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Blog

The Eternal Current with Aaron Niequist

September 14, 2020 Nathan Albert
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SEASON TWO - EPISODE 29: THE ETERNAL CURRENT WITH AARON NIEQUIST

What if the faith isn’t simply believing things about God, but practicing the way of God? 

What if faith isn’t knowing things about the Divine, but experiencing the Divine all around you? 

That’s what Aaron Niequist and I talk about in this episode. 

Aaron is a liturgist, writer, and pastor. He’s worked as a worship leader at Willow Creek Church and Mars Hill Bible Church. He’s also the creator of A New Liturgy, which is a collection of modern liturgical worship recordings as well as The Practice, which is a formational ecumencial practiced-based community at Willow.

He’s the author of the book The Eternal Current: How a Practice-Based Faith Can Save Us from Drowning and host of the Eternal Current Podcast.

I think wherever you find yourself on the spiritual journey, you’ll connect with much of what Aaron speaks about in this interview.

Aaron reminds us that faith isn’t something we have to believe; it’s not simply a bunch of doctrines we have to believe is right or true. Instead, it is learning the ways of the Divine; ways that we can experience God all around; ways that allow us to enter into the flow, or eternal current, that is happening everywhere.

To learn more about Aaron, be sure to visit his website. You can follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

As you experience a practice-based faith and learn to swim in the eternal current of the Divine, may you have peace, may you have calm, and may you have happiness.

SUBSCRIBE AND LISTEN TO THE PODCAST ON APPLE PODCASTS, PODBEAN, SPOTIFY, STITCHER, OVERCAST, GOOGLE PLAY, PODCAST REPUBLIC, POCKET CASTS, CASTBOX, CASTRO, RADIO PUBLIC, OR WHEREVER YOU LISTEN TO PODCASTS.

Tags aaron niequist, eternal current, eternal current podcast, author, practice based faith, liturgy, contemplative, faith, prayer, willow creek, a new liturgy, The Practice

Take a Breath. Seriously.

July 16, 2020 Nathan Albert
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When we are stressed we often hold our breath. Ironically enough, holding our breath actually increases our stress. 

Recently, I noticed that I sometimes hold my breath while checking email, reading the news headlines, and even checking social media. It as if the stress of that email, news headline, or some post builds up deep inside me. I’m not alone in this. According to The Center for Humane Technology, it turns out many of us do this while checking our email, task lists, or using mobile technology. 

Yet, slow and deep breathing is our natural antidote to stress. It always has been. 

Breathing has been proven to lower your blood pressure and heart rate. It can calm anxiety and decrease the negative effects of cortisol released in our bodies when we are overwhelmed or stressed. It has the power to calm and center ourselves and is essential to our mental health.

Breathing, something we do almost entirely unconscious 20 times per minute, has countless benefits. 

So take a breath. Seriously.

This blog can wait.

Take a slow deep inhale. Slowly exhale as if breathing out through a straw. Notice how your shoulders relax and tension in your body is released. 

In this pandemic in which we are living through, I have become utterly convinced that developing a practice of deep breathing and awareness is essential to our emotional and physical well-being. And, as I have discovered, it is also essential to our spiritual well-being.

You can find the importance of breathing as a spiritual practice in Buddhism, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. 

For instance, a group of Christian monks in the fifth century determined one could pray without ceasing by connecting one’s prayer to one’s breath. For these monks, with each inhale or exhale a prayer is recited. 

In some Jewish traditions, the pronunciation of the unspeakable name of G-d (Yahweh) is believed to be the actual sound of breathing. Yah as the inhale and Weh as the exhale. So breathing can connect us to God because breathing is reciting the name of God.

In Hebrew the word for Spirit is ruach, while in Greek it is pneuma. Both of these terms can also be translated as breath. Because of this, many have come to believe that the Divine Spirit is as present to us as our very breath. 

In the Sufi tradition of Islam, chanting with the breath is a way to become “a child of the moment” who is aware, present, and able to find calm in every moment. And, in the Buddhist tradition, focusing on breathing allows one to enter into a deeper meditative state and bring a sense of calm to all aspects of daily life. 

If I’m honest, in these uncharted times in which we are living, I have found myself to be more anxious and stressed than in other seasons. For me, practicing deep breathing rhythms has had a 100% success rate at calming my nerves, centering my soul, and connecting me with the Divine.

