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Saturday, February 27, 2010

argentina news

Thanks to all who have emailed or checked in on Facebook about the impact of the Chilean earthquake in Buenos Aires. I appreciate your care and concern. We had no impact here in Buenos Aires, as we are on the opposite side of the country from the Chilean border (Atlantic side). Regions on the western side of Argentina that border Chile did feel the quake and had some damage, but nothing like the impact in Chile. Please pray for the people impacted by the quake in Chile. Many friends from our church have friends who live and/or minister in Chile. Here is link to Buenos Aires news in English. The link is also on my sidebar is you ever want to keep up with the news here in English.


The Buenos Aires Herald - http://www.buenosairesherald.com/

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Autumn and Lent

Here's a sneak peak at my March prayer letter. I share some reflections about Lent in the Southern Hemisphere that I posted last year on my blog. Not quite yet autumn here in Buenos Aires, but the temps are cooling down a little.

“Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him." ~Romans 6:8

March 2010

Dear Family & Friends,

March 14 will mark two years here in Buenos Aires! I plan to take a personal retreat that weekend to reflect and give thanks for all God has done! I also give thanks for all my family and friends who have supported me in so many meaningful ways these past two years. My anniversary date happens to also fall during the season of Lent. Here in the Southern Hemisphere, the 40-days of Lent span the closing weeks of summer and the beginning days of autumn.

Last year, while away on my one-year anniversary retreat, I made some helpful parallels between autumn and Lent. I went on a boat ride through the local rivers near the city. Being the last weekend of summer, life along the riverbanks was still green and plush. However, I observed one lone tree that jumped the gun a bit in showing off its autumn colors. There in the mist of all the other green trees, this one colorful tree reminded me that autumn was around the corner.

In his book Let Your Life Speak, Parker Palmer reflects on the seasons of life. On autumn he writes, “In my own experience of autumn, I am rarely aware of the seeds being planted. Instead, my mind is on the face that the green growth of summer is browning and beginning to die. My delight in the autumn colors is always tinged with melancholy, a sense of impending loss that is only heightened by the beauty all around. I am drawn down by the prospect of death more than I am lifted up by the hope of new life”

Palmer goes on to conclude, “Autumn constantly reminds me that my daily dyings are necessary precursors to new life. If I try to ‘make’ a life that defies the diminishments of autumn, the life I end up with will be artificial, at best, and utterly colorless as well. But when I yield to the endless interplay of living and dying, dying and living, the life I am given will be real and colorful, fruitful and whole.”

I am learning that Lent is a season to die to the self that does not reflect the characteristics true to God’s image and Kingdom. It is a time to confront our false self. It is a time to put to death identity, value, meaning, and purpose that are inconsistent with being created in the image of God for His purposes. I understand one purpose of the disciplines of Lent is to put to death those parts of our lives that prevent us from living more fully into God’s resurrection Kingdom.

Very soon, the abundance of trees lining the streets and filling the parks and plazas of Buenos Aires will once again turn yellow and gold. These remaining weeks of Lent, I pray that these increasing autumn colors will serve as a daily reminder of the areas of my life that I need to die to, so that I can more fully live the resurrection. As Palmer reminds us, these daily dyings are necessary precursors to new life, more fruitful and whole.

With Love & Gratitude, david

Monday, February 15, 2010

New..."Lent 2010" Sidebar Links

I just added "Lent 2010" on the top of my blog sidebar. There is an abundance of resources, reflections, and prayers out there.

Saint Benedict & Lent

This is a blog replay from 2008. As preparing for Lent this year, I find these themes from Saint Benedict helpful in posturing my heart and life for the season. I decided to go ahead and share it again.

The book, A Monastic Year: Reflections from a Monastery by Brother Victor-Antoine D’Avila-Latourrette, reflects on the seasons of the church year as lived out in the monastery. This particular monastery lives under the Rule of St. Benedict. The reflections on Lent begin by quoting St. Benedict, “the life of a monk ought always to have the character of a Lenten observance.” For St. Benedict, Lent was the model for the monastic life of those striving to live under the Rule.

St. Benedict proposes the following Lenten practices in the Rule. Perhaps these timeless Lenten principles from St. Benedict’s Rule can help us rediscover fresh and renewed meaning and experience in Lent.

1) Refraining from sin.
“Lent should be a time for us, to do battle, a time to fight not only the great temptations but, perhaps more importantly, our subtle faults, the seemingly small habitual sins we consent to every day….Lent is a propitious time to take inventory and a close look at our bare selves, to see the obstacles on out journey to God, things which should be eliminated from our lives.”

2) Prayer with tears.
The parable of the Pharisee and the publican is Luke 18:9-14 is significant to consider. “Jesus teaches that the Pharisees prayer, filled with arrogance and pride, is not pleasing to God. In contrast, the humble prayer of the publican, a tax collector, who recognizes his sinfulness and makes appeal to God’s mercy with inner tears, is the kind that touches the heart of God….Our Lenten prayer, like the publican’s, ought to then be a humble and tearful prayer of compunction, a prayer of simplicity and trust, not in ourselves, but in the loving-kindness and tenderness of our God.”

