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The Mystical Year

Soulwork Toward Sunday: Self-Guided Retreat
Lent 5 (Year B)
"But If It Dies..."

New Revised Lectionary Texts


Sunday's Gospel

Now among those who went up to worship at the festival were some Greeks. They came to Philip, who was from Bethsaida in Galilee, and said to him, "Sir, we wish to see Jesus." Philip went and told Andrew; then Andrew and Philip went and told Jesus. Jesus answered them, "The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life.Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also. Whoever serves me, the Father will honor." Now my soul is troubled. And what should I say--' Father, save me from this hour'? No, it is for this reason that I have come to this hour. Father, glorify your name." Then a voice came from heaven, "I have glorified it, and I will glorify it again." The crowd standing there heard it and said that it was thunder. Others said, "An angel has spoken to him." Jesus answered, "This voice has come for your sake, not for mine. Now is the judgment of this world; now the ruler of this world will be driven out. And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself." He said this to indicate the kind of death he was to die. -John 12:20-33


Self-Guided Retreat

About This Week's Prompts for Personal Meditation

Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old.  Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? 
-Isaiah 43:18-19a

Praying is a slow dying.  In prayer you give up something of yourself and appropriate something of the sphere of the Divine in a continuous cycle of dying and resurrection. In prayer the growing soul leans toward the Light as a seedling leans toward the sun’s path.

Plant a bean in soil, and soon it puts forth roots and a stem and the seed itself is lifted up upon the stem, broken, transforming into the nourishing cotyledon.  This skeletal shell gives itself to the new green leaves which then begin the process of photosynthesis. The cotyledon, the old bean in withered form, falls off, spent, like the human body in death, having birthed and nurtured something new.

This week’s prompts encourage a meditation upon the cycle of death (meditation one), the promise of new life (meditation two), and bringing forth new life and love, "unity and peace" into an aching world (meditation three).

-Suzanne


Bosch, Death of the Miser, Detail
Meditation One  (introit)
Facing Death

Yearn for everlasting life with holy desire.
  Day by day remind yourself
    that you are going to die.
      -Rule of Saint Benedict 4:46-47
 
In soul
One who is learning further details concerning any office or art always proceeds in darkness, and receives no guidance from his early knowledge, for if he left not that behind he would get no further nor make any progress; and in the same way when the soul is making most progress, it is traveling in darkness, knowing naught ….

… For the nearer the soul approaches Him, the blacker is the darkness which it feels …. So immense is the spiritual light of God, and so greatly does it transcend our natural understanding, that the nearer we approach it, the more it blinds and darkens us.

-John of the Cross 1542-1591
The Ascent of Mount Carmel


In body ...
Ah! Beloved prison in which I have been bound, I thank thee for all in which thou hast followed me.  Though I have often been troubled by thee, yet didst thou come often to my aid.  All thy need wil yet be taken from thee at the last Day.  Therefore we will lament no more, but will be filled with gladness for all that God has done to us both.  Now let us only stand fast in sweet hope!

-Mechtild of Magdeburg   c.1207-1282/1294

In soul and body
True philosophers are always occupied in the practice of dying.

-Plato  424/423 - 348/347 BCE 
 Phaedo

Miscellany

"Rubble is the future"

Rubble is the future. Because everything that is, passes. There is a wonderful chapter in Isaiah that says: ‘Grass will grow over your cities.’ This sentence has always fascinated me, even as a child. This poetry, the fact that you see both things at the same time. Isaiah sees the city and the different layers over it, the grass, and then another city, the grass and then another city again.

-Anselm Kiefer


Stellar Nursery, Trifid Nebula, 9000 light years from earth, NASA


Eucharistic Universe

Our Universe is Eucharistic in its nature. Since the "great flaring forth" 13.7 billion years ago, all beings have been engaged in the exchange of energy. Everything arises, has its manifest time, and then surrenders itself to become food for another to arise into being. Each of us enters into a sacred trust upon receiving the energy given us; if wise, we use that energy for the furthering of the Universe adventure, then relinquish our life so that others may come into being. From stars to mites, everything eventually becomes good food so that life might continue.
 
We might describe the miracle and mystery of photosynthesis with curiously familiar language: a prokaryotic cell learned to eat the sun, storing that life energy to later release it to another so that life might continue. Is that not what we do in our liturgical ritual: eat of the Son that we might remember life was given in order to give us life?

-Sister Catherine Grace CHS


 

Christ Pantocrator, Cefalù Cathedral, Polermo, Italy, 12th century. Proportion of Christ to the surrounded by gold: divine life within the cosmos. Porphyry gold tunic: divinity. Blue mantle: humanity. Halo crown is also a cross. Arms open as sign of salvation.
Meditation Two  (insight)
my end is my beginning

Love is most nearly itself
When here and now cease to matter.
Old men ought to be explorers
Here or there does not matter
We must be still and still moving
Into another intensity
For a further union, a deeper communion
Through the dark cold and the empty desolation,
The wave cry, the wind cry, the vast waters
Of the petrel and the porpoise.
In my end is my beginning.

-T.S.Eliot   1888-1965
  'East Coker'  (last lines)

Meditation Three (integration)
to bear much fruit

The grain of wheat must die in order to bear much fruit:
fruits of unity and universal peace.
Jesus is speaking of his own death,
and he is also speaking for each one of us.
We, too, are called to die to selfishness
in order to bear fruit and be messengers of peace:
we are called to die to some things that may be good in themselves
but that hinder us on our path towards unity, peace
and greater openness in the Spirit of Jesus. …


-Jean Vanier
Drawn into the Mystery of Jesus through the Gospel of John


Christ was in the tomb; the whole world was sown with the seed of Christ’s life; that which happened thirty years ago in the womb of the Virgin Mother was happening now, but now it was happening yet more secretly, yet more mysteriously, in the womb of the whole world. Christ had already told those who flocked to hear Him preach that the seed must fall into the earth, or else remain by itself alone. Now the seed of His life was hidden in darkness in order that His life should quicken in countless hearts, over and over again for all time. His burial, which seemed to be the end, was the beginning. It was the beginning of Christ-life in multitudes of souls. It was the beginning, too, of the renewal of Christ’s life in countless souls. 


-Caryll Houselander 1901-1954


The Last Word

We know that all our mothers bear us for pain and for death.  O, what is that?  But our true Mother Jesus, he alone bears us for joy and for endless life, blessed may he be.
 
-Julian of Norwich  c.1342-c.1416
Revelations of Divine Love (ch.60)





Pinto bean seedling with cotyledon

 
[Jesus said]
   Very truly, I tell you 
    unless
    a grain of wheat
    falls into the earth
    and dies,
    it remains
    just a single grain;
    but if it dies,
    it bears much fruit.
           - John 12:24


Suzanne's Meditation

                       A Prayer from the Crypt

I'm praying in the crypt at Holy Cross Monastery. A womb-like place to begin again. And again and again.

I used to write in my adolescent and early adult journals, “What shall I take with me into the new life?” Nothing particular on the exterior was in the process of changing, but I often felt the need for an interior shift. As I do now. What shall I take with me into the new life? This time the response came as a poem.

Let me take
what nascent compassion has
barnacled and burrowed into my heart.
Let my brackish reserve
meet Compassion's vibrant ocean.

Let me take
what shards of love
have blistered my soul.
Let me offer these broken pieces

bleeding in my hand
to the magnitude of Love's fulfillment.


Help me to save my life
    by losing it
          in Thee.


-Suzanne


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