Saturday, November 13, 2021

Renew my heart

 Bless the Lord, O my soul ... who redeems your life from the Pit. (Psalm 103:2a, 4a)

We need not go far to know the Love God is for us. Our own bodies tell the tale.

Our anxious shoulders sigh with relief when a gentle word releases the grip of guilt or when open arms dissolve our shame. Our lungs fill with life as sickness fades and strength flows fresh into our limbs.

Light floods our hearts and evaporates our fear when the surgery is successful or when the garage door rumbles, telling us our beloved is safely home amid the storm.

Our ever-loving God is closer and kinder than we can ever understand. God is the love and grace who seeks and finds us wherever we go, however we struggle, in joy and pain, even when the troubles we endure are of our own making.

In many and various ways, Love comes to restore and renew us, saving us from sadness and despair, fear and doubt, lifting us even from the pit of death.

“Bless the Lord, O my soul,” the psalmist cried, loving the Love who seeks us our whole life through, saving us from all that would silence our praise.

David L. Miller

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Finding peace

 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. (Luke 10:5-6)

Emud shouted in my direction as he stumbled up the steps to his front door, juggling a package in one arm and his two-year old daughter in the other. I didn’t understand him but thought I heard the Arabic word for peace, salaam, through his accent.

“Peace to you,” I shouted back, and he smiled. I’d misunderstood him.

He was trying to tell me his wife had given birth to their third child. A son had joined his two gorgeous little girls who grace the world just by walking across the lawn ... and picking my flowers.

Emud beamed, juggled the black-haired angel in his arms and went into the house. I returned to the dirt in my flowerbed, feeling something I wish I could switch on anytime I needed it.

Peace.

Today is one of those days I wish I had that switch. But maybe I do. Maybe we all do.

Maybe it is as simple as savoring the beauty of children. Maybe it is misunderstanding your neighbor and giving him and yourself exactly what we all most need, a taste of what the entire world needs.

Maybe it is writing these simple, utterly inadequate words and realizing for the umpteenth time that the world is filled with glory and that glory is the Love who arises within us whenever we share a joy or a sorrow and exchange a single word, peace.

I remember when “sharing the peace” was introduced ... or reintroduced ... into Christian liturgies after centuries of its absence. Some found it intrusive, an interruption of their prayer and contemplation.

Loving time for silence, I understand this, but for me it is a sacrament of Love’s living presence, a joyous celebration of giving each other what we cannot give ourselves.

The blessed irony of peace is that the moment you give it away you find it in yourself—and learn how to live with your neighbor in this crazy world.

I hope I see Emud again today. I know exactly what I’ll say. “Peace to you, Emud. I look forward to seeing your son.”

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Trust Love alone

When the days drew near for [Jesus] to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem(Luke 9:51)

The spiritual journey inevitably takes one from what is known to a new country, to ways and places where the joys and comforts of what was must be abandoned.

One can try to hold on, crossing back into old ways in a vain attempt to revive past graces, but they lose their savor. The place you knew and which knew you moves on. The tired cliché is correct: You can’t go home again ... because the home that was is no longer there. Everything changes and so do you.

The road is our home, the road ahead. The Spirit of Life always leads beyond what we have known and cherished to deeper truth and more difficult ways that the heart might surrender its rickety justifications and defenses and learn to trust Love alone.

Biblical stories echo this journey.

The ancient patriarch, Abraham, leaves home with Sarah, his wife, looking for a new land and a new life, somehow trusting the Lord will show him the place when the time is right.

The captive Israelites escape Egyptian bondage and wander homeless, seeking the land God promised yet constantly looking over their shoulders, wondering if they should have stayed in Egypt.

Now, Jesus leaves the lake and villages of Galilee to climb steeper hills in Samaria on his way to Jerusalem. Determination lines his face as he is resolute to complete his mission, likely aware he will die painfully in the process.

He could have stayed safely home in Galilee. Abraham could have remained in the old country. The Israelites could have stayed in Egypt and avoided the blistering heat and deprivation of the desert.

But they didn’t. They trusted the Mystery who spoke in their hearts was a great and unconquerable Love leading them and everyone with them home to a country more alive and beautiful than any they had ever known.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Wilhelm’s eyes

For your steadfast love is before my eyes, and I walk in faithfulness to you. (Psalm 26:3)

Rest well, old man. Rest in the Love I saw in your eyes.

