Inspiration quote and Reflection_Empty Hand

“It is a great loss if we greet every day with clenched hands stuffed with our own devices.
We will never know what is out there waiting for us if we don’t extend an empty hand to
The world and wait for the wonder to happen.”

_Brother Homan and Louis Collins Pratt

It is all about trust and trust comes from love. Imagine a small child standing by the side of the pool, and the father or mother says “Jump. Don’t worry I’ll catch you.” For some children that is enough, while other it may take 5 or 6 times of encouragement. But what makes them take that jump? Yes, the trust in their parents that they will be ok, even though they are scared to make that jump into the water.

What about us as adults? Are we standing there with an empty hand towards God? Are we the child today that is willing to receive what God has for us or are we too scared? Do we have the trust in God, and if not, why not?

God loves us, and is all merciful with unlimited forgiveness for us. Yes, us. All we have to do is ask.

So how do we become that child today by holding out an empty hand to God? How do we get over our fears? Literally, when are we going to make that move and jump?
Yes, its trust in God, and we’re scared just like that child trying to jump into the water.

Everything is all about love. Just trust God.

“Find a way”

_Conor

All You Need Is Love

All You Need Is Love
Great Beatles song. It gets running in your head and it doesn’t stop. No way to turn it off. Little did I know a song I loved many years ago, is what guides me today in many ways of my faith. It’s a cornerstone part of my faith. It guides me, and when I may be confused or indecisive, it is what I use to choose my thoughts and actions.

What are some ways we can use love everyday as we go about what we do?
• Challenges we meet
• People we see and meet
• “Situations”
• Success
• Failures
• Help received
• Help given
• Bonds formed
• Disappointments
• Wrongs inflicted on others
• Forgiveness
• Gifts you receive
• Vulnerability
• Weakness in ourselves and others
• Viewed as an obstacle
• Listening
• Encouragements
• Them not Me
• It is the right thing to do-Carry it with us everywhere. The list goes on…………….

And when we speak and act from the heart, people from all backgrounds, all ages and all cultures, see through to the beauty of innocence, sincerity and love.

All you need is Love.

“Find a way.”

_Conor

The Street Sweeper ( The Other Speech)

“What I’m saying to you this morning, my friends, even if it falls your lot to be a street sweeper, go on out and sweep the streets like Michelango painted pictures; sweep streets like Handel and Beethoven composed music; sweep streets like Shakespeare wrote poetry; (Go ahead) sweep streets so well that all the host of heaven and earth will have to pause and say,”Here lived a great street sweeper who swept his job well.”

If you can’t be a pine on the top of the hill

Be a scrub in the valley-but be

The best little scrub on the side of the hill,

Be a bush if you can’t be a tree.

If you can’t be a highway just be a trail

If you can’t be the sun be a star;

It isn’t by the size that you win or fail-

Be the best of whatever you are.

And when you do this, when you do this, you’ve mastered the length of life. (Yes)

This onward path to the end of self-fulfillment is the end of a person’s life. Now don’t stop there, though. You know, alot of people get no further in life than the length. They develop their inner powers; they do their jobs well. But do you know, they try to live as if nobody else lives in the world but themselves? (Yes) And they use everybody as mere tools to get to where they’re going. (Yes) They don’t love anybody but themselves. And the only kind of love that they really have for other people is utilitarian love. You know, they just love people they can use. (Well)

Alot of people never get beyond the first dimension of life. They use other people as mere steps by which they can climb to their goals and ambitions. These people don’t work out well in life. They may go for awhile, they may think they are making it all right, but there is a law. ( OH yeah) They call it the law of gravitation in the physical universe, and it works, it’s final, it’s inexorable: whatever goes up can come down. You shall reap what you sow. (Yeah) And he who goes through life not concerned about others will be a subject, victim of this law.

So I move on and say that it is necessary to add breadth to length. Now the breadth of life is the outward concern for the welfare of others, as I said. (Yeah) And a man has not begun to live until he can rise above the narrow confines of his own individual concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.

