There you will find me

From Tom’s Journal

Thomas Merton is my kindred spirit. Well, at least, I like to think so. I relate to him on so many levels. He’s a complicated fella with a deep soul, an aching heart, and a head full of thoughts.

Today, it’s his journal that beckons…

“If it is from Christ…”

Thanks again, Fr. Kent Tanner, for providing us with timely quotes from discerning and wise voices. This one is from David Bentley Hart.

Words from Clive…

Another favourite voice, one that has kept me fascinated and seeking for many years, is C. S. Lewis. Clive Staples Lewis is one of those endlessly poetic, thoughtful Irishmen who have changed the world – and continue to do so.

Enjoy.

Thanks to Father Ken for the wonderful mime!

A thought from Thomas Merton

Thomas Merton is one of my Christian “heroes”. An artist and writer, an intellectual and activist, a tortured soul full of mystifying, beautiful chaos. A teacher, monk, friend to many, and a man way ahead of his time. And, to my delight, a fellow Enneagram 4! His Christian faith was enriched through many conversations with many others equally unique but very different from him. I dare say we too would benefit from such diverse interactions.

Enjoy these thoughts I stole from a similar spiritual savant (and fellow Canadian) I admire, Justin Coutts over at his website: www.newedenministry.com.

The Creative Recovery Initiative, Episode 1

Pentecost, etc.

Friendship with God

“It’s a Beautiful Day”

Tuesday. 4th of July, 2023. American Independence Day. Three days after Canada Day. The day before tomorrow, also known as, today. Always a good place to start I figure.

My itinerary:

Pages of Bono’s “we-moir”, Surrender. He is perhaps the most compelling artist-writer of a generation or two.

A cafetière of the good stuff to settle accounts with the day.

Black ink on blank pages to begin my regular process of over-thinking my under-living.

Perhaps a few quiet moments presenting myself to myself, huddled up, tucked in, and rolled up in the bosom of Jesus.

Then, another slow journey to and through my weekly practice of Sabbath – my Tuesday hunt for shalom.

Today is North Berwick – Scotland’s version of tea ‘n tidy posh b’ gosh along her sniffling east coast. The North Sea is never satisfied to sit still but insists upon itself in childish guffaws, jumping around in an effort to stretch her restless legs.

My mind, gradually calling itself back to ground zero, is settled on few things these days. If age reveals anything at all (if you’re open to its ranting) it is that wisdom is about the law of misdirection, of diminishing returns. The longer we live, the less we have left to live. The older we get, the younger we wish we were. The more we know, the less we truly know. The more we pursue it, the farther away it appears. The wider we open our eyes to see, the more blinded are we by the light of all there is to see. Says Bono, “Wisdom is the recovery of innocence at the far end of experience” (Surrender, pg. 527).

I am under no false illusions that these days of reflection, reading, writing, pretentious decaf oat lattés in pretentious places, and mental gymnastics are making me smarter, let alone wiser, let alone better. But they do, in a sense, grease the skids for what might inevitably do so. Usually it shows up as failure, naïveté wrapped in narcissism, or just willful blindness. I take ordinary days for ordinary things so that, somewhere along the road, befuddled and betwixt and bemused as it may be, I might transform into something marginally better than I am right here, right now. God’s alchemy of extraordinary from ordinary. Divinity from detritus.

And, I’m good with that. I guess I’ll have to be since it appears God is seldom in the mood to reveal trade secrets. She loves to stay at the center of things but play in our peripheral vision. That way, we’re never caught like a deer in the headlights of God’s withering gaze. Instead, our head is pressed up tight to Her bosom, listening to that cosmic heart of perfect love.

I come to North Berwick often. Set upon gently sloping shoulders bared to the North Sea, it boasts a braggadocious profile in a golf swing swagger. A country club smile with tea cozy sensibilities. It is, in a word, sublime. Better still, it is pouring. Only my fellow petrichorians understand why this is so delightful.

