Though he was in the form of God, … [he] emptied himself, taking the form of a slave. (Philippians 2:6a,7a)
Praying the mystery
Reflections on Scripture and the experience of God's presence in our common lives by David L. Miller, an Ignatian retreat director for the Christos Center for spiritual Formation, is the author of "Friendship with Jesus: A Way to Pray the Gospel of Mark" and hundreds of articles and devotions in a variety of publications. Contact him at prdmiller@gmail.com.
Sunday, April 14, 2024
The beauty of the Lord
Sunday, April 07, 2024
Wounds of love
Jesus came and stood among them and said, ‘Peace be with you.’ Then he said to Thomas, ‘Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.’ Thomas answered him, ‘My Lord and my God!’ (John 20:26b-28)
The painting was impossible to miss. I had seen it
before, but so have millions. Caravaggio’s The Incredulity of Thomas loomed
15 feet across, projected on a screen, on the southeast side of the sanctuary,
as I crossed myself and took my seat.
No more needed to be said as far as I was concerned. Virtually
the totality of my faith was right there.
Jesus grasped Thomas’ right wrist in his left hand, guiding
Thomas’ finger into the hole in his side, pierced by a Roman lance to ensure
his death.
Jesus’s eyes are on his side, helping Thomas to touch
him, to place his finger between the lips of flesh out of which blood and water
flowed as life left him.
His head turned ever-so-slightly to the side, Thomas doesn’t
look directly at the wound and certainly not up at Jesus, whose gaze is fixed on
Thomas’ right hand, guiding it to his open flesh. No anger creases Jesus’ brow,
no reproval purses his lips. His desire in singular. Please. Just touch …
and see … the Love that hate cannot kill.
Wounds of love, I thought in the moment. Instantly, my
mind traveled thousands of miles away to a moment of watching a mother walk to
a feeding station run by an old Irish nun in Baidoa, Somalia. Thousands were
dying of starvation and disease at the time, fleeing their homes with little food,
dying along the way, burying the children and old ones where they fell, trying
to get to a place like this where there was compassion and food—a place where nobody
asked whose side you were on because they were on the side of life.
Like so many, this mother denied herself food on the
journey, giving what little she had to the children. She was one of the lucky
ones. Many more died on the way, pointing their children toward places like
this when they could go no further, hoping against hope that their flesh and
blood might live to know the grace of laughter once more. I heard their stories
… told by their orphaned children.
Stories no different than this are being told across Gaza
these days. We see the pictures, too, children cradling younger brothers and
sisters while separated from parents, if they are still fortunate enough to have
parents.
They bear deep wounds, wounds of love, the wounds of
Jesus in present time, blessed incarnations of the Love human brutality cannot
kill.
A local reporter interviewed me after that long ago reporting
trip to Somalia and Sudan. He stammered and tripped over a question he thought impolitic
to ask, wondering if seeing such suffering undermined my faith.
The opposite, I told him. Amid the worst that human
beings can do to each other, I had seen Jesus. Yes, in the old nun and many
others like her, like, say, those seven blessed souls killed last week while feeding
people with World Central Kitchen. They are not only the best of humanity, as
Jose Andres, WCK’s founder said. They are the hands of the risen Lord Jesus multiplying
loaves and breaking bread.
But more, even more, I had seen the wounds of love in
suffering hearts who surrendered life and hope that others might live: Not just
survive, but live in the knowledge that there is a very great Love at work in
the world, a Love death cannot kill and brutality cannot destroy, a Love who
gives everything and holds back nothing, a Love who longs for us to touch and
see, trust and know that—in spite of all the ugliness—we live in a world where
Love lives and breathes and becomes flesh and blood in the wounded love of our
humanity.
Every time I see it, every time I feel it, every time I
witness the wounds of Love, I join Thomas, my brother, and together we cry to
Jesus, ‘My Lord and my God.’
David L. Miller
Saturday, March 30, 2024
The fellowship of Easter brunch
Jesus said to them, ‘Come and have breakfast.’ Now none of the disciples dared to ask him, ‘Who are you?’ because they knew it was the Lord. (John 21:12)
My friend, Kevin, sent the 7 a.m. squirrel report from
the front porch of his rural home. Apparently, a drippy rain induced
them to sleep late today. Here, 160 miles away, golden sun illumines the neighbor’s
daffodils, heralding nature’s resurrection, soon to delight us with the renewal
for which every heart hopes.
I, however, am still stewing on Kevin’s last note,
telling me, with absolutely no rancor, why he and his beloved wife will not be
in church on Easter … as they haven’t been regular for years.
It’s a familiar litany. I talk to God frequently, Kevin
tells me, in gratitude for the day and to help him do the good that he wills.
