
REFLECTIONS, POEMS & PRAYERS
You Loved Them To The End
As the blows rain down upon you, you cry out in your spirit with each impact
I, Love, You, Beloved, Child, Not, Forgotten, Forgive, Them
You send out blessings as they beat you
Even the soldiers you love to the end
You Loved Them To The End
“Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”
“Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end.”
Jesus, the priests, elders, teachers, leaders of your people
Stand to condemn you with mouths filled with lies
How do you respond?
You say nothing but your heart radiates love
For your chosen people, who call you enemy
If only they would turn, and still some may
Then you would gather them to you
To the end, your heart aches with love for them
And then bound before Pilate
Bloodthirsty, heathen, manipulative self-interest
But child of God still the same.
If only he would receive your living water
Your bread of life, the light you shine
But this is just another political calculation
Doing whatever to keep this bloody peace
And to the end, with love, your soul mourns his hard-heartedness
Now the crowds, chanting against you, whipped to a frenzy
You see and know each one
Timaeus, Alpheus, Sharon, Joses, Efraim
Jonath, Mara, Michah, Imma, Eli
Each created as a gift, a vessel for your love, Treasured
But they shout for your blood and choose a criminal for freedom
How your heart breaks to see them captive and ensnared in hatred
And yet you love them to the end
And the soldiers taking advantage of your helplessness
Mocking, striking, spitting, taunting
Outdoing one another with cruelty
So far from what they were created to be
To show kindness, to bless and build up
As the blows rain down upon you, you cry out in your spirit with each impact
I, Love, You, Beloved, Child, Not, Forgotten, Forgive, Them
You send out blessings as they beat you
Even the soldiers you love to the end
Now they nail you to the cross, and your blood flows freely
Crying out your love to all those gathered jeering
If only they could see the compassion in your eyes
Your deep desire for reconciliation
For thieves to join you in paradise
For an end to the mourning and suffering and death
You love them to the end and so, every fiber of your being cries out
“Father forgive them for they know not what they do”
Even in your despair, you hold onto love
For each of these your children, gone so far astray
Jesus, we know your enemy love by this
That while we were still sinners
you loved us in your passion
You loved us to the end
© Dale Gish 2020. All Rights Reserved.
This prayer was inspired by the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius. If you are interested in praying the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius with me starting in September, please contact me.
A Blessing For The Storm
May Jesus be with you in the storm
not in your boat
but may you be in his boat
A Blessing For The Storm
May the Lord bless you and keep you
May Jesus be with you in the storm
not in your boat
but may you be in his boat
Whether sleeping or awake
Trusting or frightened
Joyful or sorrowing
May you know his presence.
May you hear him speaking to the wind and the waves
Speaking peace and calm wherever you may be
May you know how cherished you are
beloved daughter, beloved son
You are not alone
You are held in his sustaining love
© Dale Gish 2020. All Rights Reserved.
A Coronavirus Prayer
Every time I hear the word ventilator
I will weep with you,
Weary from sorrow,
Heart strained by love
A Coronavirus Prayer
-Written while praying for Ellen who is hospitalized in New York City with COVID-19, and reflecting on John 11
Looking at the world through eyes of compassion
Heart open wide to embrace what is broken
Seeing the beauty, tragedy, hope
Your beloved one is sick
Eyes welling up with tears
streaming down
growing puffy and red
How many days with the fever?
Chest tight, dry cough, struggle to breathe?
Weak, oxygen low
It’s time to admit
To the hospital
To the fear
To the loneliness
To the helplessness
To the desperate need for you
Yes, you wept
Wept with your friends
“See how you love her”
“See how you love him”
Every time I hear the word ventilator
I will weep with you
Weary from sorrow
Heart strained by love
This will be my prayer
Sharing your heart
Tender compassion
© Dale Gish 2020. All Rights Reserved.
This prayer was inspired by the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola. If you are interested in praying the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius with me starting in September, please contact me.
Rogier van der Weyden -Descent From The Cross
Book Review: When Narcissism Comes To Church
If you want to keep your head in the sand and not see the emotional and spiritual abuses happening in our churches, don’t buy this book. If you would rather not become more aware of your false self and your own narcissistic tendencies, cancel your order. If you have been trying to avoid acknowledging and healing from your wounds from narcissism, there are thousands of other books to choose from. If you enjoy throwing your hands in the air and saying narcissism is narcissism and there is nothing to be done about it, then delete this book from your Kindle.
