The Art of AdventGreetings and Happy Thanksgiving 🦃!! I fully intended to write about my practice of giving thanks during November in keeping with the Holiday we celebrate. But alas, that did not happen. I believe I wrote last time about some changes that are happening personally. Those changes have kept me super busy and I have let a few things drop-like this blog/newsletter. I will write more about these big changes as they draw nearer, but for now-let’s focus on the present.
As we celebrate next Thursday with thankful hearts, we also enter into the season of Advent. I grew up in a church that did not follow the “liturgical” calendar. My search for a deeper experience of God has led me to different places and shown me other ways to enter into Gods story. One path that has opened to me has been the church calendar and the meaning and depth of the story we can experience by entering into it’s practices and traditions. Advent is one of those traditions that has enriched the meaning and my experience of Christ during the Christmas season. For those not familiar, Advent begins on the Sunday four weeks before Christmas. Each Sunday, the tradition in the early church was to light a candle, one each week, and enter into a time of prayer and reflection on the themes of the season. The themes vary by denomination, but they all focus around the scripture story of the birth of Christ. As I’ve embraced the traditions of the early church, I see its wisdom. The church calendar helps us to celebrate and honor the God of the Bible in much the same way God instructed the Jews to feast and celebrate Him in the Old Testament. In the wisdom of the early church and its practices we can find a depth of meaning we might otherwise miss in all the hustle and bustle of daily life. Especially the frantic pace of the Christmas season. I encourage you to think about beginning and Advent tradition if you don’t already have one. As I’ve been led in my life and art to deeper communion with the Creator and lover of my soul, I’ve been committed to helping others do the same. So I offer you a way to enter into Advent in maybe a new way, by joining with Art and Soul Ministries for the 2021 Advent Artists Series. I’ve gathered a collective of four talented artists and four gifted writers to create artwork for Visio Divina and a written devotion for each of the four themes of Advent. Each artist contemplated the theme for the week and created around that. As I put it together, I prayed over the work. I said prayers for each soul that reads it, that they would find a deeper meaning and experience God in greater measure this season. May we enter in even deeper ways, the story of the birth of our Savior. I would love it if you would join us each week to come before God with our Art and Soul! You can find us on Art and Soul’s social media pages as well as the website. Or click here- Advent 2021 Have a blesses Advent season and ss always, thank you for your interest in Art and Soul Ministries!!! I pray it blesses your Art and Soul! 😉
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Hello, its been a while!
I told you I wouldn’t be filling your inbox with unwanted emails, but I did plan to do more than two newsletters a year! But just like Covid has disrupted our lives unexpectedly, I have had disruptions to my life and ministry. These things have caused me to pause, reflect and recalibrate. And so, while some things have caused a change of course, I have a better perspective now than before. This summer I took a long pause and pulled back from some things to get God’s vision to go forward. I quit posting or even getting on social media and took a month off with my directee’s and Spiritual Direction. It was a time of needed rest. The verses God gave me at the beginning of 2021 have continued to deepen in me. Isaiah 43:18-19 have become so meaningful as I navigate so much change and ask God His good and perfect will. Change is constant, but God never changes. As we head into a new season I feel ready to forget the former things and embrace some “new things”! This August I began my training to lead others through the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. The Exercises are a nine month personal journey in prayer and reflection on Christ. The Exercises were such a profound experience for me that when I felt God calling me to lead others I immediately signed up! Sometimes the path is just so clear! I am so happy to be able to offer this journey to others next year as part of Art and Soul Ministries, so stay tuned for more info on that! God has also blessed my Spiritual Direction practice abundantly and I am so grateful to God for the gift this is in my life. I absolutely love holding space with people as they seek a deeper experience of God. I’m still praying about how my art fits into my ministry, and while it’s not completely clear, I know God will use it in His timing. I have a vision and dreams for what could be, but I am waiting on God’s opening. I am learning to wait. (I am also failing miserably at waiting! 