Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Zen and the Short Pencil, Chapter Four


CHAPTER FOUR:

THE PRACTICES THAT KEEP ME GOING

“A New Rule of Life”

By the time the next leg of my journey came along, it was early fall of 2021. I was figuring out how I was going to do a little hunting and fishing with the help of others, coming to grips with the fact that it would no longer be safe for me to go on the short-term solo wilderness excursions that had been part of my lifestyle for half a century. Losing that part of my independence so suddenly was sort of a big deal, but I was thankful that I had Matt and a few trusted friends, and that I could still get around pretty well as long as I had my oxygen with me.

This would also be my first Thanksgiving, Advent, and Christmas without being a pastor in charge. Christmas Eve was always the fullest worship service of the year, and family members would drive across the state to join in worship wherever I would be preaching that night. This year, it would be different.

It was also a time for me to develop a pattern for how I would continue the spiritual and physical practices that had gotten me through the initial trauma and which would be the foundation for this next part of my life (a word of advice for whoever needs to hear this: please don’t wait until you are in crisis to develop your spiritual practices! I would have been bouncing off the walls at this point if I had not had some spiritual grounding).

About ten years ago I wrote a curriculum piece called “Hands-On Faith” in which I enumerated some 40 well-known spiritual practices, then I cautioned: 

It is important to always remember the spiritual practices are not ends in themselves.  Paul advises the Philippian Christians to “work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work in you both to will and to work for his good pleasure” (Philippians 2:12-13).  The incarnational paradox is such that our faithful spiritual practices are by no means an effort towards a “works salvation” but are merely a means by which we place ourselves at God’s disposal so that God can do the work in us.  We make ourselves available to God, we make “space” for God, we submit to God and we cooperate with God.  Thomas Merton once said the biggest part of prayer is showing up.  Through the spiritual practices, we “show up” for God.

 Someone once asked in a class I was teaching on spiritual formation: “What is the difference between spiritual practices and spiritual formation?” I replied, “Spiritual practices are what we do; spiritual formation is what God does.”

Ever since St. Benedict, the pattern for how we practice our spiritual lives has been referred to as our “rule of life.” In her popular book Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life, Marjorie Thompson writes of the importance of having some intentionality and structure in our spiritual lives:

Certain kinds of plants need support in order to grow properly.  Tomatoes need stakes, and beans must attach themselves to suspended strings.  Creeping vines like clematis and wisteria will grow on any structure they can find.  Rambling roses take kindly to garden walls, archways, and trellises.  Without support, these plants would collapse in a heap on the ground.  Their blossoms would not have the space and sun they need to flourish, and their fruits would rot in contact with the soil.  We would be unable to enjoy their beauty and sustenance.

When it comes to spiritual growth, human beings are much like these plants.  We need structure and support.  Otherwise our spirituality grows only in a confused and disorderly way.  The fruit of the Spirit in us gets tangled and is susceptible to corruption, and the beauty of our lives is diminished.  We need structure in order to have enough space, air and light to flourish.  Structure gives us the freedom to grow as we are meant to.

There is a name in Christian tradition for the kind of structure that supports our spiritual growth.  It is called a rule of life.

            --- Marjorie J. Thompson, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life (John Knox Press)

A Rule of Life is the development of “holy habits” that provide a supporting structure for our spiritual lives.  It is the way we order our lives to assure that we are always making the space for God to work and help us along the way to being conformed to the image of Christ.  I like the way Marjorie Thompson reminds us that structure is not something that confines us, but that “structure gives us the freedom to grow as we are meant to.”

My new set of circumstances – my physical location, retirement status, and dealing with my illness – would necessitate arranging my daily life in a whole new way. It called for a new Rule of Life.

My Rule of Life has been described in general terms on my blog as “Pray. Be. Enjoy.”  This general statement remains the same; only the underlying order of things is new. Herein are the practices that I have come to regard as essential for this time of my life:

Centering Prayer, both solo and in small group

A—C—T—S Prayer with “Protestant Rosary” Beads

Walking: in nature, in the neighborhood and on the labyrinth

Worship

Mindfulness

Gratitude

Reconciliation

 Here is a brief description of how I practice these:

 CENTERING PRAYER. This is my starting point for prayer every day: Centering Prayer as revived, shared and taught by Fr. Thomas Keating, Basil Pennington, Cynthia Bourgeault, David Frenette, and others. I practice alone and also with a small group that meets once a month online for centering prayer and lectio divina. It is silent, meditative, contemplative prayer, to begin simply showing up to be in God’s presence prior to any discursive or dialogical prayer.

 A—C—T—S Prayer with “Protestant Rosary” Beads. Have you ever lost your place and wondered if you had forgotten something you wanted to pray about? These bead sets were made popular a few years ago by the best-selling book A Bead and a Prayer: A Beginner’s Guide to Protestant Prayer Beads by Kristen Vincent. We had a lot of fun making these little sets of beads when lots of people were doing this, and I still have a couple of sets. They provide a physical, tactile way of engaging our bodies in our prayers. They consist of four rows of seven beads, separated by a larger bead. I use the ACTS model as follows:

           1.       Adoration: the best place to start a prayer is with words of praise. Good places to find these are the psalms and our praise songs and hymnals.

