Online Healing Service – 16th April
Be free to let others know.
This week we will offer two online reflections.
On Maundy Thursday, Rev. Lesley Robinson will lead a reflection based on K. A. Austin’s book “The Garden”. There will be a time of reading followed by silent reflection appropriate to the theme of Gethsemane.
On Good Friday, Dr Iva Beranek will lead a reflection “How can we prepare for Easter Alleluia in the midst of all the pain the world is experiencing right now?”
Both reflections will be at 12noon via CMH:I Facebook live.
Here you can find the Church’s Ministry of Healing: Ireland Facebook page.
We hope you will join us.
Be free to let others know.
We have decided to offer an online guided reflection this week as well, on Thursday 2nd April at 3pm via Facebook live. The reflection will be facilitated by Rev Lesley Robinson.
Here you can find the Church’s Ministry of Healing: Ireland Facebook page.
We hope you will join us. Be free to let others know.
Keep safe.
One time, after Jesus was busy ministering to people and healing them, He went to a
solitary place to pray.
“Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up,
left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed. Simon and his companions went to look for him, and when they found him, they exclaimed: “Everyone is looking for you!” Jesus replied, “Let us go somewhere else, to the nearby villages, so I can preach there also. That is why I have come. (Mark 1:35-38)”
Jesus had a freedom to say ‘No’ to certain demands in order to do what He was called to do. This came out of His prayer life and relationship with God the Father. If we are to follow in Jesus’ footsteps then we are to have the same discerning spirit.
Our lives have changed drastically over the last few weeks, with restrictions of movement, many places, schools and churches closing down – for now. People with children are probably busier than before. People living on their own restricting human connection to mostly online encounters. Doctors, nurses, and those working in shops serving the country “on the front line”.
While demands have changed – increased for some, reduced for others – our ability to care for each other, and for the world around us, has been put on overdrive. The positive elements to it show us we are all connected. Our hearts are challenged to expand, to include the whole world in our prayer. But this can also be overwhelming.
The wisdom from John Eldredge may give us much needed peace. Eldredge speaks about “consecrating empathy”. Watching the news can easily overwhelm us. Yet the answer is not in shutting down every negative story we might hear and doing nothing. Instead, what we can do is “consecrate our capacity to care” (Eldredge). In other words, we can say a brief prayer and join our own capacity for care with Jesus’ capacity, which is infinitely greater. This way we are also giving God permission to direct us, to guide us how to use this capacity.
Having invited Jesus to help us in this caring process may eventually increase our own capacity in loving others, deepen our prayer, and bring creative solutions to our actions. Above all, it might increase the peace in our hearts, the peace that surpasses understanding. The more inner peace increases, the more peace there will be in the world too.
Thank you to those of you who joined in our online retreat last week.
If you missed it, you can listen and pray through the recording, which can be found
on the Church’s Ministry of Healing: Ireland Facebook page.
This week we will offer an online guided meditation with intercessions for the needs in our country & in the world. Join us live on our Facebook page this Thursday, 26th March, at 11am.
Blessings & keep safe.
We are offering online retreat this Thursday, 19th March, via Facebook live, at 11am to 12noon.
Here you can find the Church’s Ministry of Healing: Ireland Facebook page.
During this time of social distancing, the need to connect with each other still remains. This will be a space to connect with God, the source of all peace. We will join our prayers together – there will be a time within the hour where we will be able to bring our own petitions and intercessions to God.
No need to register. Simply tune in whenever you can.
Be free to let others know.
You are in our prayers.
Keep safe.
“In 12 years of research, I have never interviewed a single person with the capacity to really experience joy who does not also actively practice gratitude.”
Brené Brown
Practicing gratitude is simple. It does not requite any special skill, like riding a bicycle for example would. We can write our gratitude notes in a journal or on small pieces of paper that we put into a jar (“a gratitude jar”). While the practice is simple, it is good to be reminded of the value of gratitude.
Research has shown that gratitude can improve both mental and physical health, and “not surprisingly, grateful people are also more likely to take care of their health”.* A number of studies revealed other benefits, such as improvement in self-esteem, better sleep, reduced stress and even a help in overcoming trauma.
I have been writing a gratitude journal for a few years now. When I read through it I notice I am often grateful for small things. Or maybe better to say ordinary things, like sunshine, a fox in my garden, hot water – hot water features quite regularly in my gratitude notes. Green grass, a conversation with a friend, a pressed Autumn leaf in my notebook, especially since I found it at the beginning of Spring.
In “One thousand gifts”, Ann Voskamp describes her practice of writing one thousand gratitude notes into a journal. This practice gradually transformed her. When she was young, something tragic happened in her family and it marked the rest of her life. As a grown up woman, she had lovely six children, a husband, they lived on a farm, but her daily living was marked with anxiety and worry. Until she started to write the gratitude notes in her journal. She started noticing that her days were filled with beauty. Interestingly, a lot of the things she wrote about were also every-day and simple.
“243. Clean sheets smelling like wind
244. Hot oatmeal tasting like home
245. Bare toes in early light”
[Ann Voskamp, “One thousand gifts”, p. 55]
We have just started our Lenten journey. Lent is a time where we reflect on Jesus’ time in the desert. We journey with Jesus towards His final days on earth, His death and resurrection. I have never been in an actual desert, but I am sure that even there we can find things to be grateful for. Some deserts bloom with flowers during certain seasons.
There can be an oasis in the desert, and it must feel almost like a little miracle to come across one. Perhaps those who travel in the desert become aware of the essentials they need. We can be grateful for company, water, food, a shelter for the night. Even if we are not going to go physically into the desert, we can experience that life sometimes provides ‘desert-experiences’. During the difficult times, too, we can practice gratitude, and it may help to ground us into the experience of God’s goodness.
In Lent, at least liturgically, we don’t sing Alleluia, which is exclamation of relief and ultimate victory. But the prayers are still filled with praises to God. Those praises, as well as noticing gifts of each day, are a bit like new buds on the trees as Spring is gradually bursting into bloom. The more blossoms we notice, the more grateful we feel.
If we take gratitude as our Lenten practice, noticing goodness in life will guide us from the praises of God’s goodness towards the Easter Alleluia. We might even notice that some of the desert places within us bloomed as we did that.
Iva Beranek
Dr Iva Beranek is the Ministry Facilitator for the CMH: Ireland
The Dublin & Glendalough Committee invites you to their Quiet Day on Saturday, 22nd February starting at 10.30am. The day will be led by Rev Canon Adrienne Galligan. It takes place in Mageough, Cowper Road, Rathmines.
See further information on the flyer.
All are most welcome!