• Fifth Sunday of Lent

Gleanings

Gleanings

Category Archives: Gleanings

5th Sunday of Ordinary Time

09 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Isaiah 58: 7-10; Psalm 112, 4-9; Cor 2 2:1-5; Mt 5: 13-16

you shall cry

for help

and God’s

light

will break forth

like the dawn

upon a wounded

heart

quickly healed

you shall

overflow

in generosity

feeding

the hungry

a shelter

for the homeless

covering

the naked

freeing

the oppressed

satisfying

the afflicted

salt of the earth

you are preserved

from destruction

rooted

in love

you shall not

be moved

Do you care for your own?

Do you feed the hungry and clothe the naked?

Are you a shelter for the oppressed and homeless?

Does the light dawn in your heart?

Feast of the Presentation of the Lord

02 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Mal 3: 1-4; Psalm 24: 7, 8, 9, 10; Hebrews: 2: 14-18; Luke: 2: 22-40

Holy Spirit

preparing

the way

guiding lives

opening

 praying eyes

to Glory

we see the one

we have longed for

who saves us

from our fear

of  death

and the sin

that enslaves us

hearts opened

and revealed

we endure

the purifying

 flame

of love

and mercy

through

His tested faith

and give thanks

Do you see His Glory?

Do you experience His saving power?

 How are you guided by the Holy Spirit?

3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

25 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Isaiah 8: 23-9:3; Psalm 27; 1 Cor 10-17; Mt 4:12-17

united in mind

and judgment

anguish

has taken wing

streams of light

beam into

our darkness

bringing joy

to a land

of gloom

he calls us

we follow

to dwell

in the house

of the Lord

gazing on

loveliness

we are

completed

in love

yoke of burden

lifted

rod of taskmaster

smashed

making way

for light

risen

Do you experience His joy?

 Do you feel your burden lifted?

Do you experience the Unity of Christ?

Martin Luther King

20 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

A Touching Story from This American Life

It all began at Christmas two years ago, when my daughter was four-years-old. And it was the first time that she’d ever asked about what did this holiday mean? And so I explained to her that this was celebrating the birth of Jesus. And she wanted to know more about that. We went out and bought a kids’ bible and had these readings at night. She loved him. and  wanted to know everything about Jesus.

So we read a lot about his birth and his teaching. And she would ask constantly what that phrase was. And I would explain to her that it was, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” And we would talk about those old words and what that all meant.

And then one day we were driving past a big church and out front was an enormous crucifix.

She said, who’s that?

And I guess I’d never really told that part of the story. So I had to sort of, yeah, oh, that’s Jesus. I forgot to tell you the ending. Well, you know, he ran afoul of the Roman government. This message that he had was so radical and unnerving to the prevailing authorities of the time that they had to kill him. They came to the conclusion that he would have to die. That message was too troublesome.

It was about a month later, after that Christmas, we’d gone through the whole story of what Christmas meant. And it was mid-January, and her preschool celebrates the same holidays as the local schools. So Martin Luther King Day was off. I knocked off work that day and I decided we’d play and I’d take her out to lunch. We were sitting in there, and right on the table where we happened to plop down, was the art section of the local newspaper. And there, big as life, was a huge drawing by a ten-year-old kid from the local schools of Martin Luther King.

She said, who’s that?

I said, well, as it happens that’s Martin Luther King. And he’s why you’re not in school today. So we’re celebrating his birthday, this is the day we celebrate his life.

She said, so who was he?

I said, he was a preacher.

And she looks up at me and goes, for Jesus?

And I said, yeah, actually he was. But there was another thing that he was really famous for. Which is that he had a message. And you’re trying to say this to a four-year-old. This is the first time they ever hear anything. So you’re just very careful about how you phrase everything.

So I said, well, yeah, he was a preacher and he had a message.

She said, what was his message?

I said, well, he said that you should treat everybody the same no matter what they look like.

She thought about that for a minute. And she said, well that’s what Jesus said.

And I said, yeah, I guess it is. You know, I never thought of it that way, but yeah. And it is sort of like “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

And she thought for a minute and looked up at me and said, did they kill him, too?

—-Story from NPR’s “This American Life” with Ira Glass  First aired 6-22-2001  KID  LOGIC

2nd Sunday of Ordinary Time

18 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Isaiah 49: 3, 5-6; Psalm 40-2, 4, 7-10; Cor 1: 1-13; John 1: 29-34

 Holy Spirit

your law

written in my heart

it is my delight

to do

your will

to serve

your

love

formed in

my mother’s womb

glorious light

of God

you are my strength

here I am

to do

your will

your song

upon my lips

sacrifice

oblation

holocaust

and sin-offering

you seek not

but your will

is your love

your justice

a light to the nations

Do you know God’s law written in your heart?

Does it guide your life?

How do you experience God’s will?

Love looks for you

15 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Like the star
that appeared
in the night sky over Bethlehem,
God is the first to appear
and signal
to the world his presence,

God is always the first
to take the initiative —
he is the one who invites
and then patiently waits.

