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Bound together in God’s love

By Dave Henning / August 11, 2013

In the Epilogue (“The Journey Home”) of The Attentive Life, author Leighton Ford notes that time is redeemed when our memory of the past and desire for the future are united by love in the present.  Our attempts to clutch what passes as well as trying to achieve what is beyond our grasp are in […]

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Examen- practicing attentiveness

By Dave Henning / August 11, 2013

As Leighton Ford concludes Chapter 9 of The Attentive Life, he relates a well-know story told by the authors of Sleeping with Bread: Holding What Gives You Life.  During World War II thousands of orphaned children were placed in refugee camps, where they were safe from the bombs raining down on Europe.   Although they were […]

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What is deepest in me?

By Dave Henning / August 9, 2013

“No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those how love him- but God has revealed it to us by his Spirit.”- 1 Corinthians 2: 9-10 Leighton Ford asks what we should especially pay attention to at Compline in Chapter 9 of The Attentive Life.  In […]

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Compline- a paradox

By Dave Henning / August 8, 2013

“Let it come, as it will, and don’t be afraid.  God does not leave us comfortless, so let evening come.”- Jane Kenyon “He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge.”- Psalm 91: 4 In Chapter 9 (“Grandfather Time: When Evening Comes”), the concluding chapter of The Attentive Life, Leighton […]

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From restlessness to restfulness

By Dave Henning / August 7, 2013

As Leighton Ford concludes Chapter 8 of The Attentive Life, he notes that Thomas Keating (The Human Condition) maintains that we spend the first half of our lives finding our role- what our culture conditions us to do– and the second half of our lives finding our true selves, what God has called us to […]

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Our restless hearts

By Dave Henning / August 6, 2013

Leighton Ford rhetorically asks in Chapter 8 of The Attentive Life if we wake up in the world with a “holy longing” for the Kingdom of God that is “already” and “not yet”.  Ronald Rollheiser writes of this “holy longing” in his book The Holy Longing: The Search for a Christian Spirituality: “Sensing that we are […]

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When evening descends

By Dave Henning / August 5, 2013

In Chapter 8 (Lighting the Lamps: The House with Golden Windows”) of The Attentive Life, Leighton Ford covers the hour of Vespers.  The counterpart to Lauds, Vespers “celebrates the lighting of lamps as the evening descends.” David Steindl-Rast offers additional insights on the meaning and application of Vespers: “Vespers is the hour that invites peace […]

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Trying to catch the sun

By Dave Henning / August 4, 2013

At the end of Chapter 7 of The Attentive Life, Leighton Ford tells a story from the life of Jerry Sittser (A Grace Disguised), who lost his wife, 1 daughter, and mother instantly when the car in which the 3 were traveling was hit head on at 85 miles per hour by a drunk driver.  […]

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Paschal death

By Dave Henning / August 3, 2013

“Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone: but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” -John 12: 24 (RSV) In Chapter 7 of The Attentive Life, Leighton Ford cites author Ronald Rollheiser, who devotes a chapter in his book The Holy Longing […]

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When our hearts are punctured

By Dave Henning / August 2, 2013

“I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts.”- Jeremiah 31: 33 “Man has places in his heart which do not yet exist, and into them enters suffering in order that they might have existence.”- Leonard Blum Leighton Ford notes in Chapter 7 of The Attentive Life that early church […]

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Times of deepest darkness

By Dave Henning / August 1, 2013

In Chapter 7 (“When Shadows Come: Darkness Comes Early”) of The Attentive Life, author Leighton Ford discusses the hour of None (rhymes with “lone”). which marks mid-to-late afternoon- when the sun begins to set and shadows lengthen.  None is the time we realize that things don’t last forever, yet we pay more attention to things […]

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The second journey

By Dave Henning / July 31, 2013

“We must be still and still moving.”- T. S. Eliot Leighton Ford takes an interlude (“Holy Stillness”) from his discussion of “the hours” in The Attentive Life to focus on Psalm 46: 10- “Be still and know that I am God.”  He cites novelist Susan  Howatch, who writes novels about clergy in which she talks […]

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