Tuesday 25 February 2014

Still Waters

 a time to enter silence,

still the mind and encounter the present moment in quiet

Saturday 1st March
8 - 10am
St. Mary's Church, Sullington Lane, Sullington, 
West Sussex RH20 4AE

You are welcome to come at 8am or 9am or to stay for the whole time. 
Each session begins with a short introduction to lead us into
 the shared stillness and silence. 

If travelling from Horsham, Worthing or Brighton, please note:
The A283 between the A24 and Sullington Lane (which leads to the church) will be closed to through traffic this weekend 1st and 2nd March. We understand diversions will be in place. Our suggested route is to continue north on the A24 taking the first exit signposted to Thakeham. Follow the road for about a mile, crossing straight over the mini-roundabout outside Rydon School. At the next mini roundabout, take the first exit into Water Lane and continue to the end. Continue straight across into Sullington Lane. 
The detour takes about 10 minutes - please allow extra time for your journey. 

Peace be with you 

Thursday 20 February 2014

A Service of Silence & Beholding

A time of unhurried silence in which to dwell 
at the heart of the Eucharist

February 23rd
8 a.m.
 St. Mary's Church, Sullington, West Sussex, RH20 4AE

If travelling from Horsham, Worthing or Brighton, please note:
The A283 between the A24 and Sullington Lane (which leads to the church) is likely to be closed to through traffic this weekend 22nd and 23rd February. We understand diversions will be in place. A suggested route is to continue north on the A24 taking the first exit signposted to Thakeham. Follow the road for about a mile, crossing straight over the mini-roundabout outside Rydon School. At the next mini roundabout, take the first exit into Water Lane and continue to the end. Continue straight across into Sullington Lane. 
Please allow extra time for your journey.  


I am, you anxious one.

Don’t you sense me, ready to break
into being at your touch?
My murmurings surround you like shadowy wings.
Can’t you see me standing before you
cloaked in stillness?
Hasn’t my longing ripened in you
from the beginning
as fruit ripens on a branch?

I am the dream you are dreaming.
When you want to awaken, I am that wanting:
I grow strong in the beauty you behold.
And with the silence of stars I enfold
your cities made by time.

Rainer Maria Rilke    
                      

Peace be with you

Monday 3 February 2014

Inside & Outside

Still Waters 
1 February 2014

I always find that after driving up two busy main roads (busy even at this hour), that as soon as I turn into the lane here at Sullington there is a very real sense of entering something else – of leaving a hurried world and entering stillness.  Everything inside me gives way instantly and willingly to the beauty and stillness of the landscape and an internal stillness gives rise to a relaxing sigh and a warm smile.  

So this is a time to be still, to put everything else aside, let the thoughts that occupy our minds fall away as we continue the inward journey that each of us is making. Let’s also be aware that we are part of the Divine nature of all that is and by whichever word or name is meaningful to each of us.

~~~
A good many years ago (30 or more) a little book came on to the market that caused quite a stir in both the religious and secular worlds.  It was called ‘Mr God this is Anna’ by Sydney Hopkins who writes under the pseudonym ‘Fynn.’ Once read, it’s the sort of book you go back to from time to time, which is what I did recently. If you’ve read this little gem you will know that at the start Anna is a 4/5 year old urchin who had run away from an abusive home life and was found and befriended by teenager Fynn late one foggy night on the streets of East London in the 1930s.  

At 5years Anna knew the purpose of being, the meaning of love and was a personal friend and helper of Mr God.  At 6 and 7years she was her own theologian, mathematician, philosopher, poet and gardener. She didn’t reach the age of 8 because she died in an accident but with a grin on her face saying: ‘I bet Mr God lets me go to heaven for this.’

It seems that people have always asked was whether it’s a true story or not for that’s how it reads. Even today with the aid of the internet, people are still unsure, but if it isn’t true then it should be. 

The book opens with one of Anna’s many theological insights when she announces – “The diffrence from a person and an angel is easy. Most of an angel is in the inside and most of a person is on the outside.” 

Most of an angel is in the inside and most of a person is on the outside.

The simplicity of this statement reminded me that this is what many people in various ways and through a variety of different mediums are trying to achieve – to be ‘mainly on the inside’; to discover the Divine within: to discover who we truly are; that we are more than the ‘on the outside’ characters we are playing out on the world’s stage.

This is the journey inwards. It doesn’t involve strenuous effort or mental gymnastics for it is not about ‘doing’ or ‘achieving’, it’s about ‘letting go.’  In the same way we give ourselves up to sleep each night, so we give ourselves up to the stillness of meditation and the Divine within.

And I thought again about stillness.  We turn off a busy road and enter the stillness of the lane. . . and from the lane we enter into the stillness of this church. . . and then we come to the stillness of meditation.  In this setting we might hope this comes easily but that’s not always the case because all too often this is when the ego mind begins it’s ‘mainly on the outside’ chatter.  In eastern religions this thought-chatter is called ‘monkey mind’ because the mind chatters away like a troop of monkeys.  Meister Eckhart calls it ‘a storm of inward thoughts which afflict us.’
 
There are several ways which help to still this mind-chatter. I rather like the one the modern day mystic Andrew Harvey tells of in a conversation he had years ago with the Tibetan mystic Thuksey Rinpoche.  Rinpoche tells him:

“Meditation is not gymnastics, it is the art of peace, and for it to be practiced with true success you must feel as serene and secure as possible.” Then after a pause he smiled and said “But there is one thing I want you always to remember… when you begin to meditate imagine that all your thoughts, worries and fears are like a large slab of butter left out in the summer sun and let everything melt slowly away.”
So helping us towards being ‘mainly on the inside’ involves letting outside interference melt away as we still the mind.

During a time of meditation, it is helpful to make sure you are sitting comfortably and that your body is relaxed – check face and shoulders in particular, it’s surprising how much tension is there . . . . . and then focus your attention on your breathing. . . as it enters your body. . . and as it leaves going out into the air in front of you.  Notice it on your nostrils and on the area between nose and lip, breathing in and out like waves drawing back and forth on the seashore yet remaining as calm as a mill pond. Breathe naturally. If the ego-mind starts to set up a running commentary let it melt away like a slab of butter in the sun.

Eckhart Tolle tells us “When you are still, you are who you were before you temporarily assumed this physical and mental form called person.  You are also who you will be when the form dissolves. When you are still, you are who you are beyond your temporal existence: consciousness – unconditioned, formless, eternal.”

Anna tells us “Most of an angel is in the inside and most of a person is on the outside.”

Let us give thanks for this place
For the journeys we are making that brought us together.
For the silence that unites us
For the stillness that enfolds us
For the steps we have taken
And those we still have to take.
Thanks for the love and inspiration of the Divine
Which calls to us and shapes our lives
Thanks for those we love
And those we find difficult.
And so, as we go from this place,
May we take that love with us
To hold and to give.

So be it.

Meg Johnson