Dear Beloved, God will bless you all through your life,
Love's own gentle hand caress you, all through you life.
You are made by God's designing, with the holy Presence shining.
Grace will be your silver lining all through your life.
Journey hand in hand with Jesus all through your life.
Walk with him who heals and frees us all through your life.
Like him may you be forgiving, generous and freely giving.
Risen, new, receive your living, all through your life.
May the Holy Spirit lead you all through your life,
guide, protect, renew and feed you all through your life.
In the light of our redeeming, with divine compassion gleaming,
be a light for others, beaming all through your life.
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Friday, July 9, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
A blessing
Dearly Beloved,
Grace and Peace to you.
(Colossians 1.9-14)
I do not cease praying for you:
May you be sensitive to God's delight.
May Spirit be your window on the world.
May you be in harmony with the Holy One,
your life a gift to God.
May you continually grow closer to God.
Your life be full of loving deeds.
God's grace be strong in you.
May you be prepared to endure everything
with patience.
May gratitude to God fill your heart:
for as with all her children, her holy ones,
the Loving One has claimed you
and given you her light.
She has rescued us
from the dark tombs that encase us
and brought us into the realm of her Beloved,
in whom we have life again,
and are set free.
Alleluia!
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Grace and Peace to you.
(Colossians 1.9-14)
I do not cease praying for you:
May you be sensitive to God's delight.
May Spirit be your window on the world.
May you be in harmony with the Holy One,
your life a gift to God.
May you continually grow closer to God.
Your life be full of loving deeds.
God's grace be strong in you.
May you be prepared to endure everything
with patience.
May gratitude to God fill your heart:
for as with all her children, her holy ones,
the Loving One has claimed you
and given you her light.
She has rescued us
from the dark tombs that encase us
and brought us into the realm of her Beloved,
in whom we have life again,
and are set free.
Alleluia!
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
The merciful Samaritan
Dearly Beloved,
Grace and Peace to you.
But a Samaritan while traveling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with compassion.
— Luke 10. 33
You have heard that it was said, “Go and do likewise.” In other words, go and be a “good Samaritan,” and help others.
Of course we ignore the hated status of the Samaritans. What this really means is “Serve those who despise or judge you, serve them with humility and compassion. Love those whom you hate. Bless those whom you want to curse. Go to your enemy, and help them.”
But listen: “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho”— that's us, we're with him— “and he fell among robbers.” This is not just a story about being the Samaritan any more than it is about the Levite. It's about being the man in the ditch. We lie there, weak and bleeding, while those who should help us pass by. Finally comes a rescuer—and it's our vile enemy! That moment—that feeling that we are dependent on the one we despise—that's what this story is about.
It's not about what we are obligated to give, or whom we ought to love. It's about receiving. Those whom you curse have blessed you. Those whom you belittle have served you. Your enemy has saved you. Like Naaman, healed by an Israelite, you are made whole by the very people you be rid of. The stone which the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.
We all have those we want to silence, shut out, or do away with altogether: illegal immigrants, gay pastors, the powerful elite, noisy children in church, bigots, coworkers who annoy us, addicts and criminals, political opponents... But the merciful Samaritan smiles at us, lying there needy and vulnerable on the roadside, and says, “Don't be so quick to judge and exclude me. I am your savior.”
God's grace comes to us from beneath, through those whom we do not see or do not want to see, through unworthy people and unfortunate events and unlikely channels. God comes to us in the one we have crucified. And despite our fear and resistance, our judgment and our attempts to separate ourselves, God showers gentle mercy on us, God loves us and saves us.
We lie on the bed at the inn, our bill paid, our wounds healing, our hearts wondering. And when we are ready, we rise and go out into the world with eyes of mercy, hearts of gratitude.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Grace and Peace to you.
But a Samaritan while traveling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with compassion.
— Luke 10. 33
You have heard that it was said, “Go and do likewise.” In other words, go and be a “good Samaritan,” and help others.
Of course we ignore the hated status of the Samaritans. What this really means is “Serve those who despise or judge you, serve them with humility and compassion. Love those whom you hate. Bless those whom you want to curse. Go to your enemy, and help them.”
But listen: “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho”— that's us, we're with him— “and he fell among robbers.” This is not just a story about being the Samaritan any more than it is about the Levite. It's about being the man in the ditch. We lie there, weak and bleeding, while those who should help us pass by. Finally comes a rescuer—and it's our vile enemy! That moment—that feeling that we are dependent on the one we despise—that's what this story is about.
It's not about what we are obligated to give, or whom we ought to love. It's about receiving. Those whom you curse have blessed you. Those whom you belittle have served you. Your enemy has saved you. Like Naaman, healed by an Israelite, you are made whole by the very people you be rid of. The stone which the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.
We all have those we want to silence, shut out, or do away with altogether: illegal immigrants, gay pastors, the powerful elite, noisy children in church, bigots, coworkers who annoy us, addicts and criminals, political opponents... But the merciful Samaritan smiles at us, lying there needy and vulnerable on the roadside, and says, “Don't be so quick to judge and exclude me. I am your savior.”
God's grace comes to us from beneath, through those whom we do not see or do not want to see, through unworthy people and unfortunate events and unlikely channels. God comes to us in the one we have crucified. And despite our fear and resistance, our judgment and our attempts to separate ourselves, God showers gentle mercy on us, God loves us and saves us.
We lie on the bed at the inn, our bill paid, our wounds healing, our hearts wondering. And when we are ready, we rise and go out into the world with eyes of mercy, hearts of gratitude.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Monday, July 5, 2010
One of them
Dearly Beloved,
Grace and Peace to you.
