From March 2022 Intercession Paper
From March 2022 Intercession Paper
``Mi esperanza morando en tu amor. My hope dwelling in your love.``
Every month Companions receive a small booklet in the mail, the Intercession Paper (IP).
Here is a selection of prayers from this month’s IP. If you’re so inclined, please join Companions in reaching out in love through prayer.
ON THE COVER
Las tiernas palabras de Jesús a su madre: “Mujer, ahí tienes a tu hijo,” son un último regalo de amor concedido a nuestra humanidad mientras, desde la cruz, Jesús mira el dolor infinito de su madre. Que esas palabras nos muevan a estar con María nuestra madre, y con madres, padres, hijos e hijas cuya pena es inconsolable en estos tiempos de pandemia sin precedentes.
Tu alma rota en mil pedazos
Tus ojos llevan los míos a los confines del dolor
Mis ojos compañeros silenciosos
En el asombro de tal belleza descarnada
El asombro de ver el alma inconsolable
Solo puedo estar presente. Solo puedo llorar.
Permanecer y en silencio, presenciar y soportar tu
pérdida.
Quiero apresurarme y juntar los pedazos de tu alma.
Quedarme y no apartarme de tu angustia y la mía.
Deseo desesperado de una liberación milagrosa.
Solo puedo estar presente. Solo puedo llorar.
Mantenerte a salvo y abrazarte
Seguir la luz de tus ojos
tu cabeza recostada en mis brazos
Mi esperanza morando en tu amor.
Ema Rosero-Nordalm, SCHC
Jesus’s tender words to his mother, “Woman, here is your son,” are a last gift of love granted to our humanity while, from the cross, Jesus looks into his mother’s infinite grief. May those words move us to be with Mary our mother, and with mothers, fathers, sons, and daughters whose sorrow is inconsolable in these unprecedented pandemic times.
Your soul broken into raw pieces
My eyes you take through the deep confines of pain
My eyes the silent companions
In awe of such stark beauty
The awe of seeing the inconsolable soul
I can only be present. I can only weep.
I can only be in silence to witness and bear your loss.
I want to rush and put the pieces of your soul together.
I want only to stay and be next to your anguish and mine,
In desperate wish for a miraculous release.
I can simply be present. I can only weep.
To hold you safe and to hold you tight
To follow the light of your eyes
Your head resting in my arms
My hope dwelling in your love.
Ema Rosero-Nordalm, SCHC
THANKSGIVING: SUNDAY AND EVERY DAY
All are created from dirt, all become broken.
All fail to follow perfectly,
stumbling over our own desires and fear.
Yet all are marvelous, each one.
All are forgiven, each one.
All recipients of grace, each one.
United by unconditional, unmerited love.
Alleluia.
Margaret Young, SCHC
MISSION IN GOD’S WORLD: MONDAY
God is love and whoever lives in love lives in union with God, and God lives in union with them.
(1 John 4:16)
Lord, if I live in union with you and you with me, will I grow and be closer to you and as part of your mission, your work in the world? Help me if this is the way you want me to go; in your name I pray.
Judy Moore, SCHC
UNITY OF GOD’S PEOPLE: TUESDAY
Art is universal in human cultures. We can learn by allowing ourselves to experience art from people who are very different from us. Even in our own country, the diversity of artists brings joy and newness to us: Gee’s Bend quilters, painters, dancers, actors, musicians, and so many others. Let us pray that they help us break down barriers and that they can survive through the COVID-19 pandemic and continue to enlighten our lives.
Louise Forrest, SCHC
SOCIAL JUSTICE: WEDNESDAY
In a sermon preached in 1957 Dr. King said, “We must discover the power of love, the redemptive power of love, and when we discover it, we will be able to make this old world a new world. For love is the only way.”
We need a revival in this country.
We need a revival of fundamental human
relationships, of the ideals and values
we already share.
We need a revival of our relationship with the God
who made us all.
We need a revival of love.
If we discover the libretto of love we can make of this old world a new one, this old country a new one.
Go out this day and love somebody you don’t like.
The Most Rev. Michael Curry
from a sermon, The King Center, 17 January 2022
PEACE & RECONCILIATION: THURSDAY
Thank you, God, for reminding me that each day gives me new opportunity to be and to do.
Thank you for entrusting me with a new slate with which to start over and learn new ways to listen, talk, dance, write, hold, and be present.
Thank you for reminding me of our shared humanity; that you experienced jealousy, small-mindedness, racism, friendship, love, loyalty, distrust, empathy, and misunderstanding.
May I find beauty in small places, in large spaces, on leafless trees, lopsided birdhouses, in myself and in the other.
May gratitude and kindness open my being each morning as I greet you, and may I welcome your call to get up and figure out how to go forward in love.
Denise B. Crenshaw, SCHC
GROWTH IN SPIRITUAL LIFE: FRIDAY
Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer, open our hearts and minds to receive the wisdom, love, and care you shower upon us daily, so that we can become the people you have created us to be.
Pat Trumbull, SCHC
PRAYERS PERSONAL AND GENERAL: SATURDAY
Let us pay heed to the Indigenous wisdom of this country and pray for All Our Relatives—that is, the people plus the furred, feathered, finned, and scaly; the petaled, leaved, coned, and mossy; the splashing, running, sparkling, drippy; the windy, billowy, starry, flaming; the sharp, hard, crumbly, and ancient. Let us pray for the unity of all God’s creation, the heart to perceive it, and the wisdom to live it—for the future of our fragile island home.
Marilyn Orozco, SCHC