Spirituality for Beginners

Fr. Bede's almost-daily reflections. When it comes to the spiritual life, we're all beginners. I also send these out by email. Contact me at bcamera@anselm.edu. God bless!





Showing posts with label transformation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transformation. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

More about change from within.

Renewal of your mind, part 2

I did some more research around the word “renewal” and found a few things that might also be helpful. The complete quote in question is found in Romans 12:2: Do not be conformed to this world but transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.”

Now: the Greek word used there is the word for “metamorphosis,” which does indicate that come kind of a change is meant to be taking place; indeed, some change in appearance. Question: Are you appearing differently to others because of what you have been experiencing in your faith journey?

Interestingly enough, the Greek word is also closely related to another word which refers to transfiguration—such as the Transfiguration of the Lord that we heard about on the Second Sunday of Lent. During the Transfiguration, Jesus was changed as if from within in appearance. Question: What has been happening within you, or is something about to happen within you?”

I also offer a few quotes or phrases that come from various commentaries on the text:
·         “raised to a new level of being”
·         “a change that brings us more into accordance with the will of God”
·         the mind is changed in a way that makes it “an instrument of good” rather than of evil.
·         transformation “of character and conduct”
·         things move in 2 directions: what precedes from within and what follows it as a consequence.
·         clearer insight into what we ought to be and do.
·         giving the mind new desires, tastes, and directions
·         “the truth which renews the mind has a greater hold on me than it ever did before.”

I put these into quotation marks because they come from a website called Biblehub.com, a sight which provides a wide assortment of commentaries on just about every word or passage from the Bible.
If you’d like to peruse it yourself, go to biblehub.com/commentaries, type in the word or passage you’re interested in, and you will be led to a wealth of material on the subject.

Ultimate questions: how are the things quoted above being manifested in my own life? Is there anything in particular that I would like to pray for in these closing days of Lent?

God bless you.


Tuesday, March 15, 2016

How are things changing within you?

Be transformed by the renewal of your mind. (Romans 12:2)

Consider this: Over the past several months, has there been a change in your way of thinking? Thinking about your faith or the various aspects of your faith, or perhaps a slight adjustment in the way you look at the world and about your own life?

If you are a praying person, if you read the scriptures or other holy books, if you have remained open to the Lord working on your mind much like a potter works with a block of clay, then the renewal is taking place. And I assure you that the renewal will continue to take place as long as you are open to receiving what the Lord is trying to teach you, often without words, in your experience and in your prayer and in the way you live your life and live in relationship with other persons.

As for me, I take great delight when I discover myself acting in ways that I probably would not have acted in the past. I take great delight when I don’t pay any more attention to the gut reactions I have to things, but rather am able to hold them up to the light of what I have been studying or receiving in prayer. How about you?

Six months ago I would have approached this particular issue and tension in this way; now, however, I have discovered that it is possible to toss away my original way of acting and put on a new way of thinking which has led to a peaceful and profitable resolution to the tension which was “running the show” in me for a while. And that is what I think Paul means when he talks about the “renewal” of our minds.

In addition to that, I am discovering that much of what the world esteems as valuable is nothing other than an idol made of sand, and that things I once thought were interesting now seem vapid and empty. Again, renewal of the mind.

Can you relate to any of these things? Today in quiet time, I invite you to consider your own situation and make note of the changes that have been taking place. The Lord loves you and continues to work with you (and me) bit by bit, step by step, as we discover a new outlook on life and on the issues and desires in our lives.

God bless you.


Thursday, December 10, 2015

The light comes gently

From the 6th verse of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel:

                O come, O Dayspring from on high,
                And cheer us by your drawing nigh.

Think of the coming of the dawn. Consider how slowly it rises, and how gentle is its first light.
And then, consider the coming of the Savior of the World into the world: not as a mighty king, but as a little child, poor and homeless. Gradually, over the course of years, that child will grow into a man, into the God-man ready to teach and to heal, to suffer, die and to rise again. To be “a light in the darkness,” to quote the prologue in St. John’s Gospel.

These things come slowly.

Conversion, enlightenment, awakening: most often, these come slowly as well. Slow, gradual but inevitable.

I like to think of it in this way:
We are in a room that is completely dark. And we strike a match and light a single candle. At first, there is just a tiny, flickering light, but then the light slowly spreads and begins to fill the room with a soft gentle light. The light is there with us, but the room is still somewhat dark. Light and darkness exist together in the beginning. And then, if we use that tiny light to light other candles and spread them throughout the room, then the darkness recedes while there is only the light left.

This is the process of conversion, of enlightenment, of awakening or of anything else you might like to call it.

Sometimes Christ comes into our lives as a blast from heaven knocking us off our horse, as happened to Saint Paul. But for most of us, most of the time, the light begins as a dayspring, or as a single candle in a darkened room.

As you pray for the coming of Christ into your life this year, pray also that you might be able to see the gentle light as it begins its process within your heart and your mind and your soul.

Blessed Advent to you.