Sunday, June 1, 2014

Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States - Center for Action and Contemplation - Father Richard Rohr's Meditation "Type Four: The Need to be Special" for Sunday, 1 June 2014

Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States - Center for Action and Contemplation - Father Richard Rohr's Meditation "Type Four: The Need to be Special" for Sunday, 1 June 2014
The gift of redeemed Fours is equanimity or emotional balance.
Artwork by Nelson Kane Design
Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation
"The Enneagram (Part 2)"
"Type Four: The Need to be Special"
Sunday, 1 June 2014
Everything I am writing here, including the description of each Enneagram number, is a broad generalization using different common traits. The important thing is to get to the energy behind the traits. Not every trait will apply to each person, so forgive the generalizations you will read throughout this series.
Four is the conflicted number of the heart triad (Two, Three, and Four). Their Soul Child is the One. They try desperately to create an outer world of beauty and symmetry because they originally knew themselves to be an essential part of a perfect and whole world (Ones have the need to be perfect). Perhaps due to painful experiences of loss in childhood, the life of Fours is shaped by longing. They look forward to the day when the great love will come (back), and they are convinced this great love will redeem them.
Fours may blame themselves for experiencing rejection or privation, and so they consider themselves “bad.” Fours trapped in themselves may repeatedly produce situations in which they are rejected or abandoned. Fours have to be depressed or suffer from time to time in order to be happy. The greater the pain and depression, the more creative Fours can become.
The root sin of Fours is envy. They immediately see who has more style, class, taste, or talent than they. Inside a Four is a child struggling with feelings of inferiority: “I don’t deserve to be loved. I need to make an impression so that I’m not overlooked and abandoned again.” Fours strive to be aesthetically attractive, to be exceptional, to be creative, or to appear eccentric. They long to be authentic, but seldom allow themselves to fully enjoy it when it happens. “I will be special” is the mantra of the Four. Their whole life is a search for authenticity. Children, nature, and everything that radiates originality awaken in them the longing for simplicity and naturalness that they lost at some point.
Fours have lived through all the emotional spaces and experiences from agony to ecstasy. They know all the nuances of feeling and understand the human soul better than anyone else. A purified Four can deal sensitively with real life—and not just with imaginary dramas. Working for peace and justice is good for Fours. In this they have to deal with the dirt of the world, which cannot be aesthetically transfigured. Such social commitment also helps them return to their One Soul Child. 
Fours put their gifts to work to awaken a sense of beauty and harmony in their surroundings. They are highly sensitive and almost always artistically gifted. They are capable of transforming the negative and experiences of loss into something beautiful and universally valid, be it a poem, a song, a work of art, or an action of civil disobedience.
The gift of redeemed Fours is equanimity or emotional balance. If they can admit that they live in God and God in them, their soul will come to the deep authenticity and balance that they have longed for. They will finally know their True Self.
Adapted from The Enneagram: A Christian Perspective,
pages 46, 98-103, 107-108, 111 and The Enneagram: The Discernment of Spirits (CD, DVD, MP3 download)
Gateway to Silence: I want to see all—my sin and my gift.
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Center for Action and Contemplation
1705 Five Points Rd SW
Albuquerque, NM 87105 United States (physical) 
PO Box 12464
Albuquerque, NM 87195-2464 United States (mailing) 
(505) 242-9588
cac.org
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Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada - L'Arche Canada Foundation Daily Thought with Jean Vanier for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Children"

L'Arche Foundation Logo
Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada - L'Arche Canada Foundation Daily Thought with Jean Vanier for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Children"
Some people think that children do not feel anything, that they do not suffer from the ambiguities and contradictions of the adults living around them. But that is not true. Children have extremely vulnerable hearts. They need the truth and cannot tolerate injustice or lies.(Jean Vanier, Seeing Beyond Depression, page 17)
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Toronto, Ontario, United States - Henri Nouwen Society Daily Meditation for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Jesus Is in the World Not of It"

Henri Nouwen Society - Daily Meditation
Toronto, Ontario, United States - Henri Nouwen Society Daily Meditation for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Jesus Is in the World Not of It"
The Beatitudes offer us a self-portrait of Jesus. At first it might seem to be a most unappealing portrait - who wants to be poor, mourning and persecuted? Who can be truly gentle, merciful, pure in heart, a peacemaker, and always concerned about justice? Where is the realism here? Don't we have to survive in this world and use the ways of the world to do so?
Jesus shows us the way to be in the world without being of it. When we model our lives on his, a new world will open up for us. The Kingdom of Heaven will be ours, and the earth will be our inheritance. We will be comforted and have our fill; mercy will be shown to us. Yes, we will be recognised as God's children and truly see God, not just in an afterlife, but here and now (see Matthew 5:3-10). That is the reward of modelling our lives on the life of Jesus!(Father Henri J. M. Nouwen)
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Leawood, Kansas, United States - The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection Daily Guide grow. pray. study. for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Prayer Tip"

