Take a few minutes to allow your mind and heart to be still before God.
Opening Prayer:
Lord,
Help me walk slowly and deeply with you through the hours and minutes of
this day—that I might find all of you that is to be found within it. Allow me not to miss you because of hurry or
busyness, but let me sense the fullness of your presence in each moment. Slow down both my feet and my heart that I
might be more present to you as I go about my normal activities. In the Name of Jesus I pray. Amen.
(JLB)
Psalm for the Week: Psalm 90
Scripture for the Day: Isaiah 58:11-14
Reading for Reflection:
We redeem time (Ephesians 5:15-16 KJV) when we allow a moment or a series of moments to become for us a vehicle of God’s presence. To redeem time is to make time transparent so that we experience it not as pressure (“Hurry up, hurry up, we haven’t enough time”), but as a sign of the holy. Obviously, we can’t always live this way, but we can live in such a way that the redemption of time becomes an ongoing and consistent possibility. I call this living in a Sabbath rhythm, and I am more and more convinced that the development of such a rhythm is at the heart of the recovery of authentic spirituality.
We can begin living in a Sabbath
rhythm by deliberately setting aside one day in the week that will be lived
differently from the rest. For some
people Sunday becomes this kind of day.
It seems to me, however, that this tends to confuse the issue. For the Christian, the Sabbath is not the
same as Sunday; it is a preparation for Sunday.
The idea is to take a day a week and deliberately slow it down. Our Sabbath can be Saturday or a regular
workday, but it is a day that is planned.
We
begin the day with a prayer of simple awareness, which of course can take many
forms. One way is to let your mind, at
the point of awakening, focus on all that surrounds you, without analyzing or
judging. Simply take note of what you
see and hear—the room, the light, the sounds.
Be aware of yourself and of the life that has been given to you and, at
this moment of awareness, place the day in God’s keeping. (Ministry and
Solitude by James C. Fenhagen)
Reflection and
Listening: silent and written
Prayer: for the church, for others, for myself
Song for the Week: Come, Now is the Time to Worship
Prayer: for the church, for others, for myself
Song for the Week: Come, Now is the Time to Worship
Come, now is the time to
worship
Come, now is the time to give your
heart
Come, just as you are to
worship
Come, just as you are before your
God
Come
One day every tongue will confess you are
God
One day every knee will
bow
Still the greatest treasure remains for
those
Who gladly
choose you now
Closing Prayer:
O Christ, when I look at you I see that you were
never in a hurry, never ran, but always had time for the pressing necessities of
the day. Give me that disciplined,
poised life with time always for the thing that matters. For then I would be a disciplined
person. Amen. (The Way by E.
Stanley Jones)
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