“The Lord calls you,
the Lord looks for you,
the Lord waits for you,”
The Lord doesn’t proselytize.
He gives love
and this love looks for you
and waits for you, you!
Even if right now
you don’t believe
or you are far” from God.

Pope Francis
January 6th 2014

The Baptism of Jesus

11 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Isaiah 42: 1-4, Acts 10: 34-38; Psalm 29: 1-10; Mt 3: 13-17

 a Spirit

descends

like a dove

and favor

rests

upon

a chosen one

bringer of peace

doer of good

healer of wounds

a voice

over the water

glory thunders

as a sky

opens

beloved Son

Spirit of God

the people

are blessed

with peace

 Do you experience the peace of Christ?

Do you live the peace of Christ?

Do you spread the peace of Christ?

 

 

The Epiphany

04 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Readings: Isaiah 60: 1-6;  Psalm 72: 1-13; Ephesians 3: 2-6; Mt 2: 1-12

 

stars and dreams

guided them

men who knew

their world

in  and out

by reading

streams

 of light

streams

of sleeping thoughts

to find

salvation

knowing

as they did

the promised

would come

they brought gifts

to the giver

paying homage

to the justice

that would flower

from

seed of peace-

born

afflicted

and

poor

yet they

rejoiced

at hope

radiant

with His light

born

into darkness

hearts throb

and overflow

with love

Do you follow the stars to His love?

Do you pour out your treasure?

 

Remembering

02 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

January 2nd… a poignant day….remembering family births and loss…the joyous birthdays of my nieces Rebecca and Sara and my nephew Freddy and then loss of my dad who brought so much love to all of us.  I am feeling deeply the complexity of love that takes us to our heights of joy and depths of anguish.

We never know where love will take us and certainly our journey with Freddy in particular was one we never could have imagined…..  Freddy was diagnosed with schizophrenia in his late teens and through his wanderings ended up in the California state prison system…a notoriously unjust and cruel experience for anyone…particularly one with a mental illness.  He ended up taking his own life there.  His life has become an important piece of my faith story

For those who suffer in the world’s trials and  injustices I offer up part of his eulogy as a prayer…..

…Godson, so far beyond my reach in the prison where you lived—the walls and bars being only a shadow of the deeper prison of your mind.  Your life was our question, shaking us from our neatly held principles of life and love and faith, calling us to places we might not ever have gone.  Your life often seemed closed to us—you lived in all the places we dared not go, among the drifters, the homeless, our worst prisons, among the injustices to the mentally ill.

These were no one’s wishes or dreams for you.  We want to go back to your smiling, mischievous youth, filled with boundless energy, to the soccer fields, to the boy filled with potential.  Is that where we would see the meaning of your life…some lost potential…or would that just be another of life’s lies? 

When I ask myself the meaning of your life, a life that often seemed so broken and fragile I search into the ultimate meanings and have to ask…did this life inspire love?  And I realize that it has been here in your life that I have seen one of the greatest of loves I have ever known.  It has shown through the woman of my sister, who through her undying love never gave up on you, never gave up hope, and who followed you into the worst of places in spite of her own pain.

And what of the rest of us, not so tireless, more easily discouraged.  Through you and for us it is a time to know the power of God’s mercy—the mercy that comes to us in our time of need, of sorrow, of our powerlessness, and our human frailty.  The love that comes to save us, forgive us in a way much greater than we can imagine, much greater than we ever deserve. 

Your life called forth the saints to me to learn how to love you.  Mother Teresa, gifted with love, knew how to see Christ in his distressing disguise, like some kiss of Jesus of which we wish to recoil yet she could embrace in suffering.  She allowed me to see a love that didn’t need to judge you or control you but just lived as a harbor of love’s grace. 

When I saw you in your prison, I was most struck by the sudden flashes of your smile.  They were wide, and bright, with a clarity and goodness, often buoyed by thoughts of Nana and Popi Mann’s …it was as though we could reel in all the goodness again and set us all free.  But it was not to be our doing.  

God is our harvester, claiming his own, reaching into our soul to retrieve our goodness, leaving at last all the demons behind. 

Your life has inspired a greater love in me than I would have known without you.

I will miss your smile Freddy, but cannot help but rejoice in your spirit at peace, set free from the world’s sufferings, and at home with God.

A New Years Prayer

01 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Susan Morse in Gleanings

≈ Leave a comment

Ephesians 3: 17-21

And this prayer I make
That you may be
strengthened with power
through his Spirit in the inner self,
And that Christ
may dwell in your hearts
through faith;
that you, rooted and grounded in love,
May have strength to comprehend
with all the holy ones
what is the breadth
and length
and height
and depth,
And to know the love of Christ
that surpasses knowledge,
so that you may be filled
with all the fullness of God.

← Older posts
Newer posts →

About

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Gleanings
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Gleanings
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar