Inspiration for your journey to God!

Category: Advent (Page 2 of 20)

Veni Sancti Spiritus!

advent grace
Veni Sancti Spiritus!

Learn something new everyday


I guess it’s natural to learn more about yourself as you get older huh? I think it’s more about a new found awareness than actually learning anything new. For instance, garlic and bananas don’t agree with me. Yet, I’ve eaten them for years and have suffered the consequences. You’d think it would have occurred to me before the age of 50 that I shouldn’t be eating them. But……no! Life gets in the way and “ain’t no body got time for that!” Something else I’ve figured out – the idea of sewing overwhelms me (even though I do “attempt” to sew every now and then)! Go ahead and laugh MS! My latest epiphany………..WINTER is actually my favorite season!

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder

Sure, Spring and Fall are each distinctly beautiful. It’s easy to love seasons that bring so much beauty, color and wonder to our senses. But there’s something to be said about the beauty of Winter with its bare trees and frigid temps.

Ever hear the phrase “less is more?” That’s how I feel about Winter. Less distraction, more introspection. It’s probably why I truly love the Advent and Christmas seasons. The idea of curling up in front of the fireplace with my Bible and other reads literally warms my heart and soul. During Advent and Christmas I look forward to spending my first few waking hours in stillness, strengthening my relationship with the Lord.

Unlike Spring and Fall, there’s not much to see or do outdoors in Winter. There’s less distraction – less desire to be outside in a world bustling with activity. Winter is for hibernation, not just for bears but, for us humans too. Unlike animal hibernation, human hibernation has more to do with an awakened state rather than a dormant state. Nature’s time to sleep is our time for awakening our senses to the Presence of God. How awesome is that?!

Id like to share something I recently read in Monastery Journey to Christmas by Brother Victor-Antoine D’Avila-LaTourrette (the headings are my own). It made me realize why I feel so elated during Advent. Advent graces!! Such comfort and joy!!

Sancti Spiritus

During these peaceful and calm Advent days, there is a mysterious presence felt in our prayers and readings, a presence of whom little is spoken. It is the subtle, mysterious, almost incomprehensible presence of the Holy Spirit. We know through faith that from all eternity, in the intimate council of the Holy Trinity, the Holy Spirit was assigned the work of the Incarnation. It was by his mighty power that the Son of God became incarnate in the Virgin Mary. The Incarnation of God’s Son, willed by the Father long before the ages began and totally assented by the Son himself, is the particular and unique operation of the Holy Spirit.

Immersed in love

The more we immerse ourselves in the work of prayer, the more we come to discover something about the Holy Spirit’s presence in our lives. “It is one thing to believe in God,” Staretz Silouan used to say, “and another to know him.” It is in prayer, and by the direct action of the Holy Sprit, that we come to understand something of the mystery of the Incarnation, of the two natures of Christ: divine and human.

Infused with knowledge

Only the Holy Spirit can communicate to the praying believer something of that splendid union of two different natures and two wills. Infused divine knowledge is a gift from the Holy Spirit, and it is his divine power that opens our hearts and minds to this type of knowledge. It is through experiencing the Holy Spirit interiorly, deep, deep within our souls, that the mystery of Jesus Christ is revealed to us. The Holy Spirit confers on us both faith and grace to arrive at this divine knowledge.

Abundant grace

Advent is a special time to keep close to the Holy Spirit (though we know through faith, all times are his and belong to him!). But Advent and Christmas are periods of abundant graces that flow from the inner life of the blessed Trinity. These graces are channeled into our hearts through the power and grace of the Holy Spirit. Humbly, patiently, the Holy Spirit pursues each of us, gradually revealing his divine presence to us, eagerly preparing our hearts to become a worthy manger for the Savior.

Any relationship with God is impossible apart from the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit who points us to the revelation of Christ. It is the light from the Holy Spirit that illumines our understanding and allows us to apprehend something of that love that instigated the Father to send his beloved and only begotten Son into the world. For indeed, God so loved the world that in the fullness of time, by the action of the Holy Spirit, he sent his Anointed one to be born of a humble maiden in the small forsaken village of Bethlehem.

Conjunction unction

As Christians, as humble disciples of Jesus, we live and have communion with God by unction from the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit breathes Christ, the full Christ, into our lives. By this very fact he establishes us in that mysterious communion of love with the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. “Veni, Sancte, Spiritus.” (excerpt ends here)

Veni Sancti Spiritus

Tis the season to do what the song says “awake from your slumber, arise from your sleep……….let us build the City of God!” Let the Holy Spirit be your guide! Veni Sancti Spiritus. Fill our hearts with your grace. Awaken our senses to your Presence within so that your light may shine wherever we go! Amen. God bless you!

