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This Beloved of ours is merciful and good. Besides, he so deeply longs for our love that he keeps calling us to come closer. This voice of his is so sweet that the poor soul falls apart in the face of her own inability to instantly do whatever he asks of her. And so you can see, hearing him hurts much more than not being able to hear him⦠For now, his voice reaches us through words spoken by good people, through listening to spiritual talks, and reading sacred literature. God calls to us in countless little ways all the time. Through illnesses and suffering and through sorrow he calls to us. Through a truth glimpsed fleetingly in a state of prayer he calls to us. No matter how halfhearted such insights may be, God rejoices whenever we learn what he is trying to teach us.
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Teresa de Γvila (Interior Castle)
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There is a secret place. A radiant sanctuary. As real as your own kitchen. More real than that. Constructed of the purest elements. Overflowing with the ten thousand beautiful things. Worlds within worlds. Forests, rivers. Velvet coverlets thrown over featherbeds, fountains bubbling beneath a canopy of stars. Bountiful forests, universal libraries. A wine cellar offering an intoxi cation so sweet you will never be sober again. A clarity so complete you will never again forget. This magnificent refuge is inside you. Enter. Shatter the darkness that shrouds the doorway⦠Believe the incredible truth that the Beloved has chosen for his dwelling place the core of your own being because that is the single most beautiful place in all of creation.
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Mirabai Starr (Interior Castle)
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Your God would never punish you for being a human being: this life itself is your penance...But it is also more than that: it is a crucible for transformation. Each trial, every loss, is an opportunity for you to meet suffering with love and make of it an offering, a prayer. The minute you lift your pain like a candle the darkness vanishes, and mercy comes rushing in to heal you.
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Mirabai Starr (The Showings of Julian of Norwich)
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When we show up to make art, we need to get still enough to hear what wants to be expressed though us, and then we need to step out of the way and let it. We must be willing to abide in a space of not knowing before we can settle into knowing.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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Our capacity to forgive is our superpower.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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Mystics seem to have no shame about contradicting themselves left and right. They blithely proclaim that the cure for pain is in the pain itself and that the cry of longing is the sigh of merging. That's because the path of the mystic reconciles contradictory propositions (such as harrowing sorrow and radical amazement) and blesses us with an extended capacity to sit with ambiguity, to treasure vulnerability, to celebrate paradox as the highest truth.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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We would much rather be undefined than ordained in traditions that donβt fit our curves.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce and Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics)
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I think that much of our depression, anxiety, and addiction has to do with what John writes about: the soul's need and longing for transcendence. This need is instinctual and unavoidable.
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Mirabai Starr (Dark Night of the Soul)
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Itβs that keeping the heart open, even in hell, makes space for the Beloved. It is in the darkest nights of our souls, when all we know is that we know nothing, that the presence of the sacred may quietly well up, mingling with our pain and connecting us to a love that will never die.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce and Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics)
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It lasts, and will last forever, because God loves it. Everything that is has its being through the love of God.
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Mirabai Starr (The Showings of Julian of Norwich)
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the heaven to which Jesus points is the spaciousness within ourselvesβone that makes room for those who threaten us, for those who are different, even for those who have betrayed us.
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Mirabai Starr (God of Love: A Guide to the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam)
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This magnificent refuge is inside you. Enter. Shatter the darkness that shrouds the doorway. Step around the poisonous vipers that slither at your feet, attempting to throw you off your course. Be bold. Be humble. