Another Call

Narrow my window had become
I could barely breathe,
barely live in this or their temple
Then they closed it, window shut
I fell, I was lost
Trapped in the kingdom,
of the desperate and dying
What had been a small light,
now gone
I was nobody’s son

Soon lost at sea
Searching wherever
Seemed like I’d never
find new land
Monsters in the deep,
dragons in the sky
Fire burning,
a salamander’s torch
So thirsty

That’s when I saw the flicker,
from a distant lamp
Oil kept it going,
until my hand held the light
I suddenly saw all its might
It created a terrible fright
I would have to fight,
a wrestling for my life,
my own soul

The angel from the deep,
entered upon the land
Was it also a woman, was it man?
I couldn’t know
Yet the angel’s sword
bruised me in the dark
The wound bled red
I cried into the Silence,
and fell to my knees

It was a new beginning,
there on my knees
The red, bleeding wound
received a silent balm
I sensed fresh air, I could breathe
I saw a window open,
then all windows gone
My breathing got deep,
and I drank from a rich well
Everything opened

Oh day of glory,
when I could leave behind,
the barren land of agony
The principals were taken
When I woke up, like from a dream,
I was standing on my feet
Made new,
in the image of One,
I had now become

I sensed freedom
New adventures awaited
I was made for living after all
I sensed another call

Photo of Alnes in Norway: Punam Kumari

Ego and The Vastness of Self (part two)

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As much as we need our ego, and it’s helpful till a certain extent that our ego is transformed and made more flexible, just as much we need to know that we are so much more than our ego. We cannot live and function in this world without our ego (so I am not proclaiming ego-death), but at the same time we cannot go on living meaningful lives in the second part of our lives, without some experience of this other than ego.

This otherness I speak of is the most beautiful thing in the wholeness of life. It is about a vastness of a self or Self, that goes far beyond our imagination. Our egos are a beautiful creation too, at least sometimes, but this vastness I am pointing to, is of a different quality all together. And it is there for you to see and experience if you so desire and you realise that is what you truly want and need.

When the message “you are enough” doesn’t speak to you heart anymore, it may mean you are ready for a step in a new direction. You may be ready for a deeper experience and knowing of the Great Mystery.

Our egos are limited and will die, when our lives are over. At least most of it will disappear I think, since it is mostly a structure created by our minds. But the vastness of Self, Being itself, is eternal. The Holy Book tells us that humans have eternity in their hearts, so it is into our hearts and to the depth we need to go if we are to know a fragment more of this Vastness.

It is this Vastness I am trying to point to in writing these blog posts and most of my poems. In realizing this bigger truth about my life and life in general, I have come into the experience of more freedom. I do still struggle with life, and very often it is my smaller ego that creates the trouble. It is not what other people say or do. It is how my ego percieves what they say and do. It is how my past history and emotions, which is my bigger ego and also hidden ego react to the experience I have.

By taking in, preferable in silence, and silent reflection, the other part of the picture. By realizing there is a Vastness, an Otherness, something Infinite holding us all, I am slowly able to train my ego into stepping back. I don’t need to make such a big scene out of everything. I am not governed only by the ego’s need to protect itself. I can be led more by Spirit and intuition.

The Spiritfilled life is the other way, the new way, the better way, and eternal way. I do want to be led by Spirit. I do want to know and experience Oneness with all. The Bible says, everything and everyone shall be one in Christ. That is the good news! That is what fills my soul, when my ego has failed me. And beware, the ego will fail us, and in particular we can grow tired of our own ego in midlife. This can even bring us into what John of the Cross called the Dark Night of the Soul.

Yet, I do hope you can take with you something for your journey by reading these reflections. And off course, I do only see in part, and I do know I may get things wrong too, but I also believe I have found some truth that I’d like to share with you, though simply so. There may be a part three of this text that will be postet later.

For now, be at peace wherever you are in this world – and do remember, “you” are part of this Vastness.

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.