3) Holy reading.
We “should develop a continual hunger, almost an addiction, for the Word of God, for through the Scriptures the Holy Spirit never ceases to speak and educate us…Lent is this wonderful, particularly well-suited time for reading and listening to the voice of God in his Word.”

4) Repentance.
“At the threshold of Lent, when placing the ashes on our foreheads, the priest repeats the Gospel words, ‘Repent and believe in the Gospel’ (Mark 1:15)….Repentance, the work of the Holy Spirit in the innermost part of our hearts, implies a long sustained spiritual effort. It is true that conversion and repentance are lifelong tasks, but Lent provides us with an exclusive period to work on it intensely. Lent is indeed a “school of repentance.”

5) Abstinence from food.
“Christ used fasting, and encouraged his followers to practice fasting, as a way of learning the self-control and personal restraint we need to keep a humble and wise perspective on our Christian life….The process can be painful and wearying, but when carried out under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, it becomes life-giving and a source of powerful grace in our individual lives.”

Sunday, February 14, 2010

the whole gang...

Our WMF Argentina community at our new year's retreat in January!


Photo by Margi Felix

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Patience & Love

I am slowly (and I mean slowly!) making my way through Ignatius’s Spiritual Exercises. The Spiritual Exercises were, originally, designed as a month-long spiritual retreat back in the 1500’s. They served as a foundation for the Society of Jesus, the Jesuits. However, since then, the process of the Exercises has taken many shapes and forms. I am using the guide, Sacred Listening: Discovering the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola by James L. Wakefield. The introduction of this guide describes the Exercises in this way….

“…the Spiritual Exercises are an invitation to renew and deepen our relationship with Christ…primarily a series of meditations on the Gospels that help us clarify and deepen our commitments to Jesus Christ…The Spiritual Exercises often facilitate an intense examination of the disciple’s motives for ministry, and so prove to be an excellent tool for making vocational choices.

All of these themes have proven beneficial during this season of life. I am grateful for the many ways Ignatian spirituality has impacted my life and helped me make space to listen and be attentive.

Now, back to the “Patience & Love” title of this post. Each unit in the Exercises has a theme and grace for contemplation and meditation. This last unit’s theme was, “Christ is patient with his disciples in the midst of growing adversity.” The grace to pray for was, “Lord, give me deep confidence in your patience and love.”

While not always realizing it this past month, this theme and grace of patience and love was just what I needed! When I experience discouragement with Spanish and living fully into my vocation here, God has given me deeper confidence in his patience and love for me. I am grateful for how that patience and love encourages and sustains me!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Lent begins in just one week....

Lent begins just one week from today on Ash Wednesday, 2/17. Last week I compiled some information on Lent for our community here in Buenos Aires, including some helpful quotes from Christine Sine on her GodSpace blog, basic facts, and some website resources. I posted it below. If you have followed my blog in years past, a lot of this will look familiar.

Our community plans to focus on Word Made Flesh's nine Lifestyle Celebrations during Lent. We will make space to reflect and examine our lives in light of these Lifestyle Celebrations. And ask ourselves, "What do we need to die to in order to live more fully into each Lifestyle Celebration?"

What Is Lent Anyway?
“Lent is a time for 'confrontation with the false self' (Thomas Keating) when we reflect on the responses and behaviors we exhibit that are least Christ like and seek God’s help in rededicating ourselves to God and God’s purposes. This is a time for self-denial and fasting when we give up some of the comforts of our lives in order to make ourselves more available to God.”
~ Christine Sine, GodSpace Blog (January 16, 2009)

What Is Lent Preparing Us For?
“Lent is primarily about preparing us to live in the world that Christ’s resurrection brought into being - the kingdom of God world - what I like to call God’s resurrection created world. It is about preparing us to follow the one who 'transfigured the world with the Spirit of life.'”
~ Christine Sine, GodSpace Blog (February 26, 2009) http://godspace.wordpress.com/2009/02/26/what-is-lent-preparing-us-for/

• Lent is the forty-day period before Easter, which begins on Ash Wednesday and ends during Holy Week with Maundy Thursday. Since Sundays celebrate the resurrection of Jesus, they are not included in the 40-days of Lent.

• Lent originated in the 4th-century with parallels to Jesus’ 40-days in the desert as a time of preparation for baptism at the Easter Vigil. It was a time of preparation for the entire Faith community.

• Today this period of Lent is a time of prayer and preparation for Easter, which most often includes elements of introspection, self-examination, and repentance.

Website Resources:
CRI Voice: Introduction to Lent
The Season of Lent by Dennis Bratcher
(Includes other Lent and Holy Week readings and links.)

Godspace Blog by Christine Sine
(2010 Lenten blog series: “Walking to the Cross: Why Don’t We Follow?” Also includes other Lent reflections and links.)

A Journey into Wholeness Lenten Series by Christine Sine
(This guide was created by Christine Sine in 2009.)

Upper Room: Lent 101