The more I practice breathing, the more I realize I crave a life that is calm, centered, and connected.

I have a bookmark on my browser that I occasionally click when things get a little hectic, it seems I have too much on my to-do list, or when I need a good reminder about breathing. It is a quote from Zen Habits founder Leo Babauta. I’ve quoted it below for you as a reminder to breathe. 

So, seriously, take a breath. Deeply inhale calm and let your stresses melt away with each exhale. But, if you’re around others, make sure you’re wearing a mask. 

Breathe.
If you feel overwhelmed, breathe. It will calm you and release the tensions.
If you are worried about something coming up, or caught up in something that already happened, breathe. It will bring you back to the present.
If you are moving too fast, breathe. It will remind you to slow down, and enjoy life more.
Breathe, and enjoy each moment of this life. They’re too fleeting and few to waste.

If you want to learn more about breathing and prayer, be sure to check out my podcast episode on the Breath Prayer.

Tags breathing, breath, prayer, mental health, pandemic, stress, center for humane technology, breath prayer, sufi, ruach, pneuma, zen habits, the why behind the what, podcast

Podcast Episode Eight: Fixed Hour Prayer & Liturgy

April 20, 2020 Nathan Albert

SEASON TWO - EPISODE EIGHT: FIXED HOUR PRAYER & LITURGY

In episode eight of the Why Behind the What, I introduce you to Fixed Hour Prayer and Liturgy; absolutely ancient and foundational practices in the history of the Christian tradition.

Fixed Hour Prayer is pausing to pray throughout our day at regular intervals- usually in the morning, around lunch, in the early evening, and before bed while utilzing a type of prayer book, such as the Common Book of Prayer. Liturgy, meanwhile, is the guiding and organizing principles of a church’s worship gathering; the rituals, traditions, and structure within the service.

When faith and church stopped working for me, when my prayer life seemed stagnant, when I didn’t know what to pray and felt pretty numb in a church service, it was Fixed Hour Prayer and the Liturgy that revived my soul.

They brought tears to my eyes, gave me the words I knew I needed to pray but didn’t have the words for, changed how I viewed and experienced church gatherings, and made me so much more appreciative of church history and global faith community.

Through prayer and liturgy, it was as if I was discovering and witnessing a language my soul knew how to speak all along. Through practicing them, I discovered depth, beauty, richness, and mystery; something I rarely found in other contemporary Christian traditions.

Fixed Hour Prayer and Liturgy are mysteriously mindful, refreshingly remarkable, strongly spiritual, and deeply theological.

They move me from not feeling it to saying, affirming, believing, and finally, living it.

They form me, mold me, and ultimately, transform me.

They are tools that open us up to the transforming presence of the Divine.

I don’t know about you, but I need the Liturgy and Fixed Hour Prayer, whether I’m feeling it or not and I’m convinced they are essential ancient practices for our continued transformation today. If interested, here are some great resources to start experiencing Fixed Hour Prayer: The Divine Hours (Volume One); The Divine Hours (Volume Two); The Divine Hours (Volume Three); The Divine Hours: Pocket Edition; Book of Common Prayer; The Online Book of Common Prayer; Hour by Hour.

As you experience the ancient contemplative practices of Fixed Hour Prayer and Liturgy, may you have peace, may you have calm, and may you have happiness.

SUBSCRIBE AND LISTEN TO THE PODCAST ON APPLE PODCASTS, PODBEAN, SPOTIFY, STITCHER, OVERCAST, GOOGLE PLAY, PODCAST REPUBLIC, OR WHEREVER YOU LISTEN TO PODCASTS.

In Podcast Tags book of common prayer, contemplative, spiritual life, prayer, liturgy, episcopal church, podcast, the why behind the what, fixed hour prayer

Podcast Episode Six: Journaling

April 6, 2020 Nathan Albert

SEASON TWO - EPISODE SIX: JOURNALING

Dear Diary,

After forgetting about you for almost 20 years, I picked you up and decided to reread parts of you. Oh dear Lord in heaven. What was I thinking of writing all that stuff? It’s some of the most hysterical, embarrassing, vomit-inducing, fundamentalist stuff I have ever read.

It is epic. So, I have decided to read those parts to my podcast listeners.

Sincerely,

Nathan

It’s true. In the sixth episode of the Why Behind the What, I read from my first journal when I was quite the young and immature conservative evangelical. But ever since then, I have always kept a journal with me to write down thoughts, ideas, prayers, quotes, and over things I want to remember and reference. I have a row of them on my bookshelf.

