Saturday, August 27, 2011

The 12 Steps taken from Peace through Sobriety's Facebook post on 8/28/3022

Principles of the 12 Steps:

1. Surrender. (Capitulation to hopelessness.)

2. Hope. (Step 2 is the mirror image or opposite of step 1. In step 1 we admit that alcohol is our higher power, and that our lives are unmanageable. In step 2, we find a different Higher Power who we hope will bring about a return to sanity in management of our lives.)

3. Commitment. (The key word in step 3 is decision.)

4. Honesty. (An inventory of self.)

5. Truth. (Candid confession to God and another human being.)

6. Willingness. (Choosing to abandon defects of character.)

7. Humility. (Standing naked before God, with nothing to hide, and asking that our flawsin His eyesbe removed.)

8. Reflection. (Who have we harmed? Are we ready to amend?)

9. Amendment. (Making direct amends/restitution/correction, etc..)

10. Vigilance. (Exercising self-discovery, honesty, abandonment, humility, reflection and amendment on a momentary, daily, and periodic basis.)

11. Attunement. (Becoming as one with our Father.)

12. Service. (Awakening into sober usefulness.)

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Meditation on Centering/Soaking Prayer with regards to the Twelve Steps

The following excerpt caught my attention, and as I was rereading this passage, I received a phone call from a young woman who is in recovery from addiction who asked, "What does the phrase, "I no longer needed to justify my existence" mean?'

I believe the answer is the following:

This "teaching begins by a fundamental re-positioning of the place of meditation in a spiritual praxis.  Rather than seeing it as a tool for developing concentration, relaxing stress, or accessing higher states of consciousness," meditation or centering prayer, is seen as, " a catalyst for the purification and healing of the unconscious.  This purification is itself prayer--not a preparation for relationship with the higher, but the relationship itself.  It is the essence of what he means by "consenting to the presence and action of God."

How does this purification work?  As the unconscious unloads during Centering Prayer, these small purifications are actually a part of a larger project.  One begins to dismantle the "false self," i.e., the needy, driven, unrecognized motivations that govern most of our untransformed human behavior.

Dovetailing classic Christian teaching and contemporary psychology, Keating suggests the false self as a modern equivalent for the traditional concept of the consequences of original sin.  Beginning in infancy (or even before) each of us, in response to perceived threats to our well-being, develops a false self: a set of protective behaviors driven at root by a sense of need and lack.  The essence of the false self is driven, addictive energy, consisting of tremendous emotional investment in compensatory "emotional programs for happiness," as Keating calls them.

It is the false self that we bring to the spiritual journey; our 'true self' lies buried beneath the accretions and defenses.  In all of us there is a huge amount of healing that has to take place before our deep and authentic quest for union with God--which requires tremendous courage and inner presence to sustain--escapes the gravitational pull of our psychological woundedness and self-justification.  This, in essence, constitutes the spiritual journey.

So far this is orthodox psychological and theological fare.  But where Thomas Keating takes the bold step is by his assertion that Centering prayer is a direct catalyst to this process of purification of the false self.  As one sits in centering prayer with the intent to rest in and trust in God, the unconscious begins to unload "the emotional junk of a lifetime."  Repressed memories, pain, accumulated dull hurt rise to the surface and are, throught the attitude of gentle consent, allowed to depart.  As Keating visualizes the process in Invitation to Love:
     