Wilhelm Linss passed into the eternal love I knew in him on a sunny Saturday morning. That’s when I heard the news that I knew would soon come, regretting only that I was not there to bless him one more time as he had blessed me.

He always sat at the aisle-end of the second row of pews at the front of the sanctuary to shorten the distance between him and the Holy Eucharist at the time of distribution. His balance was failing. The last time I was to place the host in his hand he slipped and began to fall as I and one other soul privileged to love him interrupted his descent.

He righted himself and held out his wrinkled old hands to receive, one more time, as I fought back the tears of loving him and loving the Lord who held us both, the Lord and Love who holds him even now.

He was old in the truest sense, having lived fully the years he was granted, dwelling not in the shallows but in the depth of the beauty and ugliness, pain, absurdity and joyous glory of being human on this planet, his life caught up in the juggernaut of history that might have crushed him, but mercifully it did not. And many are better for it.

I came to know him best as he sat at my left elbow during the adult class and discussion that followed worship before the pandemic shuttered that joy. He couldn’t hear well so I often leaned left, speaking in his direction, knowing he wanted to hear, often asking for his thoughts, calling forth his years as a New Testament professor.

He spoke slowly and soft, as was his temperament, his accent thick, at times impenetrable, his words always welcome as we leaned-in to receive whatever came out of his one precious life.

Most precious of all was the day he shared what it was to be a POW in the waning days of WWII. He was drafted into the German army, a teenager, in the final months when the Nazis forced virtually all able-bodied males to serve, trying to stave off the inevitable destruction of the Third Reich.

Wilhelm, quickly captured, became a POW in a French camp where German professors, POWs like himself, began their own university to teach the next generation and stave off the aimless boredom of camp existence.

It was there he studied theology and continued to learn biblical languages, and it was there that he produced one of the most precious things I have ever held in my hands. Wilhelm brought it to our Sunday discussion to show us.

He had learned piano as a boy, and in the camp composed a little music. That is what he showed us, a short piano piece, written on strips of toilet paper. He fashioned the cover from thicker paper that had been cut from a sack that had contained flour or some other commodity. Wilhelm stitched the little booklet together with thread on the left margin.

We passed it among ourselves, gently turning the pages to see the staves and notes traced by Wilhelm’s much younger hands, several of us brushing away tears, feeling the suffering hope in which he had created this masterpiece—and the long years and miles it had traveled with him to arrive at this moment to grace our lives and awaken our love for him, for God, for each other and for the glory of being a human soul in God’s own image.

We knew we sat in the presence of holiness and grace; we saw it in his eyes and felt it stinging our own.

Near Veteran’s Day, the congregation honors those who served with a red rose and special prayers at the start of the liturgy. The following Veteran’s Day I invited all our veterans to come forward for this observance, then looked over to Wilhelm in the second row.

He shook his head, no, but I insisted he come up, too, this one who served in an enemy army. How could we not honor his life, seasoned by war, deepened through suffering, graced by the Love shining in his old eyes?

Rest well, old man, and shine in the Love that illumined your life ... and mine. Thank you.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, September 25, 2021

Fall into the Heart

While everyone was amazed at all that he was doing, he said to his disciples, ‘Let these words sink into your ears: The Son of Man is going to be betrayed into human hands.’ But they did not understand this saying... (Luke 9:43b-45a)

I understand why Jesus’ disciples didn’t understand. They didn’t want to. They didn’t want to consider the goodness they felt when near him could and would be lost. The life radiating from him illumined and warmed their mortal hearts with hope that life could be more than whatever small joys they managed to cram into a precious few years.

They had experienced the Extraordinary. Without Jesus, without his palpable nearness, the touch of his flesh and the sound of his voice, life would again become  ... normal, mundane, ordinary.

Who wants normal when you have known and felt that which exceeds every expectation? And who wants to contemplate the inevitable passing of everything we know and love and are?

All of life is shadowed by death, every loss a little reminder of what cannot be denied. Implicitly knowing this from our earliest days, we anxiously grasp as much as we can hold, a death-grip on whatever good has touched our lives and hearts.

