Friday, March 27, 2009

My Favorite Parker J. Palmer Quotes

Quotes from Let Your Life Speak by Parker J. Palmer


"Before you tell your life what you intend to do with it, listen for what it intends to do with you."

"Vocation does not come from willfulness. It comes from listening."

"What a long time it can take to become the person one has always been."

Catching Fire With Love

An excerpt from The Life of Teresa of Jesus, The Autobiography of St. Teresa of Avila

"How is it that there are not many who are led by sermons to forsake open sin? Do you know what I think? That it is because preachers have too much worldly wisdom. They are not like the Apostles, flinging it all aside and catching fire with love for God, and so their flame gives little heat. I do not say that their flame is as great as the Apostles was, but I could wish it were stronger than I see it is. To hold our life in abhorence and to consider our reputation as quite unimportant. Provided we say what is true and maintain it to the glory of God, we ought to be indifferent whether we lose everything or gain everything. For he who in all things is truly bold in God's service will be as ready to do the one as the other. I do not say I am that kind of person, but I wish I were.

Oh, what great freedom we enjoy! It makes us look upon having to live and act according to the law of the world as captivity! It is a freedom which we obtain from the Lord, and there is not a slave who would not risk everything in order to get his ransom and return to his native country. And as this is the true road, there is no reason for lingering on it, for we shall never gain complete possession of that great treasure until our life is over. May the Lord give us His help to this end."

Monday, March 23, 2009

Splendor and Majesty















"Splendor and majesty are before him; strength and joy in his dwelling place."
1 Chronicles 16:27


Original photograph Gloria Fisher 2005
All rights reserved.

Abiding in the Shadow

Abiding in the Shadow
Walking in the Light
Moving in a paradox
Believing without sight.

Captives all go free
In this bondage to the King
With noises that are pleasing
And silences that sing.

Turning other cheeks
Heaping coals upon their heads
Doing unto others
Exactly what He said.

Dressing in the armor
Laying burdens down
Listening for the Whisper
Not in the thunder found.

Abiding in the Shadow
Walking in the Light
Moving in a paradox
Believing without sight.

Copyright 1994 Gloria Fisher.
All rights reserved.

A Promise Straight From Jesus

"Truly, truly, I say to you, he who believes in me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do; because I go to the Father. And whatever you ask in My name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask anything in my name, I will do it." John 14:12-14

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Your Goals for an Abundant Life

Jesus said in John 10:10: "I came that you may have life, and have it abundantly."
When contemplating your abundant life, it is important to include your "whole" life. Balance your life with goals for your body, soul, and spirit. The following may encourage some thought:


PHYSICAL/HEALTH GOALS:



SPIRITUAL GOALS:



PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP GOALS:



CAREER GOALS:



RECREATIONAL GOALS:



PERSONAL GROWTH GOALS:



FINANCIAL GOALS:



SOCIAL GOALS:



©Gloria Fisher 1997. All rights reserved.

Food for Thought - Pondering Your Destiny

Ten Questions to Ask Yourself About Your Destiny:

1. What desire will not release you?
2. What motivates you to produce?
3. What do you do that does not seem like work?
4. What do you do that gets a response from people?
5. What do you do that seems like doors open up for you?
6. How do your spiritual elders and leaders feel about your work?
7. What do you do that makes you feel good about yourself?
8. What do you do that makes you think creatively?
9. What are you doing that you’re willing to sacrifice for?
10. What work are you doing that you’d like to face God with?

Bishop Earl Paulk 1998

A Morning Prayer

"This is a another day, O Lord. I know not what it will bring forth, but make me ready, Lord, for whatever it may be. If I am to stand up, help me to stand bravely. If I am to sit still, help me to sit quietly. If I am to lie low, help me to do it patiently. And if I am to do nothing, let me do it gallantly. Make these words more than words, and grant me the Spirit of Jesus. Amen."

Book of Common Prayer 1979

Abide in the Beauty of His Sanctuary

"Splendor and majesty are before Him, Strength and beauty are in His sanctuary."
Psalm 96:6
Original photograph 2006 Gloria Fisher
All rights reserved.

Clothed in His Glory



"Observe how the lilies of the field grow; they do not toil nor do they spin yet I say to you that not even Solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these."
Matthew 6:28-29
Original photograph 2006 Gloria Fisher
All rights reserved

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Meditation on the Tree of Life

Copyright 2009 Gloria Fisher. All rights reserved.

In the beginning God created a garden on the earth in the image of Paradise. And He called the garden Eden. It wasn’t exactly like Paradise, but it was very similar. In the garden He placed man and two special trees, the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God told the man that he could eat the fruit of any of the trees freely, except the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God said, “...but from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat from it you shall surely die.” (Gen. 2:16-17)

Therefore, in the Garden, there was the tree of life and the other tree, which might easily be called, the tree of death. God had set before man a choice, life or death. (Deut. 30:15) The first test, you might think.