Now a lot of people have neglected this third dimension. And you know, the interesting thing is a lot of people neglect it and don’t even know they are neglecting it. They just get involved in other things. And you know, there are two kinds of athesism. Atheism is the theory that there is no God. Now one kind is theoretical kind, where somebody just sits down and starts thinking about it, and they come to a conclusion there is no God. The other kind is a practical atheism, and that kind goes out of living as if there is no God. And you know a lot of people who affirm the existence of God with their lips, and they deny his existence with their lives. (That’s right) You’ve seen these people who have a high blood pressure of creeds and an anemia of deeds. They deny the existence of God with their lives and they just become so involved in other thing. They become so involved in getting a big bank account. (Yeah) They become so involved in getting a beautiful house, which we all should have. They become so involved in getting a beautiful car that they unconsciously just forget about God. (Oh Yeah) There are those who become so involved in looking at the man-made lights of the city that they unconsciously forget to rise up and look at the great cosmic light and think about it-that gets up in the eastern horizon every morning and moves across the sky with a kind of symphony of motion and paints its technicolor across the blue-a light that an can never make. (All right) They become so involved in looking at the skyscraping buildings of the loop of Chicago or the Empire State Building of New York they unconsciously forget to think about the gigantic mountains that kiss the skies as if to bathe their peaks in the lofty blue-something that man could never make. They become so busy busy thinking about radar and their television that they unconsciously forget to think about the stars and bedeck the heavens like swinging lanterns of eternity, those stars that appear to be shiny, silvery pins sticking in the magnificent blue pincushion. They become so involved about man’s progress that they forget to think about the need for God’s power in history. They end up going for days and days not knowiing that God is not with them. (Go ahead)

And I’m here to tell you today that we need God.(Yes) Modern man may know a great deal, but his knowledge does not eliminate God. (Right) And I tell you this morning that God is here to stay. A few theologians are trying to say that God is dead. And I’ve been asking them about it because it disturbs to me to know that God died and I didn’t have a chance to attend the funeral. They haven’t been able to tell me yet the date of his death. They haven’t been able to tell me yet who the coroner was that pronounced him dead. They haven’t been able to tell me yet where he’s buried.

You see, when I think about God, I know his name. He said somewhere, back in the Old Testament, “I want you to go out, Moses, and tell them “I AM” sent you. (That’s right) He said to make it clear, let them know that my last name is the same as my first, “I AM” that “I AM.” Make that clear. “I AM.” And God is the only person in the universe that can say “I AM” and put a period behind it. Each of us sitting here has to say, “I am because of my parents; I am because of certain enviromental conditions; I am because of certain hereditary circumstances; I am because of God.” But God is the only being that can say, “I AM” and stop right here. “I AM that I AM.” And He’s here to stay. Let nobody make us feel that we don’t need God.

“This is the God of the universe. And if you believe in him and worship him, something will happen in your life. You will smile when others around you are crying. This is the power of God.”

_Martin Luther King (Chicago, April 9, 1967)

The Ways of Love

May I help you?, kindness, I’m sorry, please, thank you, excuse me, take this; I want you to have it, there’s more, what can I get for you?, let me help you, this hug is for you, kisses, a smile, a look, a touch, a glance, holding hands, a tap, a pat, offering up, doing without, making it work, an overflowing heart, prayer, that walk, that call, that note, that picture, that drawing, that song, that silence, being together, thinking of you, missing you, sitting next to you, remembering you, wishes for you, the best for you, telling others of you, caring, visiting, listening, waiting, hoping, wishing, patience, sharing, seeing, watching, helping, changing, trying, not doing it again, choosing my words, always, forever, understand, don’t worry, I’m here for you, trust me, support, got your back, friendship, partners, because, cheering you on, sacrifices, best friend, encouragement, excitement, helping hand, reach out, important to me, apple of my eye, without condemnation, unwavering, understanding, another hug, love you, the way,…….

_Conor

Judging Others

Judging Others

It is so easy to be critical of others. How often do we do it? Many times we know exactly what we’re doing, and at times, we don’t even realize it. What about the times we may be just sitting around, critical of others, and thinking very little of them. In fact, we are not even giving it a second thought, as we’re in the safety of our home, on the phone, or in the company of a like one. One like me who feeds off of others/me off of them. Just speaking “ill of the absent.”

Our words, actions and thoughts all have consequences, and many times one does not realize the impact or the damage it causes to others. And why do we do it? Haven’t we all been on the end of those criticisms and have we forgotten how it feels, and the pain it can inflict? Many people have lasting pain and hurtful memories that they carry with them always. Is it something you can be proud of? Or do you just feel empowered taking someone down and hurting them? What about what you are doing to yourself? Feel so good about it, you’d have no problem having your actions judged by others or posted on-line or in the local neighborhood paper. Let others see the other side of the real you!

