Tag: family

  • over. it. / interconnection as purpose

    over. it. / interconnection as purpose

    I know that it’s easy to think God isn’t real.
    Or if He is, that He is just the Big Bang.
    Or if He is more than the Big Bang, He’s the un-namable element of energy that interconnects all things together.
    But, what a shame
    to miss out on having a relationship with God.

     

    If it hasn’t happened to you, you may not believe it, but God answers prayers.
    Moreover, if you consistently seek Him,
    He continues to answer those prayers.

    We can debate about why the Divine Spirit has to be called God in the first place
    or why that God isn’t referred to as Her,
    But I really can’t answer that for you.

    Only He can answer for you.

     

    What I know for sure is that God is real to me.

    —— (more…)

  • Return of the Prodigal: a meditation

    Return of the Prodigal: a meditation

    A meditation on Luke 15:24.
    “For this my son was dead,  and is alive again; he was lost, and is found. And they began to be merry.”

    Sounds & voices:

    harmonies from my childhood ring out from the bathroom,
    French songs my father used to play from the radio.
    (I sing along with my broken French in my head)

    The image as he gets ready for work, I am swept away into nostalgia,
    a sweetness I had been craving
    my last six months in Nashville

    I am home.

    I dream of my father as a young man,
    handsome and determined, very large glasses on a skinny frame
    making his way as a young African in newly independent Senegal

    or roaming the rues of Paris in search of a bon café,
    a noir in a sea of pale blanc.
    Perhaps a blonde girlfriend by his side
    as they bravely dare to redefine cultural taboos
    and overcome the racial socio-political walls between them.

    Just as soon, the Accura dealer is over the speaker
    reminding me that his new cars will bring me joy
    since my old Ford has a dented fender
    and expired plates.

    I am American again. The image is clear;
    my father, too, is American again,
    his citizenship codified some years ago
    by an oath and deep blue passport in hand.

    What was lost in gaining this new identity?
    I wonder as a few salty tears gently sliding down my cheeks surprise me
    and I am aware of the small lump
    in my throat.

    Happiness or sadness?

    Sometimes for me, they are the same.
    I am grateful to be home again,
    to find what I had been looking for.

    I am getting my life force back in to me slowly,
    everyday I am here, a little more.
    It was God’s grace that brought me home
    so that we all
    may be free to live again.

    Amen.