It seems, from God’s behavior, that He is very much like a parent, a father. A father says don’t do this and don’t do that in order to discipline his children. Hardly ever does a father say do that! For instance, your father probably said, “Don’t play in the street. You’ll get hit by a car.” What he doesn’t say is “Go play in the yard. The grass feels great between your toes.” Or he might say, “Don’t touch that. You’ll get burned!” What he doesn’t say is, “Touch this! Doesn’t it feel wonderful?”

Sometimes what a parent says is negative in order to teach a lesson. What they don’t say would probably tempt you most of all, but somehow they never do that. In the Garden God acts like a parent--like a father. He says to the man, “Don’t go eat the fruit off that tree. If you do, you’ll die!” What he didn’t say was, “Go eat the fruit off that other tree. If you do, you’ll live forever!”

You would think the man would have gotten it, that he would not have eaten what his father said not to eat. But he didn’t. He did like we all do, he did the very thing his father told him not to do. Why would he do that?

Mostly, he did it to please the woman. He listened to her, instead of his father, God. What did she say that made him eat it? Evidently nothing. She simply handed it to him, and he took it. But he knew what she meant. He was there with her when she was tempted, and he said nothing. He simply went along.

The serpent, lying in wait on a branch in the tree of death, seduced the woman with lies, and she believed him. Why did he lie? It is his nature to lie. By now we all know that the serpent was evil. We know that the serpent was really Satan or the devil in disguise. He tempted the humans in order to kill them. Later in John 8:44 Jesus said, about the devil, “whenever he speaks a lie he speaks from his own nature; for he is a liar, and the father of lies.” So the serpent was lying because it was and is his nature to do so.

But why was he in that tree and not the other? Because the devil, by his nature, is a killer of human beings. According to Jesus, he “comes to steal, and kill, and destroy.”(John 10:10) Therefore, according to his nature, he was hanging around in the tree of death. It was his home. He could not have lived in the tree of life. It was not his territory.

If this event was a test, then man failed it miserably. Given the choice between life and death, man chose death. He ate the fruit of the tree of death. With that choice came a multitude of negative consequences. But because God is the loving father He is, He devised a plan to fix the problem.

His plan was to redeem man from his disastrous choices. How could God do that? Would we choose better the second time around? And perhaps, the most important question of all, would we remember how we had chosen wrong the first time in order not to make the same mistake again? Would we remember the two trees? Would we even recognize the true tree of life, if we saw it?

God’s plan consisted of many facets. First of all, He would come down Himself in the form of his Son in order to make a point. He would walk among man and tell man who He is, just as He had done in the Garden–walking in the cool of the day. (Gen. 3:8)

Another facet and necessary part of the plan, in order to redeem man back from sin and death, was that He would die on a cross, a cross made of wood cut from a tree. Maybe if man saw Him hanging on a tree, man would finally understand! His plan was to hang there in open view, our Creator, our Father, and say to each of us, “Here I am. Choose me! I am the tree of life.”

Paul says in I Corinthians, “For since by a man came death, by a man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all shall be made alive...”

Over and over again in Holy Scripture, Jesus said openly and emphatically that He is the life. He said, “I am the bread of life...” “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life... And “I am the resurrection and the life...” (John 6:35, John 14:6, John 11:25) He also said, “For just as the Father raises the dead and gives them life, even so the Son also gives life to whom He wishes.” (John 5:21)

Yes, God has set before us life and death. And we must choose. The first time man made a grave error in the Garden by choosing death. Let us remember the two trees in the Garden, and this time choose the true Tree of Life...Jesus Christ, the Son.

Friday, March 6, 2009

The Garden Beyond the Veil






Copyright 1981 Gloria Fisher.
All rights reserved.



She tapped my shoulder in my sleep
Awakening me to pools of sky-blue loving eyes,
Silver hair 'round her head like a halo
And her hand reaching for mine.

In this life we'd never met before,
But I loved her in an instant
And emotion choked my words as I tried to tell her
How happy I was she'd finally come for me.

We floated through my bedroom doorway
And through a veil beyond
Where I saw my bare feet leave carpet and step onto
emerald grass,
But I never felt its touch.

There in the emerald garden green among
A sea of other unknown loving eyes,
Love poured forth from them
And I knew each one and loved them all.

Time stood still in that place of peace
And we shared our love within.
We spoke of the Master and the World To Come,
But we never said a word.

A cloud passed over those sky-blue eyes
As she led me back to bed,
And I cried to think I could not stay
In the peace of that heavenly Eden.

But before she left she promised me
That she'll come back one day
And take me again where the saints await
To the garden beyond the veil.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Creativity

Copyright Gloria Fisher 1983. All rights reserved.


The carpenter knows his wood
Every nail and every mark.
He'd know each grain and knothole
If he felt it in the dark.

The sculptor knows his figure
Every curve and every bump.
He sees what no one else could see
Emerging from the lump.

The artist knows his painting
Every stroke and every line,
The sweet perfume of color
And the rich bouquet of wine.

The Maker knows His creature
Every flaw and every sin,
But reaches forth to love us
To create us once again.