Tag: sacred presence

  • Come, Holy Spirit – A Contemplative Prayer

    Come, Holy Spirit – A Contemplative Prayer

    In this gentle prayer, we call upon the living presence of the Holy Spirit to purify, guide, and awaken peace within us all.

    Rest in the gentle presence of the Holy Spirit. This contemplative prayer invites purification, guidance, and peace within every heart.


    There are moments in our journey when words fall silent, and the soul simply longs to rest in the presence of divine companionship. This prayer arose from such a moment—born from the rhythm of ancient devotion, yet carried by the tender breath of Christian faith. It is a prayer of purification and peace, a call to the Holy Spirit who both dwells within and surrounds us with unending grace.

    In the stillness, we remember that the Spirit’s work is not always dramatic; it is often a quiet unfolding, a light that shines through the cracks of our own human fragility. May this prayer be recited slowly, like waves upon the shore—each line an offering, each breath a surrender.


    The Prayer

    Come, Holy Spirit, be with us.
    Shine Your light upon our souls.
    Guide our steps, and cleanse our thoughts.
    Purify our hearts and minds.

    Surround us with Your love and grace.
    Make us instruments of Your peace.
    Guide our actions to bless all beings,
    Bearing fruit for the good of all.

    Free us from the evil ones.
    Strengthen us in every trial.
    Keep us in eternal peace,
    And stay with us through thick and thin.

    Joyful, joyful is Your love.
    Seal us in the Book of Life.
    Thank You, God. 🙏


    Benediction

    May the breath of the Holy Spirit move through every weary heart.
    May light dispel every shadow within us.
    And may peace—gentle, radiant, and unbroken—abide in us always.

    Amen.

  • Shouldn’t We Be Calling Jesus Immanuel?

    Shouldn’t We Be Calling Jesus Immanuel?

    …for God is truly with us—here, now, always. 🙏

    Father God,

    Open our eyes to see that You are not a silent watcher from afar, but a living presence dwelling within—Immanuel, God with us.

    Reveal to our hearts that You are not distant, but near. Let us feel You not only around us but within us—in our very breath, in the silence between thoughts, in the stillness that anchors our lives.

    May we come to recognize Your nearness not just in sacred texts or holy places, but in the hidden sanctuary of our own souls.
    Help us awaken from the old belief in a faraway God, and instead know the truth:
    You live within us.
    You guide our steps.
    You bring peace into every moment.

    For it is written:
    “The kingdom of God is within you.”Luke 17:21


    “Immanuel” is a Hebrew name meaning God with us. It first appears in the book of the prophet Isaiah:

    “Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The young woman will conceive and give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.”Isaiah 7:14

    In Hebrew, the word for “young woman” is almah—not specifically “virgin,” but a young woman of marriageable age. Later, when the Hebrew scriptures were translated into Greek, almah became parthenos, meaning virgin. This Greek rendering shaped how the Gospel of Matthew understood Isaiah’s words—not only as a message for the people of Isaiah’s time, but as a sacred promise fulfilled in the birth of the Messiah.

    “She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”Matthew 1:21

    “All this took place to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet: ‘Look, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall name him Immanuel,’ which means, ‘God is with us.’”Matthew 1:22–23

    These verses give us two sacred names, each rich in meaning and revelation.

    Jesus is the English rendering of the Greek Iēsous, which is the translation of the Hebrew Yeshua—a shortened form of Yehoshua, meaning God saves or God is salvation. Through centuries and languages, the name became Jesus, but the heart of it remains unchanged: God saves.

    So to call him Jesus (Yeshua) is to speak a name filled with compassion and mercy—a name that reaches toward healing, restoration, and hope.
    To call him Immanuel is to affirm that this saving God is not far, but with us—within us.

    Both names are true.
    Jesus—our Savior.
    Immanuel—our Companion.