😂) As we move from summer to fall I am reminded that to everything there is a season. With fall comes the beauty of falling leaves and cooler temps. A few years ago I made small paintings of leaves I’d picked up on my walks. God spoke to me as I painted those leaves and I’d like to invite you to do a Visio Divina meditation on this image of a leaf. I recommend you journal your experience with this practice since it can be a way to deepen the experience. Close your eyes and ask God to speak to you through this image. Take a few moments to look at the painting and just dwell with the image as you scan it all over. Notice what speaks to you and jot that down. Notice anything that bothers you and jot that down too. Sit for a few moments with your eyes closed and imagine the image with your mind. What do you notice now? As you open your eyes and look at the image again, see if you notice anything new or if what you see seems different in any way. Where is God in the painting? How does this painting speak to you about God? Take a few moments to reflect and journal about anything that you think, feel or experienced through this exercise. Take your time with this and allow God to speak through your journaling. If you don’t journal, just spend some time reflecting on these things. Is there something you need to do or some way God has invited you to respond to what you’ve heard today? As you end this exercise, thank God for anything God has spoken to you through this Visio Divina exercise. As I painted these, I remember what God spoke to me as I looked carefully at each leaf. There is so much in nature that speaks to us about God and how he cares for us and our world. This week as I reflect on the changes that are coming for me, I am comforted by the constancy of the seasons. I feel an invitation from God to slow down and enjoy His goodness toward me even in the uncertainty of change. And again I am reminded of what and who never changes. Bless your art and soul! How can we hear from God? One way is to practice the prayer of Examen.The prayer of Examen is a review of the day with God. Prayerfully you ask God to help you notice His presence and His gifts as you look back over a period of time. I am often surprised by what God brings to mind that I missed of failed to appreciate at the time. Often I find or hear deep truths from God through this prayer.
The other night in prayer God immediately reminded of this sweet gift My granddaughter made for me. Made with loving hands and heart, I have no more precious jewels than these! I fully appreciated it at the time but as God brought it to mind again, I was overcome with gratitude. In that moment I heard and felt God as He spoke about what is precious and what is impermanent. I have been struggling and I felt His presence in this moment. I was comforted, strengthened and touched by His hand. I felt a shift in my spirit and I was left changed. My struggle is not over, but God gave me what I need for the next steps. God comes when and where He wills and it is a mystery. Not all my prayers are so eventful, but when they are-it’s holy ground! Do you long to hear from God? Are you wondering where He is working in your life? Are you hungry to taste the goodness of the Lord and dwell with the spirit of God? Spiritual direction and the prayer of examen are just two ways that can help you hear and see Gods action in your life. God is waiting for you to come to Him and experience his love. Come today. If you are interested or have questions about anything you read here feel free to contact me and I will be happy to help. I remember the first time I achieved a “likeness” in a portrait. I don’t remember how old I was. I don’t remember who it was. I don’t remember if it was a drawing or a painting. I don’t remember if it was in a class or on my own. I don’t remember any of the details, but I do remember how it felt! I remember becoming so engrossed that time stood still. I remember feeling connected to something “else”, something bigger. Art had always held a kind of peace for me, but this was more intense. At the time I didn’t understand that I was experiencing the Holy Spirit entering with me into the act of creating. All I knew was that this was a way to connect to something deep within me and that it was a unique experience for me.
And I wanted more! One Sunday many (over 30) years ago, our church commissioned a stained glass window that depicted the creation story. When it was finished and installed the pastor preached a sermon on creation. I sat in the pew as he began to read Genesis one. All I heard that whole sermon was, “in the beginning, God created”. As I gazed at the stained glass something clicked for me. God was a creator and I was a creator. In that moment I understood what I was feeling when I created. I understood that we are made in His image and as such, we are creative! And that I shared that with Him! That was a pivotal moment for me and my art. Fast forward to today. The thrill of creating a portrait is still there. I love to do portraits from life because the life that you are trying to capture is right in front of you. I feel in communion with God and it feels like holy ground to enter into creating an Imago Dei, or the image of God. An image is a reflection or a mirror. Each time I enter into the process of a portrait, from life or a photo, I am aware that each of us is a walking miracle! I see the stardust that we are all made of. I am reminded of the endless variations of the human form that come together in each individual. I notice the natural gestures that only that one person possesses and I try to capture the essence that is unique to that person. And I marvel in wonder at the Creator and lover of our souls. This is a sketch I meant to paint from a photo on the sketchy app. I never did get to the painting