Saturday, November 26, 2011

Picking Bouqets from Gardens of Faith













Gardens of Faith, I call them. Filled with flowers of all kinds, representing the beauty, the truth, the wisdom of the world's great Wisdom Traditions. I have posted seventy blogs now, ten from each of seven of the most ancient and profound Gardens of Faith: Hinduism, Taoism, Native American, Buddhist, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim. You who have followed this blog have been able, with me, to enjoy these beautiful gardens. Each is unique. Yet they all have much in common too.

In this last blog of my first series on Gardens of Faith, I want to encourage you to do more than stroll through the gardens, enjoying the flowers. Give yourself permission to pick some of the flowers, and bring them home to your heart, making a bouquet of them to delight and inspire your soul.

A way you can do that is by using the readings in the blogs as part of a personal, prayerful way to truly enrich your mind, heart, and soul. Here is a pattern you can use, if you like, either alone, or with others.

I. Begin with a simple opening ritual act.
If it is a reading from Islam, washing your hands would be fitting.
If it is a Christian reading, making the sign of the cross would be fitting.
If it is a Jewish reading, lighting a candle would be fitting.
If it is a Hindu reading, lighting incense would be fitting.
If it is a Buddhist reading, ringing a bell would be fitting.
If it is a Taoist reading, bowing would be fitting.
If it is a Native American reading, facing the four directions in turn would be fitting.

Of course, other rituals would be fine too. But some little intentional act to center yourself and prepare yourself for a prayerful period is a helpful way to enter more fully into what you are about to do.

II. Listen in a meditative way to spiritual music from the tradition on which you are focusing for this period. Music can take us straight to the heart of a faith tradition, and help us feel the love and devotion of those who are its followers.

Here are some suggestions for recordings you might choose to buy as CD's, or download from the internet.
These are all in my collection, and I can recommend them to you as "tried and true."

From the Muslim tradition: A Sufi Song of Love by Robert Gass: Wings of Song
From the Jewish tradition: Once Upon a Nigun by Mordechai Ben David
From both together: Shalom Salam Vol. I and II by Felix Maria Woschek and friends
From the Hindu Tradition: Kirtan mantras by Robert Gass: Wings of Song
From the Buddhist Tradition: Heart of Perfect Wisdom by Robert Gass: Wings of Song
From the Taoist Tradition: Chinese Taoist Music by the Taoist Music Orchestra of the
Shanghai City God Temple
From the Christian Tradition: Brother Sun, Sister Moon by the Cambridge Singers,
directed by John Rutter.
From the Hindu and Christian traditions combined: Meeting of Angels by Ustad Nishat Khan and the ensemble Gilles Binchois.
From the Native American Tradition; Medicine Wheel by Robert Gass: Wings of Song
An Anthology of Sacred World Music Vol. I by Sounds True
Awakening (also an anthology from many spiritual traditions) by Robert Gass:Wings of Song

Of course, there are many, many more which I am sure you can find by doing a little searching on Amazon.com
or other places on the internet as well as at your favorite book and music store.

III. Ponder a short reading from the wisdom tradition on which you are focusing for this session. Follow this with a period of silence to let the wisdom sink into you soul.
Choose a flower: a word or phrase you can take with you to ponder as you go about your life.
(see the blogs or choose from a book that has short readings or prayers)
Here are some books I recommend to you for your interfaith inspiration: I drew my readings for the blogs in this series from these books:

365 Days of Walking the Red Road by Terri Jean
The Portable World Bible, edited by Robert O Ballou
366 Readings from Buddhism (and other similar volumes for Taoism, Hinduism, Islam,
Christianity, and Judaism) edited by Robert Van De Weyer and sold as a set entitled
the Global Spirit Library
The Soul Would Have No Rainbow If the Eyes Had No Tears by Guy a. Zona
The Gift of Prayer: a Fellowship in Prayer Book
God Makes the Rivers To Flow by Eknath Easwaran

There are many others, of course, and again, a little searching will uncover an amazing number of anthologies of inspired readings from world religions.

IV. Close with a prayer of your own as a response from your heart.

Four easy steps: a simple ritual, meditation with music, a reading to ponder in silence, and a closing prayer of response.

If you are doing this with others, singing or chanting could be included, thus expanding the music section. Other rituals could be added. A discussion of the reading could be included.
And afterwards, there could be a time of sharing simple food together.
I hope these suggestions inspire you to try your own way of making a bouquet of flowers from the Gardens of Faith.

May your bouquet from Gardens of Faith inspire you to be a globally minded peace-maker
with your mind and heart open to all that the One Spirit has given to help human beings
live worthily and well, with love and joy.

I have created a blog book based on all seventy blogs, plus an introduction and this conclusion. If you would like to be able to order a blog book for yourself or as a gift,
please reply to this with an email giving me your okay to send your email to the Blog2Print
people so they can contact you with instructions for ordering blog books.

Once again, thank you all for your support and interest.

Next week I intend to begin a new series of seven blogs on each of the seven Wisdom Traditions mentioned above, this time focusing on wonderfully wise little stories from each tradition because stories help wisdom stick in our minds and hearts in a special way.
I hope you will enjoy reading them as much as I enjoy finding and sharing them with you.



