Online Retreat for Hand Held Devices
The Collaborative Ministry Office - Creighton University

Online Retreat:  Week 3

Guide

Perspective - A Picture of Harmony.

After two weeks of reviewing our story, and seeing it as a story of God's faithful presence in our lives, we move now to look at the bigger picture.

This week we want to reflect on, and be inspired by, God's creative desire for us, as part of the whole of creation.
St. Ignatius put it so simply:

    God created us
    to praise, reverence and serve God

    and in this way to save our souls.

    God created all of the rest of creation

    to help us achieve the purpose for which

    God created us.
Let's let the background of this whole week be two wonderful imaginative reflections:
  • To simply walk around, doing all that I do each day, more and more conscious of WHY I was created:

  • To give praise to God.

    To revere God:  grow in awe and love for God.

    To be of service:  in God's service.

     
  • To notice "the rest of creation" more consciously, and how all that I notice is intended by God to HELP ME - it is all created FOR ME.
Again, this is about gratitude.   We want to appreciate, to become more sensitized to and more aware of something about God: God has an intense desire to help us achieve the end for which we were lovingly created by God.   So, by our thinking and watching this week we are coming to know God better.

Again, make use of the helps to the right of this guide.  Let this photo draw us into wonder and awe and a sense of God's plan for us. Let's try to begin and end each day this week with openness and delight in all that God intensely desires to show us.



Some Practical Help for Getting Started This Week.

For Week Three, our perspective changes.  Notice the dramatic view in this week's photo.  It gives us a picture of how to get started with this week.

It's about perspective. This week, we will try to step back and see the whole view of ourselves in creation.  So, throughout the week, let that picture of an expanding view of our world help us with perspective.  This week, try not to let anything become too big, and mess up our perspective.

It's about purpose.  Concrete focusing can help greatly.  Throughout the week, think of what things are for.  We know what our coffee cup is for, what the toaster is for, what paper clips are for, what the telephone is for.   As we consciously focus on the purpose everything in my life has, we will gradually feel the growing power of the words of Ignatius.  It's all here for the purpose of helping me attain the end for which I was created.

Remember what we are practicing.  We want to grow in the ability to find, see, experience some connection with God in all things - and right in the midst of our busy-ness.  So, we keep focused on practicing the use of the background times each day.  Perhaps, this week, I can especially focus on going to places.  So, on the way - to a meeting, to the rest room, to my lunch, to my car - I will consciously reflect on my purpose.  With practice, I can situate myself, in a brief few moments, on that overview site from the photo.  En route to the rest room, I'll be sitting on one of those chairs and looking out, thinking, "I was created, as part of this whole vast creation, for the one purpose of praising, reverencing and serving you, Lord."

Remember the other helps from past weeks.  Naming graces is important.   Saying Thank You is critical.  Try to say it - what is it that I'm receiving this week?  "Lord, thank you for showing me the big picture."   "Lord, thank you for reminding me about your desires for me."

Remember our bodies.  What posture best says what I want to express?  For example, I may imagine myself standing on that overlook in the photo and raising my arms up in praise.  Then, perhaps, when I get out of bed and when I am ready to get in bed, I can raise my arms in praise that way, for only a moment.   Or, maybe, as I look out over that vista, I imagine feeling drawn to kneel in awe before this God who is so much grander than I ever let God be.  Perhaps I can kneel at the side of my bed for a brief moment.  Or, maybe I will imagine myself sitting on one of those chairs looking out at this creation, and I just open my hands on my lap, symbolizing my openness to be of service, as I am called.  Then, perhaps, when I begin work each day, I might lay my open hands on my desk, or kitchen counter, for just a moment.  Powerful gestures that help us interiorize the gestures - and they take only a few moments.

Remember the wallpaper.  By clicking on the photo, we are taken to the Photo Gallery page, and a larger image of the photo.  From there, we can place our mouse cursor on the photo, and click on the mouse's right button.  We will see a menu that has "Set as Wallpaper" as an option.  If we click on that menu option, the photo becomes our desktop's wallpaper.  Now, we can have this photo be a background reminder of perspective, all week.   And, when others see our monitors, and ask about the photo, we can tell them about the retreat. (By the way, if there are lots of images tiled on your desktop, just right mouse click, and choose the last option, Properties.  Then choose Centered, on the lower right, instead of Tiled.)

And remember to make use of the readings and prayers.

We are just beginning to see what God can do with our openness and trust.



For the Journey

Our prayer during the Spiritual Exercises centers our attention upon a loving God Who centers affectionate attention upon us.  Two simple points of the nature of love help us pray during these weeks of praying with and about creation.

Love urges being revealed.  If we love someone, sooner or later, we will want that person to know that.  We might send a valentine and then a box of candy and then perhaps a phone call and then a meeting.  All the time there is a creative on-going revelation which presents the beloved with the opportunity to receive the affection or not.  The lover wants his or her love to be experienced and received.

Love must be expressed in words and gestures which the beloved can understand.  The lover must reverence the beloved so much that he or she adapts the expression of love to the way the beloved can receive it.  If I love a blind person I do not speak to them in sign language.  If I love a German-speaking person, I don't speak any other language to them except German.  The lover adapts to the person and personality of the beloved.

In praying these next weeks, we watch how the loving God reveals that love through gestures of revelation.  We also consider how this God adapts that same love to our ways of reception.  We pray with God's courtship of us, constantly attracting us through acts of gentle yet persistent love.

We begin by considering that each of us has been and actually, is now being, created.  God does not create us and then set us on the earth as so many abandoned milk jugs or degenerating cars.  God tends to us as the beloved and labors upon and around us for our soul's purpose.  God wants only this then, that we experience infinite love being revealed within our finite experiences, and our reception of that love in our lives.

Our having been created tells each of us how important we are in the eyes of God and our prayer these next weeks helps us to see our value and significance in our own eyes.  In so many ways God says, "Look around and see who I have said and say that you are."  We are in the presence of a God Who can not keep love hidden and we are God's best work of art.



In These or Similar Words

Dear Lord,

Today as I reflect on the world around me, it feels like gratitude is the first thing that comes to my mind.  In the retreat this week I am trying to simply notice my life, to really see all of the wonderful gifts of nature that cross my path.  Coming to work this morning, I couldn’t help staring into an incredible sunrise through the cloudy sky.  It created colors that were indescribable.  A small tree in my yard is already turning colors, with bright red leaves that contrast with everything else that is still green.  My tomato plants are still bearing fruit and the fall flowers are starting to line my sidewalk.

I see these as gifts to us – us – but I’m not sure I’ve ever really seen them as a gift from you to me.  How can I fathom the depths of your love for me that you have created each flower, each leaf, for my enjoyment?  I’ll be honest, God.  I usually don’t tune into this kind of thing.  I just don’t always pay attention to the gifts of nature that are literally under my feet.

Now as I pray, as I pay attention, I am moved by the phrase in the prayer guide this week, “God has an intense desire to help us achieve the end for which we were lovingly created by God.”  Could you really have a real desire for my life? For what becomes of me – not just as one of the billions of people who inhabit this planet but for me as an individual?

I look outside at nature and inside at the family and friends you surround me with and I am so thankful.  Please, Lord, help me to fully express my gratitude to you for my life and for the way you care for me.  Help me to see what your desire for my life really is.  I want to make my life a way to serve you.


Prayer to Begin Each Day: 

May all that I am today,
all that I try to do today,
may all my encounters, reflections,
even the frustrations and failings
all place my life in your hands.
 
Lord, my life is in your hands.
Please, let this day give you praise.

Scripture Readings:

Ephesians 1:3-11
Psalm 139