The level of deep rest accessed during the prayer period loosens up the hardpan around the emotional weeds stored in the unconscious, of which the body seems to be the warehouse.  The psyche begins to evacuate spontaneously the undigested emotional material of a lifetime, opening up new space for self-knowledge, freedom of choice, and the discovery of the divine presence within.  As a consequence, a growing trust in God, a bonding with the Divine Therapist, enables us to endure the process.
"Thus," he continues," the gift of contemplative prayer is a practical and essential tool for confronting the heart of the Christian ascesis--namely, the struggle with our unconscious motivation--while at the same time establishing the climate and necessary dispositions for a relationship with God and leading, if we persevere, to divine union."  As I see it, the most fruitful connection here is his interlinking of the "dark night' or "cloud of unknowing' of the traditional apophatic path with the psychological process--the "dark" of the "ground" or our psyche.  If psychoanalysis might represent "cataphatic therapy"--that is, using words, concepts, awareness to illuminate the darkness of our inner ground, so Centering prayer is in fact being represented as a kind of "apophatic psychotherapy."  What really happens when one enters the cloud of unknowing, resting in God beyond thoughts, words, and feelings, is a profound healing of the emotional wounds of a lifetime.As these wounds are gradually surfaced and released in prayer (one simply lets them go non-possessively, rather than retaining them for inspection as in psychoanalysis), more and more the false self weakens and the true self gradually emerges.  For Keating this is the real meaning of the term transforming union.  As he states quite plainly in Intimacy with God: "We can bring the false self to liturgy and to the reception of the sacraments, but we cannot bring the false self forever to contemplative prayer because it is the nature of contemplative prayer to dissolve it."
from Centering Prayer and Inner Awakening by Cynthia Bourgeault, pp.94-96

Monday, May 23, 2011

Gateway to Joy: Reflections on the writings of Henry Nouwen-Part 1

The following except from Henri J.M. Nouwen's book, Life of the Beloved, touched me deeply as I read it this morning:

"The great secret of the spiritual life, the life of the Beloved Sons and Daughters of God, is that everything we live, be it gladness or sadness, joy or pain, health or illness, can all be part of the journey toward the full realization of our humanity.  It is not hard to say to one another: "All that is good and beautiful leads us to the glory of the children of God."  But it is very hard to say: "but didn't you know that we all have to suffer and thus enter into our glory?" Nonetheless, real care means the willingness to help each other in making our brokenness into the gateway to joy."

"The second response to our brokenness is to put it under the blessing.  For me, this "putting of our brokenness under the blessing"  is a precondition for befriending it.  Our brokenness is often so frightening to face because we live it under the curse. Living our brokenness under the curse means that we experience our pain as a confirmation of our negative feelings about ourselves.  It is like saying, "I always suspected that I was useless or worthless, and now I am sure of it because of what is happening to me."  There is always something in us searching for an explanation of what takes in our lives and, if we have already yielded to the temptation of self-rejection, then every form of misfortune only deepens it.  When we lose a family member or friend through death, when we become jobless, when we fail an examination, when we live through a separation or a divorce, when a war breaks out, an earthquake destroys our home or touches us, the question "Why" spontaneously emerges.  "Why me?"  "Why now?"  "Why here?"  It is so arduous to live without an answer to this "Why?" that we are easily seduced into connecting the events over which we have no control with our conscious or unconscious evaluation.  When we have cursed ourselves, or allowed others to curse us, it is very tempting to explain all the brokenness we experience as an expression or confirmation of this curse.  Before we fully realize it, we have already said to ourselves: "You see, I always thought I was no good....Now I know for sure.  The facts of life prove it."

"The great spiritual call of the Beloved Children of God is to pull their brokenness away from the shadow of the curse and put it under the light of the blessing.  This is not as easy as it sounds.  The powers of the darkness around us are strong, and our world finds it easier to manipulate self-rejecting people than self-accepting people.  But when we keep listening attentively to the voice calling us the Beloved, it becomes possible to live our brokenness, not as a confirmation of our fear that we are worthless, but as an opportunity to purify and deepen the blessing that rests upon us.  Physical, mental, or emotional pain lived under the blessing is experienced radically different from physical, mental, or emotional pain lived under the curse.  Even a small burden, perceived as a sign of our worthlessness, can lead us to deep depression--even suicide.  However, great and heavy burdens become light and easy when lived in the light of the blessing.  What seemed intolerable becomes a challenge.  What seemed a reason for depression becomes a source of purification.  What seemed punishment becomes a gentle pruning.  What seemed rejection becomes a way to a deeper communion."