But the hypocrisies of clashing egos among the supposedly
faithful keep him from the church door, along with the rejection of a gay
pastor, loved by some but not all, dividing the congregation, which moves Kevin
to think of gay family members and clients he loves and serves.
Then, there is the PTSD (my words, not his) occasioned by
hearing songs or words that transport them back to their 16-year-old son’s funeral,
killed in a terrible car crash. And I get it. I’ve seen trauma do that before.
All of this moves me to love my friend more than ever because
I feel a great and deep heart beating in his chest. But there’s one more thing:
Part of me identifies with him because—after serving the church for more than
40 years as a pastor, journalist and spiritual director—I won’t be in church this
week either.
It’s not that I have lost my faith. Far from it. I hold
the faith of the church, the faith of Jesus the Christ, deep and dear in my
heart where Christ lives and breathes in the great love I feel for him and all
creation. I cherish and hunger for his divine presence more than ever in my
life.
But when I participate in corporate worship, as I have a
number of places since retirement, I find little space—and certainly no home (at
least, not yet)—for my hunger to feel, know and share the joys and sorrows, the
struggles, doubts, elation and mystery of being a vessel of Christ. I long to
be among a people where reverence, praise and expression of God’s boundless love
for everyone is central, trumping everything else.
Years ago, one of my spiritual directees said he wanted
to be a member of ‘the fellowship of the Sunday brunch.’ He spoke partly in jest,
but mostly not.
His suggestion sparks the image of a few friends or
fellow travelers gathering around a table to share food and talk about their
lives. What gave them life or joy or hope that week? What are they reading or
seeing that moved them to see differently or understand something anew? Who
moved them to love or joy or anger or sadness? How is what is happening in the
world affecting them?
The Spirit blows where it chooses, Jesus said. You hear
the sound of it, but where it goes and why, well, that’s a mystery. I have no
doubt, however, that the Spirit of Christ’s living love would be more than pleased
to warm a few hearts and console wounded souls at the fellowship of the Sunday
brunch.
And I know, absolutely know, I have felt the
Spirit of the One who is Life and Love at cafe tables and sickbeds, in living rooms,
my favorite Irish pub and a host of other places where human hearts cracked opened
just enough to share a morsel of what is actually there, the heaven and hell of
being human.
It's interesting to me, and telling, I think, that
several of Jesus’ resurrection appearances happen over sharing food. Jesus
breaks bread and eyes are opened to his presence. Or, he cooks fish on a rocky
beach and invites his old friends to breakfast and nobody asks whether it is
Jesus whom they are experiencing.
There is no need. They know … because they feel
the loving life of the Spirit in the mystery of their own hearts.
All of this awakens a desire to join Kevin on his front
porch to watch the squirrels … and talk. I have every reason to expect Easter
can happen there … just as well as anywhere else.
David L. Miller
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Simple truth
Jesus answered, ‘For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.’ Pilate asked him, ‘What is truth?’ (John 18:37a-38)
My friend, Kevin, tells me he has become the
archetypal old man. Every morning, he sits on his porch with a cup of coffee,
lights a cigarette and watches the squirrels wake up, while thinking about the
past.
I wonder what he sees there. Next time, I’ll ask.
This morning, the question rebounds to me, and an answer springs to technicolor
life in my mind’s eye, a familiar scene, decades old, telling my heart what I
have lost and most want for the stretch of life that lies ahead.
One word: Simplicity. I hunger for the simplicity
of heart that was mine when I was nine or 10 or 11, running across the elysian
fields of the old fairgrounds near my childhood home.
Heaven was chasing my cocker spaniel across the emerald expanse, dandelions
sprouting across the meadow, as Blondie ran, her toenails ripping through the
grass, eluding my grasp at every turn.
And I laughed. I laughed at her joy, swept up in the rapture of running
free alongside and far behind, unrestricted and unrestrained, feeling the
exhilaration of being alive in a wide and open space where no one cared if I
laughed or shouted or prayed or sang at the top of my voice, songs from the
radio, others from church.
Those fields are the reason I love the stories of Jesus’ early ministry
so much. I can see him as he walked through grassy fields with his friends,
their palms running across the top of tall grasses, plucking the heads of wild
oats and eating them, talking, asking questions, stopping on a hill to gaze at the
waters of the Sea of Galilee, as the bluffs of Bashan paled to pink miles across
the water in the late afternoon sun.
I see them as people brought their children, and Jesus held them in his
arms, loving them, blessing them, as he raised his eyes to the heavens praising
the Loving Mystery for the song of birds, the yellow of flowers and the
tenderness of open hearts.
But that was then. Now, Holy Week is upon us; darkness settles in. The warm
sun of open fields is lost behind thick clouds of threat and gloom. The joy of beginnings
flees like a dream at the break of day, leaving only the nightmare. The air bristles
with anger and intrigue. Jesus is no longer a free soul on the hills of Galilee.