But there is one more thing to know, just one ... that changes everything. The Love who gives life brings Life Extraordinaire from every loss, if we but release our grip on what was ... and trust that Love always has a new day waiting to be born.

This new day ... that can be everyday ...  radiates the Life and Love of being with Jesus, our souls alive with the hope and love he awakened in his first disciples and now in us.

It was necessary for him to suffer and die. Only so could he reveal the fundamental truth of our existence. The Love who holds us all never lets go.

So we ... in every struggle and every loss ... can release our grip and let ourselves fall into the heart of Love at heart of the universe.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

In all that is love

 

Then Jesus called the twelve together and gave them power and authority over all demons and to cure diseases, and he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal. (Luke 9:1-20)

The kingdom of God is the energy of divine love pouring from the Loving Mystery, drawing all that is into its healing waters.   

To be captured in its flow, even for a moment, transports the heart into the joy-filled freedom of knowing all that we are is welcome, enveloped in the Love who draws us near to heal our hearts and make us whole.

The disciples knew this Love in Jesus’ presence as he sent them out to bless, heal and announce the great tide of God’s energetic love present among them. Their power was the surge of divine love awakened within them, freeing them from their fears to bless, welcome and share the Love inundating their hearts.

The power of the kingdom remains available to us in these latter days.

It is the joy and freedom awakened when our hearts know and are filled with the Love who embraces us despite ourselves, our sins and failures. The energy of divine love is known in all that is love, in the welcome of friends, the beauty of an autumn sun, the compassionate tear that stings our eyes over the suffering of a friend ... or of human souls a thousand miles away.

All of this and so much more is the energy of the Love who is and was and ever shall be embracing our lives, lifting us out of ourselves, out of our funk, that our startled faces may glow with the light of an eternal love, free and filled with the joy God intends.

David L. Miller

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

How to listen

 

Then pay attention to how you listen; for to those who have, more will be given; and from those who do not have, even what they seem to have will be taken away. (Luke 8:18)

It is not the knowledge of many things that fills the heart but the savor of a few. So listen ... and hear.

Hear the lilt of a voice that awakens hope, renewing confidence and joy. Savor the voice and the emotions stirred. They tell you how to listen to the Voice who speaks within you.

Even more, they are the Voice of Love restoring your wholeness and setting you free to live beyond the bondage of failures, sad memories and anxious preoccupations.

The human heart more easily dwells on what is wrong, what may go wrong, what is lost, what we no longer or could never have.

But the Voice of Love draws us forward, out of our internal quagmire into the lightness of being, out of isolation into the communion of mutual love and regard, out of ourselves into the wholeness of relationships that awaken gratitude for the goodness of life and the sacred beauty of loving laughter.

So listen to the moments that awaken life in your mortal being. Pay attention, not once in a while but every hour. Recall and retell moments that freed your heart to breathe. Turn them over. Examine them from every direction lest they be lost. 

And give thanks that the Voice of Love found you ... exactly where you are.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Life beyond the weeds

 As for [the seed]that fell among the thorns, these are the ones who hear; but as they go on their way, they are choked by the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and their fruit does not mature. (Luke 8:14)

More than ever I come to learn that one must live from within, daily reclaiming who you know yourself to be as a creature of Love’s presence,  discovering anew the hunger to know and become the Love the heart desires beyond all else.

Even the hunger for that Love is the Mystery, who is Love, present within, drawing us to know and become the fullness which is the proper destiny of every human soul.

The seed is the word of God, Jesus said, and it falls into various soils, every one of which is found within us. Word should be capitalized, of course, Word, Logos, Love incarnate.

The Word is the energy of the divine Spirit active in all that is, moving everything toward wholeness, to greater unity with others, with creation and with the mystery of Love who unceasingly draws us beyond ourselves to touch and know more love, beauty, joy and wonder.

The seed is sown, but the wounds of living, our anxieties and angers choke its growth, sometimes to the point we wonder if it has died within us. But the seed remains, still bearing the life of the One who is Love.

There is a strange horticulture that governs the growth of this seed. You can exhaust your time and energy hacking away at the weeds that get in its way, but this doesn’t help much because the damn things keep growing back. Meanwhile, you are frustrated and exhausted.

