Saturday, December 10, 2016

Have a co-ruminate with me . . .

Been getting ready for church (it's Sunday morning here in New Zealand), breakfast has happened, with nothing "pressing-to-do" I've been reading, ruminating, and summarizing my thoughts . . . I started with Psalm 90:12 . . . 
Why not read along, and have a co-ruminate with me . . . 
  • Hey, you could even post (in the comments section below) your ruminating; not  merely a critique of mine, share your rumination with some of it's "meditative-voice" . . . 
Remember, "rumination is the fodder of meditation". It's thinking about our thinking, hearing what our thoughts are saying as we take listening-time in the presence of the One who said, "I will never leave you or forsake you . . . "
Cheers - JD

5 comments:

Laurie Guy said...

Reminds me of the saying, "Still waters run deep".

Unknown said...

An unusual verb to be using in this context this particular month.

Chris said...

The wisdom of God surpasses all of man's lofty proclamations, because He sees around corners and we only think we see around corners!

Diane Gilliam-Weeks said...

Jesus was the wisdom of God and therefore the deepest conviction we can have. Let him flow through our hearts. We number our days (memento mori) and grasp the preciousness of the gift of life.

Leigh Harrison said...

A contrarian exegesis: if we focus our thinking on a "mindless" task such as numbering off the days we've lived, we are more likely to hear the still clear voice of our heart.

In the undisciplined life, we allow our mind to dart from one shiny object to the next, babbling meaningless hopes and fears and overwhelming the voice of the spirit. By concentrating our thinking capacity on a simple repetitive task we can dim this anarchic chatter and tune in to the voice of wisdom.

Perhaps the Psalmist is suggesting that meditation is not just an eastern construct?