Red apples
A place of prayer, poetry and hopefully peace all in and through the Franciscan tradition
Wednesday, 25 October 2023
Red Apples
Monday, 5 September 2022
Still Points, a guide to living the Mindful, Meditative Life
Haven’t been on here for an age but just popping in to let you all know that:
Monday, 6 September 2021
Be Still and…
Taking refuge in this one this evening…
Desert Stillness:
Be still
and know
that I Am..
Would you enter the desert
at the heart of yourself?
Would you allow the sandals of your senses
to fall away?
Would you, finally, recognise
the holy ground your heart
truly is?
Would you behold the burning bush
afire with presence at the centre of
your soul?
Then you must
enter the desert of stillness.
Be still
and know...
Would you know the call to exodus
from the slavery of self?
Would you pass through the waters
of overwhelming worry?
Would you ascend the holy mountain of prayer?
Would you behold the glory so bright that it is darkness?
Would you enter the cloud of the presence?
Would you keep the covenant of grace?
Would you reach the promised land of peace?
Then you must enter the desert of stillness.
Be still
and know...
For
This is how the Ultimate is revealed:
as presence through stillness,
as Being beyond being,
as emptiness without absence,
as right relationship,
in which
we come to know
the self truly
only in the light
of Pure Being as
independent
(where all else depends on love),
as non-contingent:
(where all else arises from previous causes),
as creative:
(where all else sub-creates),
as transcending all,
imminent in all,
beyond all,
but
holding all
in being
by
Love.
Would you enter the desert at the heart of yourself and see it bloom?
If you would,
then only
be still
and you will know.
Sunday, 5 September 2021
Mother Teresa: a mystic of holy darkness
Today we keep the feast of the great saint of the 20th century Mother Teresa of Kolkatta.
Today we keep the feast of the great saint of the 20th century Mother Teresa of Kolkatta.
While she is known mostly for her extraordinary work for the poor and the destitute in India and throughout the world very few still know of her deep mysticism of "darkness". This darkness has nothing to do with the darkness of evil, rather it is the effect on the soul's inner eye of those who have behld the bright light of the Divine Presence... We are simply blinded by its brightness and only that light can in time restore our inner vision. It is a mystical path walked by only the greatest of those the Lord calls and one of the most difficult to even imagine... simply put after the direct call of the saint to a particular path and mission the Lord seems to withdraw His light so that prayer is an unremitting desert with only very occasional indications that God is present at all... It is a participation in the humanity of Christ crucified upon the Cross and crucified to this day in the suffering of creation while at the same time, to all around them, the saint is a source of Divine Light and grace but the saint is called to ongoing teaching, working, praying all without any form of spiritual consolation in a dark night of the soul that produces extraordinary fruit in those around them while depriving the one who is going through it of anything other than the grace to contintually welcome and fulfil the will of God in the midst of it all. This was seen beautifully in the famous miracle of the light described by Malcolm Muggeridge in his book about her. Coming to film the work of her sisters in the 70's the BBC crew he was with were horrified to discover just how dark the building in the slums where the sisters lived was. It was so dark as to be completely unsuitable for filming. Telling one of the sisters that they would have to abandon the project the news came to Mother who famously said "I will pray." She did so and despite the objections of the crew Malcolm insisted they would film. It was only when they got back to the UK that they discovered that the whole building appeared suffused in a beautiful calm light. The cameramen confessed themselves stumped... what we were seeing, said Muggeridge, was the light of Mother's prayer.
In some of her last words about this spiritual darkness Mother Teresa promised that she would be a "saint of darkness" and like Padre Pio and St. Therese the Little Flower, she promised that she would remain at the doors of Heaven to guide and help all those going through the trial of darkness in their own lives... She is a powerful advocate for those who are suffering and seeking... I pray to her often for light and suggest you might like to also.
Mother Teresa always said her work (and ours too) is simply to be faithful to God in the present moment and not to worry about success... success belongs to God and from the Divine perspective what looks like success to us can be failure to God and vice versa! Just think of the Crucifixion! To live the Christian life is to live one that ever more surely seems to be at odds with the way the world thinks and acts... in our topsy turvy witness we are those who remind the world of what and who are really important... perhaps that is the way that the darkness of our world and the way it treats the powerless, the poor and the hurting may be overcome by the light of the Gospel.