Thursday, May 5, 2011

DRAMATIC, EMOTIONAL and POWERFUL piano song "Heartbroken"-original comp...

Veritatis splendor: text - IntraText SC

Veritatis splendor: text - IntraText SC

Made Free by the Truth

Redemptor hominis
Ioannes Paulus PP. II
1979 03 04
IntraText SC - Text

  • II. THE MYSTERY OF THE REDEMPTION
    • 12. The Church's mission and human freedom


"Jesus Christ meets the man of every age, including our own, with the same words: "You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free"82. These words contain both a fundamental requirement and a warning: the requirement of an honest relationship with regard to truth as a condition for authentic freedom, and the warning to avoid every kind of illusory freedom, every superficial unilateral freedom, every freedom that fails to enter into the whole truth about man and the world. Today also, even after two thousand years, we see Christ as the one who brings man freedom based on truth, frees man from what curtails, diminishes and as it were breaks off this freedom at its root, in man's soul, his heart and his conscience. What a stupendous confirmation of this has been given and is still being given by those who, thanks to Christ and in Christ, have reached true freedom and have manifested it even in situations of external constraint!"
                                                                            http://www.vatican.va/edocs/ENG0218/__PD.HTMBlessed John Paul the Great

In Spirit and In Truth

It is amazing how the mind forms ideas and beliefs that are contrary to the truth.  I love that I can read the letters that Blessed John Paul the Great wrote to the Church.  How much bewilderment and spiritual confusion could have been eliminated in my life had I known this great man of God and learned from him.




Redemptor hominis
Ioannes Paulus PP. II
1979 03 04
IntraText SC - Text

"When Jesus Christ himself appeared as a prisoner before Pilate's tribunal and was interrogated by him about the accusation made against him by the representatives of the Sanhedrin, did he not answer: "For this I was born, and for this I have come into the world, to bear witness to the truth"83? It was as if with these words spoken before the judge at the decisive moment he was once more confirming what he had said earlier: "You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free". In the course of so many centuries, of so many generations, from the time of the Apostles on, is it not often Jesus Christ himself that has made an appearance at the side of people judged for the sake of the truth? And has he not gone to death with people condemned for the sake of the truth? Does he ever cease to be the continuous spokesman and advocate for the person who lives "in spirit and truth"84? Just as he does not cease to be it before the Father, he is it also with regard to the history of man. And in her turn the Church, in spite of all the weaknesses that are part of her human history, does not cease to follow him who said: "The hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for such the Father seeks to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth"85."

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Unfolding a Rose

UNFOLDING A ROSE by Unknown
by Recovery World on Wednesday, May 4, 2011 at 10:18pm
A young, new preacher was walking with an older, more seasoned preacher in the garden 1 day. Feeling a bit insecure about what God had for him to do, he was asking the older preacher for some advice.
The older preacher walked up to a rosebush and handed the young preacher a rosebud and told him to open it without tearing off any petals. The young preacher looked in disbelief at the older preacher and was trying to figure out what a rosebud could possibly have to do with his wanting to know the will of God for his life and ministry.
But because of his great respect for the older preacher, he proceeded to try to unfold the rose, while keeping every petal intact. It wasn’t long before he realized how impossible this was to do.
Noticing the younger preacher’s inability to unfold the rosebud without tearing it, the older preacher began to recite the following poem:
It is only a tiny rosebud,
A flower of God’s design;
But I cannot unfold the petals
With these clumsy hands of mine.
The secret of unfolding flowers
Is not known to such as I.
God opens this flower so sweetly,
Then, in my hands, they die.
If I cannot unfold a rosebud,
This flower of God’s design,
Then how can I have the wisdom
To unfold this life of mine?
So I’ll trust in Him for leading
Each moment of my day.
I will look to Him for His guidance
Each step of the pilgrim way.
The pathway that lies before me,
Only my Heavenly Father knows.
I’ll trust Him to unfold the moments,
Just as He unfolds the rose.
Source unknown
A.S.A.P.
Always Say A Prayer

