Good morning…
I chuckle to myself as I read Henri Nouwen’s meditation for today. Was the eternal presence of Henri eavesdropping in the chapel at our Awake To Wholeness Women’s Retreat with the eternal presence of Betty Skinner on Saturday? Henri’s words for today sum up exactly what God was teaching us on our sacred day of retreat.
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DAILY MEDITATION | NOVEMBER 9, 2021 – Passages to New Life by Henri Nouwen
One of the most radical demands for you and me is the discovery of our lives as a series of movements or passages. When we are born, we leave our mothers’ womb for the larger, brighter world of the family. It changes everything, and there is no going back. When we go to school, we leave our homes and families and move to a larger community of people where our lives are forever larger and more expansive. Later when our children are grown and they ask us for more space and freedom than we can offer, our lives may seem less meaningful. It all keeps changing. When we grow older, we retire or lose our jobs, and everything shifts again. It seems as though we are always passing from one phase to the next, gaining and losing someone, some place, something.
You live all these passages in an environment where you are constantly tempted to be destroyed by resentment, by anger, and by a feeling of being put down. The losses remind you constantly that all isn’t perfect and it doesn’t always happen for you the way you expected; that perhaps you had hoped events would not have been so painful, but they were; or that you expected something from certain relationships that never materialized. You find yourself disillusioned with the irrevocable personal losses: your health, your lover, your job, your hope, your dream. Your whole life is filled with losses, endless losses. And every time there are losses there are choices to be made. You choose to live your losses as passages to anger, blame, hatred, depression, and resentment, or you choose to let these losses be passages to something new, something wider, and deeper. The question is not how to avoid loss and make it not happen, but how to choose it as a passage, as an exodus to greater life and freedom.
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Every time our ordinary life bumps up against an unavoidable loss, there are choices to be made. Will we allow the loss we are currently facing to be a passage to something new, something wider, something deeper? Like the Israelites following God’s lead out of controlling captivity to the abundance of the Promised Land, how might the passage at hand be an exodus to greater life and freedom?
See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland (Isaiah 43:19, NIV).
…Sue…