January
1, 2006
Spiritual
New Year’s Resolutions
by Jon
M. Sweeney
According
to the world’s civic calendar (also known as
the Christian Gregorian calendar), January 1 marks the beginning
of the New Year. Religious calendars differ.
The
Jewish New Year began months ago, on October 4, 2005, the first
day of the High Holy Days; for observant Jews, this is
the year 5766. The Chinese New Year begins this coming January
29. In the traditional 12-year cycle of counting the years, we
will soon celebrate the year of the dog. The new Islamic year
begins on January 31; for observant Muslims, this is the year
1427. The Mahayan Buddhist New Year is January 14. New Year’s
Day for Bahá'i is March 21 this year.
In the lives of Christians, Lent may be the time for deciding
what to give up for God, but the first week of January is when
we usually try adding something positive to our lives. There
are plenty of options.
You may want to begin or renew a daily habit of reading scripture.
Millions of people are motivated to read the Bible cover-to-cover
starting on January 1 each year. I would love to know what percentage
of them continue past Leviticus.
But, if you are so motivated this year, you may want to use your
new MP3 player to help you along. eBible Productions has just
issued a King James Bible in “366 Easy 15-minute devotionals.
Listen to 1 a day to complete the Bible in 1 year. Each day you
will be listening to the Old Testament, New Testament, Psalms,
Proverbs, and Words of Jesus. Plays on your computer, iPod, or
MP3 Player.”
In addition to online devotions, such as explorefaith's daily
Signposts,
devotional books are also popular at this time of year. Thousands
of people
turn
to
these
books each
new
year,
and publishers
churn out hundreds of them each January. One of the most popular
is Guideposts’ Daily Devotional 2006, celebrating
its 30th anniversary this year. The 2006 theme is “Great
Is Thy Faithfulness.” Each daily selection includes an
inspiring story, a scripture verse and a prayer.
What about dieting, after the excesses of holiday eating? There
are many Christian dieting programs that emphasize more than
slimming figures. The first and perhaps still the best of them
all at combining the physical with the spiritual is 3D: Diet,
Discipline, and Discipleship, by Carol Showalter. Originally
begun in 1972, there are nearly one million graduates of the
12-week 3D program.
Or, perhaps you are interested in other spiritual practices.
Check out The Spiritual Literacy Project at www.spiritualityandpractice.com.
You can purchase DVDs, sign up for e-courses, and read and chat
with others who are focusing this coming year on Attention, Beauty,
Compassion, Devotion, Enthusiasm, Forgiveness, Gratitude, Hospitality,
Imagination, and many other practices in the Christian tradition.
There
is plenty more to new year’s resolutions than trimming
your waistline and quitting smoking—as important as these
things are! Consider what you will do in the coming year, and
ask a few friends to join you, or at least to keep you motivated
throughout the year.
© 2006 Jon M. Sweeney.
—Jon M. Sweeney
is a writer and editor living in Vermont. He is the
author of several books, including his recent memoir,
BORN AGAIN AND AGAIN: SURPRISING BENEFITS OF A FUNDAMENTALIST
CHILDHOOD.
More
by Jon Sweeney.
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