drink and warmth and comfort

and a bag that’s small enough

to carry all the failures and the idols

that he’s picked up on the way

 

there are some days

he only moves

an inch or two

 

this is the pace of glory here in exile

          Pádraig Ó Tuama

_____________________________________

 

I inch through life

eternally displaced and homesick

seeking

 

I am not sure I belong here

it does not feel like home

and I, clinging to the vestiges of hope

like tattered clothes

 

wandering

an immigrant, a soul in exile

 

I need to travel light

it is time to abandon all that burdens

that weighs me down

and drains my sparse resources

 

my bag is small

and cannot bear the weight

of too much hate

and fear

 

I need to shed these foul miseries

leaving them, abandoned along the way

as I trod, trod

through each day, through this life

this journey through the wasteland

 

there are many paths through this

great dryness

where I struggle and thirst

and inch

lost and worn

 

I will never make it through

to that place of promise

 

without the One who makes a way

filling valleys and leveling mountains

filling my battered cup

with just enough water to keep me traveling

inching toward glory

 

a refugee

trudging with so many other

exiles

all of us needing Sacred

needing each other

 

sharing our meager gifts

of love, hope, compassion, and joy

trying to find our way home

walking each other

home

 

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Say Yes

In the Irish language there is not a word for ‘yes’.  There is not a word for “no” either.

 

You can only answer in the affirmative – you can say “I will’ or “I won’t.’  You can say ‘I can.’  You can say ‘I am’ or ‘I am not’…

 

Let your yes be yes and your no be no

Let your yes be seen in your doing.

Let your no be not-doing.

If you say yes, but do-not-do, it is a no.

So, forget all your talk.

Tell me by what you do.

                     Pádraig Ó Tauma

_________________________________

 

What does it look like to live

Yes

Yes to God, to life, to love

 

I can say ‘yes’ all I want

And it can simply be noise

A clanging of falsehoods

 

What does ‘yes’ look  like

It looks like patience and humility

It looks like respect

And forgiveness

It looks like joy

 

It does not look like

Envy, boasting, or anger

It is not focused on the self

It does not look like lies

 

It looks like welcoming the stranger

Feeding the hungry

Clothing the naked

 

It looks like fighting for justice

 

I say ‘yes’ when I look on another with compassion

I say ‘yes' when I stand and speak out

Against hate and injustice

I say ‘yes’ when I hold my tongue (sometimes)

And ‘yes’ when I refuse to spew hate

 

May my yes be seen in my doing.

May my no be not-doing

Those things that are not love

 

Its complicated

So complicated

 

And frightening too

How easy it is to stumble over ‘no’ on the way to ‘yes’

 

But there is no other way

This

This is the way, the truth, the life

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Your choice

You carry

All the ingredients

To turn your life into a nightmare

Don’t mix them…

 

You carry all the ingredients

To turn your existence into joy,

 

Mix them, mix

Them!

          Hafiz ala Daniel Landinsky

___________________________________

 

We are not helpless

Ever

 

We do not have to be tossed and blown

By every new headline

Every painful setback

Every new abuse of power 

Every new lie (Ephesians 4)

 

We can be victims

If we want

We can carry darkness

Embrace ignorance

We can harden our hearts

 

So there is no longer room

For The Gift

The Presence

 

We can stuff our souls with resentment,

Anger, hate, and greed

We can lust for power

 

We can spawn nightmares,

Which fill our souls with darkness and chaos

Pushing us to punish, harm, and reject

Which fill our lives

With every kind of violence

Imaginable

 

But all the ingredients are there

For joy

 

Love, compassion, forgiveness, generosity

Fueled by the Spirit

Can intoxicate us

Until we dance with abandon

 

Our feet moving to the sound of

Gratitude and expectation

Our hearts singing the song of love

Our eyes seeing all the good gifts

That surround us

 

Until we live joy

 

We carry within us

All the ingredients we need

Mix them!  Mix them!