You Belong

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Rather than letting what you are doing be the first and most important, you can find nourishment in your own inner being. May you continue to behold and be beholden by this inner strength. As you accept the pain and tragedy of being human may you also find peace and depth in the Love growing from within yourself.

Now when you are looking for what to do, what to give and to be, may you trust this Love within yourself. This Love was the first gift to you.

You can now experience this Love, this grace, this hope. In this you truly belong. In this you find and create meaning. No matter what.

Peace to you!

A Reconstructed Faith – Part Two

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As I mentioned in part one, I chose the word reconstructed because of its positive resonance, but I could have also used the word deconstructed. That word seems more negatively charged, but it is simply about the fact that something must be broken down, something must collapse for something new to be reconstructed. All reconstruction must begin with deconstruction, with something being broken down, taken apart. For me, it has been about looking at the parts of my faith and life, and stone by stone, reconstructing the faith, developing it, so that it supports and nourishes me deep within. This has led me, among other things, to find the contemplative path that I try to blog about here in poems and short entries.

The journey has been long, as mentioned, I am now in my fiftieth year, but I feel that something is emerging that I can stand for in the phase of life I am in now and am entering into. Through all I still experience, and maybe even stronger than before, that I am able to see that it is Love with a capital L that holds me, life, and the everything together.

I have never really been concerned with eternal life or living in an eternity in heaven. This does not mean that I deny that some version of heaven exists, but I rather need a heaven over my life now, to put it somewhat clichéd. It simply means that life’s experience is important to me, I want to be true. I don’t just want to believe with my head, but I want to believe because of, but also in the midst of my experience. Here I have even taken life wisdom from the so-called faith movement that taught me that “eternal life” in the Bible does not necessarily refer to eternity as in endless time, but it can mean a God type of life. That is, the life God wants us to experience and live here and now.

I understand that my text now becomes convoluted, but so has my life been so far. And as the poet Rilke described, I experience life in ever-widening circles. For me, in my search and restlessness, it became absolutely necessary to read and read, and read. I had to gain knowledge and perspectives, preferably from authors and wise people such as Henri Nouwen, Michael Singer, Richard Rohr, Thomas Merton, and even the psychoanalyst Carl Jung. These people became my soul friends, and I found a lot to resonate with, and often more so than in church. Had I remained isolated in my context, I would hardly have heard of or learned from these or others. But thank God that I also walked my own path, and that my restlessness forced me to read others’ thoughts, and to ponder and digest these thoughts. I have drunk from various sources and will claim that I have come out stronger for it!

I believe some may fear some of my or others’ opinions and perspectives, precisely because they fear, they may fear that the faith will not hold. Some also have a strong love for the Bible and what they consider God’s Word, and yes, they are actually afraid of falling in sin or even falling away. And yes, for some, deconstruction leads to the loss of (all) faith, but that is far from true for everyone. Rather, there are many who find that a believer who dares ponder questions and read about different perspectives, who dares change “glasses” and see that there are somewhat different answers and different views, finds a broader ground to stand on, perhaps even a spiritual (church) history and heritage that makes sense. I am one of many examples of the latter.

I have also been inspired by the story of Paul. The fact that Paul’s experience on the road to Damascus caused him to turn blind for three days is, for me, a symbol of the blindness we humans can experience in the midst of crisis, both life, and faith crises. But fortunenately a crisis lasts “for three days” and not necessarily a whole lifetime. When the Spirit or one’s inner being experiences an impact, the one who is blinded for a while can learn to see anew, and with that, gain a new view of life. It is really a reconstruction out of deconstruction.

I am convinced that if we take our experiences and the life that God has given us seriously, we will experience that faith changes over the years. But that does not necessarily mean that faith dies, or that one falls away, even if others may judge it so. Over time, one may live more easily with the paradoxes and questions, rather than with the certainty of clear and sometimes false answers. It is precisely in this life experience of deconstruction, but also subsequent reconstruction, that faith and life gain new and meaningful dimensions. And in all this, one does not necessarily let go of the belief in a Love that holds or endures a whole life. But it can become precisely that, which in the midst of everything, becomes the most important, a Love that holds, facing life’s challenges and in the encounter with the meanderings of faith and understanding. And let us be reminded of Jung’s wise thought, what is true in life’s morning may become a lie in life’s evening.

Blessings, strength and peace to you as you do your own walk with, in and through life!

