• About

A Musing Amma

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

A Musing Amma

Tag Archives: delight

Into Holy Week: Taking Delight in Love

12 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in delight, Holy Week, Lent, Love

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

delight, Holy Week, Lent, Love

Lent is coming to an end, and I turn into Holy Week, and I have just celebrated another wedding anniversary. In my practice of Taking Delight this Lent, I am aware of how many ways Love has shown up and continues to show up, around me and in the events we commemorate next week, enough to fill an alphabet:

Love is Ample. Love is Blessed. Love is Caring. Love is Delightful. Love is Elegant. Love is Forgiving. Love is Graceful. Love is Holy. Love is Imaginative. Love is Joyful. Love is Kind. Love is Lavish. Love is Mysterious. Love is Nuanced. Love is Observant. Love is Pliable. Love is Quintessential. Love is Redemptive. Love is Splendid. Love is Thoughtful. Love is Useful. Love is Volatile. Love is Wrestling. Love is eXtraordinary! Love is Yearning. Love is Zesty.

And Love is all around–in creation, in children, in old folks, in longtime enemies–now reconciled, in congregations and gatherings, in memories, in animals and birds, in friends and lovers. And in the Presence of the Holy.

During this coming week I will be seeing where Love appears still–in sacred texts, in worshiping groups, in conversations, in halls of governance and political encounter (!), and even in moments of solitude and silence. My prayer is not just that I can take delight in the Love I find, but that I will learn to practice and share Love more deeply in the Easter season to come, awash in the gifts given me through the Holy One–compassion, self-giving, and New Life! I will take Delight in the Love!


Advertisement

Lent: Taking Delight in Memories

20 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in delight, grace, remembering, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

delight, grace, remembering

Outlier art–Quilt from Gee’s Bend

In this Lenten season of taking delight, I am savoring good memories with delight. Sacred texts reminds us to mark and remember the goodness of the Holy One, for God’s sake, and as a marker of the Grace that has brought us safely thus far. I notice that the concrete way I have taken delight in happy memories is through my gathering of quilts. In my living room in pride of place is my Amish quilt that I acquired when I finished my last degree program. On the back of the chair in that room is the quilt my husband has made of all of the ties he wore in his 50 years of teaching. On the bed in the guest room is a quilt made for me by friends on a big anniversary of my ordination. I have a collection of quilts on the adjacent chair, given to me by friends who knew I loved them. And in the corner where I go to pray each morning, I lean into an antique quilt, restored and given to me by my late spiritual director, Betsy, a legacy which unfolds around me each day. Each one captures memories of the good, the true and the beautiful.

If left unchecked my mind can turn to the dark side of memory with ease–the bad, the rumor and the ugly. Wasn’t that awful? weren’t they unkind? if only I had… And I know from experience, as Shakespeare has said, that way madness lies. So my Lenten practice this year is to take delight in the memories, not denying the dark and painful, but asking myself, How was God present in those events? those conversations? those outcomes? The quilts are one visual reminder of the way that God has been there through it all–those delightful things–the joy of studying despite the loads of papers and attention to detail; the call to teaching faithfully followed by my husband for all those years; the friends and family who have accompanied me in the long and winding road to and through ordination to retirement; and the strong and gentle direction I was given for so many years, taking me more deeply and truly into the Mystery we call God.

And yes, there were hurts and slights on the journey, some that still sting. However, in many of them I can remember moments of laughter, of surprise, and most, amazingly, lessons that were learned that gave me strength for the rest of the journey. I think of Joseph who became ruler in Egypt when facing his treacherous brothers, saying to them, “Even though you intended to do harm to me, God intended it for good…” Gen 50:20. Some sad memories can’t be understood with a meaningful gloss though, and I find that I need to let then go, again, again, again.

Meanwhile, I am taking delight in the good things that are in my narrative, and In the wider world, and the memories that can be reframed. And I love to witness the memories of others. At the art museum this spring as part of an exhibit of “outlier art” were several quilts from Gee’s Bend in Alabama, an isolated town of African-American sharecroppers, creating quilts out of what they had available to cover themselves, to keep warm, and to remember. When the quilts came to greater public awareness in the last part of the 20th Century, viewers were astonished at what they saw–unconventional, daring and beautiful! Taking delight!

I continue taking delight this Lent by remembering the places, names and times I have encountered the Holy. And I am thankful!

Take Delight–in Creation

13 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by Elizabeth Nordquist in creation, delight, paying attention, praise, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

creation, delight, paying attention

Lent I==All creation cries!

A group of us reflected this week on knowing God through creation and how it is leading us to a deeper and wider connection with everything that God has made. We did this in readiness for being open to what we are invited, even mandated, to do for the sake of the created world. We had planned to go on retreat to a nature preserve, but the weather (yes, even here in Southern California!) was cold, gloomy, and even though it wasn’t raining, the threats seems imminent. We huddled in my living room over hot drinks and coffeecake at first, shared times when the Holy One had seemed very present to us in nature–the sacred places, the “aha” moments, the times when out of doors, when the Spirit gobsmacked us with Mystery and Grace! Then we went into silence, with the choice to go outside, parkas, shawls and all, to encounter holiness! As we reassembled, the energy was palpable–the ornamental plum trees, the birds chirping, the bee, tracing his bee-like way through the blue flowers, and the spent camellia with a yellow leaf and abandoned twig making a collage for the focus of our contemplation and prayer–all had called us into love, wonder and praise for the Creator.

Then, as if we had not been bathed in praise already, as one of our number drove home, she was showered with a migration of a host of Painted Lady butterflies, on their way north. Another person encountered them farther on, and then another, and the next morning, as I sat in my living room, I watched them parade for over an hour on their appointed route to the north. Amazing!

Several traditions tell us that God is revealed to us both in sacred text and in nature. I felt that I had encountered the Holy in a number of ways in the created world. Certainly I observed the Beauty–of color, shape, variety, process, growth, texture. And I felt the way that Beauty–in all of it manifestations–activated and sharpened my senses, in the words of the hymn, “tuning my heart to sing God’s praise!” But, I also felt some of the teaching of God through nature in the metaphors it offered–the connected-ness of the vines, the cycle of rising and falling, blooming and dying. I found that John Calvin, Reformer and pastor had said, “As soon as we acknowledge God to be the supreme Architect, who has erected the beauteous fabric of the universe, our minds must necessarily be ravished with wonder at his infinite goodness, wisdom and power.” (cited in Easter Gospel, by Sam Hamilton-Poore).

So this week for Lent I am taking delight in God’s earth, as I walk, go places, peer out my windows, with two questions: 1) what am I seeing about the creativity of the Holy One? and 2) how am I being invited to steward this web of creation of which I am apart? Taking Delight! Indeed!

Archives

Follow A Musing Amma on WordPress.com

Recent Posts

  • Lent 5: Purple March 27, 2023
  • Lent 4: Yellow March 22, 2023
  • Lent 3: Basic Black March 16, 2023
  • Lent 2: Blue and White March 7, 2023
  • Lent 1: Green March 1, 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
  • 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

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
  • Follow Following
    • A Musing Amma
    • Join 113 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • A Musing Amma
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...