• About

A Musing Amma

~ Gathering the pieces of our lives together under the eyes of the Holy

A Musing Amma

Category Archives: Uncategorized

Prayer for a Summer Wednesday

28 Wednesday Jun 2017

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in prayer, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

prayer

eder_prayerwomanreturn011.azzxkvj6mjccccgwcgoowoo4k.6ylu316ao144c8c4woosog48w.th

I pray a prayer of celebration today for a joyful wedding anniversary in our family. Twenty years ago no one could have imagined or anticipated the over-arching health, love and creative children that have grown in this marriage, open and inclusive to the welfare of others. My prayer is one of deep gratitude and hope for continued shaping a life of love together.

I prayer a prayer of lament today for an unwelcome diagnosis for another in the family. No one could have imagined or anticipated this invasion into a healthy life, and even now we don’t know what it means, what it will look like, where the journey will take us. My prayer is first, that God in mercy will continue the healing toward wholeness already begun, and that each of us will know how to participate in that healing, through tears, laughter and love.

I prayer a prayer of urgent petition for peace and justice today for this country, buffeted about in division and question about where truth can be found. No one could have imagined or anticipated this liminal place in which we wake every day to new surprise, and can’t count on things that were true yesterday being the same today. My prayer is that people of great compassion and will speak truth to power, speak the truth in love, and know when to speak and when to keep silence for the healing of all people.

I pray a prayer for  an awareness Holy Presence–in me through the frustrations of technology, through the quotidian mysteries of caring for my dwelling and the people in it, through the extroversion I adopt to go out to meet people, through the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart as I listen to the One standing behind me, saying “This is the way, walk in it.”  I could not have imagined or anticipated that at this point in my life, this would be a day on which I found myself, living in light and darkness simultaneously, trying to navigate a clear path between mundane and epic concerns, living intentionally and consciously, sorting out what things have my name on them and what things to let go.

But this is the day that the Spirit has made…I pray to rejoice, to weep, to do good, love mercy and walk humbly with whomever I encounter…for God’s sake!

 

 

Wrapped in Silence

14 Wednesday Jun 2017

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in retreat, silence, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

community, prayer, reading, silence

DenverEpiscopal

I was encompassed in silence, a gift I chose that was offered by my church, a six hour retreat on a Saturday morning. The all-purpose room was set side for sacred use–a circle of chairs, a library of books, a table of fresh food, a labyrinth laid out, a cozy room with overstuffed chairs, tables for writing and coloring and then an empty sanctuary, with an icon of Christ surrounded by candles, awaiting to be lit in prayer.  After the opening instructions and a reading from the pastor, we spent our next hours in silence.

My routine life is not very noisy. My husband and I don’t create much sound daily as we patter through our retirement ways of being. The loudest eruption is the dog as he tries to keep us safe from post-people and squirrels. Yet there is the hum of appliances, the whoosh of delivery trucks, the ringing of phones, even ones stopped by “nomorobo!” More incessant are the chirps and hums inside me, reminding me it is time to pay a bill, put laundry in the dryer, check on the neighbor down the street. Left to my own devices, I find it hard to enter into Silence. However, dropping into the retreat on Saturday, after I was welcomed warmly by those I knew even slightly, I could rest in the container created for me by the committee–the place, the nourishment, the prompts, the opportunities. It was pure Grace!

I began by breathing, attending to my breath, checking in with my body, and then walking the labyrinth, a tool for prayer that has delighted and served me well for many years in many places. In the deliberateness of the pace, I could recognize the clutter which needed release, listen for a Word coming to me to shape the day, and then I could begin to integrate that Word with what was ahead of me.

After that walk I sat down with my journal and began to note all that was coming up and where my prayers and reflections might go throughout the hours we were in silence. I listened deeply to the sacred text with which we were introduced to the day, gave thanks that I was beloved of God and that angels attended me, even in wilderness. I did some reading in Christine Valters Paintner’s book Wisdom of the Body, which has been my teacher in this Easter and Pentecost season. I spent time in gratitude for all the joy and blessing in my life. I spent time in lament for the losses of which I am so keenly aware–in my own body and experience, in the leaving of those I love, in my anxiety for the frailty of particular persons and the world.