Time is better spent in places and with people among whom love and laugher naturally spring up to fill your heart with gratitude for the world around you and the simple pleasure of being alive for just that one moment.

The love that surges within is, of course, the Love from whom we come and to whom we go, and that Love is more effective with the weeds than our herbicides.

David L. Miller

.

 

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Through him

For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him. (John 3:17)

Salvation through Christ is a participation game, not something we watch as innocent bystanders.

We pass through him, which means living through the experience of dying and rising, losing and discovering what we lost was a pale shadow of the life we receive, if we are willing truly to let go of what was.

Christ’s way must become ours, a way of trusting the unconquerable Love who awakens life in us exactly at the point we thought we had lost it, when what we imagined was most real and alive in us is stripped away.

Dead to what we thought we were and could yet be, we wait, even as he laid lifeless in the tomb, waiting for the great awakening to the truth that there is more.

And that more is life, deeper connection, greater awareness, more intimate communion, heart-to-heart, with the One who is Life and Love.

Every one of life’s defeats and losses is a dress rehearsal for the death we ultimately all die. But if we give ourselves to the process of dying and rising along life’s way, we begin to understand that ... just maybe ... there is nothing to fear at all.

There is life on the other side of every cross.

David L. Miller

Monday, September 13, 2021

Full of days

A good person out of the store of goodness in his heart produces good, but an evil person out of a store of evil produces evil; for from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks. (Luke 6:45)


Birthdays come and go for as long as we have them, and today is mine, age 69.

Prayers of late reach not to the past but toward what shall be, to whom I shall be, and this verse provides a focus as good as any other.

I want a heart as big and embracing as the hearts who have embraced me along the way, magnanimous hearts whose sharp edges had been worn smooth by life so that judgment falls away, allowing a gentle welcome for all sorts and conditions of our wounded humanity.

I am surprised to remember this is an old desire in me. As a boy I read Old Testament stories of Abraham, Isaac and David and would come upon a phrase that stopped me, “he died old and full of days.”

Even as boy I knew this is what I wanted. I prayed it aloud on my bed, and I knew it meant more than living a long time.

It meant savoring the days, holding everything close in the heart, joys and sorrows, success and bitter pains, rejecting nothing, trusting the Holy One is in each moment, in each experience offering beauty and grace, hope and love if you dare hold it close, not fearing the pain or loss.

I could not have written this at nine or 10, but in some hidden, inarticulate way I already understood because a Spirit beyond my own was breathing life into my heart.

How I wish I had always lived this wisdom instead of losing myself a million times and forgetting the grace my young heart already knew. I regret my lack of faith along the way, the times I substituted my plans for fulfillment for what God had in mind for me.

But it seems that God will not be cheated. The Spirit already present in childhood refuses to be refused, ever drawing us back to embrace what is, expanding our hearts into what we will yet be.  

So today, I remember souls who blessed me from the fullness of their hearts, praying that I, like them, may grow old and full of days, full of grace.

David L. Miller

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Our Lady of the Lights

 He will not break a bruised reed or quench a smoldering wick. (Matthew 12:20a)

Sobering memories dampen the spirit today, September 11, memories and faces.

There was the mother I met on her deck in Brooklyn a few days after the collapse of the World Trade Center towers in New York. Looking at the ash on the deck rail, she refused to disturb the dust, wondering aloud if it was her daughter.

I remember a parochial school teacher, her voice breaking as she described standing for hours at the school door, holding her student, waiting for a father who never showed up.

But more than these is the indelible image of a young woman at Union Square in lower Manhattan. She kept watch over thousands of candles as hundreds sat around her in stunned silence, staying long into the wee hours.

The memorial grew larger every night, and every night she was there when I sat among the silent and watched, transfixed by the beauty of her soul and the grieving love of those who held each other in the darkness.  

Night breezes would extinguish a few candles from time to time, and she would crawl among them, gently stretching and twisting lest she topple one of the fragile flames as she relit a smoldering wick.

She never lifted her eyes, not once that I could see. She kept watch over the lights as though they were her children, tenderly caring for each one through the night.

