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In this week's newsletter we feature thoughts on freedom.
What does freedom mean for people of faith? Also, more on
prayer: We are asked to pray for others, but how do we know
what to pray for?
And, there comes a time in all of our lives when we know we
need to do something new, make a change. How do we
choose? How do we deal with the fear of making a wrong
choice?
Reflections for Your Journey |
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BAPTIZED PATRIOTS
To apply our baptismal vows to our citizenship requires that
we go beyond symbolic gestures and acts when confronting
complex societal problems--
such gestures as prohibiting flag-burning as a way to make us
loyal and passionate about our country, or such acts as posting
the Ten Commandments in public places as a way to make us
moral.
The destruction of a symbol does us no harm. The public
display of rules for living, by itself, does us no good.
What is needed is application of baptismal vows to our very
souls so that each and every person of faith--
whether it be the faith of baptism, the faith of Bar Mitzvah or
the initiatory rites of Hinduism--
that every person of faith be part of turning back the tide
of secularization in our increasingly individualistic society.
by Bill Kolb
from
"Baptized Patriots"
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Praying for Ourselves and Others |
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Think
of the many times you have been asked or moved to pray for someone,
or to pray for peace throughout the world.
...
Or, how often have you been in a struggle with life yourself,
and felt like you needed the prayers of others to see you
through?
Prayer for ourselves and others can become an
overwhelming
task. Not because we lack the compassion or even motivation,
but because there are simply so many needs. ...
"Before they call I will answer, while they are yet speaking I
will hear." (Isaiah 65:24)
God reads the prayers of our heart even before they have been
formed into words or vocalized by our mouth.
Prayer becomes not so much trying to remember the names
and needs of each person or group.
Rather the task of intercessory and petitionary prayer
becomes opening our heart to receive all the needs and then
asking the Holy One to read what is there. ...
A Process for Praying for Others
- Sit quietly and center yourself in the present moment.
- Slowly read each name listed.
- As you read imagine the name floating into your heart.
- Bring your awareness to being in the presence of God.
- Open your heart and ask God to read the names that are
written there.
- Thank God for the time you?ve spent together and for
listening and answering you in your prayers.
by Renée Miller
from "Introduction to Praying for Others"
Add a Name to the Prayer List
Send us the name of a person, a place, a group, anything you
wish
to surround with prayer, and we will add it to our prayer
list
so that others may join you in prayer.
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Don't Know, Must Choose |
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To do something new, something you
have not done before--it takes guts. ...
Parents know about doing something new. They were
once carefree people. They were once the masters of
themselves, without someone depending on them for life itself.
Did you feel sometimes, as I did, late one night, before
becoming a mother for the first time, that you just were not
ready for this? "I can't do this," I sobbed in sheer panic, and a
stern voice within me said, "But you're going to." ...
The church knows about this too. We all do. To all of us
there come these moments in life: moments when it is clear
that we must move forward in something quite new about
which we know very little.
One of our great sources of pain and fear is this: Most of
the important things about which we must decide in life are
things about which we know next to nothing.
- What if the new job I have been offered is not right for
me?
- What if the sweetheart I think I know so well changes into
someone else? ...
You can't wait until all the data is in before deciding on
something new in your life. All the data cannot be in until
you've gone ahead and done it. Then you know, and not until
then. ...
by Barbara Crafton
from "Don't Know, Must Choose"
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Thoughts on Freedom |
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"For to be FREE is not merely to cast off one's chains, but to
live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of
others."
Nelson Mandela
"We must delight in each other, make others?
conditions our own, rejoice together, mourn together, labor and
suffer together, always having before our eyes our COMMUNITY
as members of the same body."
John Winthrop
First governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
"The reality is that we are IN-DEPENDENCE with one
another, with the earth, and with God. We do not live isolated
and alone. We are connected with all of creation, and I believe
we need to seek to be in that healthy in-dependence with
everything living on earth and in heaven."
Renée Miller
FREEDOM consists not in doing what we like, but in
having the
right to do what we ought.
Pope John Paul II
A Prayer for Freedom
O God, wash my eyes clean, so I see the ugliness that steals
life and hope from others. Do not let the insistence on my own
LIBERTY be the ground upon which others are denied freedom.
More Thoughts and Prayers on Freedom
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