In an individualistic society with a lot of individual and corporate brokenness, it’s not surprising that most of us can recount painful stories about people who have used us and wounded us, showing little concern for the damage they have done. We find it in our families, at our jobs, in our politics, and yes, even in our churches. We may not understand the psychological diagnostic criteria, its causes, or its treatment, but we have experienced the destruction and havoc narcissism causes.
Chuck DeGroat’s new book, When Narcissism Comes To Church: Healing Your Community From Spiritual and Emotional Abuse published by InterVarsity Press, is an important resource for individual Christians and churches who want to understand, protect themselves from, and recover from the wounds of narcissism. It’s accessible for church leaders and congregants, providing us with a wealth of insight and a helpful framework on how to respond, and is deeply grounded in a vision of God’s ongoing work of healing and restoration.
Are you the kind of person who should not read this book? Here is a helpful guide: If you want to keep your head in the sand and not see the emotional and spiritual abuses happening in our churches, don’t buy this book. If you would rather not become more aware of your false self and your own narcissistic tendencies, cancel your order. If you have been trying to avoid acknowledging and healing from your wounds from narcissism, there are thousands of other books to choose from. If you enjoy throwing your hands in the air and saying narcissism is narcissism and there is nothing to be done about it, then delete this book from your Kindle.
But for the rest of us, this challenging book is well worth reading. This book helps us in so many ways: to better understand narcissism, to recognize the damage it causes in our churches, to become more self-aware of our own narcissism, as a step towards our own healing, to envision what a road to redemption might look like for the narcissist.
Chuck DeGroat
A Wise Counselor, Teacher and Spiritual Director
Chuck Degroat has a lot of wisdom to share on the subject. He is a licensed therapist, a professor of counseling and Christian spirituality at Western Theological Seminary in Holland MI, and a spiritual director. For years, Chuck has been counseling both narcissists as well as those who have been victimized by them, and brings their stories to life, to help us understand the realities of narcissism and the consequences for families and churches.
A fascinating feature of this book is that DeGroat looks at narcissism through the lens of the Enneagram. The Enneagram is a tool for self-understanding and for examining the false self, which has nine basic types, and then many more subtypes as you get deeper into it. DeGroat takes these nine Enneagram types and looks at how narcissism gets played out for each of the nine types. Since most of us have some tendencies towards narcissism, it is fascinating to read through each type and to notice how your Enneagram type lives out Narcissism. The section on each Enneagram type also includes a story of a narcissist of that type. You will likely find yourself thinking of people you’ve met as you engage with these characters.
Two chapters go deep into the characteristics of and the inner life of a narcissistic pastor. Again, DeGroat has illuminating stories of pastors and how that narcissism plays out in the role of a pastor. If you have ever experienced a narcissistic pastor these chapters will likely ring true and may be helpful for you in your healing process. Essentially DeGroat says to us, you aren’t crazy, that’s how it is like to interact with a narcissist, and here is what was going on in the narcissist that led to your experience.
Chapter 6 looks at narcissistic systems, churches that are either narcissistic themselves or have become narcissistic as a result of a narcissistic pastor. Simply removing a narcissistic pastor often doesn’t fix the problem as the dynamics in the church have to be reworked to become healthy again. You will likely find yourself reflecting on your own church experiences and dysfunctional systems in a new way. Again, I found DeGroat naming the dysfunction helpful to me as I reflect on my own church experiences.
There are two chapters that look at spiritual and emotional abuse in the church as well as steps that can be taken to heal personally and heal churches that have suffered under narcissistic leadership. DeGroat names the dynamics, abuses, and dysfunctions, but also has eyes of hope for the work of healing and restoration that God wants to bring to those who are suffering. The recovery and healing process is not easy, but DeGroat outlines the way forward towards new life. DeGroat has a pastoral heart and does an excellent job of naming the sin and brokenness but also the hope and healing work that God is at work doing.
I found Chapter 9, Transformation for Narcissists (Is Possible) to be moving and deeply affecting. As a spiritual director, I get to sit with people and experience God’s heart for them, in all kinds of life situations. In this chapter, DeGroat models the ability to sit with narcissists holding the destructiveness of their behavior but also seeing them as beloved children of God, holding out hope for the slow, hard work of being transformed and growing into more of the fullness of who God has created them to be.
This is such a gift to us as we reckon with narcissism, but also to us as we seek to be human, Christian, and embody God’s love in this broken world. Deep down we all want to be seen, known and cared for in this way. Thank you, Chuck, for this gift you have given us. I can already tell that I’m going to be reading this chapter many times.
