I woke up early this morning to drive to Detroit to help my
sister with packing for a move she will have to make at the end of the month.
As I rushed around getting dressed, preparing breakfast and packing my purse, I
suddenly told myself or someone told me to sit down for a minute and try to do
some silent worship before leaving my apartment. I had made a promise to my spiritual friend
to pray for her and I had not done that in several days. My friend and I had talked about what prayer
meant to her and her explanation allowed to include was spacious enough to
include activities I could engage in on her behalf.
I don't really do prayer; I don't believe in a God who has a
personal interest in whether or not I get a new car or recover from a
disease. I do believe that there is an
energy running through the universe that is accessible and that can help us
navigate through life but I do not pray to it.
And until recently I felt I had no access to it. The Quaker idea of
prayer or at least an aspect of it is the concept of holding a person or a
situation “in the light”. So if someone
would ask to be held in the light, initially I would think of that person and
surround them with light. I had no faith
in this practice because it seemed I could hardly hold someone else in the
light when I felt I had no access to it myself.
A few weeks ago, I asked a fellow Quaker to engage in a
spiritual friendship with me which is basically a commitment to support each
other through our spiritual growth by meeting on a regular basis to worship and
share about our successes and challenges on our spiritual journeys. It was
during one of my conversations with my spiritual friend that I realized I do
have access to the light, to that universal energy.
I had always believed that if I was able to access this
divine energy that 1) the presence of such a connection would be dramatically
evident and 2) I would suddenly experience the peace of mind and spirit that
has eluded me all of my life. And since neither of these had happened I assumed
I had no connection to the divine. But
it hit me, during this conversation with my friend, that I had indeed felt that
divine presence. I felt it when I
silently worshiped with my fellow Quakers.
Not every time but often I feel the deep sacred silence within my being,
something that settles everything within me and I am able to rest in that
silence. This was an unacknowledged miracle. I was able to experience that profound peace
I have been seeking for a lifetime and did not recognize it.
There was no fanfare, no dramatic outward evidence that I was
in the presence of the divine but I was suddenly able to see that I had been all
those times that I was able to settle into silent worship. I was not able to
immediately recognize it because there were no fireworks and the heavens did
not open in any obvious way but also because in my everyday life my mind was
still troubled and my spirit unsettled.
And then I had my second revelation:
I could access this deeply restful and peaceful energy at any time. I only had to be still and silent and rest in
it. And I have slowly, in fits and
starts, been able to stop myself at different points during the day to take a
few moments to connect with spirit, God, the universe, however I name it in
that moment. And it is what I did this
morning in the middle of my frenetic activity.
I sat down and connected with the divine.
I really enjoyed this. It makes me remember the value of being still and quiet and finding that peace and calmness in that moment.
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