"…religion is an ‘art of memory,’ a way of sustaining mindfulness about the religion that is inherent in everything we do." – Thomas Moore

Prayer_y
   Some of us attend religious services as a way of nurturing and sustaining spiritual practices in everyday life. Others go as a matter of habit. For this second group, Saturday or Sunday services are attended as a matter of duty rather than meaning. And this group may fall into a dangerous bifurcation, dividing off religion as limited to a particular time of the week – something not to be lived in the rest of life.
   We’ve all seen this behavior. It’s the church member who acts out religious behavior in the confines of the church and abandons it by the time they’ve reached the parking lot…

   I’ve also seen it numerous times at meetings in faith-focused
hospitals. Someone presents a devotional about the central importance
of love and compassion. The rest of the group listens and nods
respectively. Then the "real" meeting begins as group members argue
about the best way to beat the competition and the most efficient way
to lay-off caregivers.
Prayers_also
   Spiritual practices are, of course, meant for every moment of every day of the week. It is possible for us to live our lives as sacred beings. To do this requires some level of ritual because, as Moore writes, above, "religion is an ‘art of memory.’ We need rituals as a way to help us recall the sacred nature of life.
   Fortunately, I don’t believe this requires that we walk about as somber people wearing robes. The sacred can be just as apparent in laughter as it can be in prayer.
   What is critical is that each of us, as caregivers, take an honest look at the behaviors in our lives and the thoughts that trigger them. It’s immensely difficult to change a bad life pattern. It requires not only an awareness of the personal issues we may have but an understanding of how to change – a deep determination to live out a new way of being.
Prayer_rosary
  I’ve never been very good at rituals because I’m impatient toward anything that is repetitious. Yet, I admire the behaviors of those of any faith that engage in regular patterns of prayer and meditation. It seems as though these rituals are critical to living the kind of loving existence we are all capable of achieving.
   Rituals are useful if they help us to align our energy with Love. The divine is always present. It is for us to engage in a life of mindfulness that will us to draw nearer to the divine. 
   As regular readers of the Journal know, I do an awful lot of preaching – intentionally and otherwise. But the best preaching, of course, is not done with words but with loving actions. It is in this way that I fail so often.
   Only with careful reflection and new patterns of action can any of us ever hope to keep alive the ‘art of memory’ required to sustain the sacred in our lives.

-Erie Chapman

4 responses to “Sustaining the Sacred”

  1. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    This is a beautiful and inspiring meditation. After I read it, I fished out my old rosary that I haven’t used for years. As I sat with my eyes closed, fingering the beads, the whole idea of that ritual took on new meaning for me. Thank you

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  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Your meditation reminds me of the words of Mary Oliver that you have published here before,
    “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves…” In my continual search for the divine within me, I have been confused with the impositions of religion and most often find the most sacred elements of life outside the church walls. Perhaps I’m more open to that in this stage of my life. However, I do fall back to many of the stories and rituals of my faith for grounding and comfort. Thank you for this reminder of the sacred within and surrounding us.

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  3. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    I’m not very good at ritual either, Erie. And it may be impatience for me. too. Thanks for reminding me this morning that ritual IS important in continuing to point us in the direction of LOVE.

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  4. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I find myself wanting to write so much in response to your insightful meditation, so I will try to stay focused. As a child, I was required to attend church regularly and the experience seemed so foreign to me. The mass was in Latin, and the sitting, standing, and kneeling repetitions difficult as I felt I might faint, as we had to fast to receive Communion. Fortunately, these days my experience of church is an enriching one that I wholeheartedly embrace; the fellowship of Love in community, and especially encountering the sacred in Holy Communion.
    Still others find meaning in the sacred outside the confines of religious structures. My father-in-law was one such man. Although he never spoke of God, I observed him to be a deeply spiritual man. His connection to God seemed to be found in the garden and with his family. He spent his weekends with his young grandsons teaching them how to plant, grow, and harvest fruits and vegetables. A family dinner was then prepared and shared as all were welcome at the table, truly a Holy Communion.
    I will hold close your instructive message to look deeply within, to identify the causes of our suffering, so that we can refrain from hurtful patterns of thought and learn to live Love in new and healing ways. When we pay attention with our hearts awakened, we begin to see the divine in all and the sacred in every action. Loving action becomes our daily intention.

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