I never learned her name. She spoke to no one, and I didn’t dare interrupt her vigil. It would have been sacrilege to distract her from a work so holy.

When I wrote my story I called her Our Lady of the Lights, the Madonna of Manhattan.

Sitting there, we were all her children, the light of her love holding us all together, warming us in the night.

I wonder where she is today. I wonder if she ever really knew the beauty of what she did ... or how grateful at least one of us is 20 years later.

But I doubt I’m the only one.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, September 10, 2021

Love has us all

 

But love your enemies, do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return. Your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High; for he is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. (Luke 6:35)


Nothing is less realistic than imagining you can work up pleasant thoughts about those who hurt or belittled you. We carry a thousand wounds from childhood and whenever we have been injured along the way, typically trying to push them aside as we age as if that were possible.

Ignore them as we may, they remain in wounded corners of the psyche, appearing at unpredictable times to remind us that there is work left undone.

Take a long walk away from the noise of traffic, construction down the street, a plane overhead, the music of a familiar voice calling you to necessities of the day. Soon enough, the mind becomes a quiet pool from whose depths  memories appear, words you wish you’d never heard, a disparaging glance, slights large and small that still cut from decades past.

No act of will can make them disappear, and the self-righteous ego rails against the hurt, conjuring reprisals to hurl against the ghosts that haunt your wounded heart. Or maybe that’s just me.

But I doubt it.

The necessary work is that of forgiveness, which is a really an invitation to ride the wave of a very great love, letting it pick you up and carry you along until it breaks on the rocks, splashing over the wounded places in your heart and the wounding faces you have long carried.

Maybe then you can see them as they are, every one of them as imperfect as yourself and as needy. And as loved, by the Love who is that wave longing to lift us from old hurts into the freedom to let it go, knowing ... Love has us all, every last one of us.

It the only healing.

David L. Miller

 

Thursday, September 09, 2021

One of the crowd

And [Jesus] came down with them and stood on a stretch of level ground. A great crowd of his disciples and a large number of the people from all Judea and Jerusalem and the coastal region of Tyre and Sidon came to hear him and to be healed of their diseases (Luke 6:17-18a)


You don’t really understand this scene until you imagine yourself amid the crowd, craving Jesus’ touch, knowing you have needs you cannot meet.

It is better to speak of need instead of needs, however. What niggles deeply within is the hunger to feel truly and wonderfully alive, to be lifted beyond the sadness of our mortality and be touched by something, by someone who fills our being with a life that transcends the life we are living.

This is why they clamored after Jesus. They craved the mysterious something that was in him, aching to feel and know it within themselves. Surely, they suffered diseases and maladies of all sorts, but beneath these was the gift and burden of their humanity crying out for food that satisfies the hunger they could not name.

Our humanity begins to die within us when this desire is lost to the despair of believing there is nothing more to life than getting the best we can out of the years we have.

They are my brothers and my sisters, these souls who crowded near Jesus, who hungered to touch him, who wanted him to hear their voices and turn and see them and reach out his hand.

When you feel this, when you see that hand reaching out and pulling you into an embrace, it is then you understand what words cannot convey. You know the heart of the One who is the heart of God for whom your heart hungers.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

Monday, September 06, 2021

The final freedom

 

September 6, 2021

On another sabbath  [Jesus]entered the synagogue and taught, and there was a man there whose right hand was withered. The scribes and the Pharisees watched him to see whether he would cure on the sabbath, so that they might find an accusation against him. (Luke 6:6-7)

It is Jesus’ freedom that most impresses me and which I most want. Opponents watch his every move, seeking opportunities to pounce, but Jesus is marvelously free from all this.

Neither the judgments of opponents nor the approval of friends define or determine his actions. He acts according to inner impulse, living out the identity he is within, undeterred by those who denounce him.

What defines him, of course, is the oneness he shares with the Loving Mystery with whom his heart communes. He is like all the rest of us in this regard. Only in communion with a great love do we know and find freedom to be the soul we are.

I find myself in a unique position, different from any I have known in my 69 years. Many things that defined me are gone ... and gone for good—professional standing, role, place and position, along with whatever privileges and respect they afforded.

