Olive Tree

Monday, February 20, 2017

How to Pray

Whenever you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you[Matthew 6:6]

My prayer partner is 80% blind and virtually lame, however she "sees" clearly in the spiritual realm and moves mountains through prayer.  I call her Clara.  Here is her advice on how to pray, as written in a letter to me:
"By Saturday I felt as though we had barely made a dent in hewing away the rock embedding [our intentions].   We have to keep on praying because as bad as the situations may seem, without prayer they will get so much worse. 
"In recent years, I don't spend as much time on meditation as I used to, and I can feel the difference.  As you already know, it's good to prepare for prayer by reading the Bible or from the lives of the saints, or for that matter, any religious writing which elevates the mind and lifts it from our worries.  The next step is to pray with words, not too many, which make our intention clear to us.  God already knows what is needed, but to receive His guidance, we can't be confused about the intention of our prayers. 
"After the intention has clarity, we can use formal prayers, such as the rosary in which we pray the Our Father, Hail Mary and Gloria preceded by the Apostles' Creed.  These prayers have been prayed for centuries and have the zeal of the saints and martyrs within them.  Now when we have finished, there is one more crucial step, and that is meditation.  Meditation in the Catholic world is the step before contemplation where God takes over and fills us with His wisdom and guidance.  
"I find the best way for me to begin to meditate is to think of a Bible story where Jesus is always giving us a message.  It can be anything of your choosing from Jesus walking on water to raising Lazarus from the dead.  I don't use words in my mind, I just picture the scene, and breath slowly in and out.  Now resting in the Lord and just breathing.  You can start with 5 minutes  several times a day or at least 3 minutes.  Even if you feel nothing, you are allowing God to do His work in you.  It is in silence that the clamor and worries of the world recede, and in that silence built on faith, the problems that we are praying about are dissolved by God. 
"Some years ago, there was a missionary priest who wrote several books on prayer, fasting and meditation.  I went to one of his services when he came to Philadelphia.  He was an active mystic, and his rail thin appearance was in line with the fasting that he did.  Now, I just remember that he was living in a monastery in California.  For the life of me, I can't remember his name.  But he explained how meditation prevents many calamities in our lives.  When we trust in God and remove our worries from the situation but remain mindful that a solution must be found, our Lord takes over.  Whether it was he or another priest, I remember how the priest related that he was staying with a family, and they were getting ready to take him to the airport.  He told them that they couldn't leave yet, that he had to be alone to meditate.  Had they left at the appointed hour, they would've been buried in a tremendous rock slide.  As it was, they were all saved, and only the flight reservation had to be changed. 
"While meditation isn't easy with young children,  we have to practice it daily whatever our circumstances are.  Playing an instrument requires practice, and meditation is the same.  The more we do it, the easier it becomes.  Meditation opens a path for God to communicate with us in our prayer intentions.  His grace is always active, but we must be receptive in a clear minded way to receive it.  
I hope that some of the above will be helpful. "

Love and prayers,
 Clara 

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

The Queen Mother

So Bathsheba went to King Solomon to speak to him for Adonijah. And the king arose to meet her, bowed before her, and sat on his throne; then he had a throne set for the king's mother, and she sat on his right. [I Kings 2:19]


After Solomon was crowned king, we see his mother Bathsheba approaching him.  Notice how Solomon treated her.  Solomon, the king, bowed to his mother.  He had a throne brought for his mother. She sat on the throne and it was on his right hand side, the place of honor.   He venerated his mother.  

Monday, February 6, 2017

The King's Mother


And the LORD struck the child that Uri'ah's wife bore to David, and it became sick... 

On the seventh day the child died. [2 Samuel 12:15b,18a]

So often, God used mistakes people made to be the very things through which he brought the line of Christ.  

King David committed adultery with Bathsheba, Uriah's wife.  When she told him she was pregnant, he then allowed her husband to be killed in battle.  

We are told the child of that union was "struck" by God and died.  The innocent baby took the punishment for David's sin.  Sound familiar?


Bathsheba, the mother of that first sacrificial child later gave birth to Solomon, in the line of the Ultimate sacrificial child: Jesus Christ.  Bathsheba was queen, King David's wife.   Bathsheba also was the queen mother, King Jesus' mother.  

Monday, January 23, 2017

Changing Injury to Compassion

But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency may be of the power of God, and not of us.  [2Corinthians 4:7]


Once again, I am drawn to Jesus' first miracle.  He changed the water, which was in clay jars, into wine.  Clay jars - earthen vessels.  We are earthen vessels.  We  are comprised of 70% water.

When we suffer hurt and injury at the hands of another,  Jesus can change the water of that hurt into the wine of forgiveness.  Let us each present our own earthen vessel to Him and ask Him to transform us from within.

It is there, in fact, "in the depths of the heart," that everything is bound and loosed.  It is not in our power not to feel or to forget an offense; but the heart that offers itself to the Holy Spirit turns injury into compassion and purifies the memory in transforming the hurt into intercession.  
[CCC 2843]

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Joy Spoken

Look toward the east, O Jerusalem, and see the joy that is coming to you from God!  Behold, your sons are coming, whom you sent away; they are coming, gathered from east and west, at the word of the Holy One, rejoicing in the glory of God.

The sheer joy of these words!  The joy of having a child return home!  Even on this side of the veil, we have glimpses of heaven.

Take off the garment of your sorrow and affliction, O Jerusalem, and put on forever the beauty of the glory from God.  [Baruch 4:36-5:1]

Thursday, December 22, 2016

A Christmas List for Jesus

Image result for st. andrew christmas novena



The St. Andrew Christmas Novena, a.k.a the Christmas Anticipation Prayer.   Never heard of it until two years ago.  The tradition begins on the feast day of St. Andrew, November 30.

Choose one thing for which to ask the Lord.  Pray the prayer 15 times daily along with your request, up until Christmas.   Last year, I balked at the 15 times - feeling like it suggested superstition.  So, I just prayed it once per day, and still found it deeply beautiful.  But this year, I not only am saying it 15 times, but afterwards I say a request for each person in my family.  I am asking for  a list of seven things!

 Sometimes I feel like a little child sitting on Santa's lap saying, "I want this and this and this..."  And yet, isn't that what Christ wants?  He wants us to come to Him like children and promises not to withhold good things from those who ask.

Best of all is the joy and hope which pervades my soul in prayer.  The moment in which the Son of God was born...  Think of it, the very moment when Jesus entered this world!



Wednesday, December 21, 2016

The "O" Antiphons


O Day-Spring, Brightness of the Light Everlasting, and Sun of Righteousness, come and enlighten him that sitteth in darkness and in the shadow of death. [Luke 1:78.79; Malachi 4:2]

Once again, I am humbled by the beauty of an ancient Church tradition just discovered by yours truly for the very first time.  This tradition: The "O" Antiphons!

The Church has been singing the "O" Antiphons since at least the eight century.  They are part of Evening Prayer for December 17-23.  They use ancient Biblical imagery drawn from the Old Testament to proclaim the coming Christ as the fulfillment not only of old Messianic hopes, but present ones as well.  They embody the longing of all for the Divine Messiah. [usccb.org]

The word antiphon means a psalm, anthem or verse sung responsively.  Or, it is a verse that accompanies a canticle or psalm during the liturgy. (www.merriam-webster.com)

 Here, again, is today's antiphon in another version:

O Radiant Dawn,
Splendor of eternal light,
Sun of justice, 
Come and shine on those who dwell in darkness 
and in the shadow of death.