          2.      Confession: When I realize that I am coming into the presence of God for prayer, I may get a feeling that I need to ask for grace and forgiveness before proceeding.  The model I use is the Seven Deadly Sins as described by St. John of the Cross (1542-1591).  They are pride, anger, envy, lust, greed, gluttony, and sloth. These were described in spiritual terms by John but they can be applied in more fleshly terms as well. I simply go one-by-one and ask the Spirit to reveal to me any known or unknown sin that needs to be dealt with (see Psalm 19:12-13).

          3.      Thanksgiving: I could go on and on about this….

          4.      Supplication: This is (finally) where I get out my “prayer list” and go one by one, name by name, to pray for those who are especially on my heart. I also pray for my family and for my team, who have been so faithful to pray for me and check on me. Then I will pray for myself.

Walking.  I have always loved walking; it’s been my favorite exercise. But now, walking any distance is HARD. I still do it as much as I can, and I am sorry that I ever took it for granted. I walk in the neighborhood, at the city park and once or twice a year on a labyrinth.  I have walked labyrinths all over the place and they are a wonderful way to pray. A labyrinth is not like a maze: a maze is designed to get you lost; on the labyrinth, if you stay on the path, you will eventually go into the center and back out again.

Worship. With the pandemic going on and my diminished lung capacity and immunity, I have avoided most in-person worship but am slowly returning. Whether in-person or online, worship is indispensable to the spiritual life.

Mindfulness. This has been one of the most important resources for me throughout, and I am so glad that I learned something of this practice before I got sick. I try to practice this all day as much as I can, for it is the best way I know of to “pray without ceasing.” Be sure and look at my friend Amy Oden’s book on Christian mindfulness.

Gratitude.  Again, one of the most therapeutic things I know.

Reconciliation. You might not have thought of this as a spiritual practice.  But I have seen too many people leave this Earth with unresolved matters which left a lot of pain behind. As much as possible, if there is anyone who needs to be forgiven, I want to forgive them, with God’s help. If I have wronged someone, I want to ask their forgiveness while I am still around to do that. If I appreciate the positive influence someone has had on my life, I want to let them know. And I don’t want to miss an opportunity to tell my loved ones that I love them.   

So, these are the practices that God is using to carry me through, along with the support of trusted friends (Feel free to contact me about any of these: spiritual practices are pretty much my wheelhouse). Everyone’s practice will be different; the main thing is to pay attention to where God is leading.  

New Year’s Eve 2021 represented six months in.  Six days later, I sent this to my team:

Thursday, January 6, 2022

 

Update January 6 Epiphany 2022

 

On Friday, New Year’s Eve, I drove to Heber Springs to check on my boat which is docked there. Only once since I got sick in June-July have I felt like going. It had been my plan to spend my first day of retirement relaxing on the boat. As you know, I spent that first day and the next eight days in the hospital instead.

 

Anyway, on my way back I passed an Episcopal church that has a sign which invited the public to stop and walk the beautiful labyrinth on their grounds. I’ve passed that church lots of times; this time I stopped.

 

As I stood at the entrance to the labyrinth, I knew what I needed to do with this particular walk. Last year was such a threshold year for me, I knew I needed to take some burdens to the center and leave them there. I took more than 30 years of my cherished roles in parish ministry, along with the shell-shock of receiving such a sudden and abrupt terminal diagnosis, along with an assortment of self-blame and regrets from the past, and pressed my hands into the ground in the center. After a few minutes I rose and walked the circuits outward to begin the next part of my life. There are many forms of Healing.

 

On this Epiphany evening I have two prayer requests for you my team (in addition to the regular miracle prayer):

 

Today I have received the special medication that it took so long to get. It’s called ofev and it’s known for two things: it’s astronomically expensive [] and potentially dreadful side effects. But this is one of only two treatments that are known to slow the progression of the disease and prolong life. My pulmonologist has helped me apply for and receive a foundation grant to take care of the cost, which would have been prohibitive. For that I am thankful!

 

So my two prayer requests are:

One, that the medication is effective and that I can continue to function as well as I am now, or even better;

Two, that my body will tolerate the medicine without serious side effects.

 

As always, it means a lot for you to be part of my prayer/support team and I’m here for you anytime.

Lots of love,

Bill B

 


Next week will be Holy Week.  My prayers are with you, my readers, and with all the churches and pastors who have led their people through Lent and who will be preparing to proclaim the Crucifixion and Resurrection of our Lord. 

The theme of next week’s missal will beFrom Team to Tribe” (“The Necessity of Companionship”), with an added mention that I believe I may have stumbled upon the actual Meaning of Life. 







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