Sunday, November 20, 2011

Communing with Great Mystery














In this last of my blogs on the Native American Wisdom Tradition, I have chosen to share beautiful prayers from this tradition. I have found that the prayers that come to us from the great Wisdom Traditions of the world, because they come from the heart and soul, can move us to that mysterious place where, in spite of all our differences, we are one with the One. It is a place beyond words, a depth far greater than all the more surface beliefs and practices that have too often divided people from each other. In this place of humble and profound, listening Silence, it is possible to experience that Mystery to which the words of prayers are no more than signposts. Yet, as such, they can be helpful. I hope they are for you who read these words,
whoever you are, wherever you may be.
(These prayers are taken from a book I recommend to you, entitled The Gift of Prayer: a Treasury of Personal Prayer from the World's Spiritual Traditions published by Continuum)

Grandfather,
Look at our brokenness.
We know that in all creation
Only the human family
Has strayed from the Sacred Way.

We know that we are the ones
Who are divided
And we are the ones
Who must come back together
To walk in the Sacred Way.

Grandfather,
Sacred One,
Teach us love, compassion, and honor
That we may heal the Earth
And heal each other.
(Ojibway prayer)

Today I will walk out,
today everything evil will leave me,
I will be as I was before.
I will have a coool breeze over me.
I will travel with a light body.
I will be happy, and nothing will hinder me.
I walk with beauty before me.
I walk with beauty behind me.
I walk with beauty above me.
I walk with beauty all round me.
My words too will be beautiful.
(Navaho prayer)

O our mother the earth, O our father the sky,
Your children are we, and with tired backs
We bring you gifts that you love.
Then weave for us a garment of brightness;
May the warp be the white light of morning,
May the weft be the red light of evening,
May the fringes be the falling rain,
May the border be the standing rainbow.
Weave for us this garment of brightness
That we may walk fittingly where grass is green,
O our mother the earth, O our father the sky.
(Tewa Pueblo prayer)

O Great Spirit of our Ancestors,
I raise my pipe to you.
To your messengers, the four winds,
and to Mother Earth who provides for your children.
Give us the wisdom to teach our children to love, to respect, and to be kind to each other
so that they may grow with peace in mind.
Let us learn to share all the good things that you provide for us on this Earth.
(A Native American Prayer for Peace)

Monday, November 14, 2011

Condensed Wisdom













Proverbs are time honored wisdom in highly condensed form.
They express the hard won wisdom of the people and culture which have created them, and they are effective because they are based on keen observation of human nature and behavior, and the society and world which are their context. A good way to understand the soul of a people and their wisdom tradition is to become acquainted with their proverbs.

Today's words of wisdom from the Native American tradition are from a collection of proverbs contained in a lovely little book I recommend to you, entitled "The Soul Would Have No Rainbow if the Eyes Had No Tears" by Guy A. Zona. I am sure you will find them vivid, memorable, and well worth pondering, as I have.

Know that we are eager to share our gifts in the name of love. (Seneca)

Treachery breaks the chain of friendship, but truth makes it brighter than ever. (Conestoga)

Lying is a great shame. ((Sioux)

Let no one speak ill of the absent. (Hopi)

Listening to a liar is like drinking bad water. (tribe unknown)

Do not judge your neighbor until you walk two moons in his moccasins. (northern Cheyenne)

One foe is too many and a hundred friends too few. (Hopi)

Do not hate or wrong your neighbor, for it is not your neighbor you wrong, but yourself. (Pima)

If you see no reason for giving thanks, the fault lies in yourself. ((Minquass)

There is no death, only a change of worlds. (Duwamish)

All religions are but stepping stones back to God. (Pawnee)

Don't walk behind me, I may not lead.
Don't walk ahead of me, I may not follow.
Walk beside me that we may be as one. (Ute)

Creation is ongoing. (Lakota)

Don't let yesterday use up too much of today. (Cherokee)

If you are as wise as a serpent, you can afford to be as harmless as a dove. (Cheyenne)

The smarter you are, the more you need God to protect you from thinking you know everything.
(Pima)

Listen to the voice of nature, for it holds treasures for you. (Huron)

When you move away from nature, your heart grows hard. (Lakota)

Take only what you need and leave the land as you found it. (Arapahoe)

All dreams spin out from the same web. (Hopi)

It is no longer good enough to cry peace. We must act peace, live peace, and live in peace.
(Shenandoah)

There can never be peace between nations until it is first known that true peace is within the souls
of human beings. (Oglala Sioux)

Be satisfied with needs instead of wants. (Tenton Sioux)

Rituals must be performed with good and pure hearts. (Hopi)

We are all one child, spinning through Mother Sky. (Shawnee)

Sharing and giving are the ways of God. (Sauk)

When you have a talent of any kind, use it, take care of it, guard it. (Sauk)

There are many ways to God. (Arapahoe)

My response:

Great Mystery, Source of all wisdom, wherever it is found,
may the wisdom of these proverbs live in my mind and sink into my heart
that I may live as wisely and well as those who have passed them on to us.
Amen.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Sharing Secrets













