Finding God in Ordinary Time
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About this ebook
Take a wide-eyed look at your life—the commonplace, joyful, and even heartbreaking events—and discover the presence of God, hidden in plain sight. Forget bowing your head and closing your eyes. The secret to prayer is what happens when you’re not trying to pray.
This is the invitation of Christine Eberle’s Finding God in Ordinary Time. Each daily reflection contains a true story and a nugget of spiritual insight, accompanied by thought-provoking questions and a memorable Scripture quote. Together they reveal a God who is playful and affectionate, merciful and compassionate, and always relevant. Warm, accessible, and surprisingly funny, Christine offers spiritual nourishment to people skeptical or weary of religion, while still giving the faithful something to chew on.
Simple enough to be devoured in one sitting, this intimate little book is best enjoyed slowly. Each piece deserves to be savored and revisited through the unfolding of each ordinary, extraordinary day.
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Finding God in Ordinary Time - Christine Eberle
Copyright © 2018 by Christine Marie Eberle.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Printed in the United States
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GREEN WRITERS PRESS is a Vermont-based publisher whose mission is to spread a message of hope and renewal through the words and images we publish. Throughout we will adhere to our commitment to preserving and protecting the natural resources of the earth. To that end, a percentage of our proceeds will be donated to environmental activist groups and the author’s charity of choice, My Place Germantown (myplacegermantown.org). Green Writers Press gratefully acknowledges support from individual donors, friends, and readers to help support the environment and our publishing initiative. GREEN PLACE BOOKS curates books that tell literary and compelling stories with a focus on writing about place.
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Green Writers Press | Brattleboro, Vermont | www.greenwriterspress.com
Praying
from the volume Thirst by Mary Oliver, published by Beacon Press, Boston. Copyright © 2006 by Mary Oliver. Used herewith by permission of the Charlotte Sheedy Literary Agency, Inc.
ISBN: 978-1-7320815-3-6
COVER DESIGN BY ASHA HOSSAIN
PRINTED ON PAPER WITH PULP THAT COMES FROM FSC-CERTIFIED FORESTS, MANAGED FORESTS THAT GUARANTEE RESPONSIBLE ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC PRACTICES BY MCNAUGHTON & GUNN, A WOMAN-OWNED BUSINESS CERTIFIED BY THE WOMEN’S BUSINESS ENTERPRISE NATIONAL COUNCIL.
Contents
INSPIRATION from PEDRO ARUPE, SJ
Origins And Observations
The Four Terrains
PART ONE: AWAKE TO SEE
1. FINDING GOD IN THE MORNING SKY
2. FINDING GOD IN PLAIN SIGHT
3. FINDING GOD IN THE BACKYARD
4. FINDING GOD IN THE COMPOST BIN
5. FINDING GOD IN STILLNESS
6. FINDING GOD AT THE CAMPSITE
7. FINDING GOD AFTER THE STORM
PART TWO: MESSENGERS OF GRACE
8. FINDING GOD IN A FLOWERED HOUSEDRESS
9. FINDING GOD ON THE PHONE
10. FINDING GOD IN MERCY
11. FINDING GOD IN MY ARMS
12. FINDING GOD IN THE CAFETERIA
13. FINDING GOD IN SMOKY FUR
14. FINDING GOD ON THE ONCOLOGY FLOOR
PART THREE: FAR FROM HOME
15. FINDING GOD ON HOLY GROUND
16. FINDING GOD IN AN OUTSTRETCHED HAND
17. FINDING GOD IN UNCERTAINTY
18. FINDING GOD IN FORGIVENESS
19. FINDING GOD IN A FOREIGN TONGUE
20. FINDING GOD IN THE GRIKES
21. FINDING GOD AT MY FEET
PART FOUR: WORKING IT OUT
22. FINDING GOD IN IRREVERENCE
23. FINDING GOD IN IMPERFECTION
24. FINDING GOD IN FAILURE
25. FINDING GOD IN THE YES
26. FINDING GOD IN PURE GIFT
27. FINDING GOD AT THE WATER’S EDGE
28. FINDING GOD IN A FORTUNE COOKIE
PRAYING
BY MARY OLIVER
QUESTIONS FOR GROUPS
SCRIPTURE INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Nothing is more practical than finding God,
that is, than falling in love
in a quite absolute, final way.
What you are in love with,
what seizes your imagination,
will affect everything.
It will decide what will get you out of bed in the morning,
what you will do with your evenings,
how you will spend your weekends,
what you read,
who you know,
what breaks your heart,
and what amazes you with joy and gratitude.
Fall in love,
stay in love
and it will decide everything.
—PEDRO ARUPE, SJ
Origins and Observations
I’m really glad I’m always able to pray so well,
said no one, ever.
In my quarter-century of spiritual conversations with young and not-so-young adults, one theme has come up over and over again: people of faith are anxious about prayer. We know we should pray, and often we try, but we don’t think we’re very good at it, and we’re sure other people are better. We yearn to feel close to God, but most days, we just feel clueless.
It doesn’t help that some people reach adulthood with way too much religious baggage—images of God that are problematic yet persistent—while others arrive with suitcases nearly empty, having gotten through adolescence without acquiring a scrap of religious vocabulary. Whether we start by struggling to erase the picture of God as an angry old white guy with a beard, or by staring at an alarmingly blank piece of paper, moving into a mature relationship with the living God is both a challenge and the work of a lifetime.
The people of Jesus’ day were not so different. If they were, he wouldn’t have had to resort to so many similes. Just think of all the things Jesus said the reign of God was like: an old woman; a new wineskin; a merchant’s search for fine pearls; a mustard seed. Urgently he piled simile upon metaphor upon analogy—anything that could reveal the ways of God in the language of ordinary experience.
I did not always understand this. The particular flavor of my Roman Catholic upbringing didn’t dwell on experience and metaphor; it emphasized answers and rules. In matters of faith, it was important to know the right answers and abide by the rules. And so I did. I was a good daughter, a good student, a good Catholic (or so I thought)…and unbearably self-righteous.
It wasn’t until the fifteenth year of my Catholic education that I realized there was more to faith than doctrinal certainty. At Saint Joseph’s, Philadelphia’s Jesuit university, I majored in English but