Sadness settles on his soul as furtive eyes surround him, waiting their time. He
is but a political problem, a pawn passed from one authority to another, each
seeking an expedience to be rid of him.
Night has come, and Jesus stands before his accusers, silent, but for
this. ‘I came into the world to testify to the truth,’ he says. And I ask the same question as Pontius Pilate,
‘What is truth?’
I don’t know whether he spoke with a sneer or with faint hope that Jesus
might say a little more, wondering against all odds that there might be an
answer to the question.
But Jesus just stands there, silent, for truth allows no words. Truth is
what filled me on the fields of my childhood. Truth is what swept my heart to
tears and songs and prayers and joy as love for life filled me from a Source
that I did not then and never will comprehend.
Truth is the divine smile that delighted in my play and warmed me whole
as I ran with my dog. Truth is the Love who filled me with graced awareness
that this Love, this Great Mystery, is real and knowable, and that my laughter
was the greatest praise I could ever return.
The simple truth is Jesus, the face of the Loving Mystery who forgives his
enemies, blesses those who curse him, prays for those who kill him, and still
has time to find young boys on the fields of their play. (Girls, too, I’m
sure).
It may be that I was closer to God at 10 than any time since. My
heart was simple then, and I knew … the truth that matters most.
David L. Miller
Friday, March 22, 2024
Angels unaware
Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it. (Hebrews 13:2)
I recognized the face immediately, older, certainly, and
her hair was a different color. But the shape of her smile had endured years of
crippling arthritis, transporting me to the high school classrooms we shared more
than 50 years ago.
Her name was … is … Diane. I didn’t know her well. We
were not friends, just pleasant acquaintances occupying the same spaces for a
few short years in our little high school. Most classes were required and
elective opportunities were few, so we saw the same people over-and-over from
one hour to the next until the bell rang at 3:57 p.m., setting the prisoners
free.
So, then, what is this flood of gratitude as she smiles at
me from a Facebook obituary, recounting her death at 71 and naming family
members who were blessed by the life she lived?
I know almost nothing of that life beyond a few brief moments
we shared in the narthex of my childhood church while visiting my mother. The
first time, I was surprised to see her there, since she was not part of the
church when I was growing up.
Reading the names of her children and grandchildren, teary
words of purest gratitude rise unbidden from the center of my soul, praise to
God for a life with which I had but fleeting connection, long ago.
But why such praise and spontaneous emotion? Perhaps
this: She was an unassuming presence, making no demands and offering no
judgments at a time in my life when I felt insecure, uncertain and even more confused
by life than I am now. It was enough for us to exchange greetings, comment on
the class assignment or whatever rumors were buzzing through the hallways.
There is a certain grace in this, moments when it is
enough just to be, free of expectations to be something or someone at a time
when you weren’t sure of who you were … or are … or might or want to be.
I certainly wouldn’t name Diane as having much influence
on the development of who I continue to become. But maybe I should.
There are far more channels of grace, unnoticed streams
of Presence, than the obvious ones we can see and name. Our days are sprinkled
with little moments—incidental, nothing-special, entirely forgotten encounters—that
direct our paths, change our course and shape our hearts in incalculable ways beyond
our awareness.
All of which is to say life is a greater mystery than we imagine,
and God, which is to say the presence of Loving Grace, is woven more deeply among
the twisted threads of our days than our blinkered eyes can see.
But moments come when the heart is grasped by an intuition,
when it knows what the mind cannot teach, and tears offer their silent prayer, moved
by Love’s Living Presence that was always there … unnoticed … in places and
faces that were more important than you ever knew.
No one needs to tell you to be thankful at such a time. For
a beatific presence well beyond you moves you to gratitude for the great
mystery of your life and for the greater mystery of the Love who managed to
find and bless you … even though you were clueless about it at the time.
But when, finally, your heart sees and knows, love flows
as easily as your breath. Just so, Diane, beloved of God, I return the blessing.
May the angels lead you into paradise; may the martyrs
greet you at your arrival and lead you into the holy city, Jerusalem. May the
choir of angels greet you and, like Lazarus, who once was a poor man, may you
have eternal rest.
David L. Miller
Friday, March 15, 2024
Nightlight
And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself. (John 12:32)
Perhaps it was the setting, a hospital room when I
couldn’t rest, sleep or find any comfort. Maybe at another time the image, the juxtaposition,
would not have struck me, but lonely hours staring at the ceiling affects your
vision … and opens your heart.
Three parents stared from a silent television screen,
receiving hugs from supporters who visited them in solidarity with their grief
and calls for justice. They will never get it, however. Justice would mean
getting their children back, alive and well. But they are gone, slaughtered in
an elementary school room in Uvalde, Texas, two years ago.
Justice, for them, lies far beyond human reach, in a
realm more gracious than anything we might imagine let alone provide.
