Prayer the church’s banquet, angel’s age,
God’s breath in man returning to his birth,
The soul in paraphrase, heart in pilgrimage,
The Christian plummet sounding heav’n and earth
Engine against th’ Almighty, sinner’s tow’r,
Reversed thunder, Christ-side-piercing spear,
The six-days world transposing in an hour,
A kind of tune, which all things hear and fear;
Softness, and peace, and joy, and love, and bliss,
Exalted manna, gladness of the best,
Heaven in ordinary, man well drest,
The milky way, the bird of Paradise,
Church-bells beyond the stars heard, the soul’s blood,
The land of spices; something understood.
I rediscovered George Herbert’s sonnet ‘Prayer (I)’(above) a couple of years ago thanks to Malcolm Guite’s excellent book The Word in the Wilderness: A Poem A Day for Lent and Easter. My Father brought me up reading Herbert, and John Donne, another seventeenth century ‘metaphysical’ priest-poet (and Herbert’s Godfather), and several of his turns of phrase became embedded in me. Perhaps the most accessible of these when I was a child was the opening line of another poem, ’Love bade me Welcome’, but over the past few years, as I have begun to write more extensively about spirituality and creativity and the challenges of living with chronic illness and depression, Herbert’s image of ‘heaven in ordinarie’ has been of recurring, resounding significance.
Perhaps rather unusually, the Anglican Church choose to single out George Herbert as a priest-poet by creating a day of remembrance and celebration of the continuing influence of his devotional lyrics (today, February 27th). As one seventeenth-century commentator noted of Herbert’s poetry, “Herbert speaks to God like one that really believeth in God, and whose business in the world is most with God. Heart-work and heaven-work make up his books”. Unknown to a large audience in his lifetime, from the eighteenth century onwards Herbert’s work became increasingly known and popular. His work has been deeply and broadly influential on a significant number of British poets and composers, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and T.S.Eliot among them; and the Wesleys made hymns from his poems, such as ‘Teach me, my God and King’ and ‘Let all the world in every corner sing’.
George Herbert was born on 3 April 1593 at Black Hall in Montgomery, Wales. His family on his father’s side was one of the oldest and most powerful in Montgomeryshire, though his father, an active local sheriff and member of Parliament, died when Herbert was three and a half years old. His mother, Magdalen, seems to have been an extraordinary woman, fully capable of managing the complex financial affairs of the family, moving the household when necessary, and supervising the academic and spiritual education of her ten children. Herbert credits her with teaching him to write poetry.
He went to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1609, studied for a B.A. then an M.A.; he obtained a Minor fellowship then a Major fellowship, which involved increasing responsibilities as a tutor and lecturer; and was made University Orator in 1620, a position of great prestige within the university, and which was often a stepping-stone to a successful career at Court. The Orator was the spokesperson for the university on a variety of occasions, making speeches and writing letters. As Orator, he attracted the attention of King James I. He made friends with ambitious and powerful men at Court such as the Lord Chancellor Francis Bacon and Bishop John Williams, who became Herbert’s patron and benefactor. He was elected to Parliament twice, but when James I died in 1625, Herbert became seriously interested in being ordained as a Church of England priest. He delayed entering the priesthood due to several years of poverty and illness, and his poetry from this period fully reflects the serious spiritual and bodily struggles he suffered. “I alwaies fear’d sickness more then death,” he wrote to his mother, “because sickness has made me unable to perform those Offices for which I came into the world.”
Herbert was finally ordained in 1630 and settled in the small parish of Bemerton, near Salisbury, Wiltshire. At Bemerton Herbert found somewhere to fulfil his lifelong search for “some place, where I might sing, / And serve thee,” and to finish his final collection of poetry, The Temple. Herbert described this collection as containing “a picture of the many spiritual conflicts that have past betwixt God and my Soul, before I could subject mine to the will of Jesus, my Master: in whose service I have now found perfect freedom.” Herbert’s poetic speaker is never as a distant observer but one who is thoroughly, personally, passionately, eternally, involved in his spiritual struggles. Even when he was first at Cambridge he could write a poem where the speaker cries out “I, joyous, and my mouth wide open, / Am driven to the drenched cross”.
Shortly before his death, at the early age of forty, Herbert sent the manuscript of The Temple to Nicholas Ferrar, the founder of a semi-monastic Anglican religious community at Little Gidding, Lincolnshire, reportedly telling him to publish the poems if he thought they might “turn to the advantage of any dejected poor soul”, otherwise to burn them.
Fortunately for us, they were not burnt. In a letter accompanying two sonnets sent to his mother as a New Year’s gift in 1610, Herbert made a vow “that my poor Abilities in Poetry, shall be all, and ever consecrated to Gods glory.” As I celebrate this poet today in the words of one of the Anglican collects of the day, I wonder: dare I adapt and repeat the words of Herbert’s vow for myself, here and now?
Our God and King, who called your servant George Herbert from The pursuit of worldly honors to be a pastor of souls, a poet, and a priest in your temple: Give us grace, we pray, joyfully to perform the tasks you give us to do, knowing that nothing is menial or common that is done for your sake; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen
by Christine Sine.
Next week is the beginning of Lent for Western churches, and though most of us have heard of Ash Wednesday, many of us are a little confused about the days that precede it. However with the urge to declutter and organize spreading around the planet I thought that this was a good time to think about adding Clean Monday to our celebrations.
For Eastern Orthodox Christians, Clean Monday, the Monday before Ash Wednesday, is the first day of Great Lent. It is a reminder that we should begin Lent with good intentions and a desire to clean our spiritual house. It is a day of strict fasting for Eastern Catholics and orthodox, including abstinence not only from meat but from eggs and dairy products as well. Because of the different calendar used by Orthodox churches this will be March 11 this year (2019). For us Protestants however it might be a good day to set aside for some house cleaning and decluttering.
Shrove Tuesday is the day before Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent in the Western Church. “Shrove” is the past tense of the word “shrive,” which means to hear a confession, assign penance, and absolve from sin. Shrove Tuesday is a reminder that we are entering a season of penance.
Shrove Tuesday is also known as Fat Tuesday or Mardi Gras (which is simply French for Fat Tuesday). In Italy, Fat Tuesday is known as carnevale-goodbye to meat-from which we get our English word carnival. Traditionally people held one last rich feast, using up perishables like eggs, butter and milk before the fast of Lent began. Now in some places, like New Orleans, this has become a huge celebration that really has nothing to do with the beginning of Lent. Our church, St Andrews Episcopal in Seattle always holds a wonderful Mardi Gras celebration that is also a fundraiser for the youth team’s summer outreach.
For many however this is still a significant day. Churches often hold pancake suppers, sometimes as a way to reach out to their neigbours. You can find a great collection of recipes and traditions from around the world for Shrove Tuesday in Fat Tuesday Recipes.
The following prayer of St. Ephrem the Syrian is a common prayer used during this season.
O Lord and Master of my life, keep from me the spirit of indifference and discouragement, lust of power and idle chatter. [kneel/prostration]
Instead, grant to me, Your servant, the spirit of wholeness of being, humble-mindedness, patience, and love. [kneel/prostration]
O Lord and King, grant me the grace to be aware of my sins and not to judge my brother; for You are blessed now and ever and forever. Amen. [kneel/prostration]
by Christine Sine
A couple of weeks ago I was interviewed for the Dear Daughters podcast. Before the interview I was asked to write a letter to my younger self. It was a wonderfully reflective exercise that had me revisiting my childhood and remembering both the good and challenging aspects of it. Interestingly it also had me revisiting my faith journey and asking myself questions that I thought you too would like to reflect on. This was fun and renewing — reminiscing is good for us and it is the topic of one of the chapters in my upcoming book The Gift of Wonder.
Why Did You Commit Your Life to Jesus?
At 15 I had a radical conversion experience. but I look back to my early childhood and realize that God was always nudging me. I always had a craving for something more from life, an awareness of a loving presence outside myself that held me, loved me and comforted me. Wen my spirit raged with anger God brought peace. When my soul felt abandoned God drew me close. When my life seemed full of ashes God showed me beauty. It is hard for me to remember all that made me commit my life to Jesus but I think it was primarily this feeling of only being complete when in God’s presence that was the initial draw, a feeling that has only strengthened as the years progressed.
