Tag: Mr G

God creates a little flower.

photo: Mr G

One Sunday afternoon in heaven, a wing of Guardian Angels met God and he noticed their glum faces.
“Why are you looking so miserable”, God asked.
“We’re bored” they replied.
“How can you be bored! You have so many humans to look after, and animals too.”
“That’s the trouble,” Angel Anthropos said. “Many of the humans aren’t much fun and right now so many of them are anxious and sad.”
“Some are downright wicked” said Angel Pax.
Angel Vocalis, ever one to put in its opinion, added that, “many are just dull.
“and,” said Angel Gloriana, “so many of them keeping asking for things for themselves. Some of them think they are so important that they want bigger and better homes, cars, boats, holidays. They are possessed by their possessions. They don’t  care about anybody else. Angel Anthropos concluded, “There is no joy or colour in their lives.”

God smiled at his little group of angels whom he loved so dearly. Then he shook his head and sighed, “I know just what you mean. So many dark things are going on at the moment, causing many of the little ones to suffer. The vulnerable ones have so many things to deal with. That’s why they need their Guardian Angels now more than ever.
The Angels twitched their wings and began to feel guilty, though God reminded them that there in no room for guilt in heaven. You must brush away your guilt with love. Go and love those in your care more than ever.
They knew God was right, of course, but it was hard to do that right now.

Then God smiled. “I know a way to cheer you up, and maybe some of the humans too.”
He beckoned them into his studio where he kept his art material. It was the Creative heart of heaven where God made things.
The Angels noticed the  design of a tiny flower. Angel Vocalis said that, though it was pretty, the flower didn’t look  that much. It was hardly worth making. Then he flung a wing over his mouth, “Sorry, Father God, I shouldn’t have said that.”  “Don’t worry,” God replied, “who gave you your mind to think, to have opinions, to speak. But let me tell you about this flower.
As you say, it’s tiny and most people won’t notice it. It could so easily be ignored. That’s why I’ve painted it pinky-purple with dark foliage – and there’s something I want to show you but I need all your help.”
The angels looked at God expectantly.
“I’ve made lots of copies and I need you to colour them in for me. Now get on with that whilst I go to Evensong and listen to all the voices singing throughout the world, and listen to their prayers.

After God had gone, the Angels got busy and carefully and quietly painted the flowers and the foliage. A hush descended as it often did when they were doing creative things.
It also helped that they were absorbed doing part of God’s work. As they worked skillfully, they remembered how much of Himself God poured into the things he made – including themselves. The secret was that everything was made by Love as love.

When God returned he brought the Holy Spirit with Him and together they examined what the angels had done. “Tove!, Tove!” said the Spirit, which was a Hebrew word meaning Good, Beautiful.
The angels were pleased because God was pleased.
They all looked at their paintings and loved them. The tiny flowers were bursting with life.
God agreed that they were little and would be dwarfed by bigger, brighter, more showy flowers. Some would be hidden by the grass and would be mown when the grass was cut but God had a plan, as always!

First, he explained something very important.  He told the angels, “It’s not always the big flowers, or the big things or big people who show people what I am like, nor is it always by big gestures that people serve me. My dear daughter, St Teresa of Calcutta , once reminded people that we don’t necessarily do big things in our life but  rather little things with a big love. These little flowers are signs that we can bring beauty and peace and love to others by the little things we do – smiles, thoughtfulness, acts of kindness, just ordinary things which make others feel better and wanted and loved.”
“Now put your paintings next to each other”.

When they did, there was a carpet of colour and the table, the floor, everywhere was covered in beauty. Then God, the Holy Spirit blew on them and the little flowers came alive and danced, and danced. And as they swirled to the music the Holy Spirit made, tiny seeds flew from the flowers. “Catch them!” said God, and they did.
“Go now” said God as he smiled on them and they were filled with joy. “Be off with you to the earth especially to dark and sad and lonely people who need brightening up, but go everywhere – cast the seeds all over the place. It’s the tiny seeds of love which bring joy to life, even in the difficult and broken places. Place some of your seeds gently in the cracks and reclaim people’s hearts with beauty and love. May these little flowers bring hope and joy and remind people that little things make a big difference, especially when those little things are joined to each other in a big carpet of love and care.

“Tove! Tove!” said the Holy Spirit, blowing God’s love over them… and they went gladly and willingly.

photo by Mr G

It is in little things that we show people what God is like. Simple things like caring, smiling, showing people that they matter and are valued, holding a hand, giving a hug, acts of practical kindness, praying for people, breathing God’s love over them. It is such things that really change the world and make it a better place.
Every time you see a little flower, give thanks to God for making it and breathing the same love into it as He does into us …. And remember the words from the Book of Genesis: “and God saw all that He had made, and it was very good”.

[Mr G]

Like children playing.

Cartoon courtesy of cute fly free clipart

Humility

Little flower made by God. Photo Mr. G.