On the other hand, how many times have you written or spoken words of forgiveness or encouragement? Shared warmth or love. Remember that feeling? Remember when you needed help and someone made a difference in your life and you vowed to pass it on, so others would know the difference that others can make.

Have you lent a hand to help to one in need today? Have you shared a kind word, a smile, or held the door for someone in need? Have you taken the time lately to share an extra long hug, a look that says you’re special and mean something to me, or I love you? Remember that feeling when you have reached out and how it made you feel? It put a smile on your face, added something to your walk and gave you a peaceful feeling right in your chest. And yes, maybe you eyes became a “little watery.” Just a little?

We all have choices and we all make decisions. Our decisions have consequences; some immediately and others at the end of our life, regardless of our faith and beliefs. We can change now and know God sees what is in your heart, or you can talk to Him later about it and explain your actions. God is ever so patient, loving and forgiving. He knows you better than yourself; so maybe now might be the time.

So make your choices, and hopefully you want that smile and skip back in your step!

_Conor

What is Prayer?

“In prayer we attend to the things about life that are essential. Prayer is first and foremost about a relationship, and this relationship fills our life with meaning and purpose. Prayer, therefore, is not so much an exercise of piety, as it is an exchange of love.”

_from TLBOH

Theological Reflection – Connecting Faith and Life Review

The reflection, right from the preface, reaches out to you in such a manner that it begins to explain theological reflection and its impact as it pulls you into the “water.”  It tells of the existence of the bridge between our human reality and the spiritual side of life.  The challenge for the reader is to learn and understand the components and the methods, and how to connect the two; thus making it a must have book in understanding theological reflection.

We reach a point in life, all at different times, to begin to understand even more the meaning of life, along with wanting desire to deepen our relationship and closeness with God. The book in a very logical manner, begins to lay out the components and the methods of finding those intersection points of our life along with the exercises of how to put it into daily practice.  I believe many people, myself included, was unaware of these various intersection points, as we live and compartmentalize all the different aspects of life, work, and family. We are faced with managing all the struggles and challenges that come our way. Through this theological reflection process, we can advance and achieve the integration and peace we are looking for by understanding and residing in those intersection points. It brings faith alive in our everyday life with the many surprises of reciprocity.

“The prayer of one who engages in theological reflection is: “Lord that I may see.” Through this prayer you begin to see more, and as the adage goes, the more you notice the more you see. Not unlike, the more you know, the more you realize how much you don’t know. Prayer is the key to seeing more.

Within theological reflection, the areas or poles for entry are experience, tradition and culture. Experience is all that we are from our past to the present, is what happens to and around us, things in and out of our control, all which makes us who we are as a distinct person living our life. Tradition incorporates all the scriptures, the teachings of our faith and the doctrines of our church.  Culture is who we are from our thinking and mores, where we live and our environment and all of the idiosyncrasies; the ways things are understood throughout the geographies of the world that has developed in its own unique ways and means.  We share bits and pieces of all cultures by virtue of what we do, where we reside, what we believe, and the values we bring along with us. This then is our start to begin to find and understand our many intersections points.  By making these points part of an active daily life, we then begin to define ourselves differently.

From our understanding of the above, we then need to understand the methods to bring into play; the means to pull it together. These methods are attending, asserting and decision making. Attending brings into play the listening and giving undivided attention to the speaker or group and withholding all judgments of others.  Critical importance is applying attending to listening on an introspective level, giving attention to what is going on inside our own heart and mind. This is a crucial area as we begin to see changes and viewpoints of our thinking and begin anew with a different perspective of the world and life.  “This is our call to pay attention.” Secondly, asserting by definition is claiming something to be what we believe.  Asserting is proclaiming a truth or understanding to another, but by this process of theological reflection, we may find what we believe may not be true, something different from what we’ve come to understand or what we were taught. We may come to know or believe a new truth which can have a major impact on us in how and what we believe.  This is the main area where our moral fiber and foundational beliefs are challenged, revised or changed. This then impacts who we are and what we may assert differently. This is a place we aspired too as we develop different and challenging tenets which is our path to theological reflection.  Finally, decision making is the third method of the process.  It is area where we decide and bring together all that we’ve learned, studied and challenged. It is where we make decisions to bring these truths into our life, make it part of our daily life and share with others. It is the place we aspire too and the place we want to continue to build upon. This brings along the models and the methods to allow us to come into peace and harmony.