Because most Native American tribes and cultures had an oral rather than a written spiritual tradition,
a great deal of their wisdom has been lost, and most of what has been kept is in bits and pieces, and has not been widely known. It has only fairly recently,( in the last century or so, and especially the past few decades,) been captured in writing and made available to the general public in this way.
To me, one of the great tragedies of American history (and world history, for that matter) is the lost opportunity the white race (Europeans) had when they discovered this continent to live here in harmony with the many Native American peoples already here. Instead of engaging in relationships of mutual respect and learning, the great majority of settlers were guilty of discounting, disinheriting, displacing, and destroying much of the culture and wisdom of the many tribes who lived here. Many of their children were taken away and forced into "Christian" boarding schools where they were forbidden to use their native tongue or practice their own spirituality.
It was not until the 1970's that Native Americans were given the full right to practice their religion===in this country where freedom of religion was meant to be a basic right for all who lived here.

Fortunately, fragments of Native American spiritual wisdom have somehow survived, and can now be shared with the world. Today's readings are examples of the special wisdom available to any of us who are open to it.

A long time ago the Creator came to Turtle Island and said to the Red People, "You will be the keepers of Mother Earth. Among you I will give the wisdom about Nature, about the interconnectedness of all things, about balance and about living in harmony.
You Red People will see the secrets of Nature. You will live in hardship and the blessing of this is you will stay close to the Creator. The day will come when you will need to share the secrets with other people of the earth, because they will stray from their spiritual ways.
The time to start sharing is today.
(Don Coyhis, Mohican)
Note: Turtle Island is the name many tribes gave to North America.

We were religious people from our mother's womb.
From the moment she recognized the fact of conception to the end of the second year of life,
which was the ordinary duration of lactation, the mother's spiritual influence counted for most.
Her attitude and secret meditations were such as to instill into the receptive soul of the unborn child
the love of the "Great Mystery" and a sense of kinship with all of creation.
(Ohiyesa, Santee Sioux)

We loved to worship.
From birth to death we revered our surroundings.
We considered ourselves born in the luxurious lap of Mother Earth,
and no place to us was unworthy.
(Luther Standing Bear, Oglala Sioux)

Can things go well in a land where freedom of worship is a lie, a hollow boast?
To each nation is given the light by which it knows God,
and each finds its own way to express the longing to know and serve God.
If a nation does not do what is right according to its own understanding,
its power is worthless.
(Thunderchild, Plains Cree)

Treat the earth well.
It was not given to you by your parents,
it was loaned to you by your children.
We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors,
we borrow it from our children.
(anonymous ancient proverb)

We also have a religion which was given to our ancestors,
and has been handed down to us, their children.
It teaches us to be thankful,
to be united,
and to love one another.
We never quarrel about religion.
(Red Jacket, Seneca)

First, you are to think always of God, of Wakan Tanka.
Second, you are to use all your powers to care for your people
and especially for the poor.
(Black Moon, Hunkpapa Sioux)

Strength is not the only thing we must have in the world,
and in a person or nation, it is of little use without wisdom.
(Chacopee, Yankton Sioux)

And to close this blog---a Cherokee blessing for us all:

May the warm winds of heaven blow softly upon your house.
May the Great Spirit bless all who enter there.
May your moccasins make happy tracks in many snows.
And may the rainbow always touch your shoulder.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Play, Children, and Blessing













Once, we were all little children. We knew how to play, and we spent many hours playing---if we were lucky, to our heart's content. Some of us leave that behind, and in our adulthood, with its myriad responsibilities, we forget how to play, and our life loses that wonderful zest that comes with a playful spirit. One of the great blessings of being parents and grandparents is that our children and grandchildren give us another chance to become playful again, and enjoy life with a child-like spirit.
All of this, and more, was well understood by the people we call Native Americans. Their words share their wisdom with us, speaking from ages past in a voice that still rings true. If we are wise, we will heed their advice.


Those who know how to play can easily leap over the adversities of life.
And one who knows how to sing and laugh does not need to brew mischief.
(Igluik Proverb)

The Creator made it be this way.
An old woman shall be as a child again, and her grandchildren shall care for her.
For only because she is, they are.
(Handsome Lake, Seneca)

Be happy in order to live long.
Worry makes you sick.
(Hopi Proverb)

It is strictly believed and understood by the Sioux that a child is the greatest gift
from Wakan Tanka in response to many devout prayers , sacrifices, and promises.
Therefore the child is considered sent by Wakan Tanka.
(Robert High Eagle, Teton Sioux)

Hold on to what is good, even if it is a handful of dirt.
Hold on to what you believe, even if it is a tree that stands by itself.
Hold on to what you must do, even if it is a long way from here.
Hold on to life, even if it is easier to let go.
Hold on to my hand, even if I have gone away from you.
(Pueblo Blessing)

My response:
Great Spirit, may I never grow too old to play,
too serious to laugh,
too busy to spend time with children,
too self-important to be willing to learn from others, no matter how much I think I know.
May I life a blessed life by holding on to what is good, being faithful, cherishing life,
and staying connected to those who care for me.