Thought for the day, Friday 5th April

International Day of Conscience

“Somewhere in every heart there is a discerning voice. This voice distrusts the status quo. It sounds out the falsity in things and encourages dissent from the images things tend to assume. It underlines the secret crevices where the surface has become strained. It advises distance and opens up a new perspective through which the concealed meaning of a situation might emerge. The inner voice makes any complicity uneasy. Its intention is to keep the heart clean and clear. This voice is an inner whisper not obvious or known to others outside. It receives little attention and is not usually highlighted among a person’s qualities. Yet so much depends on that small voice. The truth of its whisper marks the line between honour and egoism, kindness and chaos. In extreme situations, which have been emptied of all shelter and tenderness, that small voice whispers from somewhere beyond and encourages the heart to hold out for dignity, respect, beauty and love.”

John O’Donohue

Thought for the day, Thursday 4th April

“We’ve got some difficult days ahead, but it really doesn’t matter to me now, because I’ve been to the mountain top, and I don’t mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life – longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And he’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over and I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land. And so I’m happy tonight; I’m not worried about anything; I’m not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.”

From a speech given by Martin Luther King Jr. on 3rd April 1968. He was assassinated on 4th April 1968.

Thought for the day, Tuesday 2nd April

“If you cannot find peace within yourself, you will never find it anywhere else.”

Marvin Gaye (1939 – 1984), born on this day

“Peace begins at home. Many of us have peaceful intentions regarding the world at large, but what is the use of feelings of cosmic peace if our own heart is troubled? ..Peace will sprout only when we ourselves spill tears of release upon the hard ground of our hearts.”

Caitlin Matthews

Thought for the day, Monday 1st April

“That the first breath will come without fear.
That the second breath will come without pain.
The third breath: that it will come without despair.
And the fourth, without anxiety.
That the fifth breath will come with no bitterness.
That the sixth breath will come for joy.
Breath seven: that it will come for love.
May the eighth breath come for freedom.
And the ninth, for delight.
When the tenth breath comes,
may it be for us to breathe together,
and the next, and the next,
until our breathing is as one,
until our breathing is no more.”

Blessing of Breathing by Jan Richardson

Thought for the day, Sunday 31st March

Easter Sunday

“Weeping may last for a night.
Weeping may last for a thousand nights.
But joy comes in the morning.
That morning we went to our beloved teacher’s tomb.
We went to anoint his body.
We carried oil and cloths.
We came to the tomb in sorrow, heads bowed low.
But hope does not die so easily.
It flickers inside, buried somewhere deep.
Hope grows, blossoms like a rose
even through stone,
even in hearts frozen by grief.
When we arrived at the place where he lay
We dropped all that we carried, in wonder, in fear,
to see the tomb laid open, and our beloved gone.
Do not weep, said the man.
This morning we rejoice.
Love lives. Hope lives.
Jesus is not here, he said.
Come and see.
He is risen.
Our beloved is risen. Our hope is risen.
Can it be?
Can it be?”

At the Tomb by Molly Housh Gordon

Thought for the day, Friday 29th March

“When we practice looking deeply into our body, we discover its nature of interbeing. It’s made of all the elements: earth, water, fire, air, space, and time. And we begin to see the mountains, the rivers, the trees, the flowers, the dew, the stars, the galaxies – everything in our body. The whole cosmos is there in it. And suddenly we see our body as something to bow down to. We discover deep reverence, and we learn to handle our body with respect.”

Thích Nhất Hạnh

Thought for the day, Thursday 28th March

“The goal of all religion is not to prepare us to enter into the next life; it is a call to live now, to love now, to be now – and in that way to taste what it means to be a part of a life that is eternal, a love that is barrier-free, and the being of a fully self-conscious humanity. That is the doorway into a universal consciousness that is part of what the word ‘God’ now means to me. This then becomes my pathway into the meaning of life that is eternal. It starts when we step beyond our hiding place in religion into thinking, and finally into being. It involves stepping beyond boundaries into wholeness, beyond a limited consciousness into a universal consciousness, beyond a God who is other into a God who is all.”

John Shelby Spong, former Episcopal Bishop of Newark, New Jersey, quoted in Fragments of Holiness for Daily Reflection