While she is known mostly for her extraordinary work for the poor and the destitute in India and throughout the world very few still know of her deep mysticism of "darkness". This darkness has nothing to do with the darkness of evil, rather it is the effect on the soul's inner eye of those who have behld the bright light of the Divine Presence... We are simply blinded by its brightness and only that light can in time restore our inner vision. It is a mystical path walked by only the greatest of those the Lord calls and one of the most difficult to even imagine... simply put after the direct call of the saint to a particular path and mission the Lord seems to withdraw His light so that prayer is an unremitting desert with only very occasional indications that God is present at all... It is a participation in the humanity of Christ crucified upon the Cross and crucified to this day in the suffering of creation while at the same time, to all around them, the saint is a source of Divine Light and grace but the saint is called to ongoing teaching, working, praying all without any form of spiritual consolation in a dark night of the soul that produces extraordinary fruit in those around them while depriving the one who is going through it of anything other than the grace to contintually welcome and fulfil the will of God in the midst of it all. This was seen beautifully in the famous miracle of the light described by Malcolm Muggeridge in his book about her. Coming to film the work of her sisters in the 70's the BBC crew he was with were horrified to discover just how dark the building in the slums where the sisters lived was. It was so dark as to be completely unsuitable for filming. Telling one of the sisters that they would have to abandon the project the news came to Mother who famously said "I will pray." She did so and despite the objections of the crew Malcolm insisted they would film. It was only when they got back to the UK that they discovered that the whole building appeared suffused in a beautiful calm light. The cameramen confessed themselves stumped... what we were seeing, said Muggeridge, was the light of Mother's prayer.
In some of her last words about this spiritual darkness Mother Teresa promised that she would be a "saint of darkness" and like Padre Pio and St. Therese the Little Flower, she promised that she would remain at the doors of Heaven to guide and help all those going through the trial of darkness in their own lives... She is a powerful advocate for those who are suffering and seeking... I pray to her often for light and suggest you might like to also.
Mother Teresa always said her work (and ours too) is simply to be faithful to God in the present moment and not to worry about success... success belongs to God and from the Divine perspective what looks like success to us can be failure to God and vice versa! Just think of the Crucifixion! To live the Christian life is to live one that ever more surely seems to be at odds with the way the world thinks and acts... in our topsy turvy witness we are those who remind the world of what and who are really important... perhaps that is the way that the darkness of our world and the way it treats the powerless, the poor and the hurting may be overcome by the light of the Gospel.
Thursday, 2 September 2021
September In-Between
September In-between
This is the season of in-between,
a sacred door into the dragonfly days
of sun blushed berries,
and fruits full upon the branch,
when autumnal fire crackles
slowly over leaves,
unleashing light along their veins
tempting them towards
the tension of windborn wonder.
These are the days of swallows and starlings
gathering as slow storm clouds
before their flocked flight warmwards,
screaming their farewells,
fountaining forwards,
free upon the foaming clouds.
These are the days of first noticing
the chill and the dark,
though not as winter yet,
only as remarked change upon our skin
walking from patches of conversation
into silent introspection,
feeling the old summons of schoolday beginnings,
the burgeoning pull-tide of term
we never truly escape from,
no matter the outer age,
that calls our shuffling feet towards
the first drifting leaves and
makes us count conkers upon the trees,
even if our pockets hold other treasures now.
These are the days of longing,
yearning for those sunsets and mornings
just now out of reach,
that teach us the deeper soul longing
for Love's eternal Summer,
yet we rejoice too
in the brittle sharp newness
of lowering sun and rising moon.
These are the days of hunting,
of homing, of harvesting;
of gratitude given before the gathering,
of berried blessing being
between us and all that is,
and though our gaze now looks
long towards winter
we join here, now,
in the days of autumnal grace,
the dance of in-between.
Wednesday, 18 August 2021
The Garden is Burning
The Garden is Burning
Sunday, 15 August 2021
Assumption; Our Lady of the Harvest
Assumption: Our Lady of the Harvest
Autumn edges
in,
gilding leaves
lovelier,
swelling fruit,
and berry,
and shining nut,
filling seed
with life,
to lie long quiet
until the quickening
thaw
invites the labour
of the land
with longed
for Spring birth.
For now though,
we keep your
festival
my Lady,
beneath
a still summered
sky,
though cooler,
as ever dancing
dawn and dusk,
hearing the autumnal
music
change their step,
and,
creep closer,
preparing
for their near
embrace.
O you who are
our harvest,
our first fruits
offered
and received,
we hail you as
Love's
healing promise
made
and kept
of
always
a new greening,
a new quickening,
a new birthing,
made manifest
in you
long since,
and there
faith futured
for us too,
whose barrenness
yields to
birth blessing,
only
in the fruition of your
virgin womb.
So now you
shine,
our harvest moon,
gold and glorious,
reflecting Son's
light,
upon our rejoicing
hope
that we too may be,
one day,
with you,
assumed;
and held within
your holy hands
and there
become your
golden gift
to Him
as
gathered grain
of Heaven's
harvest
home.