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Welcome to Tuesday and our feature on nature as a window into the divine with a reflection based on the writing of Carl Safina, this time from his latest, Becoming Wild.
Note: for those new to our weekly Blue Ocean nature-themed meditation series, new episodes are published every 2–3 weeks, and only the new ones will appear on the Tuesday, nature-themed feed. Episodes of the Blue Ocean Daily Prayer series publish every day (Mon-Sat), and include repeats.
God be in my head—and in my understanding
Psalm 96: 1, 9, 12 (Robert Alter)
Sing to the Lord a new song!
Bow to the Lord in sacred grandeur
Let the field be glad and all that is in it,
In Becoming Wild, How Animal Cultures Raise Families, Create Beauty, and Achieve Peace, Carl Safina tells of the extravagantly beautiful Macaws gathering in the rainforest, raising a joyful noise as they prepare to descend to a patch of clay, from which they extract salt which is so hard to find in the Amazon. These birds are in the same family as parrots, parakeets, lovebirds, and cockatoos. Safina describes them setting the forest ablaze with color: “Their hues and tints set the trees aglow,” he writes, “the spontaneous combustion of their reds, yellows, and blues making them the rainforest’s supreme firebirds.”
As I picture the scene that Safina conjures, the crescendoing chorus in the trees, the descent to the ground, hundreds of them now, arrayed in nature’s brightest colors, a pulsating assembly gathered in the outdoor cathedral for sacred feasting, bending beak to clay to pick out a salt-laced crumble, I think of words from Psalm 96: “Bow to the Lord in sacred grandeur, quake before him all the earth … then shall the forest gladly sing.”
Fire of the Spirit, life of the lives of creatures,
—Hildegard of Bingen, 12th century nun, writer, composer, mystic, visionary, polymath, regarded by many as a founder of scientific natural history in Europe.
Over the next minute simply name your loved ones, calling each to mind in love, lifting each in the embrace of remembered love, to the God who is the source of all being.
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
So have a blessed day, go in peace, wash your hands, love your neighbor: you are not alone.
By Blue Ocean Church Ann Arbor5
11 ratings
Welcome to Tuesday and our feature on nature as a window into the divine with a reflection based on the writing of Carl Safina, this time from his latest, Becoming Wild.
Note: for those new to our weekly Blue Ocean nature-themed meditation series, new episodes are published every 2–3 weeks, and only the new ones will appear on the Tuesday, nature-themed feed. Episodes of the Blue Ocean Daily Prayer series publish every day (Mon-Sat), and include repeats.
God be in my head—and in my understanding
Psalm 96: 1, 9, 12 (Robert Alter)
Sing to the Lord a new song!
Bow to the Lord in sacred grandeur
Let the field be glad and all that is in it,
In Becoming Wild, How Animal Cultures Raise Families, Create Beauty, and Achieve Peace, Carl Safina tells of the extravagantly beautiful Macaws gathering in the rainforest, raising a joyful noise as they prepare to descend to a patch of clay, from which they extract salt which is so hard to find in the Amazon. These birds are in the same family as parrots, parakeets, lovebirds, and cockatoos. Safina describes them setting the forest ablaze with color: “Their hues and tints set the trees aglow,” he writes, “the spontaneous combustion of their reds, yellows, and blues making them the rainforest’s supreme firebirds.”
As I picture the scene that Safina conjures, the crescendoing chorus in the trees, the descent to the ground, hundreds of them now, arrayed in nature’s brightest colors, a pulsating assembly gathered in the outdoor cathedral for sacred feasting, bending beak to clay to pick out a salt-laced crumble, I think of words from Psalm 96: “Bow to the Lord in sacred grandeur, quake before him all the earth … then shall the forest gladly sing.”
Fire of the Spirit, life of the lives of creatures,
—Hildegard of Bingen, 12th century nun, writer, composer, mystic, visionary, polymath, regarded by many as a founder of scientific natural history in Europe.
Over the next minute simply name your loved ones, calling each to mind in love, lifting each in the embrace of remembered love, to the God who is the source of all being.
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
So have a blessed day, go in peace, wash your hands, love your neighbor: you are not alone.