In the stained glass lighting of the sanctuary I felt free to pour out my heart about things unknown ahead of me, for those whose need seem far beyond my capacity to touch, for the broknen-ness of people and systems. I lighted candles for some at the very top of my awareness, even now living with pain and fear.

I was nourished with healthy food, silently companioning others when they chose to sit with me in silence for lunch. Bread for the journey!

My heart turned toward a primary ministry I have now, a group of women who have met together for 10 years. Where are we being led? Who will keep on with us? Can we let go of those who move on? And how does our aging and growing shape what we do? What are we being invited to reflect on in the year ahead?

After the hours of prayer and reflection went by, I came to a place of rest. Sitting comfortably with my eyes closed, I savored in gratitude what had been provided for me in this day. I recognized that my soul was satisfied as with a great feast by having this opportunity to be in the presence of others, yet in silence given the space, time and awareness to hear the voice of the Holy to come to me in particular–for such a time as this!

I am deeply grateful for this time in which I was able to come apart and rest with the Holy in the presence of others on the journey. Savoring. Thankful. A full heart!

Personal photo from St John’s Cathedral, Denver. (not from my home church)

 

 

 

 

 

Living a Word: Sanctuary

18 Wednesday Jan 2017

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in action, beauty, sanctuary, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

ourrosesandlabyrinth

Many bloggers and columnists advocate people of the journey to choose a word for the year ahead, and this year, in the wake of so much upheaval all round, my word has become SANCTUARY–to find my sanctuary in the Holy One, to be sanctuary from the storm and to offer sanctuary to the vulnerable and unprotected. The word and the intention feel big, daunting, yet absolutely necessary, since so many in the world are so fragile, so at risk and have so few resources for unknown roads of 2017.

So it was with joy when yesterday morning I got a phone call from my daughter in between appointments, asking if she could come to hang out at my house for awhile; “I need shelter,” she said. I agreed to her coming with alacrity, and for a few moments between tasks, we gave each other sanctuary–from traffic, weather, anxious cares and heavy sorrow. As the day unfolded, I kept remembering that mini-moment of sanctuary. What does sanctuary offer? what does it bring?

I am musing on those questions this week, as all over the universe things quiver and shake. The conversations into which I am invited nearly always have a shade of anxiety about how the world is turning–an earthquake, a bombing, a rupture, a parade of resistance. I do not believe that being and acting as sanctuary stops any of those disruptions, but I see that having some sanctuary–a place where it is safe to be who one is, a place without agendas to be accomplished, a place where all is well for the moment–can be an agent of healing and restoration. It is no wonder that Jesus invited his beloved ones to “Come apart and rest for awhile,” in the midst of a challenging and hostile environment.

So this year I will be reflecting on how I live in sanctuary and provide sanctuary for others. I know some elements: warmth–physical and spiritual; shelter–from noise and from harassment;  genuine welcome; and, I have come to believe, beauty. It is January, yet in my front yard white and purple irises continue to bloom. Other flowers pop up here and there. The gifts from the Advent and Christmas season bring illumination to new corners on the wall. New pictures of loved ones smile out at whomever is gathered. Familiar quilts and blankets, scented candles and delicious aromas make everyone feel at ease as they take respite here for the moment.

So I am living into claiming and being sanctuary while at the same time, I gather my resources that energize me to do justice in and for the places to which I am called; to love kindness and let it be the dominant tone of my words and actions; and to walk humbly with Holy One, learning what true sanctuary can mean for me and for the world. I have much to learn, but I am energized for the living of it!

Save

Save

Save

Save

3 Gifts of Epiphany for the New Year

04 Wednesday Jan 2017

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in Christmas, Epiphany, faith, Hope, Love, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

faith, Hope, Love

images

In these 12 days of Christmas, I have felt very much like the Little Drummer Boy, singing, “I have no gifts to bring…” or Christina Rossetti in the carol, “In the Bleak Midwinter,” “What can I bring him, poor as I am…?” We are heading toward Epiphany where the Wise Ones bring gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh, gifts both mystical and practical, elegant and marvelous. And I feel as if my cupboard is bare after this season of healing and world trauma. However, in the way that the Spirit seems to work with me, I keep encountering at every turn this finale of the Love Hymn in I Corinthians, King James Version: “And now abideth these three–faith, hope and love…” And I am delighted–in spite of my recovering health, in spite of the losses in the past year, in spite of the predictions and prognostications about the state of the world and what will happen next, I do have those three things; they abide–in me and in the world.