I would love to hear from you and your story if you care to share. Feel free either way!

Translated from Norwegian to English by the help of ChatGPT.

A Reconstructed Faith – Part One

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I am now in my fiftieth year of life and I think that my journey of faith so far, while not a sensational story nor very special, is still a story worth sharing. And I share it here because I hope that my story might perhaps support, alleviate, or inspire the believer or doubter who reads it.

My background and upbringing are in the Pentecostal movement. I was, you could say, born into this movement through my two parents who were Pentecostals, who themselves were also raised in the Pentecostal movement. Until recently, I was also a member of a Pentecostal congregation, which means I have sought spiritual fellowship and friendship in Pentecostal contexts for many years.

As a teenager, I had a rather challenging emotional life and struggled with inner turmoil and also my sincere faith in God. From an early age, I was a seeker of truth, and someone who took my faith seriously, who wanted to share it with others and who wanted to serve wholeheartedly the God I believed in.

From my youth, I have few strong spiritual experiences, but as a student, I had a period where I experienced a great joy based on the belief in and experience of a God who was love and that God loved me. It was an important experience. I remember the challenging time in military service where I read 1 Corinthians 13 repeatedly and where I learned to replace the word “love” in the text with “God”, so that the beautiful description of love became a story of my God’s unconditional love that endured everything. Now it became a story of a God who loves, and I was included.

I have many experiences at Christian camps and meetings where I remember longing for an experience of God and his love. I remember how I struggled with my own thoughts about myself. I wrestled with big questions, including the question of whether I was fundamentally good or evil. It was very serious for me, and it was quite challenging. I would actually be convinced of my own wickedness if it was the truth, rather than to live in falsehood or in a lie, as long as I could also breathe more freely in life.

This is not the story of a saint, but of a teenager and man who struggled with emotions, his faith, and longing for an experience of God. In the midst of these difficult thoughts and uncertainties, I also partially have experienced a preaching that said we are all “zeroes”, but with Jesus in front as number one, we become like a million. And when God sees you, he doesn’t see you, but he sees Jesus. He loves you (but only) through and because of Jesus. At the same time I also heard that God loved us even while we were still sinners, but in my struggle the more uplifting message drowned early on. In my longing and in my strong desire to experience love and also to serve the true God, I rather experienced fighting with myself and my own self-contempt than being too convinced of my own high value.

I cannot blame my upbringing, the preaching, or the Pentecostal movement alone for my challenges and struggles. But it is clear that this had great significance. Perhaps helped by being highly sensitive and vulnerable from the start, and not one of the strong, cool guys. In my younger days I often felt excluded and lonely. And perhaps it is precisely this loneliness that today has given me the motivation to, for example, stand on the side of gay people and demand that we include everyone, that everyone must be allowed to serve God and the Christian community, regardless of their orientation.

So far, this is certainly not a unique or very special story. But I choose to share it now in a few simple sentences. Perhaps these words can reach some of those who need to find strength either in a somewhat challenging youth life with a strong longing for God, or strengthen an adult who is in the middle of life and who no longer feels to sure of the answers to life’s questions. Furthermore, my story is a story of reconstruction, a development in and of faith.

I chose to use the word reconstructed in the title. It was entirely intentional, because it resonated positively. It tells of something being rebuilt, and something being created and developed. It also speaks of a faith in my life that has been in crisis for much of my life, from my teenage years and several years thereafter. But as is well known, a crisis is truly an opportunity to find a stronger foundation to build your life on. It’s about finding something trustworthy and valued without having answers to all of questions of life.

To be continued…

Translated from Norwegian to English by the help of ChatGPT.

Towards The Red Horizon

Dean Stelow

As I am looking towards the Horizon

I see the Red and Light of Longing

I sense here I just Am

In Relationship to Eternity

As I am looking towards the Horizon

Beauty whispers to me

True Words of Belonging

Of Everything and Everyone

As I am looking towards the Horizon

I become Faith

I become Hope

I become Love

The Fire

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The fire within

a powerful force

Able to destroy and

to mend

My ego

in fearful tricks

tries to make it

bow

This fiery force

makes my ego go for

a smile

Hide the fire and

let it go

At least not let it

show

The fire within

my truth to live

Is not to be hid

in fear

and in illusion

There to be real

To act

In this

now

The strength of fire

A life meant to be

Not to be quenched

in the falseness of ego

May I hold it

gently

Refined in contemplation

flow