part. I have lots and lots of unfinished works like this one in various stages of completion. One thing the artist always asks themselves is “is this work finished”. Some of the works of art I like best by other artists are sketches and unfinished works. Sketches help the artist search for what is true about the subject and clarify how they want to give that a voice. I think sketches and unfinished work have a purity that the finished work often doesn’t. I find beauty in the simplicity of the artists concept and the struggle to tell the story. I think this sketch has qualities that give it a voice and make it as finished as it needs to be for me, its creator. I love the lines and I think it stands on its own. I wonder if that’s how God see’s us too? And that’s another subject for another time! "Resurrection power is in everything that looks like it's dying" I said that to my spiritual director last week as I reflected on some of what’s been going on in me. I seem to be holding both sorrow and joy at the same time a lot more these days the older I get. When I was younger I was better at compartmentalizing and pushing the hard stuff aside to stay focused on the “good”. It may have been a coping skill I don’t need as much these days? But lately I’m finding it harder to push aside the sorrow and the sting of death that is all around us in this fallen world. I find myself asking God “how can any good come from this?” or thinking there is nothing that can redeem what has happened. Yet at the very same time, I also see God’s resurrection power at work bringing life to what is dead or dying. I see God working to restore and resurrect in the very places that death seemed to end the story. And somehow, I am finding peace and joy amidst the sorrow. Resurrection power is a power that is only be seen through death. There is no resurrection without it. You might be saying “duh” right now. But stop and really think about that. Something must die to be resurrected. And God is inviting me (and you) to be a witness to and participate with Him IN that resurrection power. As I contemplate new life from death, the verses He gave me at the beginning of the year in Isaiah continue to deepen and unfold for me. “See, I am doing a new thing. Now it springs up; Do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland. Is. 43:19” Notice the word “IN”. One little word. Where does God do the new thing? IN the wilderness and IN wasteland. There is no mention of moving out of the wilderness or wasteland, is there? It is IN those barren, dry, desolate, lifeless place, the new springs up! Do you not perceive it? Uh, no, I don’t Lord. Or at least I didn’t until I began to look. It was in my daily Prayer of Examen where I started noticing new life coming from what was dying or dead. As I looked back for God in my day or over a period of time or an event, I began to see how God was present in the places that seemed Godless before. It was then I saw a tiny trickle of life giving water in the dessert of my soul. It was IN the midst of the hard season where I saw growth. It was IN the impossible situation that I saw possibility arise. It was IN the midst of death and dying I began to witness hope and a future. That resurrection wasn’t just happening around me in the physical world, but within me. As I continued to look for God’s resurrection power in the very things that look dead, my heart was being changed. Those places in my heart that were dry, desolate wastelands devastated by sorrow and pain began to see a new shoot of faith. The barren wilderness began to open up to new paths toward God. The circumstances might change, but they might not. That is not the promise. What I hear from God is that He is the God of Resurrection Power IN me. And the Prayer of Examen has helped me “perceive” the new things He is raising from the dead thing in my life. It is through that prayer that He has shown me His loving care for me where I might have otherwise missed it. He has revealed my sin in a tender compassion and allowed me to confess and be made new in the resurrection power of the cross. It is through this prayer that I have found my tears of sorrow turn to joy as God has shown me the dead places in and around me He is resurrecting. Where do you need to feel joy and hope amidst sorrow? What are you looking at that is dead today? Over 400 years ago St. Ignatius Loyola began to pray over his day looking for the presence of God. This became known as the Prayer of Examen. Below is a simple prayer of Examen you can pray to help you find joy in the sorrow. Quiet yourself and become aware of God’s presence. Begin the prayer by asking the God of Resurrection Power to help you notice His movement in your life over the last day or in an event/circumstance or season of your life. As you review your day with God, where do you see His hand in your life? Notice the small things as well as the big things. Notice any feelings that come up and talk with God about them. If anything stands out to you during your refection, talk to God about it. Allow yourself to be free and open about any feelings or desires you may have around this. End your prayer in thanksgiving, thanking God for any way you have encountered Him through this prayer. Amen. You can find more information on the Prayer of Examen on the Resource page of the Art and Soul Ministries website. Here’s the latest news from Art and Soul Ministries! Spring has Sprung--