For the time being, there is grief, the consolation of
tender hearts and the faint hope that public authorities will hear them and respond
like it was their children who were cut off from their precious lives by
a shooter and his soulless killing machine.
Who knows what beauty and joy would have graced their
families and community through the irreplaceable lives of these children? For
this, we should all grieve. The Holy One gave those lives not just to their
parents, their families and to one Texas town …. but to every one of us.
But it was more than this, more than my frustration of another
night tethered to heart monitors in a hospital bed that moved my tears. There
was an image. Behind the faces on the TV screen, a crucifix hung on the wall over
their shoulders.
My bleary eyes could not make out much detail on the cross.
It looked to be plaster with little color that I could see in the darkness.
But it was just right, in exactly the right place … as if
forces beyond us curated the scene, a juxtaposition of shattered hearts
standing there as the Crucified, arms spread wide by the ugly brutality of this
world, his arms, above and around them … and me in that cursed bed, all of us in
need of healing.
And there he was … and is … and always will be, arms
open, Love giving itself away, refusing to hate, lost in love for a world that
hates far too much and all-too-often.
That’s who Jesus is, the crucified and risen one, Incarnation
of the Love who embraces all that we are, all that we have suffered and
celebrated, all that makes us laugh and cry, enfolding the worst and best of us
in an overflowing triune Love that has neither beginning nor end.
I cannot explain it and am certain I will never have such
wisdom, but I know there is healing in those arms. More than once or twice I
have tasted it, many more. And I know … that plaster crucifix, on a wall
somewhere in Uvalde, Texas, speaks to places in our hearts that only Love can
reach, transforming sorrow into hope and death into life.
In the darkness of night, only a crucified savior will
do. Nowhere is God any greater … than on that cross.
David L Miller
Monday, March 04, 2024
A clean and open space
All in all, it’s not a very ‘sweet Jesus’ sort of thing
to do. But I understand the impulse.
Walking into the temple precincts, Jesus twists together
a whip of cords, upends the tables of the money changers; their coins ching and
clatter across the pavement.
Swinging the whip above his head, he drives off the
merchants with their birds and lambs and cattle and who knows what else,
clearing out an empty space until all that remains is him, standing alone in
the courtyard, catching his breath, looking around for who or what he has yet
to chase off.
He wants the temple—the ‘Father’s house’—to be a meeting
place where human hearts might know and feel the Great Heart who loves and
longs for them, a space to pour out their loves and hurts that they might meet
and enter the Love who is their home, their hearts enfolded in the divine heart.
I felt something of the same yesterday while visiting a
church that was new to me. The choir stood at the director’s command, a flute
from a hidden corner intoned an exquisite passage, inviting the heart to rest,
wait and listen for the voices to breathe their harmonies over the gathered
people.
A spiritual, deep and soulful washed over us, the congregation
rapt, moved but unmoving in the pews around me, until it was over. The final
note hung in the air a nanosecond as a moment of sweet, mystic communion was
about to gather every heart into one love for the Holy God who inspires such
beauty and devotion.
But it was not to be, the congregation broke into simultaneous
applause, unable to leave a tender moment alone, as they did every time someone
sang or played or spoke, shattering any opportunity for silent communion with each
other in the Great Love who woke us from sleep and called us together.
There was no open space for the heart to breathe and pray
and be.
I was not tempted to make a whip of cords and drive these
good people out, but I certainly wanted to tie their hands that they might let Beauty’s
presence wash over them and grace their hearts with whatever the Holy One might
give them.
Just so, I think I understand Jesus as he stands out of
breath in the middle of the courtyard.
He cleared an open space where the clamor of buying and
selling, of work and worry is stilled, a space where human hearts are relieved
of the compulsion to fill every single moment with sound and motion—all the
things we do in our vain attempts to fill our life with meaning or to drown out
the nagging doubt that our lives and all we do to fill them has any meaning at
all, that the emptiness we sometimes (often?) feel has no cure.
But the heart does not lie. Our hearts know we are made
for love, to be filled with affection and warmth, to find ourselves amid the mutuality
of giving and receiving that makes us truly human and truly glad to be graced
with the privilege of drawing breath on this wonderous little corner of the
cosmos.
We need a clean, open space to feel what we feel and to
speak our fears and needs and hopes from the hidden silence of our hearts. And
there, exactly there, in that open space, we meet the one who is the face of
the hunger within us.
He is not only the fire of our hunger but also the food
and drink that satisfies the heart’s ancient longing, standing in the open space,
ready to hear, ready to heal, ready to receive, ready to welcome us that we may
be taken into the Heart he is. Heart-to-heart, we meet and know the Love who
made us, the Love who ever awaits us, the Love who lies waiting to live and
breathe through our holy and precious lives.
David L. Miller