I continue to have Faith. I experienced Holy Presence all through my surgical process and the aftermath, in each step of recovery and setback, even or especially in faith-filled folk who come by me, in person or on-line. I can wear with integrity my ring that holds Lady Julian close to my heart, saying, All will be well, and all will be well, and all manner of things will be well.

I have Hope, on which I mused in during Advent, not in particular outcomes or even in absence of chaos and terror, but in that Holy Presence who never leaves us or forsakes us, and whom the author of Hebrews tells us, often has a better idea for our future than we can imagine, ask or think.

And I have Love. I have been given so much love in my life–some of it well-intentioned but poorly executed, some of it unable to show up all the time, some of it intuitive and caring from afar–but I am loved, not the least of all by the One who calls me by name, and to Whom I belong. And Love begets Love; out of the love I have been given, I am free to love those I am given–longtime friends falling on hard times, new friends who need some ballast, those who are nearly ever noticed by those they serve, those who seem to be difficult by character–learning how to pray that they will be blessed and have their deepest needs satisfied.

So on this Epiphany I come to the Holy One bringing my gifts, maybe more truly giving back what I have been given–Faith, Hope and Love–with the prayer that they will deployed in the places most useful, healing the places most sore, and giving Life and Love to a world which seems to have a short supply of any of them. I pray that these gifts will enrich us all in the world that God loves!

Save

Save

Advent 1: Signs of Hope-A Rose

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in advent, beauty, Hope, rose, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Hope, Ken Medema, Mary Oliver, rose

images

I am not very adept at Hope. It has always been ephemeral in my repertoire of spiritual practices, and has seemed to lead to disappointment, were it to be too firmly attached to a particular outcome. So for a long time I gave up Hope as an active spiritual practice in favor of wishing and/or being realistic. Yet in this year of all years I need Hope. An Advent is a season of Hope…Hope that there are no final defeats, Hope that all will be well and all manner of things will be well, Hope that Christ has come and will come again.

However, the elusive nature of Hope still lurks, and I am thrown back to the Psalms where we are advised not to put our trust in human beings and outcomes, but in the Presence of the Holy One. So in this season of Advent I am looking for concrete images that remind  me to Hope. Today it is the rose. Living in Southern California, which has been without rain for many months, we have as a community been replacing most of our greenery with drought resistant plants. Yet I have kept my several roses, a cherished gift to me from a contemplative sister, for all these years, and even though I am not an adept gardener, and leave the care and feeding of the rose to others, I am continually delighted when I see to my surprise– “Lo, how a rose ere blooming…” as it did this week. It’s the end of November, the temperature fluctuates between the 60s and 80s, and suddenly there is a rose in bloom. And it makes me glad, makes me hopeful, that in what seems like unlikely circumstances, beauty and life can blossom forth.

In the Advent season poets and songwriters have used the Rose as a symbol of Hope. From Hebrew Scripture there is the image of the Rose of Sharon. Eleanor Farjeon sings that “Love the Rose is on its way.” Old Friend Ken Medema invites us to “Bring me a rose in the wintertime when its hard to find…”  It is possible to see an icon of hope even in the bleak midwinter of our own discontent, fragility, frustration and temptation to despair, and the rose in my garden reminds me of that. Despite the drought, despite the bleakness, despite the anxiety, a Rose blooms, and will bloom again. In our living room, a sacred space, we have placed this week three rosebuds opening, bringing beauty, perfume, peace to our gatherings and conversations. When the course of the narratives become dismal and hopeless, I look at the Rose, longer lasting than the course of human events, more beautiful than any scenarios being sketched by pundits, evocative of the One who has come and will come again. I am reminded to Hope!

And I will be continue to be reminded if I pay attention to the garden  where the roses grow. Mary Oliver writes, Attention is the beginning of devotion. (Upstream, p. 8)  This season I want to devotedly rejoice in Hope!

Save

Save

Save

How Can I Keep From Singing?