Leawood, Kansas, United States - The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection Daily Guide grow. pray. study. for Sunday, 1 June 2014 "Prayer Tip"
Prayer Tip:
"Speak Lord, for your servant is listening" --1 Samuel 3.9.
When I was a little girl, God spoke to me regularly. When I was four, I remember sitting on the Morse Avenue beach in Chicago playing in the sand, and I recall thinking how amazing it is that God created each grain of sand different from the next. Here is a picture of sand at 250x magnification: 
I remember thinking if God created each grain of sand, how much more lovingly, God created each individual person in the world. God spoke scripture and truth into me before I even knew there was a book called the Bible. As I got older, my childlike faith became more analytical, and the religious teaching I received made me doubt the authenticity of my experience and forget how to listen to God. Yet, listening to what God is saying is just as important in prayer as talking to God. A good relationship with God in prayer consists of both speaking and listening to God.
God speaks to us in many ways, possibly in as many ways as there are people to talk to. However, a primary mode of God's communication is through the words of scripture. It is easier to hear what God is saying to us by slow, deliberate meditation on short verses of scripture rather than reading a couple of chapters. God also commonly speaks to us through dreams, practical every day life experiences, and mystical experiences. A mystical experience to me is the same thing as an uncanny coincidence that can't be explained. It is when the veil that we picture between heaven and earth becomes so thin that the physical realm and the spiritual realm feel like they are intersecting for a brief moment. Maybe you have had an experience like this and know exactly what God is trying to say, but for me, these experiences simply give me the encouragement and assurance that our loving God is present and accessible and here for me in my neediness.
So how do we know if what we hear is really God speaking or if it a concoction of our tricky egos? To summarize Bill Hybels, in Too Busy Not to Pray, here are some great suggestions:
1. Promptings that come from God are consistent with his Word, the Bible. For example, a prompting to cheat on an exam or your income taxes is never from God.
2. God's promptings are usually consistent with who he made you to be. So knowing myself now for half a century, if I think I hear God telling me to put skydiving and running a marathon on my bucket list, that is probably my ego trying to prove itself and not from God.
3. God's promptings usually involve servanthood. Really, God, you still want me to work every weekend when all my friends are at the lake? Ok. Fine.
Bill Hybels also teaches us to question promptings if they require us to make a life changing decision in a short amount of time, if they require us to severely jeopardize our family relationships or important friendships, or if more mature Christians, advisors or counselors think it's not a good idea. The longer we practice speaking and listening to God in prayer, the more competent we become at discerning God's true voice. When I was young, I was not even aware that it was God speaking to me. Now, looking back on that time with fresh eyes of faith, I realize that God speaks to us all the time.
This week, take a moment to reflect on these quotes from Maya Angelou as you begin your prayer.
"Listen to yourself and in that quietude you might hear the voice of God."
“Let gratitude be the pillow upon which you kneel to say your nightly prayer.”(Nancy Pauls, Pastor of Prayer)
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Nashville, Tennessee, United States - The Upper Room Daily Devotional "Learning to Fly!" for Sunday, 1 June 2014 - Read Ephesians 4:1-8

issue coverNashville, Tennessee, United States - The Upper Room Daily Devotional "Learning to Fly!" for Sunday, 1 June 2014 - Read Ephesians 4:1 I therefore, the prisoner in the Lord, beg you to walk worthily of the calling with which you were called, 2 with all lowliness and humility, with patience, bearing with one another in love; 3 being eager to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. 4 There is one body, and one Spirit, even as you also were called in one hope of your calling; 5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 one God and Father of all, who is over all, and through all, and in us all. 7 But to each one of us was the grace given according to the measure of the gift of Christ. 8 Therefore he says, “When he ascended on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts to men.”[a]
Footnotes:
a. Ephesians 4:8 Psalm 68:18
There is one body and one Spirit . . . one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all.(Ephesians 4:4-6 (NRSV))
Every year, my husband and I watch purple martins nest in our backyard. We enjoy watching the parents busily feed their new babies. One evening, a flock of purple martins was flying all around our yard, crying out excitedly. The adult birds were flying with a small baby bird in their midst! Some would fly above and in front of the baby urging the baby on, while the others would fly behind and below. I soon realized I was witnessing a baby purple martin learning to fly! The baby bird had emerged from life in a dark nest. Now, with the help of the flock, it was flying into a bright, beautiful, and new world. The whole flock seemed to be dancing in the sky, celebrating the event with joy. As new Christians emerge from the darkness of unbelief into a new life of faith in the body of Christ, brothers and sisters in the faith can become like that flock of birds — lifting new Christians up, urging them on, and encouraging them in the faith. We can celebrate their faith journey with joy because we know these new Christians will experience a relationship with God and feel God’s limitless love.
The Author: Ramona Barr (Texas, USA)
Thought for the Day: How can I help new Christians in their faith journey?
Prayer: Dear God, inspire us through the help of your Holy Spirit to encourage our brothers and sisters in the faith as we celebrate with joy our relationship with you. Amen.

Prayer focus: New Christians
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