What has kept you following him?
I grew up with an authoritarian, workaholic God who was hard to follow through those early years. At times my faith stumbled over the harsh disciplines God seemed to impose on me. More that anything it was discovering the God who invites me to be creative, to ask questions and use my imagination, that liberated me from the narrow confines of my early perspectives and kept me on the journey. In later years connecting to a God who loves fun and laughter and beauty has been even more strengthening of my faith. My soul sings with delight and my spirit is full of joy whenever I think of God. It doesn’t mean my faith ignores my own shortcomings and still broken areas, or that I am unaware of the brokenness of the world around me and my need to respond, but it does mean I am more easily able to face these and seek God’s forgiveness and step out in compassionate response.
What is One hope you have for the future of your faith?
My hope is that I will continue to learn more about the wonder and wisdom of my God until the day I die. I want to learn more about what God enjoys and how I can continue to delight the heart of God every day. For now though I will be satisfied with expressing the joy and delight that bubbles up from within at this moment.
What Would You Say To Your Younger Self?
Here is the letter I wrote to my younger self. What would you say?
Dear Eight Year Old Christine,
I write this on a snowy Seattle morning half a world and a lifetime away from where you sit hankering after travel and adventure. You always wanted to travel yet I am sure that in your wildest dreams you could never imagine how this desire will be fulfilled. You will travel far and have many adventures but not as a tourist.
Let your passions drive you, not just your passion for adventure but also your passion for learning, for gardening, and above all your passion for God, now nothing more than a seed but soon to blossom into a beautiful plant that will continue to grow throughout your life.
Reach for what God has seeded in your innermost being. Your love of life, adventure and learning are part of who God has created you to be. They will open your mind to new ideas, new perspectives on faith and new understandings of who God is. As you learn to integrate these deep desires your life will unfold in incredible ways. Most importantly your faith will be strengthened and your love for God will grow deep and strong.
Reach for the extraordinary. Don’t give in to your weaknesses. Never say I couldn’t do that because… And when people tell you something cannot be done because no one has ever done it before, don’t believe them. Try it anyway. You will make mistakes, but you will also make surprising things happen. That is one of your gifts. You will encounter some incredible opportunities and accomplish some amazing things. Don’t let it go to your head though. Learn from the extraordinary people you admire who remain humble and teachable recognizing that the universe is far bigger than they are.
Don’t be afraid to stretch beyond your comfort zones or the comfort zones of those around you. Take risks, experiment, let your creativity inspire you. It is in the wonderful gifts of the unexpected that you will find your greatest fulfillment.
Relish your uniqueness. You are a strong woman. Don’t expect to tread the traditional paths in your career, your lifestyle or your life choices. Be confident in who God has created you to be and don’t let others shape you into the person they think you should become.
Smile often, be kind to others, open yourself to awe and wonder and have fun with life. Don’t be too hard on yourself and learn to love and believe in yourself at an earlier age than I did.
We have also created a special set of Gift of Wonder prayer cards to compliment Christine’s new book coming out, The Gift of Wonder. These cards are designed to enrich your study of The Gift of Wonder. Prayers from the book are illustrated with images to assist your contemplation. The back of each card provides a short excerpt with a question for you to reflect on as you study and process what you are reading. You can purchase a digital copy, 1 set or 3 sets below. There is also an option to pre-order my new book and with your purchase. This bundle is only available through the Godspace website.

by Lilly Lewin
MOVE towards LOVE
I’ve been fortunate to live in many different places. In one town Lent was what you found in your belly button or your dryer, it was not a season of the Church Year. In another town where we lived, Lenten specials were advertised on every fast food sign offering fish sandwiches on Fridays and there were fish fry dinners offered around town. What about you? When you hear the word Lent what comes to mind? What does the word make you think of or feel?
What if we saw the season of Lent as a MOVEMENT towards LOVE this year?
This is a confession prayer station that I created for a Sacred Space prayer experience long ago and I’ve used it many times since, most recently in a Sacred Space called “MOVE TOWARD LOVE” You can use this prayer of confession on your own, with your family, your small group, youth group, or even your entire church. You can create it as a prayer station or pass around the Lint Brush in your small group or around your dinner table and talk about the Lint, the junk, the sin, that sticks to each of us. If you do it with your entire church or a bigger group, you can create multiple prayer stations around the worship space. You also can do it as a corporate response, by having a Lint Brush on each row and have people pass it down as they pray.
