Thursday, December 10, 2015
Prayer Beads for the Forgetful and the Distracted
Rosaries always fascinated me because they were forbidden in
the religious tradition I grew up in. They were one of those Catholic
trappings, like incense and processing with a cross that smelt of idolatry,
like one might just rely too much on them to get you on the good side of God
when we knew only Jesus could do that. Of course, anything outlawed becomes
what you want. So in high school, when I stayed with my best friend who was a
devout Catholic and who slept with her Rosary, which entangled us during the
night, I secretly fingered her beads and wondered about prayer. Did God hear us
if we used a prop?
I don’t know much about the history of the Rosary, but I
know that traditionally it included praying The Lord’s Prayer and saying The Apostle’s Creed which are pretty universally believed among Christians. I
could see it being a cross-cultural help to many. Like, what if you didn’t know
how to read? If you loved God, you would be happy for something that framed and
directed your prayers to him.
Whether it’s my age or the pace of modern life, I don’t
know, but the least thing can distract me from prayer. An Asian beetle crawling
on the ceiling. My grocery list. The tag on the back of my shirt, and somehow
I’ve leapt across three continents and an ocean to a Greek Island in the Aegean
Sea. When a friend gave me a set of Anglican prayer beads, I was interested.
First, their beauty pleased me – he made them out of jade and onyx. Second, their
smoothness is calming, holding something physical in my hand helps keep me from
wandering off to who-knows-where?
So the other day a friend contacted me. She had purchased
several sets of prayer beads as Christmas gifts and wondered how I used them.
She wrote, “I would love to include your suggestions for use. The ancient
prayers that came with them just didn’t seem right for these particular
friends.” Somewhere in my murky past I
had written about them, but I couldn’t find it, so, oh well, I started over and
came up with this which I thought I’d share. You know. Just in case you are the
friend who gets a set.
Prayer Beads for the forgetful and the distracted.
There are four sections of seven beads each separated by a
larger bead.
The larger beads, I use to frame my prayers. Beginning with
the cross and moving around the circle, for me, the cross is, of course,
obvious – we send all our troubles to the cross. We begin with the cross and
end with it. (How appropriate!) The larger beads represent some aspect of
Trinity – for example the desire of the Holy Spirit to comfort us. Or the
Father to protect us. The Savior to rescue us. Sometimes I might have read a
section of the Bible or a daily reading of some kind that reminds me of some characteristic
of God and I use that large bead to thank Him and to ask for some of that
holiness to be seen in me.
The first section of seven represents the world – what’s out
there – outside my personal world and family. Crisis, tragedies in other
countries, friends who may need prayer for something specific. I recognize my
finiteness in trying to remember EVERYthing,
so this at least helps me to be focused outward and whoever or whatever
comes to mind gets assigned a bead even if temporary.
The second section represents my primary family members.
Some of them get their own bead!
The third section is me. All seven beads. I always have a lot to pray about regarding
myself. My work, my calling, my attitude, my body, etc etc. But the other
sections help me not to be COMPLETELY self-focused.
The fourth section is Thanksgiving. Each bead represents something I am thankful
for. I think of Phil. 4: 6-7 “Do not be anxious for anything, but in
every situation, by prayer and petition with thanksgiving, present your
requests to God And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will
guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
This is all purely my own invention. Nothing particularly
sacred about it.
Hope this helps as you come to God with all your baggage and
mess knowing he will receive a humble heart.
Saturday, December 5, 2015
How the Holidays limited my chance of getting more presents than my brothers and sisters
More, more, more |
At certain times of the year women are more fertile, more
likely to get pregnant than at other times of the year. I don’t have scientific
evidence, but if you take a little toll of women you know who’ve had several
children – the more the better – you’ll likely come up with a cluster of kids
who showed up during the same season of the year. I know. I know. But check it
out. You might be surprised.
Take my mother, for instance. She had twelve pregnancies.
Six of them miscarried. But of the six of us who made it three are in December
and one was late October. That’s four out of six. That meant that December,
with its major holiday, was a difficult month especially during our birth years,
because our mom was too busy lactating or laboring to pay us much mind. You
know how those last weeks are with contractions in the middle of the night as
you lie staring at the ceiling, wasting precious hours of sleep as you watch
the clock and wonder if you can make it until morning. If Mom wasn’t pregnant,
then she was busy scratching at the budget and wondering how badly we December
babies would feel if our birthday presents were rolled into Christmas. Sure, we
were poor, but as the oldest I considered myself more entitled than two of my younger
brothers, who shared my month, and Randy who was a little more distant coming
at the end of October. Dallas was on the 3rd of December so he had
the best chance of getting a gift. Mine was smack in the middle, so it could
easily go either way depending on the price of the pulp Dad hauled out of the
woods and loaded onto a flat car in town. But poor Rex was born on December 26th
in the middle of the night, missing Christmas Day by only a couple hours. Poor
baby. He wouldn’t have a rat’s chance in hell of getting a party. Ever. He was
never convinced that it was an honor to almost share his birthday with the baby
Jesus. And let’s be honest, we all, especially me, wanted the presents as much,
maybe more than I wanted to be Mary the Mother of Jesus in the Christmas Pageant.
The year he was born I was seven years old and it felt as
good as if I’d won a trip to Disneyland because on Christmas night I got to
stay with my mom who was waiting for a baby, we were told, at my Grandpa and
Grandma Frolander’s in town. We lived thirty-six miles from the hospital and it
was too far and too risky to remain on the farm when you didn’t know how fast a
baby could come or if a blizzard might put you in the ditch when it was 30
below. Helping a mare drop a foal or pulling a calf out of a cow with ropes was
one thing, but getting that intimate with the birth of your child was bloody
alarming. Dad could not imagine being that present at the birth of his children.
Plus, on a cold night with the wind howling up your backside, how were you
supposed to bend to your wife’s need along a country road only to have the baby
die of exposure? Some things only required half a brain to figure out.
On Christmas morning Dad, Randy, Jan and I arrived in
Warroad excited to see Mom who’d been away for years. We opened presents and
then we feasted on Grandma’s Christmas trimmings. We scraped our desert plates
clean and ate one chocolate-covered cherry each. Not long after, Dad had to
leave as the cold afternoon turned fast toward night. Cows had to be milked
twice a day. Jan was crying and Randy’s big eyes spilled tears as Mom helped
Dad wrap them for the drive home. Someone had decided I could stay and I didn’t
know what to make of such good luck.
That night Mom and I snuggled down into the same bed with
quilts piled high. She had been gone for two weeks and every day my stomach had
filled with dread that she might never come back, but here she was all warm and
sleepy. My mother.
I was wakened by a lamp shining in my eyes. Urgent whispers
caused me sit up. Towels were lying on the on the floor soaking up something
that had been spilled. There was a stack of clean sheets on the chair. My
grandmother was wrapping Mom in her bathrobe and coat. Grandpa appeared, put
his arm around her and led her down the stairs. Where are they going, I asked.
It was alarming, her leaving in the middle of the night. My grandmother shushed
me and moved me aside where I shivered as she pulled sheets from the bed. What
happened I asked? How did the bed get wet? “We’ll be done in a minute,” she
said, “then you can hop back in bed.” But where is mom going? My voice was swelling
and my stomach lurched. “She went to the hospital to get a new baby,” Grandma
told me brightly. In the middle of the night? “Don’t worry. She’ll be back
soon.” She kissed me, switched out the light and I heard her footsteps fade
down the stairs.
Poor Rex. He still doesn’t get much out of his birthday. Maybe
this year I will remember to send a card.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)