All those who exalt themselves will be humbled and those who humble themselves will be exalted  (Luke 14:11)

In his poem, East Coker (one of the 4 Quartets), T S Eliot said:
“The only wisdom we can hope to acquire is the wisdom of humility. Humility is endless.”

Earlier this week the current writer of the Church of England’s Daily Reflection, Chine McDonald, was reflecting on the passage from St Luke’s Gospel (14: 1-11). The section included a story Jesus told about guest at a dinner who grabbed the superior positions at the table. Jesus suggested that if more important people came, the host might have to  ask the others to take a lower seat. That would not only be embarrassing; it would be humbling.

Humility was the subject of Chine’s reflection and is at the heart of the story Jesus told. The passage ends with the quote above.
My further reflection brought to mind the quotation from Eliot’s poem.
It comes just after Eliot says, Quiet voiced elders have deceived us. Do not let me hear of the wisdom of old men but rather of their folly. The only wisdom we can acquire…is Humility.
Humility  and its practice as humbleness is often mistaken for the kind of grovelling we find in Uriah Heep in Charles Dickens’ novel, David Copperfield. In one episode, Heep was ringing his hands and wiping them on his handkerchief. It was a gesture of how he wished to present himself to David Copperfield as what he described as being “a very umble person” He went on to reiterate. “I am well aware that I am the umblest person going, said Uriah Heep, modestly; “let the other be where he may. My mother is likewise a very umble person. We live in an umble abode…

Taking pride in false lowliness is not what Jesus was speaking about.
Humility before God is not, as is so often presented, about feeling a complete lack of worth. It is not about making us feel bad about ourselves.  It’s actually the reverse. It’s about recognising that all the potential we have, all the gifts we can offer, all the love we can share, all the joy we can bring, all the things we can achieve – owe their origin to God. And we are called to use our lives and all God has given us, in His service.
Humility is about recognising and celebrating that.

Jesus was, however cautioning us against another false trait, opposite of the one taken by Uriah Heep, of thinking ourselves better than others. This leads to a view that some of us have rights and privileges over others. Our view of humanity then becomes warped. It leads, ultimately to nations trying to lord it over others. We do not have to look far to know what I mean but before we sweep our vision towards the Holy Land or Ukraine, let’s not forget to look nearer to home at the boat people, refugees, the poor and homeless.
Chine McDonald in her reflection widens the story Jesus told. She says, “Jesus words reflect the nature of the Kingdom of God. This is a place where the usual rules do not apply. What applies, she says, is humility because we are dealing with the upside-down nature of God’s Kingdom.

By contrast, she says, “We live in a world where we are asked to measure ourselves against others; where we pride ourselves in our achievements and what we have, whether that is family, a great job or great car – are what matters.” 

Jonathan Sacks, the late Chief Rabbi,in his book To Heal a Fractured World,  makes the point that no one ever speaks in praise of someone who died, about the car they drove, the house they owned, the clothes they wore, the exotic holidays they took. He says that  the things we spend most of our time pursuing turn out to be curiously irrelevant when it comes to seeing life as a whole.
After death, he says, “what was important was the kind of life people led; the qualities they showed; the good things they shared in; the responsibilities they took within community life; who they were as people.”

Chine McDonald places this in context by saying that the Kingdom of God is a place “where human wisdom is replaced by divine wisdom. It is a place in which the status quo cannot be assumed. It is a place of newness and wholeness, where we see things as they should be.”
The way to inhabit this Kingdom is to embrace the kind of humility which translates into seeking the well-being of others; of putting service of others before self; of behaving towards others with respect and love, no matter who they are or the circumstances of their life; of encouraging others and being generous towards them; and to be examples of hope and gentleness. Most of all, of course, it is about embracing the Will of God for us and for others.

[Mr G 14th June 2024]

A Message

Photo of the Carpet of flowers, Arundel Cathedral
– sent to me by my friends, Emma & Nathan Pope

Carpet of Flowers – Every Corpus Christi, the Roman Catholic Cathedral at Arundel hold a Festival, the highlight of which is the world famous Carpet of Flowers.
It has been an annual event for 140 years. It began when the 15th Duke of Norfolk, Henry Fitzalan Howard. visited the village of Sutri just outside Rome. There he saw a carpet of flowers and this inspired him to introduce a similar festival in the church he had founded in Arundel – Our Lady and St Philip Neri. This was later to become the RC Cathedral.
Each year there is a focal message in flowers and greenery. This year, as you see, it is Pray for Peace.
Inspired by this, I wrote this little poem.

A Message from the Earth

You destroy the earth
with your lust for power, control;
the selfish bolstering of your ego.
Yet, you cry for peace.!

Your words and actions are empty.
So we must speak, for we are the world
which you tread on with your heavy boots
of rhetoric, falsehood, self-centredness
and greed.

Therefore,  we have chosen to send you a message
in flowers and branches,
in beauty and in love.
This is our voice to your heart,
the cry of the earth.
Become Peace!
Listen to us, please
and act.

[Mr G, 3rd June 2024]