Find a Lint Brush.
LENT OR LINT?
When you hear the word LENT what comes to mind?
Do you think LINT or LENT?
Do you think about MOVING towards Easter?
Or do you just think about the stuff in your dryer?
Do you think “sack cloth and ashes”? Does it make you feel guilty?
Do you think about giving stuff up for Lent like chocolate or cokes/soft drinks?
Or do you think of LENT as an opportunity to MOVE closer to Jesus?
Consider LENT…
Ask Jesus to show you today.
LINT…the junk that sticks to each of us.
What JUNK sticks to you ?
What is the SIN that entangles you and
Keeps you from where God wants to take you?
What is keeping you from MOVING and starting an Adventure with God?
USE THE LINT BRUSH.
As you roll the lint brush on your clothes.
Use it as an act of confession.
Ask Jesus to remove the LINT in your life,
The junk, the sin that keeps you from MOVING toward the Love of JESUS!
Ask Jesus to remove the stuff that keeps you from MOVING into the Adventure you are called you to live!
Tell Jesus your LINT.
Give it to HIM.
Ask Jesus to remove it!
He will because He loves you!
MOVE towards LOVE this Lent!
With Lent only a few weeks away, I know that many of you are looking for apps, scripture plans and devotionals to guide your journey. Obviously there are hundreds out there. Written, online, downloadable; you choose. I have tried to provide a few from a variety of theological perspectives. If there are others you think should be on the list, please let me know. And by the way, the photo is of a 500 year old Bible – seemed appropriate for the season especially (at least to me) that though the method we use to study may change, the message is timeless.
Daily Readings
- Sacred Space – Daily Prayer with the Irish Jesuits
- Pray as You Go – also from the Jesuits. Daily prayer for portable MP3 players.
- Live Lent – Embracing Justice. Lent for 2022. Here on Apple or on Android
- Biblegateway.com’s Reading plan for Lent – can also be downloaded as an app.
- Church Father’s Lenten Reading Plan – a downloadable reading plan
- Download The Bible App – The plans deliver a relevant scripture verse to users each day that are themed around the topic selected by the user with one specifically for Lent.
- Interesting 5 apps for Lent from ccr.org.uk.
- Prayers for Lent and Advent on Googleplay
- Seven Apps to Help You Through Lent
- 10 Catholic Apps for Lent
- The Daily Office From the Book of Common Prayer
- Presbyterian USA daily readings
- Presbyterian Mission for 2021, 2022, and also 2023
- Catholic Gallery – Daily Mass Readings for 2022, and for 2023
- Reflections from Forward Day by Day
- Pittsburg Theological Seminary for 2022 and for 2023
And don’t forget the free resources available from Godspace
- 40 Daily Ideas Guide for Lent – FREE download
- Hungering for Life – Creative Exercises for Lent – FREE download
- Maundy Thursday Agape Liturgy – FREE download
- Gospel Eyes by Jeannie Kendall – FREE download
- Resources For Lent
- Music For Lent
- Five Ways to Foster Creativity in Kids During Lent
- Seven Tips for Creating Sacred Space For Lent
- Let’s Get Creative with Lent
- Let’s Get Creative – Doodle Your Way Through the Lenten Calendar
- Stations of the Cross – by Lilly Lewin
- Lenten Reflection Video by Christine Sine
- Is This A Fast – meditation video by Christine Sine
- An Invitation To Journey – Lenten Video by Christine Sine
- Were You There When They Crucified My Lord? This meditation is designed for Good Friday and does not have music.
Please check out our complete list of Godspace resources for Lent through Holy Week including our free downloads.
As an Amazon Associate, I receive a small amount for purchases made through appropriate links.
Thank you for supporting Godspace in this way.
When referencing or quoting Godspace Light, please be sure to include the Author (Christine Sine unless otherwise noted), the Title of the article or resource, the Source link where appropriate, and ©Godspacelight.com. Thank you!