United
in Prayer Day
March 21, 2020
“Healing Divisions”
A day
dedicated to whole-making in ourselves,
our relationships and our world
“Prayer is the energy of awakening to this radical presence of God. It is the breathing of God’s Spirit in me that awakens me to the reality of my own existence. As I awaken to my own reality, I awake to the reality of the whole of which I am part, the whole that is the universe itself. … As I am pulled into the power of God, my mind is filled with light and my being expands. Such is the power of contemplation.
“Theologian
Wolfhart Pannenberg describes the Spirit as a field in which one’s particular
being exists. Each person is like a particle in a relational field in which the
Spirit unifies the various fields of energy. If this analogy holds true, then
the particularity of my existence depends on my energies of relatedness. Prayer
expands my field of energies so that the more deeply I am related to God, the
more expansive are my relationships which energize and unite, and thus
contribute to the work of evolution.”
– Ilia Delio, ” Praying
In Teilhard’s Universe,” The Omega Center Newsletter, January 14, 2020
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“The awakening of the inner eye of faith is the awakening of the contemplative process. You begin to see the Divine Presence in everything without effort – even when the necessities of daily life require your full attention. When the inner eye of faith is thoroughly opened, it is a fairly permanent state of mind. You see everything as it is, but you also see it in its Source which is the presence of God. … To see God in everything, however hidden, is an enormous enhancement of the capacity of perception. … The practice of silence allows God greater freedom to act in us as our interior life becomes freer from our predispositions and predetermined mindsets. …”
– Thomas Keating, God is Love: The Heart of All Creation companion book
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“For the Christian, the choice for wholeness is embedded in the gospel life, following the words of Jesus, ‘I have come so that you may have life and have it to the full.’ (Jn 10:10). We are to focus our minds and hearts on the whole and choose the whole for the sake of abundant life. …
“In a remarkable letter to the director of the Vatican Observatory, John Paul II wrote: … ‘Unity involves the drive of the human mind toward understanding and the desire of the human spirit for love. … Unity is also the consequence of love. If love is genuine, it moves not towards the assimilation of the other, but toward union with the other. Human community begins in desire when that union has not been achieved, and it is completed in joy when those who have been apart are now united.’
[…]
“Jesus began his mission by announcing the dawn of a new age, a new humanity unified in the love of God and committed to the reign of God. He challenged the social patterns of exclusivity and sought to replace it with the values of compassion and mercy. His inner oneness with God became manifest on the level of community, where he sought to overcome divisions by giving priority to men and women as coequal in God’s reign and by empowering the poor, lowly and marginalized. The reign of God is not an abstract ideal, he indicated, but a concrete reality. It begins with a consciousness of God and a desire to live in accord with God’s law of love. Jesus’ deep oneness with God empowered … a non-dual consciousness of belonging to the whole and the whole belonging to God. He lived from this wholeness by going ‘all over Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the good news of the kingdom, and healing people from every kind of disease and sickness’ (Mt 4:23). He constantly challenged others to see, to awaken to the presence of God, and to be part of an undivided whole, the kingdom (or ‘kin-dom’) of God, where Jew and Gentile, rich and poor, male and female are invited as equals to the divine banquet.”
– Ilia Delio, Making All Things New: Catholicity, Cosmology, Consciousness
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“In the Christian tradition love is the bottom line: ‘Love God with your whole heart, mind, soul and strength and your neighbor as yourself.’ The same God is in others as in us. All humans basically are equal and, if they consent, are inserted into the Mystical Body of Christ to serve each other and to build-up the Body of Christ in every possible way. …
“We belong to the human family and are developing and growing in breadth of perspective and in relationship to God. Christian non-duality then is this increasing merging of all our interests of body, soul, and emotions into the Body of Christ, the New Creation, who through the Spirit has given us the guidance of the Fruits and Gifts of the Spirit. …”
– Thomas Keating, That We May Be One: Christian Non-Duality