Showing posts with label Jesus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jesus. Show all posts

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Blessings From Poverty

Lessons Learned by the Blessing of Poverty

Child labor was seen as it's proponents as a way to relieve poverty for families. That was just a justification for greed. Education then was understood to be the real key to moving out of the tenements.
Child labor was seen as it's proponents as a way to relieve poverty for families. That was just a justification for greed. Education then was understood to be the real key to moving out of the tenements.
Source: Wikimedia

See No Evil

Poverty is only important to the public when the middle class start to use that term to describe their future. The chronically poor never benefit fully from the slight swings from left to right in the political arena. They benefit from the social action that is left in place after the pendulum has swung the other way. It is never a swoop of justice that changes things in the long run. It is only the movement of inches that better the lot of the poorest of the poor. We only care about the economic cliff when we ourselves are about to fall off.
When poverty is widespread as it was in the Depression, those who fall from the middle class learn lessons that hopefully will lead them to remember the chronically poor.
When poverty is widespread as it was in the Depression, those who fall from the middle class learn lessons that hopefully will lead them to remember the chronically poor.
Source: Dorothea Lange (1895-1965)Wikimedia Commons- Public Domain

Mindful of the Blessings Bestowed

Really if you think about it the time of counting and thinking about your blessings runs from Thanksgiving to New Year's. At Thanksgiving we are supposed to be thankful on a national and personal level for our current blessings. Most of us just do the holiday rush and food overindulgence. Christmas is our time to be thankful for the gift of Christ to the world.
Again, we just think about the gifts we have to give and what we would like to get. We could think about how the gift of Christ has blessed our lives. The New Year is a time to count our blessings of the past year and our hopes of blessing for the New Year. We many time use it to pledge to make those improvements we think will bless our lives, that we just somehow never achieve.
It is the time of year that even the pagans celebrated in order to return the blessing of full light that spring brings. It is a time when in the past the farmer was surviving of the blessing of the crops from the fall harvest and hoping for the blessing of good weather for the planting of the spring crops. It is the time of year where the blessings of past, present, and future collide.
President Johnson's poverty tour in 1964th  War on Poverty was not won, but some of the social programs have lifted some out of poverty and made it bearable for many.
President Johnson's poverty tour in 1964th War on Poverty was not won, but some of the social programs have lifted some out of poverty and made it bearable for many.
Source: Wikimedia Cecil Suagdon Public Domain

Blessing of Poverty

I could focus on the blessings of past, present, and future. I want to look at the blessing of poverty, because it is something most considers not a blessing. It is a blessing for the lessons it teaches and the joys that it only can bring.
Poverty can be the source of endless futile worry that zaps one of all happiness. There is a unique peace that comes when you finally realize that there is not job, sweepstakes, or kind relation who is going to change your status of poverty. It is out of your hands and you can only count on the blessing of God to survive day to day. The blessing of poverty can be the end of constant anxiety and true reliance on God to see that your day to day needs are met. Keeping the heat on is not a task of worry in your life, but a testament to the grace of God. Each month you are not cold is a small miracle. It brings joy to be blessed with the necessities of life. It also helps you to count the blessing of having the essentials because there are many who do not.
Poverty brings the joy of hope. When you have hit what you consider the rock bottom and there are no easy fixes you latch on to hope. You face each day with the hope of the blessing that you will get what you need to survive that day. There is not far off hope that you can retire in the Bahamas or travel in Europe some day that only brings a distant twinge of joy. You get the joy of knowing that at the end of the day all is well in the moment. Your joy is in the moment.
We play a game at our house. It is if tomorrow you had a large amount of money what would you do. Even my kids get great joy out of using at least half of their imaginary money to make someone else happy. Being poor teach you the joy of sharing with others and the blessing of the common good as the highest call of God to each of us.
The hope of having brings as much joy as the actual act of having. My children know how to be grateful and therefore hopeful. When they are blessed with something extra even if it is small it is a source of large joy.
The best lesson of poverty is that you learn happiness, joy, and blessing is a choice. Money cannot buy happiness because it is the individual who chooses to feel blessed. Now this is not to say that a mother who has a dying child and cannot save them do to lack of money feels blessed.