What is left, however, is greater than what was before, an opportunity to enter the final freedom found only as one releases the external supports the insecure heart uses to give itself significance, an opportunity to allow my heart to rest in God alone.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 


 [D1]

Monday, August 30, 2021

Just breathe

 

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me
    because he has anointed me
        to bring glad tidings to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives.”
(Luke 4:18)


Back in his hometown, Jesus preaches a sermon that begins with these words. Everything goes well until he suggests the good news he brings cannot be limited to “people like us.”

This is the first and last thing one should know about the Spirit of God. It cannot be hemmed in, limited or predicted. The Spirit blows where it will, Jesus was known to say. You never know how or in whom the Spirit may show up.

But you can recognize it whenever and wherever it appears, if you know what to look for.

The Spirit has one big work: breathing life into creation, which means you and everything else there is.

If you are walking down the street and see the silly smile of someone who is happy just to be alive, grateful for reasons they may not understand, you are seeing an example of the Spirit’s best work.

The Spirit is about freedom, about life, about feeling your heart lift from burdens that literally crush life out of you. It is about liberation for people oppressed by anything and everything—physically, emotionally and spiritually—that crushes their spirits and drains their joy for the wonder of being alive.

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, Jesus said at his hometown sermon, which means he is about liberating bodies, minds and spirits that they might shine with the light of life within them.

That light and life is the Spirit’s breath that is in everything that lives, right down to the spastic squirrels burying acorns among my black-eyed susans.  

The Spirit’s greatest friends have been busy in Covid wards and Afghani airports and Louisiana bayous. Wherever you see life doing battle with death ... know who you are looking at.

And take a very deep breath.

David L. Miller

Saturday, August 28, 2021

The masters’ heart

“It will be as when a man who was going on a journey called in his servants and entrusted his possessions to them. To one he gave five talents; to another, two; to a third, one." (Matthew 25:14-15a)


This is where the story starts, a man going on a journey gives three employees some cash. The tale ends successfully for the first two who did something with it, but disaster for the third guy who buried his bit in the backyard, thinking his boss was a harsh, unforgiving jerk who expected a fat return even when he didn’t invest.

The story is one of Jesus’ judgment parables. At its end, the first two guys “enter into the joy” of their master, Jesus says. The third is consigned to the outer darkness far from the master’s joy and generosity.

And this is what he ... and most Christians ... don’t understand. They don’t understand where the story begins, with the generosity and hope of the master, who is not harsh or unforgiving. He is trusting and full-hearted, giving some of his substance that his servants might do something good with it ... even as he has.

The first two servants took risks. One supposes they could have lost it all, but they knew what the third servant failed to recognize. The master is not harsh but has a magnanimous heart so that failure is not fatal but forgivable.

They trusted the master and engaged what they were given, even as we can engage what we are given. “Talents” the parable calls them. We might better call them life. We are given life, breath, material reality, genetic inheritance of one sort or another and the inimitable, inherent potential that unfolds through millions of encounters large and small for as long our bodies last.

The trajectory of our lives is in large part determined by whether we live in the outer darkness of fear, like the guy digging up the master’s cash in the backyard, or whether we live in joyful freedom, knowing the master’s heart.

David L. Miller

 

 

Thursday, August 26, 2021

Verbish

 Therefore, stay awake! For you do not know on which day your Lord will come.  (Matthew 24:42)


Most certainly, God is a verb ... or at least verbish.

Were I still a parish pastor, right about now I would be preparing to lead a group of squirrely third graders through the basics of Holy Communion.

I would enter the room wearing my Indiana Jones fedora, ready to launch into the adventure it always was, not knowing what would come and doubting my ability to hold the attention of 8 and 9 year-olds. But I always knew, sooner or later, one of them would crack a joke at my expense or stump me with a question and reduce the room to raucous laughter.

I used to consider paying one or two of kids to make sure that happened at some point, so that they knew this was all about love, the love that brought us to that room and held us together as we learned—and as they opened their hands for the first time to receive ... and every time thereafter.

It never grew old, not once, not in all the years I stumbled through those sessions, always wanting to share just a little bit more to help them know what I knew every time I broke the bread and every time I opened my hands to receive what nothing on earth can hold.