The Power of One!

The power of one!
A shoot shall sprout from the stump of Jesse!

Oh, Advent! My favorite liturgical season of the Church year! One of my favorite traditions for the season is the Jesse tree. Each day I take an ornament out of my Advent calendar to place on my Jesse tree. Each ornament has it’s own Bible verse to contemplate. The idea is to follow the Bible during Advent through salvation history to the birth of Jesus on Christmas day. The topic today: The power of one!

The Power of One

The first week of Scripture focuses on Genesis. On December 4 I read Genesis 6:5-8: Warning of the Flood. It says: When the Lord saw how great was man’s wickedness on earth, and how no desire that his heart conceived was ever anything but evil, he regretted that he had made man on the earth, and his heart was grieved. So the Lord said: “I will wipe out from the earth the men whom I have created and not only the men, but also the beasts and the creeping things and the birds of the air, for I am sorry that I made them.” But Noah found favor with the Lord.

What stirred

The last line of the verse “but Noah found favor with the Lord,” stirred something in me. My immediate thought was, there is always someone righteous enough to redeem us – not perfect, just righteous. What a timely message! At a time when the world seems so dark, divided and irredeemable with no where to go but down, it’s important to remember the story of Noah. The one man in the world who found favor with the Lord.

Now you may be thinking, one man, redeeming power, no kidding, ever hear of Jesus? But there’s a difference between Jesus and Noah – Jesus was divine. He was, in fact, perfect. Noah was not and yet he was enough! He was righteous enough to redeem the world in his time.

I considered the contradiction of the “good” of God’s creation and the “evil” that would lead him to want to wipe it all out. God’s regret struck me. How could the perfect, omnipotent, omniscient God I know and love feel that way?

Subject to futility

I slowly began to understand as I continued to ponder throughout the day. It wasn’t a contradiction at all. You see, God created us flawed. We may not be perfect, but we’re still good! It’s ALL good. As a matter of fact, Romans 8:20-21 tells us “for creation was made subject to futility, not of its own accord but because of the one who subjected it, in hope that creation itself would be set free from slavery to corruption and share in the glorious freedom of the children of God.

Never once do we read in Genesis, or anywhere else in the Bible for that matter, that God created everything perfect! There’s always room for improvement, which is where we come in as God’s co-creators. God has given us an opportunity, as His co-creators, to participate in His creation. We have an opportunity to be His partners. Yes, He gave us free will, but He also gave us so much more than that.

Our God is an awesome God! The fact that He allows us the free will to choose – to make better or exploit, to love Him or leave Him is evidence of how much He truly loves us! Amen!

If you love something

How does the saying go? “if you love something set it free, if it comes back it was yours, if it doesn’t it never was.” Imagine that! Our God is not possessive or forceful. Does He desire a relationship? Does He desire cooperation and participation? Of course He does, but He won’t force it. So who loses when we don’t follow through? We do! Think of all the wonderful things God has created, and then think of the fact that He wants us to continue His work. Think of the fact that God is waiting for us to make His amazing creation even better! We’re called to continue evolving. Are we doing our part?

Hearing the call

The story of Noah gave me an entirely different outlook as I move forward on the journey. First, if God was currently planning to wipe out all of mankind, am I righteous enough, like Noah, to redeem the world? Could the world depend on me? I’m certainly not perfect, but do I have the little it takes to find favor with the Lord? Does He delight in me? How about you?

Second, as God’s co-creator, where do I belong? How do I respond to His call to co-create? Seems like a tall task, all of it, but remember “God requires fidelity, not perfection.” Remember the power of one! All we have to do is show up and God provides the rest.

After reading and pondering Genesis 6:5-8, I’m relieved and excited and hope you are too. I hope your Advent got off to a good start! God bless you!

Postscript

This won’t be the first time this ever happens to me and I’m sure it won’t be the last. You may have read something similar in some of my previous posts. I drafted this post over the weekend, about two days after I had read the Scripture verse. While all my thoughts and ideas in the draft were complete, I delayed posting. Why? Who knows, but I do know that I woke this morning with the intention of getting back here to post. It’s been a while!

I’ll share here Richard Rohr’s morning meditation, which left me flabbergasted. He goes way deeper than I do or ever could! Enjoy!

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