The tornados that swept through the center of country have left at least 88 dead, over 15,000 structures destroyed or severely damaged, and current estimates on the cost are almost $4 Billion. There was a warning, but in that moment, nowhere to run.
The silent stillness that often come before a storm can make your skin pop as the barometer changes and the storm clouds begin to invade. The silence after the destruction, whether there is actually silence or not, cuts deep and clarifies. All is meaningless, all is temporal, life is priceless and so vulnerable.
Our spiritual life often follows a similar pattern. We are numb to the behaviors that destroy us. We are broken and overcome by fear and despair. We are left in an existential stillness that strips our ego naked and forces us to face all that matters – our relationships, our faith, our momentary existence.
My god, my god, why has thou forsaken me?
Silence
My youth is gone, my despair is total.
Silence
And we ask, where do we go from here?
Might I suggest moments like this give us an opportunity to create a life focused on meaning, simplified by fire, and fulfilled by relationship and depth.
Long talks. Long walks. Good books. Good food. An expulsion of excess and a rejection of the temporal.
A Birthday Reflection On Youth
The Woodshed, Van Halen, and The Lord's Work
The Power of Little Things
The Power of Humility, The Cancer of Pride
Getting Bad Thoughts Out of Your Head
Are You Serious?
Real Courage From The Blue
A Displacement Is Happening
On Anger and Virtues
Creating Rich Love and a Pure Soul
We Come From The Land of Ice and Snow
What Will Be On Your Runestone?
Crazy Russians and Lake Wobegon
What is Real Worship?
The Poor Widow and Real Wealth
A House of Prayer or A Den of Thieves
What We Sacrifice For Screen Time
The Real Social Dilemma
The Splendid Glory of CS Lewis
More Army Suicides, More General BS
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Life After Ministry
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Bible Recap
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)