That is done now, but remembering is a blessing beyond compare. Faces stream through my mind and heart, children I wish I could hug once more and let them know how much they are loved and how dearly I treasure every one of them, including those that were, well, a challenge.

Would to God that I could name them all ... from all the years, including the faces who have gone on before me, now knowing the Love I know only in part.

As we met and talked and laughed together in all those rooms through all those years, God was not an object outside of us to be known, but the flow of love and laughter among us. A verb not a noun. Or at least verbish.

And we were caught up in the flow, encompassed and carried in an all-possessing love.

Joy, healing, freedom, pretty much everything our hearts truly need is in that flow, so go with it. Wherever you go. It’s always there.

David L. Miller  

 

 

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Return to ‘yes’

 

For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, whom we proclaimed among you, Silvanus and Timothy and I, was not “Yes and No”; but in him it is always “Yes.” For in him every one of God’s promises is a “Yes. (2 Corinthians 1:19-20a)


Sooner or later one comes to realize all attempts to fulfill one’s life are futile.

They all fail because they are all more less the product of the ego’s attempt to satisfy itself, thinking, “If I just do this ... or go there ... or get that ... or accomplish this, I will be satisfied.” Fulfillment will follow like the dawn.

But it’s an illusion for at least three reasons I can see.

First, the human heart is a bottomless abyss, always aware there is more it doesn’t have and might well enjoy. Second, because the human ego is inherently arrogant, thinking it can satisfy itself by its own actions and best laid plans.

And third, because we tend to think we know or can figure out what we need, but this is just another version of reason two: arrogance.

We don’t, of course, know what we need, until what we need finds us, and that what is really a Who ... who is known only in moments of knowing a great love you cannot deny and know you did nothing to deserve.

It is right about then that the heart grows still, and you begin to realize this is what you needed all along.

If you can resist the urge to do something or hang a label on what is happening in you, in other words, if you can just be there, you can abide in the Loving Mystery who is saying “yes” to your life in all its mottled glory, with its loves and losses, its failures and false steps, its sins of omission and commission, its best intentions and futile efforts to give itself what it actually needs.

The human heart is a reservoir for the glory of God, which is to say, for the Love who says “yes” to us every blessed morning, if we can just find a place and way to listen.

If you find such a place and a way, go back there, return often. You will stop asking questions about life’s meaning.

David L. Miller

  

 

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Heaven’s gate

 

Jesus said to him, “Very truly, I tell you, you will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.” (John 1:51)

It was here all along, this balcony, early morning before the sun is high, its rays filtered through the locust as the martins play above. It’s here, the gate of heaven.

For here, at least today, is where I meet you as tears of recognition silently tell me it is you, and you are as pleased to be with me as I with you.

But it is not this place, blessed as it is, but you who are the gate of heaven.

Here, with you, heaven opens, and an incomparable mercy descends from an infinite realm asking nothing except to be here, in this moment, as eternity fills temporal time and the distance between heaven and earth dissolves.

Stay close, Jesus told his first disciples, I suspect, with sly smile tugging at his lips, knowing how much he had to share and how greatly he longed to share it.

They followed for the same reason as the rest of us, hoping to catch a glimpse of the heaven that opens when your heart knows him near.

There is no better healing.

David L. Miller

Monday, August 23, 2021

Spirit & life

It is the spirit that gives life.  (John 6:63a)

The spirit is life. So look around. Take stock when love and peace, joy and freedom touch the heart and breathe life into your mortal flesh.

‘Tis an eternal moment in which the Spirit of Life finds an opening in your shuttered heart to breathe in and then out, blessedly carrying you along in its flow.

Such is the Spirit’s nature. Like the current of a stream or a morning breeze, it cannot be grasped but savored as it caresses the heart, wakes joy from its slumber and dissolves the illusion of aloneness.

For we are not alone, but alive in the Spirit’s playground. All that awakens our senses to joy and beauty, goodness and grace is the breath of the Spirit resuscitating our hearts that we might lighten up, laugh and join its holy game of giving life to the dead.

So notice when the breath of dawn awakens a sigh, when the martin’s flight gives wings to your heart, and when the smile behind the counter is so honest and real that it becomes a sacrament of Love’s holy nearness.

Stop there. And breathe. Someone is trying to bring you back to life.

David L. Miller