Journaling is a powerful spiritual rhythm. It gives voice to our prayers, longings, and desires. It filters our prayers and thoughts to their core and can become a time capsule for our prayer life. It also can be a way to hear the still small voice of God. 

I’ve found journaling to be an incredible funnel for our deepest thoughts and desires. The more I write, the more I am able to filter out random thoughts and bring focus to my thoughts or desires I have been ignoring or too distracted to notice.

Some of the most famous and impactful spiritual books in church history are simply journal entries. Whether it’s Saint Augustine’s Confessions or Mother Teresa’s Come Be My Light or works by Henri Nouwen and Thomas Merton, these are all works by spiritual leaders who journaled their thoughts, desires, and spiritual journey.

Their words and prayers impact generations of people...while my words and prayers would be an embarrassment for generations of people.

In this episode, I also give a few tips on how to start journaling, so be sure to listen. My favorite journals are Moleskine. I have used them for years and I always have a handful lying around my office. A good resource I recommend is from a former professor of mine: Journaling as a Spiritual Practice: Encountering God through Attentive Writing.

As you start writing your thoughts and desires onto a page while listening for the Divine, may you have peace, may you have calm, may you have happiness.

SUBSCRIBE AND LISTEN TO THE PODCAST ON APPLE PODCASTS, PODBEAN, SPOTIFY, STITCHER, OVERCAST, GOOGLE PLAY, PODCAST REPUBLIC, OR WHEREVER YOU LISTEN TO PODCASTS.

In Podcast Tags journal, journaling, the why behind the what, contemplative, spiritual life, spirituality, pastor, prayer

Podcast Episode Five: Centering Prayer

March 23, 2020 Nathan Albert

SEASON TWO - EPISODE FIVE: CENTERING PRAYER

Nothing can make me fall asleep quicker than being forced to do Centering Prayer for 20 minutes after lunch, during prime nap time, when you’re in graduate school and constantly exhausted. Yet, the first time I tried Centering Prayer, this is what happened. After 20 minutes, I awoke to drool streaming down my chin.

After this experience, I didn’t try this ancient practice again. It wasn’t until over a decade later that I tried Centering Prayer and this time I found it had become a profound practice for my soul that leads me into greater peace and calm, centers my soul, and allows me the space to listen for God. It’s been a game changer in my spiritual life. It was revived my soul and lead me into deeper awareness.

At it’s basic, Centering prayer is a type of silent prayer in which we center ourselves upon God’s presence.

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This is why it is also one of the most difficult spiritual practices. It’s a practice where I can’t do anything, really. I don’t check things off my list. Instead, it forces me to be rather than to do. In Centering Prayer, I just am as I am. It’s just me and my thoughts, which can become quite noisy when sitting in silence.

But this is also why Centering Prayer is an essential practice.

Instead of me trying to achieve or do something, Centering Prayer becomes about me being present, as I am, to the Divine One who is always present to me. It becomes this centered place where I’m not working on my own soul, but God is working on my own soul. Through it, God does a transforming work in me and I am simply opening myself up to the One who does such good work.

Centering prayer allows us to be in union with God, to be aware of God, and to be as close to God as your very breath. It is a holy act, where we don't have to worry about doing, but instead settle into simply being.

Catholic Priest, Basil Pennington gives the following framework for Centering Prayer:

Be With God.

Stay With God.

Return to God.

In this episode, I share more about Centering Prayer, but I also give instructions on how to do a sit as well as end the episode with silence to experience Centering Prayer. As I mention in the podcast, a few resources I recommend are: Centering Prayer, by Basil Pennington; Centering Prayer and Inner Awakening, by Cynthia Bourgeault; and Centering Prayer in Daily Life and Ministry.

As you learn to center yourself through silent prayer, as you learn to be with God, stay with God, and return to God, may you have peace, may you have calm, and may you have happiness.

SUbscribe and listen to the podcast on APPLE PODCASTS, PODBEAN, SPOTIFY, STITCHER, OVERCAST, GOOGLE PLAY, PODCAST REPUBLIC, OR WHEREVER YOU LISTEN TO PODCASTS.


In Podcast Tags the why behind the what, centering prayer, center, calm, prayer, spiritual life, ancient, contemplative, spirituality
 
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