06 Saturday Aug 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in beauty, blessing, centering, joy, music, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

centering, joy, listening, singing

singing1In these Dog Days of August replete with politics, athletics, wild weather (too hot, too many fires, too wet) and the shrillness of uncensored opinion about everything, I am looking to those sources of Grace that keep me centered, grounded, even in Joy! I know that much of my theology, much of my heart, much of joy lies in the songs that have accompanied me from the cradle, and will continue to do so as long as I love. I am sure that in these days of distress all round us, I need to keep close to this source of Spirit and healing from the Holy.

Music was a language into which I was born, primarily sacred music as sung by the communities in which I was nurtured. My family worshiped together in daily prayers, and all of us learned to sing in harmony, as we sang through the Inter-Varsity hymnal year after year. I played the piano in accompaniment. But while I was a seminary intern, I heard for the first time a melody with words that took root in my spirit, and continues to cheer, heal and haunt me. It is a 19th Century hymn attributed to Baptist pastor Robert Lowry. I was preaching one of my first sermons on the prophet Deborah, someone up against military threats, sexism and difficult odds. When she emerges from all the “tumult and the strife,” the next chapter in the book of Judges ascribes a full length song of celebration to her. After I preached, without introduction, a winsome young soprano soloist friend sang a capella from the balcony these words (not Deborah’s):

My life flows on in endless song above earth’s lamentation/ I hear the clear, though far off hymn that hails a new creation./ No storm can shake my inmost calm while to that Rock I’m clinging./Since Love is Lord of heaven and earth, how can I keep from singing?

The following verses sing about darkness, tyrants, prison cells, yet a clear deep sense that Love wins, and that alone is the prompt and cue for singing. Augustine has told us, that the one who sings prays twice, and so I am doubling my prayers through song this month–prayers for peace, for comfort, for hope, for healing, for resolution, for vision for energy and action; prayers of gratitude and praise, delight and laughter.

I include a youtube version of the late Jean Redpath singing this song on Prairie Home Companion; she surely could not keep from singing. I plan to follow her example!

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Lent 5: A Time of Silence

16 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in Lent, listening, Mindfulness, silence, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

creation, Holy Spirit, Lent, listening, silence

images-1

After all the words read and said in my Lenten practices this year, Joyce Rupp invites me to observe a time of silence and solitude each day. What does the silence bring me?

  • a slowing down of my breathing
  • a clearing of my space of external noise, a choice for me to unplug and shut down what creates babble
  • a lens through which to notice the gifts of creation around me–the first rose in bloom, the sprout from the succulent in the box by the gazebo, the hummingbird and the pair of romping squirrels, the endless forming and re-forming of clouds
  • an inner word to anchor my reflection; today, once again, it was GRACE
  • a space in which to spread and to sort all the pieces of my daily life, my memories of past adventures and hopes for the unknown and unfolding future
  • an ear by which to listen to what comes to me from the Spirit–for today, for those closest to me, for creation, for all people everywhere
  • a tangible connection to all others who long for and seek the Holy in all places around the world
  • a context for understanding and hoping in prayer for the broken world that God loves and that I try to love
  • one more encounter with the Mystery we call God, ephemeral, real, numinous, in that slowed down breathing, closer than my own breath.

Thomas Keating says, The root of prayer is interior silence.

I pray in this final week of Lent that what I choose for my exterior practice becomes a reality in my interior heart.

 

Lent 3: Journey with High Cross

29 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

th

A striking feature of Celtic spirituality is the presence of High Crosses all over the landscape, pre-12th Century, primarily placed in sites thought to be as sacred. Not only are they tall and dense, many of them like this one from Monasterboice in Ireland have a circle connecting the arms of the cross close to the top and have scenes of Christian salvation history carved into them, a visual sacred journey review for all to remember. Joyce Rupp suggests that it become a template for this next week’s Lenten practice.

She suggests that as a Lenten practice, I draw a high cross, and then fill it in with pictures or with words that represent the story of my life. Two features call my attention. The first is to look at the “cruciform” shape of my life, places shaped by suffering and joy together, represented in the vertical and horizontal beams of the cross. The other is to look at the connection of heaven and earth, represented by the circle between the beams in the Celtic crosses. What events tell the story of my sacred journey? How would people understand my memoir were they to encounter my “high cross?”