The sea and I have an understanding. It needs to do nothing other than slosh about in its normal routine, twerking her waves at me while I lollygag at its shores sufficiently attentive to the needs of my soul. Rough ‘n tumble or quaint ‘n quiet, I’ll take it how it comes. I didn’t grow up near the ocean (the sea here in Scotland), having instead the daily reminder of my ineptitude as either a cowboy, oil roughneck, geologist, or economist, the generals in Calgary, Alberta’s army. That only made my lifelong yearning for ocean that much hotter, more insistent.

On these days of Sabbath, my thoughts inevitably drift to matters of faith and fury. My bugaboos bashing at heaven’s door in search of understanding. I reflect, usually with book and journal in hand, upon the life I’ve been given; the one I’m living, the places from which I’ve come, those toward which I’m heading, and the life to which I’m called in my best moments. Increasingly, I see them all as one. We are always living the life to which we are called. Our holiest moments are the same as our most mundane. When everything is holy, nothing is wasted, everything belongs (thank you Richard Rohr), and we can live in constant gratitude.

I end these brief recollections with Bono’s words:

“…faith is…more like a daily discipline, a daily surrender and rebirth. It’s more likely that church is not a place but a practice, and the practice becomes the place. There is no promised land. Only the promised journey, the pilgrimage. We search through the noise for signal, and we learn to ask better questions of ourselves and each other.

   I call the signal “God” and search my life for clues that betray the location of the eternal presence. For starters we look to who is standing beside us or down the road, the ones whose roof we share or the ones around the corner who have no roof. The mystics tell us God is present in the present, what Dr. King described as “the fierce urgency of now.”

   God is present in the love between us…In the way we meet the world.”

This has been an extraordinarily ordinary day. I’ll take it.

The Celts…again

I read. Like, a lot. Mostly narrative (novels), poetry, and spirituality. But also loads of practical, pastoral fare; the expected manuals of those like me in the craft of soul-shaping. As one who still stands uncomfortably close to the edges of evangelicalism, it is generally expected that I be of the ‘soul-winning’ trade. It’s not as though I’m uninterested as much as I’m…uninspired. The language is so quaint and banal by comparison. Hardly the kind of thing to draw anyone into the kaleidoscopic mystery of the Trinity.

For that, I turn to the Celts. Their muskiness and John the Baptisty daring-do has an almost Homeric quality about it. I revel in their disinterest in the urban diaconates of Rome in favour of the murky oak groves more suited to the thicker material of Desert Fathers-inspired mysticism.

Trust me, I am no expert in any of this. But I can say, without embarrassment, I’m an enthusiast. Living in Edinburgh now since October of 2021 has helped this thirst. My proximity to the mythic environs in which Celtic monasticism was born and from which it traversed the globe is delirious at times.

So, where was I? Oh yes. I read. Like, a lot. A lot of Celtic-related material. Some of it fictional, (as in my first ever Waverley novel of Sir Walter Scott. Highly recommended by the way, although not without copious cheat notes to help guide your way through narrative literally dripping in self-importance and fourth-wall breaks). But, I also love history as well, which is what I’m currently reading.

A more thorough review may well be forthcoming. But, for now, here’s a taste of writing so good it makes me cry, both with the joy of its beauty and in the discouragement that I possess a skill rather quaint and elementary by comparison. Sigh.

For now, just listen to these rigorous but calming waves of literary water lapping on the shores of your imagination.

“The monks who took their curraghs to the Hebrides knew that they sailed along the edge of the world and perhaps they also believed that they were moving along the edge of Heaven.

Seen from the Atlantic shore, silhouetted by the westering sun slowly enveloped in the still, soft air of the gloaming, the Hebrides become metaphors. Beyond these islands of the evening lay the vast wastes of the ocean, and beyond that, the end of the day, the dying of the light, the darkness. But beyond even that, there was hope, the eternal light of Heaven, where the sun warmed the fields and all those who had been saved, and where God smiled and stretched out His hand to bless those who had sailed to the islands in their curraghs and given their lives to Him.”

Good, right?

So then, back to reading and the dream of the world the Celts envisioned, and maybe just…be a part of creating it.