Thought for the day, Wednesday 17th September

Feast Day of Saint Hildegard of Bingen

“O Fire of the Spirit, life of all life of all creatures,
Holy are you, because you make all creatures come to life.
Holy are you, because you save the dangerously broken.
Holy are you, because you heal the wounds.
O tremendous flow which has permeated everything
in the heights and on earth and in all the depths,
You gather and unite us all.
Protect those who are incarcerated and free the bound ones because the divine power wants to keep them safe.
Through you the clouds stream and the ether flies,
the stones contain wetness, the waters form little brooks
and the earth drives forward its green.
You always lift up your disciples,
because the breath of wisdom delights them.
Therefore you should be praised,
you who are the sound of praise and the delight in life,
the most powerful hope and honour, which gives us the gifts of light.”

O Ignis Spiritus Paracliti by Hildegard von Bingen (1098 – 1179), translated by Brigitte McCready, Doncaster Unitarians

Thought for the day, Tuesday 16th September

“Our individual relationship with Spirit has to be personal and immediate for it to have authenticity. It cannot be gained by reading books. In every place, in every time, with every person, Spirit communicates in its own ways. Those who advance their spiritual lives by spending time in nature, in meditation, and in practice, learn the eternal knowledge which is the heritage of mystics in every tradition. To simply make repetition or to blindly accept the findings of others, without personal perception and understanding, invalidates our spiritual path.

The truly authentic spiritual tradition is one we are actively practicing: while it may indeed correspond with that of many other people, there will always be features within it that arise uniquely from our own living context, which we know to be authentic to the very core.”

From The Celtic Spirit: Daily Meditations for the Turning Year by Caitlin Matthews

Thought for the day, Friday 12th September

“I am dust particles in sunlight.
I am the round sun.

To the bits of dust I say, Stay.
To the sun, Keep moving.

I am morning mist,
and the breathing of evening.

I am wind in the top of a grove,
and surf on the cliff.

Mast, rudder, helmsman, and keel,
I am also the coral reef they founder on.

I am a tree with a trained parrot in its branches.
Silence, thought, and voice.

The musical air coming through a flute,
a spark of a stone, a flickering

in metal. Both candle,
and the moth crazy around it.

Rose, and the nightingale
lost in the fragrance.

I am all orders of being, the circling galaxy,
the evolutionary intelligence, the lift,

and the falling away. What is,
and what isn’t. You who know
Jelaluddin, You the one
in all, say who

I am. Say I
am You.”

Jalaluddin Muhammad Rumi (1207-1273)

Thought for the day, Thursday 11th September

“Spirituality emerged as a fundamental guidepost in Wholeheartedness. Not religiosity but the deeply held belief that we are inextricably connected to one another by a force greater than ourselves–a force grounded in love and compassion. For some of us that’s God, for others it’s nature, art, or even human soulfulness. I believe that owning our worthiness is the act of acknowledging that we are sacred. Perhaps embracing vulnerability and overcoming numbing is ultimately about the care and feeding of our spirits.”

Brené Brown, research professor and writer

Thought for the day, Tuesday 9th September

“Perhaps this is the deepest impression left by life in India, the sense of the sacred as something pervading the whole order of nature. Every hill and tree and river is holy, and the simplest human acts of eating and drinking, still more of birth and marriage, have all retained their sacred character… In the West everything has been “profane”; it has been deliberately emptied of religious meaning… It is there that the West needs to learn from the East the sense of the “holy,” of a transcendent mystery which is immanent in everything and which gives an ultimate meaning to life… Then everything is sacred. That is what one finds in India; everything is sacred – eating or drinking or taking a bath; in any of the normal events in life there is always a sacred action… We have lost that awareness… this sacramentality of the universe. The whole creation is pervaded by God.”

Bede Griffiths, aka Swami Dayananda (1906 – 1993), monk and yogi, quoted in Christian Mystics by Matthew Fox

Thought for the day, Wednesday 10th September

“Animism is the way humanity has been deeply connected to the land and its seasonal cycles for millennia, in rapport and conversation with the animals, plants, elements, ancestors and earth spirits. The opposite of animism is the “cult of the individual” so celebrated in modern society, and the loss of the animist worldview is at the root of our spiritual disconnect and looming ecological crisis. Human beings are just one strand woven into the complex systems of Earth Community, and the animistic perspective is fundamental to the paradigm shift, and the recovery of our own ancestral wisdom.”

Pegi Eyers, curator, visual artist and writer

Thought for the day, Tuesday 9th September

“Perhaps this is the deepest impression left by life in India, the sense of the sacred as something pervading the whole order of nature. Every hill and tree and river is holy, and the simplest human acts of eating and drinking, still more of birth and marriage, have all retained their sacred character… In the West everything has been “profane”; it has been deliberately emptied of religious meaning… It is there that the West needs to learn from the East the sense of the “holy,” of a transcendent mystery which is immanent in everything and which gives an ultimate meaning to life… Then everything is sacred. That is what one finds in India; everything is sacred – eating or drinking or taking a bath; in any of the normal events in life there is always a sacred action… We have lost that awareness… this sacramentality of the universe. The whole creation is pervaded by God.”

Bede Griffiths, aka Swami Dayananda (1906 – 1993), monk and yogi, quoted in Christian Mystics by Matthew Fox