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U-Turns and the Straight Path

Running errands yesterday, I had entered a series of destinations into my Google Maps app, and clicked “Get directions.” My first stop was the fabric store and then my friend’s house to deliver a gift. I had a general memory of how to get to Terry’s home and proceeded on that route. But Siri had other ideas, and at several stoplights she urged me to make a U-turn. I knew I was on the right route, but Siri wanted me to backtrack and take a round-about freeway route to approach her home from the other direction. It was a nervy […]

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Morning Prayer—Upon Arising

My Morning Prayer Routine I am invincible in the morning. Anything requiring my creative thinking and positive attitude is best done upon arising, preferably before breakfast. Many of my readers may be night owls, so my morning prayer routine may be a non-starter for you. Maybe something here will help you think about mornings differently. But first, a word of caution: I am aware—in myself and others—that using one’s electronic devices for spiritual purposes is fraught with peril. My iPad is my alarm clock, prayer book, and Bible. [The advantage here is that I do not need to turn on

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The Examen as a Nightly Practice at the End of the Day

You haven’t heard from me for a while, but I am alive, well, and improving in all aspects of life. Give thanks to God! I have even been writing—about four or five hours a day since the beginning of the year. The result of that labor of love is a book entitled Why I Don’t Pray: [Subtitle TBD]. Now that it is in the capable hands of my editor, I can turn my attention to blogging. What spurred me on this week was the request to share with my congregation “a prayer practice.”  Yes, indeed, one who ’fesses up to

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Prayer as a Practice

The question came up this week: Mary, how do you practice prayer? It’s a great question, because prayer is a practice and it takes practice. But “it”—the precise form of prayer—varies greatly from day to day, from person to person, from tradition to tradition. There are so many ways to pray! What’s very important, though, is to confirm that I am referring to a conversation with God—the One who created everything and is sovereign over the universe, our world, and our souls. God has no true rivals, though we try occasionally to erect our own golden calves. The God I

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Walking a Labyrinth as a Prayer Practice

Imagine my surprise, while walking through a London Tube station, to discover a framed picture of a labyrinth hanging on the wall! No label, no instructions, just the picture seen here. Then imagine the frenetic times when you might need a calming prayer practice, and you realize a Tube station is the perfect place to position this ancient prayer prompt. A labyrinth is a circular walkway laid out so you can start at the entry and follow the path toward the center and out again. This is not a maze in which you can get lost. It is a trail

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Reinventing a Woman of a Certain Age

In the fallout from breast cancer treatment last year, my physical strength and flexibility has taken a big hit. This setback has been debilitating at times and certainly disappointing. It’s one of my “cut tulips.” Some necessary changes or subtraction of meds has helped since August, and just this week with a new rheumatologist, I feel some hope that I can been free of mild-to-moderate chronic pain soon. But some changes appear to be permanent. In the throes of my woes, I have felt the need to identify and claim the kind of life I want to lead. So in

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Cut Tulips—new blog by Mary Holder Naegeli

Hello my friends, here’s Mary Naegeli popping up in “the room next door” to Bringing the Word to Life. Life in the last two years has been a bit of a wild ride, and I find myself in the position of having to undergo a personal renovation.  I continue to “bring the Word to life” in fulfillment of my fundamental calling as a Christian and a minister, and I will continue to add posts there when the point is particularly biblical in nature. But here on Cut Tulips, I want to process the construction project God is working in my

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Going on a Mission Trip

Andy and I are preparing to leave on a mission trip to northeastern Arizona, where we will be part of a team from Walnut Creek Presbyterian Church to NAOMI House, a ministry to Native American foster children. I will be blogging on the church’s website all week. Here’s the link, if you are interested in what a sixties-something retired minister is doing in her “spare time”! No, seriously, this is a faith stretcher for sure, completely out of my comfort zone. Your prayers would be appreciated. Read on: https://naomiwcpc.wordpress.com/2021/06/30/2021-naomi-mission-trip-begins-soon/

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Soul Searching: What Makes a Person and a Country Great?

Part 6 (last) in a series of reflections on the Capitol insurrection and Christians’ participation People must make choices every day about what they will do and how they will act. This is a fact of life ever since Adam and Eve left Eden and became time bound and subject to physical death. We are limited in our capacity and limited in our potential, despite what we may have been taught by affirming parents and teachers. But the truth is, every one has only so much energy and the same amount of time to work with. Perhaps I feel this

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Soul Searching: I Follow a Leader, but Not That One

Part 5 in a series of reflections on the Capitol insurrection and Christians’ participation In the waning days of Mr. Trump’s presidency, I am waiting to see what kind of strings he is going to attach to the Republican Party and his supporters around the country. The author of The Art of the Deal is a transactionalist, very pragmatic in his relationships, expecting to get something from anyone who hopes to gain a favor from him. My curiosity extends to two areas, pardons and a possible 2024 candidacy. If he pardons family members or associates this week, I will be

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