Writing
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Prayer Vol.02, 2020, pg.71
Strahan is a musician, writer, speaker, psalmist, storyteller and songwriter. He is the creator of Commoners Communion, a blog, podcast, and conversational look at how poetry and revelation kiss in the life of Spirit-filled humanity. He writes daily prayers and devotions on Instagram and published Prayer Vol.01, and more recently Prayer Vol.02. Strahan helps to teach others how to hear God’s voice and grow in closeness with him through retreats and seminars and is passionate about helping the church find a new language in prayer. www.commonerscommunion.com more» -
Zac Poonen has been serving the Lord in India for over 50 years as a Bible-teacher. He is co-founder of the Christian Fellowship Church (CFC) Bangalore, www.cfcindia.com, and has responsibility for a number of churches in India and abroad. He has written more than 25 books and numerous articles in English – which have been translated into many Indian and foreign languages. He wrote the hymn, "What God did for Jesus" in 1977. more»
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A poem from our September scholar Lincoln Jaques. The Disappeared is a personal poem, written during my last trip to Zagreb, in October 2018. I wrote the poem after wandering one afternoon through the old part of the city. The Zagreb cathedral sits in Gornji Grad, the Upper Town, and the poem came to me after dwelling on the deeply catholic roots of Croatia, and the effects of the Patriotic War that raged in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s. There is still a sense of loss that pervades in all corners of the region; the poem was my response to that loss, to all the family members who went missing during that time, and for those who wait for perhaps someday for answers, for closure. The poem is part of a wider sequence, part of which I’m working on now. It was first published in the Australian literary magazine The Blue Nib, issue #42 more»
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“Gratitude is the memory of the heart”, wrote the French bishop, Jean Baptiste Massieu. My heart’s memories of Vaughan Park include... more»
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Prior to the 25th March 2020, the largest retreat I’d ever been on was possibly about 60 people. Imagine my surprise when it was 5 million New Zealanders, 25 million Australians and untold millions in the northern hemisphere… more»
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I never see kingfishers when I’m looking for them, they just appear magically and disappear as quickly, an unexpected grace that never fails to make my day... more»
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Even the bowerbird builds a home out of scraps canvassing walls with purple blossom and blue beads... more»
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the winsome charm of Wisdom, Love and Grace sustain me for my living in this space and make me yearn to join them face to face more»
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We weep when holy text is used to deny others' breath. open our eyes, our ears, our hearts to the truth that for you, love without justice, is not love at all. more»
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What the festival costs is more than the price of helium in a few small red balloons, and a birthday cake for the church during coffee hour... more»
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The blessing could not have happened any other way than by his departure, by his letting go of the ones whom he loved and whom he would never stop loving but had to release into their own lives so that they could enter into the blessing and live it out on earth. more»
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“We’re all like you now;” observed my self-isolating mother, “enclosed.” She isn’t the first person to make the connection between my life as an enclosed Carmelite nun and the present lockdown. more»
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This is a service for those who want to share Communion in an online community during a time of quarantine // lockdown // sheltering place. It is a simple service which begins with an announcement on more»
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We are sheltered from the profound sense of absence of the early disciples because we know the outcome of the Gospel passion story — that Jesus rose. more»
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The message of peace was what your disciples needed to hear, and what the world needs now. more»
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Between Palm Sunday Hosannas and Easter Alleluias, Holy Saturday is a day of many overwhelmings... more»
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In dark places Lost places Condemned places Who will walk there? Willingly? more»
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If Christ should suddenly stand before me with a towel thrown over his shoulder and a pan of water in his hands, would I have the humility to take off my shoes and really let him wash my feet? Or, like Peter would I say: ”Wash my feet, Lord? Never!” more»
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And so you come once more to Bethany, and share a meal with Lazarus, a resurrection feast... more»
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Washing hands. Well, in our gospel passage today (a long one I know) we come across someone washing their hands. Pilate. Trying to ‘wash his hands’ of his actions. more»
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In the great silence the flowers seeded and grew, the rain fell, the land took a breath, exhaled. The sun turned on its wheel heedless to the forecast doom. more»
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Jesus is no sterile savior. He is not interested in remaining tidy and removed. With a beautiful and earthy economy of gestures, Jesus reveals himself as one who is willing to fully inhabit the messiness of our world and of our lives. more»
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Be thankful now for having arrived, for the sense of having drunk from a well, for remembering the long drought that preceded your arrival... more»
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Nor can this blackened sky, this darkened scar Eclipse that glimpse of how things really are. more»
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Here at the outset of Lent, what can you see of the landscape that lies ahead of you? Might there be another place you need to go, physically or in your soul, before you are ready to enter the landscape that calls you? more»