It’s been one week since I finished reading this wonderful book and this book continues to live with me. I find myself reflecting on my own false self more and what it would be like to bring more of it into the light. I’m already considering what pastors and churches I will recommend reading this book. This book will be an ongoing resource for me as I walk with pastors, church leaders and congregations as a spiritual director, and I think for many will receive this book as an enduring gift for the health and wholeness of the church.
In Everything (including Coronavirus) Turn Towards Jesus
In Everything (including Coronavirus) Turn Towards Jesus. Right now, right where you are, turn towards Jesus and welcome his loving presence. Let him meet you in the very place that you are. That’s the first step in what Jesus wants to do in your situation, whether that situation is Coronavirus or something else. And keep turning towards him.
In everything (including Coronavirus) turn towards Jesus.
The Lord’s deep desire for us is that we receive his love. God is always looking upon each of us personally with a loving gaze, and we are invited to return his gaze and receive his love. So many things in our lives and in our world are broken (such as Coronavirus), not as God intends. But God is always at work, seeking redemption, bringing good out of evil.
Jesus meets us right where we are. There is no need to be somewhere else in order to receive him. Often the first step in his redemption, in the midst of the brokenness and pain is that we turn towards Jesus and his love. Perhaps nothing in our situation has materially changed except we now notice his presence, experience his loving care. We are not alone. Jesus is right there with us and that changes everything.
But where are we? Sometimes before we can know his presence with us we have to acknowledge the reality of where we are. We may be too busy reacting to or avoiding what we are facing that we can’t be present to the reality of our situation and to the Lord’s presence with us in that place. So where are you right now? What are you facing? What is your situation?
Right now the Coronavirus may be a significant part of your situation. Are you sick? Are you afraid? Are you worried about your elderly parents? Has your kids’ school been closed? Is your job or your business at risk or your retirement plan evaporating? Are you separated from loved ones? Is your church canceling services or changing how it operates? Has your vacation been canceled or are you self quarantined in your house? Does it feel like the world is falling apart? Where are you?
As a spiritual director I want to encourage you. Here and now, right where you are, turn towards Jesus and welcome his loving presence. Let him meet you in the very place that you are. That’s the first step in what Jesus wants to do in your situation, whether that situation is Coronavirus or something else. And keep turning towards him. How will he care for you? What will he invite you to do in response? Where does he call you to love and serve? How will he involve you in his redemptive work in this world? Stay connected, always turning to him in whatever situation you are in.
Thank you, Asian American Christians!
So I want to say, Thank You! I will not glare at you. I will smile and be grateful for the good gifts God has given all of us in you. I see you. You are leading all of us, caring for all of us, helping us all be Christ-like and love our neighbors.
When I cough in public no one pays any attention. But I have Asian American friends who experience people glaring at them when they cough. While the COVID-19 outbreak began in China, here in the US, I suspect people should probably be more concerned about a white guy like me than an Asian American. This racial stigmatizing is so terribly wrong and worthy of its own post. But this is not my primary point today.
Today I want to say thank you to Asian American Christians who are leading the way to respond to this virus. In my sphere of life, the people I experience responding well, helping us be safer are primarily Christian Asian Americans.
At my church, a Korean American doctor is leading our response to COVID-19, to help keep others safe, and no, I couldn’t go to worship this week with my cough, and that was the right call. At my work, the Christian Chinese American founder of our company has us all working from home to keep others safe. And I watched a wonderful event held last night led by Daniel Chin, and a panel of primarily Asian American Christians in Seattle showing us the way for us to respond as Christians to COVID-19.
So I want to say, Thank You! I will not glare at you. I will smile and be grateful for the good gifts God has given all of us in you. I see you. You are leading all of us, caring for all of us, helping us all be Christ-like and love our neighbors.
If you want to watch this helpful presentation by Daniel Chin and church leaders on the front lines in Seattle, here is the link. https://youtu.be/FuwBsHjOxgE
Does God Really Like Me? A book review
In my work as a spiritual director, I see a lot of dedicated, faithful Christians who believe that God loves them but struggle to experience God’s love in an affective way. Deep down they feel that God is disappointed in them, scolding, judging, frustrated. If that’s your experience, it’s hard to be deeply connected with God, to experience God’s love. And when I suggest that God delights in them, people are often taken aback, disoriented by considering this life-changing possibility. What if it were true that God likes you? What would that mean? How would that change your life?