I begin this third week by naming significant time periods or happenings in the sequence of eras in my life. Which are the ones in which I was conscious, either then or now, that this was a sacred encounter or happening? How was each one a “thin place” where God was surely there, even when I did not know it? And in which ones did the Light and darkness, suffering and hope coexist, juxtapose each other in a way that deepened my awareness that the ground I inhabited was holy?

Each day I will try to focus on a few to identify the scenes I would want to include in this review. Some of them will be obvious–childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, first career–teaching; marriage, second career–child rearing; graduate school–twice; third career–ordained ministry in the parish, seminary faculty and spiritual direction; retirement. Other areas will be more amorphous–growing a sense of self, re-imagining the role of women in the Church and in the culture, finding a rhythm for  all the adult roles to which I was called–mother, pastor, custodial parent, wife, friend. (It is becoming clear that this practice may take more than a week!) Also, the ongoing wrestling with theologies that are Reformed, but always in need of being reformed. In addition, the sea-changes going on the the Church and the World. And more.

I set out on this week’s practice gingerly, knowing that the intention of the practice is to lead me more deeply into the Mystery, in which suffering and joy are not mutually exclusive, because the Holy One is present in both. I also want to notice the “thin places” in which for brief shining moments I am very mindful that God is present, around and through me, above and below me, within and outside me. I want to place my story into that cruciform space, as an express intention to acknowledge that all of my life is sacred and that it is evident in the concrete details of the journey I take.

Holy Spirit, be my companion.

 

“The Mother God Made Me To Be:” Book Reflection

19 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in book reflection, children, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

children

Mothering

This week as I am blessing my own children day and night, I have been asked to reflect on a new book being published by FaithWords, Hachette Press, called The Mother God Made Me To Be, by Karen Valentin, a writer of for Daily Guideposts and a single mother of two young boys. She and I are at opposite ends of the mothering spectrum; she writes about the beginnings and endings of  a marriage, and her call to be the single working mother of young children, responsible for supporting them. I am a retired grandmother in a long marriage, whose days of balancing mothering and vocation are completed. Yet, there are many overlaps in the ways we love and care for our children.

In her book made up of vignettes of her story, Valentin captures both the extreme delight of mothering children, each one a unique miracle, and the overwhelming and unremitting sense of responsibility for their welfare-physical, emotional and spiritual. She is candid about her fatigue and disappointment that is exacerbated by having to raise her boys alone, and having to face the reality of living a life that is not the one of which she dreamed. What she finds through her spiritual journey, supported by family, friends and church, is the Presence of the God who continues to work in and through her, even in her times of most conflicted decisions; she encounters the Spirit in worship, in ministry, in sustenance, in surprise and  quiet moments.

Almost every mother I know struggles at some time or in some situation with their “mothering,” whether their children are tiny, as they were in the middle sections of the Valentin’s book, or older in school, or teenagers, or adults with children of their own. The cultures we in habit in 21st C. North America do not support us well. In this present day mothers of young children are caught in culture wars in which almost every act of nurture is a cause for polarization–breastfeeding, working inside or out of the home, schooling–public, private or home, vaccinations, feeding, sleeping. There seem to be a limitless number of judges and critics who have an opinion on what a mother should do. Karen Valentin in not immune from those pressures, living in New York City, raising two boys on her own. Yet she continues to seek and to find both solace for the sadness and energy for the tasks in front of her, as she listens to the Spirit leading her, even letting her dare to become self-employed and entrepreneurial in her calling to be the kind of mother God wants her to be.

For every mother who is feels challenged by that calling, this book will be an encouragement to keep faith, to seek support and to recognize that we are not alone. The community of faithful, seeking mothers is wide and deep, and Karen Valentin has given voice to many of us in telling her story.

Personal photo from Museum Plaza, Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Lent 1: Blessing the Children

13 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in blessing, children, Lent, prayer, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

angels, children, dailiness, Lent

In Lent this year, I am practicing some themes fromGreeneValentine15 Celtic spirituality, suggested by Joyce Rupp, one per week. Her first theme is to notice and celebrate the Presence of the Holy in the ordinary–the small details of our lives–our routines, our surroundings and the people who are front and center. She makes the suggestion that every morning and evening we bless our children.