Frazzled Faith

I read this on the Christians United for Israel  email this morning and I thought about those struggling with their first year of recovery from life controlling issues and addictions. Sometimes it feels like we take one step forward, only to fall two behind.  Thankfully, if we can let go of our feelings, not be controlled by emotion, but by deliberate faith in the God who gave living waters out of the rock; parted the Red Sea; gave manna from heaven; and is one day at a time showing me His great mercy and love; then we are victorious. He is among us, proving it by His miracles of love toward us.

"Frazzled Faith?
“…is the Lord among us or not?” Exodus 17:7
 I have often considered the conflict the Hebrew people must have experienced as they started their journey to the Promised Land. One day they are living in Egypt, then literally overnight, they are thrust into the Wilderness where they became homeless and radically dependent on the supernatural provision and protection of Moses’ God - Whom they were still getting to know for themselves. Their world had been turned upside down! From high-highs to low-lows, God set them all on a ‘relational-crash-course’ so that they would learn to rely on Him.
Stepping into Exodus 17, the Hebrew people are now faced with another opportunity to trust in God as Provider. Confronted with a bone-dry desert, without water for their people or animals, the crisis proved to be more than their reliance on God could handle, and their faith frazzled. As their fear peaked, the people mobbed Moses screaming, “…is the Lord among us or not?” Of course, you know the rest of the story, how God stepped in and used a “dead rock” to produce abundant amounts of “living water” in the midst of a “dry land” – proving that He knows how to take care of His own!
Well, allow me to remind you that the same God Who broke Egypt’s death-grip, carved a path through the Red Sea, supplied His people with daily manna and turned a desert-rock into Niagara Falls is still caring for His people! Regardless of your famine, fear or frazzled-faith, know that your God is here, He does care and He will provide!"

by Scott Thomas
CUFI – Florida State Director
Free Life Chapel, Lakeland, Florida
Frazzled Faith?

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Hope When All Means Fail

Today a great man went to be with the LORD.  He impacted my life with his enormous faith in the God who could deliver addicts and provide hope for troubled youth.  David Wilkerson's last blog on the day of his fatal accident is reprinted below.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2011


WHEN ALL MEANS FAIL

To believe when all means fail is exceedingly pleasing to God and is most acceptable. Jesus said to Thomas, “You have believed because you have seen, but blessed are those that do believe and have not seen” (John 20:29).
Blessed are those who believe when there is no evidence of an answer to prayer—who trust beyond hope when all means have failed.
Someone has come to the place of hopelessness—the end of hope—the end of all means. A loved one is facing death and doctors give no hope. Death seems inevitable. Hope is gone. The miracle prayed for is not happening.
That is when Satan’s hordes come to attack your mind with fear, anger, overwhelming questions: “Where is your God now? You prayed until you had no tears left. You fasted. You stood on promises. You trusted.”
Blasphemous thoughts will be injected into your mind: “Prayer failed. Faith failed. Don’t quit on God—just do not trust him anymore. It doesn’t pay!”
Even questioning God’s existence will be injected into your mind. These have been the devices of Satan for centuries. Some of the godliest men and women who ever lived were under such demonic attacks.
To those going through the valley and shadow of death, hear this word: Weeping will last through some dark, awful nights—and in that darkness you will soon hear the Father whisper, “I am with you. I cannot tell you why right now, but one day it will all make sense. You will see it was all part of my plan. It was no accident. It was no failure on your part. Hold fast. Let me embrace you in your hour of pain.”
Beloved, God has never failed to act but in goodness and love. When all means fail—his love prevails. Hold fast to your faith. Stand fast in his Word. There is no other hope in this world.

TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2011