In their book Does God Really Like Me? Discovering the God Who Wants to Be With Us, Cyd and Geoff Holsclaw challenge us again and again with the reality that God likes us, that God desires us, that God wants to be with us. Their goal is to get that message through to us on whatever level we need it. And the Holsclaws are able to speak to us on many levels, Geoff is a theologian, both are pastors, and Cyd is a life coach and spiritual director.
Some of us have theologies or ways of reading scripture that keep us from knowing that God likes us, that God desires to be present to us. To help us out, Cyd and Geoff have a huge focus on telling the big picture story of scripture in a way that highlights their point. From the creation and fall story in Genesis, through the story of Israel, through Jesus’s incarnation, life, death, and resurrection, through the early church and all the way through the new creation of the book of Revelation, they trace God’s desire for us, God’s delight in us, God’s presence with us.
Read the full book review on Englewood Review of Books
Forgiven
My heart leaps for joy. Miraculous mercy, gratuitous grace, fantastic freedom
I want to forgive everyone. Blessing springs up everywhere.
Lord, I come to you in need of mercy
Your forgiveness
My sin is heavy upon me
A weight I cannot bear
But you see through my sin
and look at me with great compassion and love
And now you speak words of forgiveness to me
Words that release me, unbind me
My heart leaps for joy
Miraculous mercy
Gratuitous grace
Fantastic freedom
I want to forgive everyone
Blessing springs up everywhere
You overwhelm me with your love
There is nothing I can say or do except to love you.
© Dale Gish 2020. All Rights Reserved.
This prayer was inspired by the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola. If you are interested in praying the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius with me starting in September, please contact me.
Book Review: When Faith Becomes Sight
I recently reviewed the book When Faith Becomes Sight by Beth and David Booram for the Englewood Review of Books. An excerpt is below. You can read the full review here.
If you have ever had a spiritual director, you know that you typically see your spiritual director once per month. During your meetings, your director listens to you, prays with you, and helps you look for God’s presence and work in your life. But in spiritual direction, the focus is not on the director sharing their wealth of wisdom and understanding. Instead, a good spiritual director may speak very little in a session which helps keep the focus on God and on the relationship between the directee and God.
However, sometimes you wish you could go to your spiritual director and just listen, soaking up all their spiritual wisdom and knowledge. If you booked a spiritual direction session with Beth or David Booram I doubt you would be granted this comprehensive wisdom download, but fortunately, they have written a book that you can read their collected spiritual wisdom… When Faith Becomes Sight: Opening Your Eyes To God’s Presence All Around You.
Both Beth and David have been spiritual directors for more than a decade and disciples of Jesus for many years. They are founders of Fall Creek Abbey, an urban retreat house, and spiritual direction center in Indianapolis Indiana. There they offer spiritual direction, train spiritual directors, offer retreats and supervision for spiritual directors. So the Boorams have a lot of wisdom to share, and we are the beneficiaries.
When Faith Becomes Sight accomplishes a lot in its 218 pages. Think of it as part prayer manual, part spiritual direction textbook, part psychology informed self-discovery workbook, and part contemplative prayer survey. Beth and David masterfully weave together personal stories, spiritual direction session narratives, guided scripture meditations, quotes from spiritual direction masters, and reflection questions to form an engaging book that draws the reader deeper into reflection on God’s work and the terrain of the reader’s own spiritual journey.
One of the things I loved most about this book was the active God that it portrays and assumes. Many Christians today are functional Deists, who don’t experience an active God who initiates relationship and is alive and at work in their lives, not so with Beth and Dave Booram. Their first chapter begins with an exploration of God encountering Moses through the burning bush. While we may not be Moses, we are invited to live our lives on the lookout for the same God who puts “shimmering attractions” in our lives that if we respond to, lead us deeper into connection with God.
Because our God is active and involved in our lives, the Boorams invite us to overcome “our inner agnostic,” respond to God’s presence and be drawn closer to God. Spiritual direction, then, becomes a place to notice and reflect on the work of God in our lives, which further requires self-exploration as we come to know the terrain of our spiritual lives.
Read the rest of the review here.
Prayer: Spirit of God Come Upon Me
Spirit of God, come upon me
Breath of God, anoint me for good news
That I may join with you
In my poverty
Spirit of God
Come upon me
Breath of God
Anoint me for good news
That I may join with you
In my poverty
As you
Bless the poor
Free the prisoners
Make blind eyes see
Release the burdens of the oppressed
And manifest the jubilee of your kingdom
I can only go where you lead me
Your humble vessel
Filled with your love
Only sustained by you
© Dale Gish 2020. All Rights Reserved.