I have prayed for each of my children and grandchildren since before they were born. But in picking up this Lenten practice which is more regular and more intense, I notice first that my prayers for them now are often either “defensive,” asking for protection or correction, or are just generic, “bless the beasts and the children” kinds of prayers. To bless them in a focused way twice a day is calling me to focus on each of them in his or her particularity, and to see them more deeply and lovingly.

John O’Donahue in his book, To Bless the Space between Us, describes blessing this way:

A blessing is not a sentiment or a question; it is a gracious invocation where the human heart pleads with the divine heart.

So I embark this practice with an open heart. What do I already know about each of them, two of them since their conception?  What do I still need to observe and to learn? In what can I take delight and rejoice? What concerns can I lift to the Holy One for healing, for satisfying, for directing, for deepening? And how can I be a blessing to each of them, without hovering, prying, judging or interfering?

It was a joy-filled exercise to inscribe in my journal the name of each one, and to limn out the qualities and aspects of that personality, as I pray for blessing for her or for him for that morning and evening. In the collection of the eight of them (in-laws included!), there is such diversity in temperament, style and  affections: introverts and extroverts, actors and contemplatives, students and athletes, cheerleaders and followers.  In addition, they all keep growing up, changing, even the adults among them, so that my list keeps inviting additions and subtractions day by day. I bless school assignments, sports events, play dates, rehearsals, and after-school lessons. I bless marriages, job searches, office politics, bank accounts. And I bless the working and loving, the hopes and the dreams, as well as bumps in the road that seem to block those dreams.  And I pray for each unique spirit of that growing one, made in the image of the Holy, that it be preserved and nourished, and, yes, protected, as it follows the path of the Spirit that is meant for it.

Joyce Rupp suggests this prayer of blessing:

May God and the angels guide, guard, and protect you this night.

And so I go to sleep praying this blessing for each one by name…Sean, Erica Lee, Dalton, Malakai, Erica Brooke, Ezra, Theo, Sadie. I am filled with hope as I bless each one, even  as I enter into the arms of the angels who watch and bless me as I sleep, believing that the One who is blessing me will also bless them. A loving way to begin Lent!

 

 

 

 

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Archives

Follow A Musing Amma on WordPress.com

Recent Posts

  • GRATITUDE–IN DETAIL November 16, 2023
  • Unveiled Faces October 31, 2023
  • Celebration! August 9, 2023
  • Pentecost: Take a Breath May 31, 2023
  • Eastertide April 14, 2023

Categories

  • action
  • advent
  • aging
  • b
  • balance
  • beauty
  • blessing
  • body
  • book reflection
  • breaking bread
  • Breath
  • candlemas
  • celebrations
  • centering
  • change
  • changing my mind
  • children
  • choosing
  • Christmas
  • clouds
  • community
  • compassion
  • creation
  • daily examen
  • darkness
  • delight
  • Discernment
  • discovery
  • doing good
  • dryness
  • earth
  • Easter
  • Epiphany
  • examen
  • faces
  • faith
  • faithfulness
  • family
  • fear
  • food
  • freedom
  • friendship
  • gifts
  • giving up
  • grace
  • gratitude
  • grief
  • Holy Week
  • Hope
  • hospitality
  • icons
  • illumination
  • Jesus Christ
  • joy
  • lament
  • legacy
  • Lent
  • letting go
  • Light
  • listening
  • loss
  • Love
  • marriage
  • Mercy
  • Mindfulness
  • ministry
  • mothering
  • music
  • mystery
  • Mystery
  • New year
  • open heart
  • opening my mind
  • paying attention
  • peace
  • pilgrimage
  • praise
  • prayer
  • presence
  • rainbow
  • reflection
  • refreshment
  • remembering
  • renewal
  • rest
  • retreat
  • rose
  • sabbath
  • sacred reading
  • saints
  • sanctuary
  • scripture
  • seasons
  • seeing
  • senses
  • shadow
  • sharing
  • shelter
  • silence
  • singing
  • slowness
  • soul friends
  • sources of Spirit
  • Spirit
  • spiritual direction
  • surprise
  • taste
  • teaching
  • time
  • touching
  • traveling mercies
  • Uncategorized
  • waiting
  • weeping
  • wisdom
  • women
  • Word

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • A Musing Amma
    • Join 125 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • A Musing Amma
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...