Thoughts at a Monastery

2013-07-10 14.52.52

I am sitting under a huge tree. It looks like a black walnut. A couple of miniature undeveloped nutlets hit my arms as the wind blew them out of the tree. Other nutlets are littering the ground like little quarter-inch green tear-drops. Stones form a circle around the tree trunk made of smooth flat gray stones in a flat layer.

I am sitting on a stone bench. My legs swing loosely because my feet are unable to touch the ground. The wind is blowing the Japanese maples’ leaves. It is very park-like here. The rain from a week ago refreshened the leaves on all the plants. They look vibrant, brightly colorful. I picked up a green hulled nutlet to smell it. It smells like black walnuts. I should know! I have spent many an hour picking black walnuts to sell for spending money, especially right before Christmas.

A woman came by and picked up some green nuts and swirled them in her hand. She mouthed to me “What are they?” I replied, “Black walnuts.” She held up her hand to stop me from saying more. Then I asked her, “Are you on a silent retreat?” She nodded, yes. What a lovely smile she has. I see the cat from a few weeks ago. She is coming over to me. I speak to her and she meows back. She rubs and arches her back against my pant’s leg.

A red spider mite is running around in frenzied circles on a table top. It is the size of a pin-head. I love listening to the rustle of the wind in the trees. A dove is cooing, I can see it. A sprinkler is spraying, the water is splashing the ground. A motor is in the near distance, and the more I concentrate, I can hear vehicle noise from the highway, quite a distance from here. There is a “caw” of a crow, and an owl hooting several times like in a long paragraph of on-going sound. Other sounds stir and resound in the silence. One sound is missing, I hear no human voices.

I have meandered around the buildings and have entered the small cinder block chapel, the one with only six seats. I am thinking back over several conversations of the past week, praying for loved ones, and pondering truth. My daughter says “You’ve changed so much. I don’t know what you believe anymore.” The topic was the gift of speaking in tongues, is it biblical for today? She is right. I have changed. Although I hold most of the same beliefs and doctrines from a protestant viewpoint and biblical interpretation of scripture. In many ways I have not changed. I believe one must practice truth as it is taught in the Bible, and not add on to its truth.

There is difference though. I have changed in that I don’t believe God operates in only one way. He is not limited to our way of thinking. I have learned that there are some parts of Christianity that need more emphasizing. The Christian walk is a disciplined walk of spiritual disciplines, but energized by God’s power and His grace which comes out of His Divine Love and utterance. If we learn to follow His lead, we are certain to seek the right things. The trick is, we must learn to wait and we must not get ahead of God. Also, we must make ourselves available to him.

Contrasts and Complexities

My cousin and I talked about a mystery a few years ago. He said that we can’t really know a valley without there being a mountain. It is like the person living on the equator who has seen snow in pictures but it makes no sense until they experience snow.

Life is full of living contrasts. They add to the complexity of life, making it interesting, full of ideas and items to explore. Even our personalities and talents show this assortment of “versus’.” Of course they overlap and are just man-made categories and I don’t mean much by them, but we do think and itemize (compare) this way. There isn’t a right or wrong in this. Hey, right vs. wrong . . . I am going to list a few that come to mind:
We have the. . .

  • introvert vs. extrovert
  • practical vs. impulsive
  • right brain vs. left brain
  • athlete vs. nerd
  • feminine vs. tomboy
  • quiet vs. loud
  • flat affect vs. expressive
  • emotional vs. phlegmatic
  • monotone vs. melodic
  • critical vs. affirming
  • positive vs. negative
  • mean vs. kind
  • motivated vs. lazy
  • miserly vs. giving
  • humble vs. proud
  • insignificant vs. magnificent
  • other-centered vs. self-centered
  • ugly vs. beautiful,
  • spiritual vs. profane
  • sedentary vs. active

It is hard to stop adding on more of these, the list could be expanded triple-fold. The point is, there are many types of people in this world. A person could say that we are the sum of our parts: heritage + personality + abilities + experiences + education + religion = individual, but that would be incomplete. Free will and life’s experiences determine a destiny. In God, we all have a destiny. The confounding challenge is to find out what our destiny is. I once was struggling with a concept in my life. It was an area of insecurity for me. My friend said a statement that resounded loud and clear. “Norma, that is not your destiny.” And it wasn’t my destiny. I came to see it more clearly once I was separated from the situation.

This is what is true regarding a person’s destiny: You have a gift that only you can give. You have a song that only you can sing. You have a message that only you can impart.

Before we were even formed in our mother’s womb, God had a plan for each one of us. He put eternity in our hearts. God has a plan and a future for you and one for me. It is our destiny and our purpose for living.

You are a good Father God, so very good. I stand amazed in your presence. Holy is your name. Blessed is your Being.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

N. L. Brumbaugh, with a monastic interlude from “The Sacred Place”
THE MEETING PLACE by N. L. BRUMBAUGH