Centering Prayer one day intensive

Friends,

I’ve just returned from a leadership retreat in contemplative prayer in New Zealand and I’m interested in acting while what I’ve learnt is fresh.

I’ve been practicing a Christian meditative practice called Centering Prayer for a while and it seems to me that it’s effects have been, as advertised, transformative, healing and fairly profound. As a
consequence of my own experience and encouraged by what I’ve recently learned, I really want to to share the basics of the practice with anyone who’s interested.

The usual way to do this is via a one-day intensive and I am, in these matters, a traditionalist. The day consists of a certain amount of teaching of the background and method of the prayer and a couple of opportunities to practice the prayer and ask questions.

If you’re interested in exploring Centering Prayer, this day is an ideal opportunity to learn the basics and try the practice. The cost of attending will be $30 to cover venue hire and a basic lunch.

Please consider joining me and sharing this delightful, simple, profound practice.

With love,
Father Tim Mansfield

Centering Prayer One-Day Intensive
Date: Sunday 29 Nov 2009
Venue: Buddhist Library, 90 – 92 Church St, Camperdown

Bookings essential – RSVP here

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All Saints Day

Tonight is Halloween, or to expand the name a little, All Hallows E’en (or Eve).

Tomorrow is the first of the days of the dead, All Hallows or All Saints, in which we remember the forebears of the tradition – all the members of the Communion of Saints. Those enlightened spiritual presences who continue in the eternal realm to provide guidance and assistance to those on the path.

On Monday, All Souls Day, we remember the spirits of our own ancestors and give thanks for them and to them for the choices they made that have enabled our own lives.

Tomorrow at St Uriel’s we’ll say a prayer to commemorate both All Saints and All Souls. If you can’t make it along, please consider remembering those dear to you – both spiritual guides whose books or teaching you’ve appreciated over your life and ancestors whose choices have had a big influence on your life. Bring them to mind, thank them for their help and offer a prayer for their continuing rest.

Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine: et lux perpetua luceat eis.


Grant them eternal rest, O Lord,and may light eternal shine upon them.


Readings for All Saints
Readings for All Souls

Service – 6pm
The service this Sunday will be the “Johannite Gnostic Divine Liturgy”. The service alternates engagement and stillness, provoking a meditative attitude and the cultivation of deeper perceptions. The service features prayer and chant and the sharing of the Body and the Blood in the form of bread and wine.

Conversation, hot drinks and snacks follow the service. Please stay and mingle.

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The congregation at St Uriel’s meets every Sunday at 6pm at:
The Unitarian Centre
15 Francis St
Darlinghurst, NSW
Map

Rector: Father Tim Mansfield
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Serenity

The theme for this week’s readings is “Serenity”, a word forever slightly tainted for every Australian by the 1990s movie, “The Castle”. Whenever I read the word, Michael Caton’s character Darryl appears unbidden in my mind, looking out over his backyard next to Melbourne airport, murmuring “The serenity!”.

It’s a commonplace to fret about our busy lives, the chatter of Facebook and Twitter, the unbalance of work and life, busy business folk faxing from the beach, texting from the marriage bed. Take time away – advise the vacation ads, Find inner peace – spruiks the local meditation school, Develop a calm mind.

We’re a little obsessed with serenity, to be honest. Entire industries seem to trade in it and offer to sell back to us what  modernity seems to have bought: peace, quiet, silence.

I had the great good fortune to attend a Centering Prayer retreat with Rev. Cynthia Bourgeault last week and she told a story of running a retreat above a school. She was leading a meditation session as school let out, fifty or so kids and parents talking, laughing and shouting just below the room where the retreatants were trying to surrender their thoughts and rest in the presence of the Divine Beloved. At some point, kids starting singing “Happy Birthday” to someone and the whole class took up the tune. The retreat room, possibly sensing this as the last straw started to collectively chuckle, it built up a little energy and, just as suddenly, died away as the participants surrendered even their laughter.

Darryl was on to something, I suspect, able to stare at a 747 taking off from the main runway at Tullamarine and still pronounce with no trace of irony, “the serenity”! Later in our retreat, Rev Bourgeault noted that she had seen Father Thomas Keating, one of the founders of the practice, take his meditation in a crowded airport several times.

This week’s readings appeal to an inner understanding of serenity. Rather than finding it in the outer places of solace: holidays, the couch, some fantasy locale embedded in peace and quiet; we look for a more real, more intimate and more authentic sense of serenity: within our hearts.

May the peace of God which passeth all understanding be with you this week and draw you into the arms of the Beloved and the serenity which is never truly departed.

Father Tim.

Readings for the week

Service – 6pm
The service this Sunday will be a “Sophianic Eucharist”. The service praises Sophia or Holy Wisdom as the immanent, feminine face of the Divine and celebrates the sacred marriage between the immanent and transcendent aspects of Spirit. The service features prayer and chant and the sharing of the Body and the Blood in the form of bread and wine.

Sophia Café – 7pm
Sophia Café follows the service – stay around for tea, snacks and conversation.

Parish logo

The congregation at St Uriel’s meets every Sunday at 6pm at:
The Unitarian Centre
15 Francis St
Darlinghurst, NSW
Map

Rector: Father Tim Mansfield
email blog

Apostolic Johannite Church

You’re receiving emails from us because you signed up to receive announcements of services at the Parish of St Uriel in Sydney, Australia.

Unsubscribe <<Email Address>> from this list.

Our mailing address is:

Parish of St Uriel the Archangel

5a Lilydale St

Marrickville, NSW 2204

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Copyright (C) 2009 Parish of St Uriel the Archangel All rights reserved.

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Templar Sunday

This Sunday we comemorate the destruction of the public form of the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon (better known as the Knights Templar) and the execution of hundreds of the brothers and then Grandmaster of the Order, Jacques de Molay.

There is lots said and alleged about the Templars. Arguably, Dan Brown might not have a career without them. Some find them Saints, others villains.

In the AJC and in many Gnostic churches, the Order is regarded as the guardian of the apostolic lineage of Saint John the Beloved and the baptismal initiation of Saint John the Baptist. For this reason, we recite the Litany of the Sovereign Pontiffs in abbreviated form at most public services.

On Templar Sunday, we recite the full litany – the name of every grandmaster of the order – as well as the Insititutional Narrative, the grand story of the lineage which we inherit from the Johannite Church of Primitive Christians found in the 19th Century as a part of the French Gnostic Restoration. We light memorial candles to recall their sacrifice and their witness to the truth of gnosis.

Please join us for this haunting, solemn service which illustrates a core aspect of our spiritual lineage.

Readings for the week

Service – 6pm
The service this Sunday will be the “Johannite Gnostic Divine Liturgy”. The service alternates engagement and stillness, provoking a meditative attitude and the cultivation of deeper perceptions. The service features prayer and chant and the sharing of the Body and the Blood in the form of bread and wine.

Conversation, hot drinks and snacks follow the service. Please stay and mingle.

Parish logo

The congregation at St Uriel’s meets every Sunday at 6pm at:
The Unitarian Centre
15 Francis St
Darlinghurst, NSW
Map

Rector: Father Tim Mansfield
email blog

Apostolic Johannite Church

You’re receiving emails from us because you signed up to receive announcements of services at the Parish of St Uriel in Sydney, Australia.

Unsubscribe <<Email Address>> from this list.

Our mailing address is:

Parish of St Uriel the Archangel

5a Lilydale St

Marrickville, NSW 2204

Add us to your address book

Copyright (C) 2009 Parish of St Uriel the Archangel All rights reserved.

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Update your profile

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