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							When I find that I have neglected a spiritual 
							discipline for a while, the absence of this practice 
							is noticeable. For instance, when I haven’t been 
							sitting in the solitude and silence of the morning, 
							my days seem longer and my patience thin. When I 
							haven’t read the Bible outside of Sunday morning 
							worship, my own story, feels lonely and 
							insignificant. But I find that when I take the time 
							to engage the disciplines that give me life, like 
							taking time to read the story of God slowly and 
							deliberately, I begin to recognize how my story and 
							God’s intersect. 
							
  During my 2 days down, my 2 dogs took good care 
							of me.
 
 In church, we are constantly assessing our 
							relationship with God. We sing, we pray, we listen, 
							and give as a response to God’s goodness in our 
							lives. An important part of this goodness is our 
							bodies. When we worship, it is important not just 
							that we exercise our souls, but our physical selves 
							as well. In passing of the peace, we touch our 
							neighbors and acknowledge their physical presence; 
							in sharing our joys and concerns we audibly respond 
							and recognize one another’s physical presence; and 
							in communion, especially as we have lately practiced 
							it by intinction, we come forward together, sharing 
							in a common loaf and a common cup, bumping shoulders 
							and saying “excuse me” to the physical presence of 
							our neighbor. In worship, we respond with our 
							physical selves, because even our flesh belongs to 
							God.
 In her book An Altar in the World (currently 
							the subject of our Sunday night book group reading 
							during Lent), Barbara Brown Taylor admits that it 
							took her time to understand that God loved all of 
							her—not just her spirit but also her flesh. She 
							says, “When understanding finally came—not by reason 
							but by faith—the first thing I understood was that 
							it was not possible to trust that God loved all of 
							me, including my body, without also trusting that 
							God loved all bodies everywhere.” [1] She continues: 
							“while we might not have one other thing in common, 
							we all wear skin.”
 Our bodies have a way of telling us to slow down. 
							For instance, when we get sick, as with a bad cold, 
							this is usually our bodies forcing us to stop, 
							gather ourselves, and rest. This happened to me 
							Monday and Tuesday. After going, going, going for a 
							few weeks, I finally listened to my body that said, 
							“Adam, rest.”
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			 So 
			rest I did.In this rest, I was able to read, write, and return to some 
			disciplines I hadn’t practiced in a long time (although, most of 
			Monday and Tuesday were spent asleep from coughing the previous 
			night). This period of forced slowness reminded me of this important 
			truth: that all of our selves need to be filled. Whether by reading 
			a good book, taking a long walk, or taking a sick day to recover 
			from a busy few weeks, our bodies will benefit from slower paces and 
			healthier ways of using our time.
 
			I leave you all with this poem I stumbled across in the midst of my 
			recovery. It is a healthy reminder that even as we are still in 
			Lent, who we are is defined by much, much more than what we do.
 Camas Lilies
 by Lynn Ungar
 Consider the lilies of the field,
 the blue banks of camas opening
 into acres of sky along the road.
 Would the longing to lie down
 and be washed by that beauty
 abate if you knew their usefulness,
 how the native ground their bulbs
 for flour, how the settlers' hogs
 uprooted them, grunting in gleeful
 oblivion as the flowers fell?
 And you—what of your rushed
 and useful life? Imagine setting it all down—
 papers, plans, appointments, everything—
 leaving only a note: "Gone
 to the fields to be lovely. Be back
 when I'm through blooming."
 Even now, unneeded and uneaten,
 the camas lilies gaze out above the grass
 from their tender blue eyes.
 Even in sleep your life will shine.
 Make no mistake. Of course
 your work will always matter.
 Yet Solomon in all his glory
 was not arrayed like one of these.
 ______________________________________
 [1] Barbara Brown Taylor. “An Altar in the World.” (New York: Harper 
			One Publish, 2009,) 41.
 
 [Adam Quine, First Presbyterian Church]
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