meeting : 24 Feb 2008
February 29, 2008 at 4:14 pm | In cape town, community, emergent spirituality, meditation, worship | 4 Comments
The meeting started with a silent, meditative foot washing ceremony led by Tess. Bowls of warm water suffused with fresh lavender, geranium leaves and rose petals were at the ready as partners washed each others’ feet.
Our attention was called to be focused on the sensory aspect of hand, feet, water, the fragrances together with the prayerful aspect of bringing the other before God. We were asked to be astute to whatever we sensed might be for the other.
After the ritual, we sat in a circle around our central candle and each took black paper with white chalk and wrote one word for our partner, a summation of that prayer and handed it to them. Some words that emerged were strength, flow, support, love, loving, creative and so on.
After some attempt to worship with our more familiar Taize songs, we learnt a new song based on a Sami joik with new words “Let me see what eye has not seen, let me hear what ear has not heard…”
Then in contrast to the initial time of prayerfully waiting for each other, Tim focussed us again towards prayer, this time asking us to speak out our prayers one for the other. We were to allow the Spirit’s work through each one of us and not to rely on those who have already stepped out. Those requesting prayer stood in the circle as we sensed, spoke, beseeched, encouraged and offered our prayers for them.
The meeting ended with the sound of drums, chatter and the obligatory second visit to the cornucopia of pastries that have come to reside next to the great coffee in the corner.
– Ann Bothwell Paton
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Anne,
Thanks for the summary
I found the foot washing experience both intimate and rich. I’m reminded of Godde’s desire that we love one another and that we are, oddly and/or mysterously, one “body”.
Thanks Theresa for re-sacramentalising this act.
Comment by Tim Victor — March 3, 2008 #
We are reminded that in process of feed washing that intimacy is both giving and trusting.
We are also remind during communal prayer that we see God in our intimacy with each other.
Comment by Andrew — March 4, 2008 #
Unfortunately missed it but sounds very interesting. The pic is great – little clean toontjies!!!
Comment by squarepig — March 4, 2008 #
Anne – Thank you for your words. Your summation is so poetic that it becomes a creative work of its own. Keep writing, gal, your words are an inspiration.
Thank you Mike for your words about the stones in the stream. I just love the image, it rings so true. Just like the flow of a stream, creativity is not blocked by stones nor obstructed by boulders. Such “obstacles” only make the path more interesting.
Comment by Theresa Hendrikse — March 4, 2008 #