Tag Archives: Psalms

Mind Your Tongue!

To His Son Benedict from the Tower of London
by John Hoskyns

Sweet Benedict, whilst thou art young,
And know’st not yet the use of tongue,
Keep it in thrall whilst thou art free:
Imprison it or it will thee.

“Imprisoning” the tongue makes me think of one of my favorite Proverbs: He who hath no rule over his own spirit is like a city without walls and broken down.

We must acquire the faculty of judgment so that we use our words wisely and judiciously. Words can create and words can destroy. And this is not only in reference to the words we speak to others but to the words that we speak to ourselves, that internal “self talk” that we all have, that “chattering” of what the Buddhists call the monkey mind. Due to the circumstances of life, we often acquire a lot of negative self talk and when we do this it is difficult to every let it go; and until we let it go, we are thereby imprisoned. This makes me think of something that Henry Ford once said, “Whether you think you can or think you cani’t, either way you are right.” For example, if you are a young man and meet a fetching young lass and think you can catch her eye, there is a good chance you can. If you think you can’t, you probably won’t.

 

St Augustine Opines on Being and Nothingness

 

St. Augustine and I are pals!  I never would have thunk it!  This is a profound observation about the majesty of God and his creation.  (This was posted this morning on (http://lowellsblog.blogspot.com/)  By the way, I intend to do a better job of giving credit for where I “steal” some of this stuff!

 

My brothers and sisters, where does time go? The years slip and slide past us, day by day. Those things which were, no longer are; those things yet to come, are not here. The past is dead; the future is yet to come, but only to pass away in turn. Today exists only for the moment in which we speak. Its first hours are already over and behind us, the remainder do not as yet exist; they are still to come, but only to fall into nothingness.

Nothing in this world has constancy in itself. The body does not possess being; it has no permanence. It changes with age; it changes with time and place; it changes as a result of sickness or accident. The stars have as little consistancy; they are always changing in hidden ways, they go whirling into outer space. They are not stable, they do not possess being.

Nor is the human heart any more constant. How often it is disturbed by various conflicting thoughts and ambitions! How many pleasures draw it, one minute this way, and the next minute, that way, tearing it apart! The human spirit, although endowed by God with reason, changes; it does not possess being. It wills and does not will; it knows and does not know; it remembers this but forgets that. No one has unity of being in himself.

After so much suffering, disease, difficulties and pain, let us return humbly to God, to that one Being. Let us enter into that heavenly Jerusalem, that city whose citizens share in Being itself.
Augustine,Commentary on Psalm 121 (Hebrew Ps. 122); CCSL 40, pp. 1801-3; quoted by Robert Atwell,Celebrating the Seasons, Canterbury, 1999, p.416

Lowell

 

My soul followeth hard after Thee

“My soul followeth hard after thee.” I think that voices the deepest sentiment of my heart from my early youth. And recently reading St. Augustine again, I discover that he was saying the same thing in the 4th century a.d. and furthermore many other ancient men and women did the same. And, my passion for literature has introduced me to many contemporary men and women who have the same intense drive in their life. Furthermore, the blog-o-sphere has allowed me to meet many others who feel that passion and do so with the same anonymity that I enjoy.

I think that from our earliest days on the planet there were men and women who made this discovery and dared to share it on occasion. Often the tribal elders looked askance, I’m sure, probably private chuckling with each other and saying, “Hell, I just wish he would get laid and get that stuff out of his system.” And in modern times, I have to wonder if back in the ‘fifties “they” had known about the “god spot” and been able to tweak it with neurotransmitters, what would have happened? Hell, I might even be living an Ozzie life of the “Ozzie and Harriet” genre! But no, I’ve been cursed with this “lean and hungry look” and daily pine, “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.”

Seriously, I don’t know what this is all about. Some of us have sentiments like this one I’m describing and I’m glad that we do. Many of our ilk have accomplished a lot in the world and left a lot of wisdom for mankind. This passion for me does not have the fury that it used to. I’ve grown up and don’t take myself as seriously as I used to…most of the time! But it is there and it is more comforting as I take it…and myself…less seriously.

Throughout all the lying days of my youth
I waved my leaves and flowers in the sun.
Now may I wither into the truth. (W. B. Yeats)