click the link below to read all about the latest things that are springing up! “To be a writer, you must write. To be an artist you must show up at the canvas. - The Artist’s Rule Ouch! As both a writer and and artist I can say-I’m not showing up!! Are you experiencing that too? Do you have good intentions but never show up to do them? Is your creativity the last thing on your to do list? I am leading a book club on the book The Artist’s Rule. It’s a book about your inner artist and your inner monk. Without going into too much detail, its a book that applies Benedictine spirituality to our creativity. I am not Catholic but my understanding of Benedictine spirituality is that it emphasizes the idea that everything, even the most mundane task is a holy act if done for and before God. And that every tool we use is a holy vessel. This means that our creativity and even the tools we use to do it are sacred! But that’s not what this post is about. This post is about showing up and it’s one of the reasons I wanted to do the book group in the first place. I needed to show up. I think about art constantly. I plan compositions in my head. I gather reference photos for future paintings. I read blogs, follow artists on instagram and watch other artists create in videos, but I have remained dormant! I thought for a long time it was because I had more important work to do while I was caring for my father, which was true, and that I’d get right back to it when I was done. But I didn’t. Now I’m caring for my grandkids and enjoying being a spiritual director and life is full. So I wondered for a hot second if maybe that part of me was over? But then why do I still desire to create? In Ignatian spirituality we understand desire to be God given. So where was the disconnect?? Back to the quote. I was reading along and BAM! It hit me hard. I USED TO SHOW UP. I used to love to show up. When I was a working artist it was easy to prioritize my time and values around creating. So I had to ask myself: whats going on that I’m not showing up now? And honestly its a lot of things. Fear, bad time management, lack of energy because I use it on all the “important” things. I could go on...but then there’s that quote! And I realized as I read on that because I’ve shifted my energies elsewhere I’ve moved my art to the bottom of the priority list. The last thing I do when all my “important” tasks are through. The reward I never get to because I’m so tired! But if I’m truthful it goes deeper, I’m avoiding it... It’s not just reprioritizing things to “DO” art. Its prioritizing “BEING” an artist. We talk a lot about “being” these days. Being present. Intentional. Mindful. All buzz words that are popular now and really just mean showing up! I believe in the mission statement I lovingly created for Art and Soul Ministries: “to create ways to honor and encourage art as a sacred practice”. And because I believe we are all Imago Dei—image bearers of the Creator—as such I believe we are all imbued with creativity!! It’s in our DNA and our very SOULS! And I believe in my mission statement which is one reason I began Art and Soul Ministries in the first place! So now I have a problem. I’m going to have to show up! I’m praying about what that looks like and I’m leaning in to the Creator and lover of my soul to guide me into what He has for me in all this. And I’m already finding some shifts in how I’m walking in the world as an artist again. Now I’d like to ask you? How are you showing up to your call as a creative being? And how can I and Art and Soul help you do that? Let’s show up together! Take time this Christmas season to enter into sacred prayer using Visio Divina during the Advent season. Join Michelle Morris artist and spiritual director, as she leads us each week in a special Visio Divina created for each week of Advent. Michelle created four paintings with audio prompts each week that will lead you into a sacred time of prayer as we prepare ourselves to welcome the birth of Christ.vThese meditations will be posted on the Flourish website and social media pages so stay tuned! Advent Visio Divina Meditation Prompts:Prompt 1:
Audio Prompts:Author: Michelle MorrisTake time this Christmas season to enter into sacred prayer using Visio Divina during the Advent season. Join Michelle Morris artist and spiritual director, as she leads us each week in a special Visio Divina created for each week of Advent. Michelle created four paintings with audio prompts each week that will lead you into a sacred time of prayer as we prepare ourselves to welcome the birth of Christ.vThese meditations will be posted on the Flourish website and social media pages so stay tuned! Advent Visio Divina Meditation Prompts:Prompt 1:
Audio Prompts:Author: Michelle MorrisTake time this Christmas season to enter into sacred prayer using Visio Divina during the Advent season. Join Michelle Morris artist and spiritual director, as she leads us each week in a special Visio Divina created for each week of Advent. Michelle created four paintings with audio prompts each week that will lead you into a sacred time of prayer as we prepare ourselves to welcome the birth of Christ.vThese meditations will be posted on the Flourish website and social media pages so stay tuned! Advent Visio Divina Meditation Prompts:Prompt 1:
Audio Prompts:Author: Michelle Morris |
Author:Michelle Morris Archives
November 2021
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