Thursday, September 16, 2010

Setting the table for peace



Peace is more than an intention, wish or prayer.  It is more than anti-war protests, long eloquent speeches or articles, even books.  It is so much more than a cease fire between nations. It is not a liberal Democrat's political position promulgated in Congress like an anti-missile launch.  It is not political, economic, social, or earthly at all. It is not something we do.  It is not an action of any kind.

Peace is that profoundly still calm, infinitely fertile power which removes all barriers to the divine presence and gently holds you.  It is an infinite and deeply saturated moment of God-presence. 

"My peace I leave with you. 
Not as the world giveth, give I unto you."

Peace, like so many beautiful spiritual attitudes and platitudes, has long eluded us.  As the many centuries-long dark night of our collective soul clouded over Earth's civilizations, each in its own way, re-interpreted these ancient ideas, in less and less depth, until they became social action statements, political platitudes, nice Sunday-School ideas, but not the cutting edge, opening into ultimate truth and reality, essential truths they really are.

Peace-makers throughout these long dark centuries of this Kali Yuga, have through deep prayer (as in Theresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Jesus, Buddha, and so many others) have discovered this great pervasive stillness.  It is beyond understanding, beyond words.  It is beyond intellectual description or understanding.  It is ineffable BECAUSE it resides in and emerges from the heart, which has its own language, often realized through the arts. It radiates itself, as love radiates itself.  Words may be able to frame it, a bit, but they are not it.  It also cannot be legislated, because it is free and comes of its own free will.

Peace grows in a unique soil, lives and flourishes in a fertile climate.  Like a precious rare flower, it will not grow in an acidic oil slick, or a chemically infused, toxic environment.  It grows in a gentle valley, a sacred place, where it is honored and welcomed.  It is a place where the heart is cherished above the hardness of the brain.  It is a place of unsurpassed patience, of endless compassion, of resonant music and light, gentle and allowing.  It grows where it is seeded and then nourished.  It cannot be bought or sold or controlled or enslaved.  It is eternally alive and powerful in its ability to bring all who enter into its gentle, radiant stillness, deeper into the throne room of God, into  the real holy of holies within the human soul, into the authentic presence of God, whom we can meet in this climate of peace.

Peace seekers can create the right climate in which it can be seeded and grow.  They can make the work place or home an intentional, uncluttered gentle garden for love, acceptance, unconditional compassion, infinite patience, filled with much beauty. They can make it a place that honors each and every one that lives, works or enters it.  The spiritual light and love in that garden can be enhanced by the objects placed within it.  Light attracts more light.  Color brings life to a dead space.  Soft music, Baroque, Classical, sweet Irish ballads, some ancient chanting, played softly, in an atmosphere of positive aromatic essences - lavender and jasmine and rosemary, for example, all will help to create an invitation to peace.  

Peace is like the proverbial bird of paradise.  It comes at our invitation when the climate is right.  The right climate is the invitation.  It is also invited intentionally by us through prayer and the stillness of meditation.

Peace is waiting for an invitation. As you look around your home, your office, your work place, see how it does - or doesn't - invite peace.  Then, if, in your heart of hearts, you truly want to raise the spirituality of this place, detox it, get rid of the old stuff, paint the walls, bring in plants and fountains, a lead-free scented candle.  Set aside time each day to sit quietly in that atmosphere, just being, not doing, and pray or sit in quiet reflection or meditation.  If we set the table for peace, and wait for peace (1 Corinthians 13), peace will surely come.


"Be still and know that I am God. I will be exalted
among the nations; I will be exalted in the earth."
Psalm 46:10




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