Showing posts with label Easter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Easter. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Mining Gold in the Commonplace-Prepare Yourself for Easter Writing

BAUTZEN, GERMANY - APRIL 08:  Easter riders ha...
BAUTZEN, GERMANY -  Easter riders at traditional lunch during a break of the parade on horseback on April 08, 2012 in Ralbitz, Germany. Sorbians, a Slavic minority in eastern Germany, celebrate Easter with processions of mounted riders dressed in 19th-century outfits who travel from village to village to sing and announce the resurrection of Jesus Christ. ( Getty Images via @daylife)

Writers planning blog posts, articles, or poems for Easter are likely rereading gospel accounts and related Old Testament scriptures, making notes or outlines, praying, and thinking now. 
  Beryl Adamsbaum's Only Believe climaxes at Easter, a golden time for the world that needs to know. On page 118 in her final chapter for the book, Beryl tells about a time she had alone, away from home and "in a small apartment in the Swiss Alps." She was trying to renew herself in a change of scene during a particularly stressful time in her life and her thinking. In the mountain apartment, a change occurred in her habitual way of viewing a big part of her life:   

"God enabled me to see my daily grind as service 
to others and therefore to him. 
He gave me a different perspective on life. 
He helped me to see what I call
'the glorious in the mundane'"

With the last line, above, Beryl continued to extract the ore, the gold, while telling of God at work in a commonplace context...tiredness from drudgery that threatens us in everyday work or service to others. 
  Beryl's description of a deeply experienced insight could be a launching point for you, if you write about the Friday before Easter. What was more mundane, commonplace, or routine than the everyday routines we need to keep. In the world of Jesus in his earthly time, what was more accepted than the crosses of shame used by the punitive Roman Empire
  Yet, routine in Roman-occupied Palestine was soon to be revealed as a scene of glory, where One sent of God and Son of God, took the sin of the world upon himself. Even soldiers at the foot of his cross suspected or foresaw glory without realizing it. The "worst of sinners" for whom Jesus prayed from that rugged cross must have wondered, deep within, what they were not seeing in what they were witnessing, of which they were participants.  
  We think of the record we have of that time: a dozen friends together for a private Passover meal with their mentor, a Roman hearing and trial soon to begin in the middle of the night, lifeless bodies brought down from crosses as "criminals," a tomb gifted for one, and weeping Jews--men and women of no rich reputation or power. These were among the many common ingredients of that historical time when in the midst of the commonplace glory was at work. 
     
C. S. Lewis said, of Easter, "Away with tears and fears and troubles!...Man is a creature whom the Angels--were they capable of envy--would envy. Let us lift up our hearts! At some future time perhaps even these things it will be a joy to recall" --Letters, C. S. Lewis/Don Giovanni Calabria, 27 March 1948, from The Quotable Lewis.
  What gold of truth and encouragement will you put yourself into mining soon, in preparation to write about Passover or Easter days and nights?      
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Sunday, April 8, 2012

Joyous Easter!

What does it profit a writer to gain the whole world and lose his or her soul?

The love of God constrains us to respond to His love. Joyous Easter, dear follower of Jesus Christ!

Hold onto faith in Christ, the promised Messiah.
Hold onto Hope.
Hold onto Love.
Hold onto God.

Thanks be to God for His eternal gift of salvation to us through His Son!

Nothing else can give to us the Joy that is in Christ Jesus. 
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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Resources to Share: As Spring approaches, so does the season of Lent

JW BibleImage by mtsofan via Flickr
For God so loved the world that he gave 
his only begotten Son 
that whosoever believeth on Him shall not perish 
but have everlasting life. 
John 3:16. 

A few resources to help you think about Lent, personally, and to remind others through your writing 


First Week of Lent - March 13 - 19, 2011 

I don't come from a background where Lenten self-denial and other observances were practiced. However, I remember the preparations for Easter Sunday at home and in church, through special plans and music. The day of Easter was a shining day, whatever the weather, and such observances in the church helped me, growing up, to be more aware of the love of God through Jesus and His life offered on the Cross for the sins of the world. This is a good time, also, to... 
Write or collect poetry, scripture verses, articles, pictures, devotions, and prayers...or other works that help you focus on this time. Lent contains the weeks leading up to Passover and Easter. The link below leads to reading for the weeks on the schedule also below. You can search on-line for readings, prayers, and meditations for your personal consideration, to share with others, or for your writing inspiration. May we go further than dipping our toes into the waters of the ocean of faith during this holy season. May we take no day or opportunity for granted, and honor the Lord. 

Lenten Bible Readings for these weeks: 
  • Week of the First Sunday in Lent (March 13 - 19) 
  • Week of the Second Sunday in Lent (March 20-26)
  • Week of the Third Sunday in Lent (March 27 - April 2)
  • Week of the Fourth Sunday in Lent (April 3 - 9)
  • Week of the Fifth Sunday in Lent (April 10 - 16)
"The word Lent comes from Anglo Saxon times which means spring.
In Latin, Lent is quadragesima which means forty days. In Greek, it is tessarakoste (fortieth), a word formed on the analogy of Pentecost (pentekoste).
"Period of Lent
The season of Lent is the period of forty days before the celebration of the great feast of the Church, Easter.
In determining this period of forty days..." read more: The Meaning of the Word "Lent"
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