So how do you put all of this into place? How do you proceed? As noted earlier, you can begin from any pole. From the starting pole you decide, you need to lay the associated groundwork and questions to bring the group together and begin their thought process. You then need to bring the remaining poles into play by the kinds of questions you ask of the group. The exercise of bringing these three methods into play, leads us to the various intersection points. Understanding the meaning of these points, the relation to our life, allows us to start taking these results and putting them into action. Stated differently, it is “taking faith and putting it into action.” This is accomplished and furthered by the facilitators techniques of “So What?” and “Therefore.”  This allows us to be brought to a proper conclusion for the individual. This conclusion then can personalize further by exploring what does this mean to me? How does this change my thinking? How does this impact my life? “What does this cost me, and what am I suppose to do.” These are the questions, as noted earlier, bring our faith to life and change who we are and what we do. As we become transformed, our life takes on new meaning with greater perspective and depth. We bring us to our faith thus bringing life to our faith.

Key to bringing closure and success to the exercise is being prepared with the right questions. Tying the probing questions to the components of experience, tradition and culture brings out the best from the group. Employing the conclusion questions of so what and therefore, brings relevance to the individual.  Utilizing silence not only to our advantage, but a time for the participant to reflect and gathers their thoughts. Having the participants understanding of what they have learned and what they need to do is their takeaway.

It’s noted in its own category, but the question of reciprocity comes up in the writing of the seminarian bringing the Eucharist to last person on his schedule for the day. The theological reflection begins from the seminarian’s experience of his day, the repetitions, stress, and generally just an exhausting day. What seemed like an ordinary review and exercise in reflection, pointed something out very unknowingly to the seminarian.  What he came to realize in this exercise, was not what he was doing for this elderly person, but what she taught and gave him while visiting and giving her the Eucharist.  He realized he was seeing the love and face of Jesus in her, who had not only lost much, but was suffering in pain and dying. She was the one with the gift as she reached out to him. The seminarian thought he came bearing gifts, which he was, but he was not expecting to receive the most treasured gift from her. She is the one who gave the gift of our Lord and his love to the unknowing seminarian. This is the gift of Ministry, and this seminarian was fortunate enough to learn and see this gift in his ministry of caring for the sick and dying. 

Advice on being a facilitator, which is also so very applicable in the business world. Creating a safe environment, keeping focused and on task leads to results.  Making sure the parties in the group use the word “I” when talking about their experiences and sharing their messages.  A key part which we talked about earlier is being a good attentive listener. Through these techniques, you are able to bring out and clarify what the individuals are saying, especially when it has to do with feelings and thoughts in the deepest parts of their hearts. There are five different types of listening and noting the purpose of each and good examples of questions are aides in the process to a conclusion. This would be key to have as part of your notes as a facilitator.  They are Clarifying, Restatement, Neutral, Reflective and Summarizing. These areas assist the facilitator in the mode of listening, rather than trying to solve problems.  As far as the participants, the facilitator needs to be sure the members of the group are following their guidelines to be effective and have no detrimental effect on the overall group. These areas of Sharing is voluntary. Sharing is not interrupted, Sharing is not contradicted, Sharing is done in the “I” language and Sharing is confidential. Furthermore, they need to understand they are not here to be right and prove their point. This is where one needs to insure the understanding and difference between debate and dialogue.  This is key and should be not only pointed out, but discuss to some degree so all participants understand the stark difference between the two. This leads to the components and personality make-ups within a group. All people with different experiences and confidence take a different dynamic role within a group. They need to be identified, managed, and in some cases, gently poked to participate or quietly reviewed in private. However, look for the good. Identify the morale boosters and conciliators. Call on them when needed. Know your elaborators when more need to be discussed and understood and make sure you identify your synthesizers so as meetings and sections come to a close, their actions can further bring success to individuals in the group.  As can be seen, the facilitators are required to have a vast skill set to bring success to the various groups so individuals are the best they can be.  In addition to impeccable preparation, facilitators need to be those attentive, deep listeners and totally knowledgeable in the tradition of scriptures. Facilitators are the lynch pin to this process.  They are the ones that need to know our thanks.

By embracing theological reflection and making it our daily life and asking our Lord to let me see, ones perspective on the world on what and how we see will change. Once we see, we will begin to see more. Once we see more deeply, we will see to greater depths. The visions and glimpses of the holy and sacred will become more often.  When one sees a sign with optical illusions, it takes time to figure it out and see it, but one you see the sign, you will never see it the way you always saw it. Never.

In summary, “Reciprocity is The Nature of Ministry” It is a gift from God showing his presence, love and acknowledging what you have learned and embraced. 

_Connor.