Lessons Learned and the Dignity of the Poor

There is a level of poverty that is simply evil and the reality of poverty is an evil that does not please or show the glory of God. It is the existence of a sense of blessing in the lives of the poor that shows forth the Glory of God. It is the reality of the poor themselves working towards justice in the world that show us the true grace of Christ.
The past few years have been difficult for a whole group of Americans who have found themselves doing things that were not part of any experience they have ever had. They found themselves losing homes, collecting food stamps, and taking jobs below their skills and education. Many will as the. Economy improves .move back into the middle class. I hope that there will be lessons learned by many, who never counted their blessings when they were blessed. The,”I did it” attitude of the apathetic middle and upper classes to the plight of the poor in this country has hopefully softened. The great recession did not leave those who had done nothing to improve their lot in life in the proverbial bread line; it left those who had dedicated their lives to economic gain there as well. Poverty, many times a life altering disease is not respecter of persons. We however, should learn to respect our fellow citizens and their right to a basic level of human dignity that no one should be deprived of. This is what the blessing of poverty should ultimately teach all of us.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Things of God Every Child Should Know

Detail - Glory of the New Born Christ in prese...
Detail - Glory of the New Born Christ in presence of God Father and the Holy Spirit (Annakirche, Vienna) Adam and Eva are represented bellow Jesus-Christ Ceiling painting made by Daniel Gran (1694-1757). Post-processing: perspective and fade correction. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Stained glass at St John the Baptist's Anglica...
Stained glass at St John the Baptist's Anglican Church http://www.stjohnsashfield.org.au, Ashfield, New South Wales. Illustrates Jesus' description of himself "I am the Good Shepherd" (from the Gospel of John, chapter 10, verse 11). This version of the image shows the detail of his face. The memorial window is also captioned: "To the Glory of God and in Loving Memory of William Wright. Died 6th November, 1932. Aged 70 Yrs." (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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Gods Own County
Gods Own County (Photo credit: tricky (rick harrison))
The Perfect Imperfection of a Child of God

Adults forget the reality of a child like mind. We many times deal with our own childlike minds as adult without recognizing the benefit of natural curiosity. I always fear that young people grow up and stop looking and focus their minds on the mundane. They grow and cease to look beyond. The point of looking beyond is not to see down the road, but an attitude of always looking beyond.
The world is not the black and white. The confidence of youth that there is better right can be a source to drive many to seek the change the world .This is a energy that the world needs tempered with the reality that most view points on the world that teach in absolute right and wrong are lies. It is a lesson most of us learn over and over both corporately and individually over the course of our life time.

A sincere journey to know God starts, for most people, when as individuals, finally realize we can not know God wholly ever. , but chose to look for God anyway We will learn the most about God in the daily, seemingly mundane interactions with parents, lover, co-workers and friends. My spiritual quest started like for most people with my own family. My grandmother who walked as a Christian, but never overly confidently with a grace like few others I have met made me want to know the grace that she knew
. My own sister who strives to walk in my grandmother's steps in her own many always inspired me as well. She always casts aside the word by others spoken in haste and forgives easily. I will never share her world view but I respect the way she shares the love of Christ and ultimately of our universal God with others.

Many times we are timid or lack a measure of faith to not be satisfied with the open ended questions that no organized religion really ever fully answers. There are those we meet in our lives who are brave enough to keep asking away and realize that while God is never changing our ability to distinguish and understand God does. Wolf a friend of mine is the bravest person I have meet in this matter. Brave enough to drop the assumptions made in much spiritual confidence in the past, to move forward asking the same spiritual questions and getting new and truthful answers. The answers are necessary for us to seek to do the will of God in the world, but they never ever are complete and if we are honest we will always keep looking beyond them. It takes a brave soul to act on that they know is not perfect. They seek to do the will of God with an honest knowledge that all the human perceptions are 
somewhat flawed and never universal.

