Dish towel 1 a copyright erie chapman 2012

   In Act 5 Scene 2, Hamlet delivers to Horatio one of Shakespeare's most oft-quoted lines: "There's a divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will."

   Why worry about mistakes? Hamlet tells us. Everything is already predetermined by God.

   The reason I don't accept this view is that it seems to defeat our humanity. If there is nothing we can do, for what are we responsible?

   Life is a partnership between God and us. Love opens the door to God's light. Our role is to walk through it. 

   Our choice is whether to open to God's Love or to ignore it.

   How do we "find" Beauty? It's already here, of course. 

   The "divinity" isn't in the dish rag or in the sun. It's in the way we notice and celebrate the relationship between the two. 

   This doesn't mean we can't create. It means our best creations appear because we listened for Love's song, trained our voices to sing it, and acted to serve up this music to ourselves and others.

   I didn't manage the cloth in the photograph to catch the light. I simply noticed it and photographed it. A painter could express this beauty. A musician could convert this image to song. A poet could describe it. An entire novel or film could be inspired from the way this cloth turns to catch a slice of sun.

  An example appears in the 1956 movie "The Red Balloon." In it, a balloon follows a small boy through his travels in the streets of Paris. The film succeeds because we see the divine in the relationship between balloon and boy. 

   We can train our hearts to see divinity. We can do the same with others we love.

   As you and I create together, the divine can appear. Two people in love can nurture divinity in their lives so that their relationship becomes more and more sacred.

   Yet, we often do the reverse. We may take both ourselves and those we love for granted. The more matter-of-fact we are, the less we are likely to experience the divine. 

   The more violent and disrespectful we are, the more we desecrate of Beauty. There is no divinity in the human acts of rape or child abuse or murder.

   Similarly, pornography degrades everyone involved. Pornography, of course, does not mean nudity. Otherwise, great works of art like Michelangelo's "David," Manet's "Luncheon on the Grass" or Edward Weston's photographs of nudes would be banned instead of celebrated.

   The power of these examples is that they teach us not how to "rough hew" divinity but how to  let God guide our efforts.

   Look at the photograph. 

   How could such a thing be divine? How can your life celebrate divinity in our relationships?

-Erie Chapman

Photograph- "Dish Towel 1a" copyright erie chapman 2012

Dish towel 1 a copyright erie chapman 2012

5 responses to “Days 37-39 – Where is The “Divinity That Shapes Our Ends?””

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    This is a delightful expression to read and for our eyes to behold, Erie! Your photograph is so rich in contrast of light, shadow, shape and crimson as is your enlightened reflection. I wholeheartedly embrace the emphasis of the the spark of the Divine manifesting in relationship. Thank you for the lovely gift offered here and all we need do…is notice.
    This past week, I was with a few of my co-workers on a week long road trip, so to speak. We spent a great deal of time together traveling extended distances in the car from one place to another and the conversation was all so personable versus focused only on work. It was a good learning for me to experience and observe the warmth, caring and humor of my co-workers, lending a lightening up in my perspective amidst the challenges.

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  2. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    I want to remember to let in more light…to open myself to other ways of seeing the people I love…to allow them to change and be many faceted and new. I want to remember to allow myself this same life giving chance to be cast in a new vision.

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  3. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    I love the photo Erie. You are remarkable at being present to the moment and capturing it so elegantly for all of us to enjoy. Divinity exists in the smallest of particles to the grandeur of the universe(s). It exists becuase it was ordained to be. Our role is to live in such a way that this divinity is expressed both within ourselves and by recognizing and developing it in others.

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  4. Marily Avatar

    Thank you for being one, Rev. Erie. It is truly a gift, when we see, hear and feel the miracles of love unfolding in our relationships in whatever circumstances we may be in. A little more patience as we listen, understanding each others world hearing each others song, slow to judge and reject, instead, quick to be present and become one. This I want to be to my daughters… and everyone.

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  5. Maria Doglio Avatar
    Maria Doglio

    I see how you can make the link between this posting and the one for “life as vibrational energy”, for as we live and expand into a higher vibrational state, we are ramping up our ability to perceive the divine light in all things. I can visualize you in a higher vibrational state in the moment you noticed the play of light and color in a “simple” dish towel thus capturing it’s divine quality emanating from it in the moment you snapped the shutter of your camera.
    I think we move up and down in our divine awareness and vibrational status depending the our environment that surrounds us at the moment. Sometimes when we say “we are above that”, I believe it really means we have moved on in our divine perspective and how we incorporate our life into daily activities. Everyone is at a different stage and different vibrational level, yet we are also all mixed together and connected in our energy fields, so when we expand up, we bring others with us energetically and divinely! The more we expand the more we don’t want to be around those lower vibrational levels you talk about. We can also go the other way of course…..it’s a conscious choice in every single moment. For me divine light is when one is in a higher vibrational energy that allows us to see so much more. Thank you for your perspective and your art Erie….it makes an interesting lunch break contemplation.

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