Forgetting the Sacred within each other
“Do not be shy about claiming the visions you have seen. In our time and culture, it is not as common for people to speak of their spiritual visions, but that does not mean they have ceased appearing.
The Spirit still sends messages to each of us, images unique to our experience, flashes of meaning for us to interpret and understand. Some we seek, some come unbidden, but all are authentic parts of a spiritual life. The sacred is a visual realm. Wisdom is in what we see.”—Bishop Steven Charleston Daily Facebook Page, June 27, 2018.
Salish Chief
We pass the town of St. Ignatius in the Flathead Indian Reservation on the way to Glacier National Park. The name of Ignatius is sacred to many for what this saint taught us so many years ago.
I previously visited the church there at the foot of the Mission Mountains, known for its original biblical paintings on the ceiling and walls painted by one of the brothers, believed to be the cook!
My daughter tells me there was a boarding school there where young Salish Indian children were taken from their homes to become “civilized.” The student were punished if they ever spoke in their native Salish language. The Jesuits were certain they were doing the right thing, changing the Native Americans into Europeans.
This story is a constant reminder that we, as well, may be so assured about the God of our understanding that we forget to honor the part of God in our neighbor. We hope to remember to honor the God of our spiritual friends’ understanding. We may tell them about the God of love we know and share our experience. We may listen to the God of love of their understanding, but we do not insist that ours is the only way to encounter God.
Each of us has a part of the divine within. Our job is to realize that part of God within ourselves, help those we meet to find the God within themselves, and look for similarities in our relationship with God. We also learn so much from others about the divine presence in their lives, honor it, and care for it. It is sacred.
Today, we are beginning to realize the power of Native American spirituality, which for hundreds of years we falsely were certain was not God.
Joanna https://www.joannaseibert.com/