In the woods
I walk among living creatures,
unjudged, unjudging,
speaking the word
of their green or breathing being,
invisibly rooted in each other,
fully and calmly attuned
to the whole,
until I become
one of them,
until I know
that I've always been
one of them.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Grace and Peace to you.
In the woods
I walk among living creatures,
unjudged, unjudging,
speaking the word
of their green or breathing being,
invisibly rooted in each other,
fully and calmly attuned
to the whole,
until I become
one of them,
until I know
that I've always been
one of them.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Friday, July 2, 2010
Psalm 30
Dearly Beloved,
Grace and Peace to you.
Psalm 30
I praise you joyfully, Holy One,
for you held me gently and firmly
and no one could take me from your arms.
In fear my heart whispered your name
and you whispered mine, remaking me.
You salvaged me from my hopelessness,
hauled me right out of the dump.
(You who love the Breather of Life,
sing her praise,
and give thanks to her holy Presence!)
In little moments you press against me,
but over a lifetime you hold me in love.
I pass through an evening of weeping
in a season of joy.
In comfort I said, “No worry. I’m immovable—”
forgetting it was you who held me up.
Then you hid for a moment
and suddenly I was lost.
Oh, then I begged on my desperate knees.
Before you I was a baby:
“Do you really want to lose this one?
Will my shadow look better without me?
Will the empty place I leave speak well of you?
Listen to me and be gentle!
Seriously, God, I need you!”
Strange, how you turn my tears of sorrow
always to tears of joy,
how this cloak of despair I wear
you reweave into a robe of splendor.
O Life, O Holy Presence, my soul
is not mute but sings your praise.
To you, the One, the Here and Now,
my life is my thanks, forever.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
www.unfoldinglight.net
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Grace and Peace to you.
Psalm 30
I praise you joyfully, Holy One,
for you held me gently and firmly
and no one could take me from your arms.
In fear my heart whispered your name
and you whispered mine, remaking me.
You salvaged me from my hopelessness,
hauled me right out of the dump.
(You who love the Breather of Life,
sing her praise,
and give thanks to her holy Presence!)
In little moments you press against me,
but over a lifetime you hold me in love.
I pass through an evening of weeping
in a season of joy.
In comfort I said, “No worry. I’m immovable—”
forgetting it was you who held me up.
Then you hid for a moment
and suddenly I was lost.
Oh, then I begged on my desperate knees.
Before you I was a baby:
“Do you really want to lose this one?
Will my shadow look better without me?
Will the empty place I leave speak well of you?
Listen to me and be gentle!
Seriously, God, I need you!”
Strange, how you turn my tears of sorrow
always to tears of joy,
how this cloak of despair I wear
you reweave into a robe of splendor.
O Life, O Holy Presence, my soul
is not mute but sings your praise.
To you, the One, the Here and Now,
my life is my thanks, forever.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
www.unfoldinglight.net
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Thursday, July 1, 2010
What you are sent for
Dearly Beloved,
Grace and Peace to you.
The Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. He said to them... “Whatever house you enter, first say, 'Peace to this house!' And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that person; but if not, it will return to you.... Cure the sick who are there, and say to them, 'The kingdom of God has come near to you.'”
— Luke 10.1, 5-6, 9
Remember when Jesus said, "I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other cities also; for I was sent for this purpose” (Lk. 4.43)? Well, the same is true of you. Your existence is for a reason. You are sent out into this day for a purpose. You are here to convey the presence of God. You enter a new “town” whether it is a new city you live in or simply the present moment of each day: in strange or familiar surroundings, whether you are passing through or living where you have for decades, Christ sends you out into this world to make visible the nearness of the Reign of God. Whether you find yourself in a new, strange place, or if it never changes, the familiarity of the neighborhood is not the issue. The questions is how you are transparent to God's grace.
You don't need to convince people; just let it shine. Extend peace and healing. And don't take personally how well you are received. Stay rooted in the peace that is given you. Here is the connection between justice and contemplation. If we are deeply rooted in the peace of Christ, we are prepared to extend peace and blessing even in difficult circumstances, in ways that bear witness to the Realm of God and help to transform of the world. The peace we extend is the peace that rests upon us.
Root yourself in the divine Presence. Steep your heart in grace. Then go out and be transparent to the holy. For this you have been sent.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
Grace and Peace to you.
The Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. He said to them... “Whatever house you enter, first say, 'Peace to this house!' And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that person; but if not, it will return to you.... Cure the sick who are there, and say to them, 'The kingdom of God has come near to you.'”
— Luke 10.1, 5-6, 9
Remember when Jesus said, "I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other cities also; for I was sent for this purpose” (Lk. 4.43)? Well, the same is true of you. Your existence is for a reason. You are sent out into this day for a purpose. You are here to convey the presence of God. You enter a new “town” whether it is a new city you live in or simply the present moment of each day: in strange or familiar surroundings, whether you are passing through or living where you have for decades, Christ sends you out into this world to make visible the nearness of the Reign of God. Whether you find yourself in a new, strange place, or if it never changes, the familiarity of the neighborhood is not the issue. The questions is how you are transparent to God's grace.
You don't need to convince people; just let it shine. Extend peace and healing. And don't take personally how well you are received. Stay rooted in the peace that is given you. Here is the connection between justice and contemplation. If we are deeply rooted in the peace of Christ, we are prepared to extend peace and blessing even in difficult circumstances, in ways that bear witness to the Realm of God and help to transform of the world. The peace we extend is the peace that rests upon us.
Root yourself in the divine Presence. Steep your heart in grace. Then go out and be transparent to the holy. For this you have been sent.
Deep Blessings,
Pastor Steve
_______________________________
Copyright © Steve Garnaas-Holmes
unfoldinglight@hotmail.com
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