    Many Christians hold that Jesus is the one and only Son of God, born of a virgin by divine mystery. This is a sacred and central truth of the Christian tradition, which has been passed down to us through the ages—a truth that continues to shape the hearts and hopes of millions.

    And yet, in the quiet space of shared contemplation, we may also recognize that Immanuel—God with us—is not bound to one person or one moment in history. The Spirit of God moves beyond boundaries and dwells wherever love awakens, wherever compassion flows.

    God continues to be born into this world—in unexpected places, through unlikely people, and in every heart that says yes to love.

    “Very truly I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.”
    John 3:3

    Through these words, Jesus (Yeshua) invites us not only to believe in his birth, but to share in it—to awaken, to be renewed, to be born of the Spirit. In this light, Immanuel is not a one-time event, but an ever-deepening reality. God’s nearness is not locked in the past—it is happening now, within us, again and again.

    So yes, let us call him Jesus, the one whose name means God saves.
    And let us also call him Immanuel, for God is truly with us—here, now, always.


    A Quiet Benediction

    The name that saves, the name that stays—
    Yeshua speaks through every age.
    Immanuel whispers in the soul—
    “I am with you. You are whole.”

    🙏🕊🙏

  • Awareness Remains Our Most Vital Ally

    Awareness Remains Our Most Vital Ally

    —A Tapestry of Heart Guidance from a Variety of World Teachers: Awareness remains our most vital ally—guiding us gently back to what is real, what is whole, and what is ours to reclaim.

    Each tradition, in its own sacred language, whispers this truth. Beneath the surface differences, a deeper unity calls us home. Here, we gather pith instructions—simple, distilled heart-guidance—from some of the great spiritual teachers, each inviting us to cultivate awareness as a path of return.

    The Buddha
    “Be mindful, O monks, of body, of feeling, of mind, of dharma.”
    The Buddha offered the Four Foundations of Mindfulness not as a doctrine but as a doorway—to observe without clinging, to witness without judgment. Awareness, he taught, is not a tool but a way of being, illuminating the path with each breath.

    Jesus of Nazareth
    “The kingdom of God is within you.”
    Jesus spoke not only of heaven but of presence—of turning inward, of being awake to the Spirit within. His pith instruction was love in awareness: to see the sacred in each face, to forgive with open eyes, to walk gently because we are never alone.

    Ramana Maharshi
    “Who is aware of this awareness?”
    Ramana, the silent sage of Arunachala, directed us not toward accumulating insights but toward returning—to the source of all seeing. Awareness, he said, is not something we practice but what we are. The true ‘I’ is ever awake.

    Thich Nhat Hanh
    “Feelings come and go like clouds in a windy sky. Conscious breathing is my anchor.”
    His way was simple, tender, and profoundly deep. Return to the breath. Feel your feet on the Earth. Bow to the moment. This is the miracle—not walking on water, but walking mindfully on dry ground.

    Rumi
    “Do you know what you are? You are a manuscript of a divine letter.”
    Rumi’s pith instruction was to listen to the inner music. Become the witness of your longing. Awareness is not a discipline but a dance—an intoxication with the Real, a turning toward the Beloved in every moment.

    Tenzin Palmo (Jetsunma)
    “We have to bring the Dharma into our hearts and make it real.”
    For those walking the mountain path of practice, she reminds us: awareness must be intimate. Not abstract, but embodied. Not somewhere else, but here—in how we rise, rest, and respond to life.

    Tony Bernhard
    “Be kind to yourself. This is your practice.”
    For those living with chronic illness or grief, Tony offers a heart-softening path: make awareness gentle. Let it hold you rather than interrogate you. This, too, is awakening.

    Each voice, each teaching, brings us back to the same sacred truth:

    Awareness is the ally that walks with us, even when we feel most lost.

    Not to fix, not to strive, but to be with.
    To illuminate the path that was always underfoot.
    To remember what we are.

    May we walk with these teachers in our hearts.
    And may our own awareness become a quiet blessing to the world.

    🙏🕊🙏