Categories
Reflection

Love Looks for Burdens – by Mark Vincent Vicari

Photo: Copyright Marlyan Dimitrov, “What makes loneliness an anguish is not that I have no one to share my burden, but this: I have only my own burden to bear.” Dag Hammarskjold Flikr Creative Commons https://goo.gl/Y6lVnn https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/

Matthew 22:37-40

Jesus said, “Love the Lord God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.

That is the first and that is the greatest commandment.

The second is just like it; love everyone as you love yourself.

Hung on these two commandments, is all the law and the prophets.”

 1 John 4:21

This instruction we were given by Him.

That who loves God, should love his brother.

 Galatians 6:2

Bear each other’s burdens.

This will fulfill the law of Christ.

How often is it that we do not even know the burdens of those around us? After how many horrific social / family tragedies do we hear someone say, “Everything seemed ok. I had no idea they were struggling with all that.”?

How can we bear burdens that we aren’t even aware of?

 We even hear that phrase with parents speaking of their children, or one spouse speaking of the other. These are the closest relationships we have to us, and yet… we are ignorant of their burdens. If that is true, what of those social circles beyond those closest to us?

Our spouses, siblings, spouse? Our (literal) neighbor? Our neighbor’s grandparents neighbor? The people that sit in a pew 2 rows back and 5 people over towards the main door?

How can we help if we don’t know the problems around us? How can we bear a burden we don’t know someone else is carrying? Those are rhetorical questions obviously, because, it is clear that we can’t.

Before we even begin to address how to help people with all kinds of many varied burdens, struggles and pains, we need to gain the knowledge and awareness of their existence.

So, to start, I challenge those who read this, to pick one person, and ask, “How are you?”

Then, after they say, “Fine.” Reply with, “No. I mean…how are you really? I want to know if there is anything I can help you with.”

If you are truly brave, you can even pick someone you’re already sure needs help, by the way they walk, the way they talk, the weary look they carry on their face.

Also, and truly, I am sorry, but those of you who are under great secret duress, some of this responsibility falls on you as well. To you also, I challenge you pick one person you find yourself most able to dare it, and force yourself, drive yourself forward, and say plainly… “I need some help.”

We will start with that…and go from there.

Oh yes, naturally, if you ask to help, or ask for help… be prepared to offer help, or to receive it.

____________________

I have recorded audio versions of this, and my other devotionals, in formats that both do, and do not have background music. They can be listened to at…
SoundCloud.com/777arkV

I am an author, theologian and philosopher
I hope to be a teacher and a public speaker.
You can find information about me, my 1st book,
and much more that I’ve written at my website…
777arkV.com

Please note – If Bible verses are not specifically noted as being taken directly from the King James Version, I paraphrase all Bible verses that I use. The primary reason for this is in putting a verse into my own words I clearly expose how I read and understood the verse myself. Please always take the time to compare my understanding of a verse with the verse itself from your preferred translation of the Bible.

© 2015 Mark Vicari – All Rights Reserved

Categories
Devotional Resources

Devotional Guide: Joy

VISIO DIVINA – DIVINE SEEING

HEARING God’s Word, SEEING God’s Word, PRAYING God’s Word

The term, visio divina, is Latin for “divine seeing.” The practice of the visio divina is a method of connecting God’s Word with God’s creation using visual arts.

Theme: Joy

"I will make merry before the Lord"
“I will make merry before the Lord”

Psalm 97, 2 Samuel 6:16-23, Luke 2:22-38

Suggestions for how to practice the visio divina

  1. Place the name of God on your forehead by making the sign of the cross and saying, “In the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”
  2. Pause for a few moments with your eyes closed and take five to ten deep breaths.
  3. Look at the picture and take notice of any figures, shapes, colors or textures appeal to you.
  4. Read on of Scriptures under the picture, beginning with the Psalm. It is helpful if you use the same Scripture for a few of days (there is no hurry to finish the visio divina). Do not read the Scripture for the purpose of study, but let it speak to your heart. Take note of the emotions as well as the thoughts this passage brings to mind.
  5. Connect the Scripture to the picture. Are there common or uncommon elements between the two? Are there godly desires that you find rising to the surface of your thoughts? What is God revealing to you about who you are, about who God is?
  6. Now pray the Scriptures and picture using what you have discovered during this visio divina time.
  7. Finish by saying (if you use the visio divina in the morning), “May God order and direct my day through Jesus Christ according to his word, ” or (if you use the visio divina at night), “Grant me, O God, a restful night in Jesus Christ according to your word.”
  8. Either go about your daily routine, or lay you head on your pillow in peace.

If you like to write, you might consider journaling your thoughts when you are finished (not during) your time of meditation on God’s word.

Click on the picture to view a larger version.

God bless this journey of divine seeing.

Copyright Douglas P. Brauner

Categories
PWTE Daily Devotion

Glass from the Past

Click on this SoundCloud link to listen to today’s PWTE daily devotion

“Indeed, in your sight a thousand years are like a single day, like yesterday-already past- like an hour in the night.” Psalm 90:4 God’s Word to the Nations

It seems that the older I get the more flashbacks I experience. I had one of those occasions when I walked around the penny arcade in Manitou Springs, Colorado. It’s not that I hung out at a penny arcade as a child, but that the arcade possessed stuff from my past gathered into one space. Pinball machines, coin fed riding stuff and window shopping items like these reminded me of my distant past.

Like my distant past, these gum machines were distorted by the pane of dirty glass that protected them. This glass perverted my view of these machines. There were water spots and reflections that made it hard to see the details of these machines.

In the same way, my past is distorted as I move into the great unknown of the future. “Stuff” gets in the way of my memories so that I’m not sure what is real and what is now my perception of the past.

However, God sees clearly my past, our past. To God, our past is as if it were today. Maybe that thought frightens us. We’d like God to lose sight of our past, or that he’d at least see our past as better than it was (isn’t that how memories usually work?). Since, by definition, God stands outside of time “a thousand years are like a single day” to God.

If the psalmist speaks truth, and I believe he does, then we’re missing the point when we focus on our past failures and sins. If today is like a thousand years to God, or better yet, two thousand years, it’s as if Jesus died for us yesterday. Jesus’ mercy for us on his bloody cross is firmly fixed in the mind of God. God’s memory is fixed on his Son’s death and resurrection so much so that they are a present reality in our lives.

We might see through the glass dimly but God never does. His view of the cross is as clear today as it was two millennia ago.

Copyright, Douglas P Brauner

Click on this link to listen to the most recent PWTE podcast. The Pursuit of Happiness