 


God let's those who listen see that in so many ways we define our own realty. Yes, we can personally get a large degree of what we think we want even if it is far from the will of God for our lives. Knowing that we can so define our own reality in a positive way can help us make wiser choices in our lives and seek the will of God however, imperfectly. When we have too much faith in the validity of our created reality we can become lost and truly feel Godless in our walk in this world.

For many of us the Church is where we find that language and spiritual drama that speaks to us of the reality of God and the limits of being human in the world. Those of us, who still find comfort in the knowledge of Christ, find the Church a place for us to meet Christ as God in the flesh. We are driven towards God by our own knowledge of the reality of Christ. If we are honest we understand our reality is limited in the knowledge of God and can not define the spiritual reality for the rest of the world.
I have never met anyone who calls themselves a Christian that fully knows Christ. It has always been enough for me that Christ knows us. It seems that vanity alone makes people claim to know Christ fully. The goal of the Christian walk seems to me to be to learn to see the grace and transformative power of Christ in our own lives and the lives of others.
Christians learn about the grace and transformative power of Christ in the world in a walk that is many times slow, painful, and at moments joyful. Our entire past spiritual walk informs our moments on earth. Sometimes our greatest faith or wishful thinking is focused on our future moments on earth. This is how it should be because if we keep walking towards God we find our lives empowered by hope that God truly acts with love in world. We take solace in the hope that there is better always better than what we know as humans now. For me at the end of the day, this hope is empowered by the faith that at death we will fully see the face God. Our greatest faith is ultimately that our moments on earth matter 
and we have in some way served God.


Many churches promote spiritual vanity but the individuals in the church still seek to walk in the less well defined truth of God anyway. I have an abiding love for the Anglican communion because it is broad and in its own three steps forward two steps back evolution embodies the sometimes comic reality of the Christian walk. A Mrs. Elizabeth Templeton, a church woman in Scotland said of the Anglican Communion, was an evolving life form, conspicuously unclassifiable, a kind of ecclesiastical duck-billed platypus, robustly mammal and igorously egg lying."




Duck Billed Platypus Schnabeltier

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Who Deserves Their Daily Bread?

Anachronistic Medieval representation of St. G...
Anachronistic Medieval representation of St. Gregory. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Christians Need to Understand the Need to Share God's Provisions with All His Children


The Lord's Prayer
The Lord's Prayer (Photo credit: Wikipedia)



      St. Gregory of Nyssa on the Lord's Prayer: "So we say to God: Give us bread. Not delicacies or riches, nor magnificent purple robes, golden ornaments, and precious stones, or silver dishes. Nor do we ask Him for landed estates, or military commands, or political leadership. We pray neither for herds of horses and oxen or other cattle in great numbers, nor for a host of slaves. We do not say, give us a prominent position in assemblies or monuments and statues raised to us, nor silken robes and musicians at meals, nor any other thing by which the soul is estranged from the thought of God and higher things; no -- but only bread! . .
.
"But you go on business to the Indies and venture out upon strange seas; you go on a voyage every year only to bring back flavorings for your food, without realizing that . . . [it] is above all a good conscience which makes the bread tasty because it is eaten in justice. .

Progressive Anglo-Catholics hope for social justice for all. We pray for the Lord to,give us our daily Bread" and then ask that we be reconciled to our fellow man by virtue of mutual forgiveness. Those of us in the West, often find our quest for social justice limited to our concern for our brothers and sisters who appear to be victim's of America's many times less than just social system .We focus on seeking justice for our little corner of the world. We do it because it is easy and we can get results. Our parish food pantry does make sure some daily bread flows to our neighbor.

We miss the more important aspects of daily bread. . Italian statesman Machiavelli understood that. He said: "People are always provoked by small injustices but never by great injustices We live in a world where many of our brothers and sisters in Christ have been denied the provision of daily bread.. Many of these faithful Christians die in famines or mourn the death of their children because they do not receive their God -given portion because of the greed and excess of Christians in the West. We have not strived to set into place social systems that honor the will of the Lord. We have failed God, in this manner. God has not failed us.


English: Lord's Prayer miniature medallion, us...
English: Lord's Prayer miniature medallion, used on same chain as military ID tag (dog tag). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Many so-called Christians of a more literalist theological bent have come up with "prosperity" teaching and use the "daily bread ",line from the Lord's prayer and scriptures about the blessing to justify entitlement to more than just daily bread. They do not even want the whole loaf. They feel theologically entitled to the whole bakery, without regard to their fellow Christian who would be satisfied with just a few crumbs if it meant their children could live in health till adulthood.

Praying for a "Cadillac" is not within the will of the Lord. The problem is for many Progressive Christians is they find it hard to forgive those who preach these things in the name of the Lord. This is our vanity at work. We need to ask God's forgiveness for our lack of serious attempts to work for social justice in a ways that impact the bigger picture,right of all of God's children to their "daily bread". We only can seek 'forgiveness "to those we corporately deny God's provision for by demonstrable action. We need to work for social justice always in our daily lives and share our "daily bread". Then, only then will we be bringing forth will of God "on Earth as it is in Heaven."

James 2:15: "(Give) if a brother or sister is in need and destitute of daily food!"
2 Corinthians 8:14: "Your plenty will supply what they need, so that in turn their plenty will supply what you
need

Hosea 11:4: "I led them with cords of human kindness, with ties of love; I lifted the yoke from their neck and bent down to feed them."

The Claim of a Personal Relationship with God


The Amazing Extraordinary Friends
The Amazing Extraordinary Friends (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Does God Really Offer Customized Relationships?


The biggest personal dilemma ever faced as a Christian was realizing that the Church was not one. That the bride of Christ; which was charged to be Christ on Earth in action was hopelessly split into many sects. Even more disturbing is the fact that one Church deems one thing to be against Christ that another church deems to be with Christ. These are all matters that do not even address the issue of theological differences. There is not agreement among much of the Christian world about what it means to be a Christian. Worse those who gather in the name of Christ many times spend more time attacking each other than doing the work of God. Of course there is no clear, "work of God "for most Christians to agree on anyway.
This is leading some to assume that the relationship one has with Christ is individual. An individual relationship with God is narcissism. Personalized to our own needs and likings much like all those nifty cell phone applications that can tell us where we can find sushi anywhere on earth. These folks assume God will be their GPS through the daily trials of life and get them to heaven in the end. They get extra brownie points in heaven if they lead others to their own customized relationship with God.
They of course like this individual relationship with God idea. God is their Daddy who looks like them, thinks like them and of course has the same ethics which can neatly be written into doctrine. Those of us who are not lucky enough to be naturally like God need doctrine so we can have our fellow Christians individual relationship with God. Of course we have to give up being the individuals God created us as and whatever doctrine of Christian neighbor is promoting.


Christ the Saviour (Pantokrator), a 6th-centur...
Christ the Saviour (Pantokrator), a 6th-century encaustic icon from Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai. NB - slightly cut down - for full size see here (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


True Christianity is not some neat little relationship with God; that we get when we weep the sinners prayer when we are upset with our lovers, our jobs, and general disarray of the world. It is the journey of life where we constantly struggle to put Christ at the center when we are spiritually mature enough to know that that is what God calls us to do. Christ is with us from our point of Baptism. We grow imperfectly in the knowledge of Christ until we accept the truth of Christ at our confirmation and partake of Christ with full knowledge at the Eucharist.
We are only Christians when we know we have the choice to follow Christ or ignore Christ. We most walk that muddy middle ground until life's circumstances calls us to fall at Christ feet. It is here in God's true church that we discover and our born again into our Lord over and over. It is here that we find the grace of God in the absolution of our sins. Mother Church always welcomes back her errant Children because she is the essence of God's love and promotes God's true work in the world. The miracle is Christ church is one even when we act like it is not and Christ himself forgives us our arrogance for not seeing it.