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Morning Prayer: New Song

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  From Morning Prayer:  “Sing a new song unto the Lord.” (Psalm 98:1) Morning Prayer begins with praise. Before petitions, before reflection, before the day’s demands — the Church sings. "Sing a new song" a line that appears often in Scripture — in Psalms 33, 96, 98, 149, and in Isaiah’s vision of renewal. Each time, it signals something more than novelty. The “new” song is not new because it’s never been sung before. It’s new because God has done something new , and the world itself is being remade. What Makes the Song New In Hebrew poetry, “new” does not mean “recent.” It means renewed — fresh with gratitude, alive with grace. When the psalmist calls for a new song, it’s a summons to awaken the heart to what God has just done: deliverance, mercy, creation itself reborn. Morning Prayer, or Lauds , is the hour of resurrection. It greets the dawn not as repetition but as revelation. Every sunrise is a new creation. Every breath is a new song. The Church places this psalm at ...

🐾 How My Cat Made Me a Better Listener

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  I used to think listening meant paying attention to words. My cat taught me otherwise. Cats speak in silences, in pauses, in the flick of an ear or the angle of a tail. They listen with their whole bodies — and expect you to do the same. Living with a cat is like living with a Zen master who never explains the lesson but expects you to learn it anyway. Here’s what mine taught me: Listen beyond language. A cat’s vocabulary is limited, but her communication is vast. I learned to hear tone, rhythm, and intention — the way she said mrrp when she was content versus mrrrp! when she was annoyed. It made me notice how much humans say without words too. Listen without interrupting. When a cat tells you something — hunger, affection, disapproval — she expects you to receive it fully before acting. I stopped finishing people’s sentences. I started letting silence do its work. Listen for what isn’t said. Cats withdraw when they’re hurt. They hide when they’re scared. I learned to ...

Defining the Divine: A Cross-Cultural Reflection

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  Most people think the hardest question in religion is Does God exist? But the deeper, older, more human question is simpler and more unsettling: What do we even mean by “the Divine”? Across cultures, the Divine is not a single idea. It is a constellation — a set of intuitions, metaphors, and experiences that different peoples have tried to name with the language available to them. When we ask What is the Divine? we are really asking How do human beings encounter the sacred? And that answer changes depending on where you stand. 1. The Divine as a Person In many traditions, the Divine is Someone — relational, intentional, responsive. Christianity speaks of a God who loves, grieves, forgives, and seeks relationship. Islam names Allah through 99 attributes — Merciful, Just, Compassionate — each a window into divine personality. Judaism often avoids naming God at all, not out of distance but reverence: the Divine is too alive, too holy, too present to be reduced to a label. Her...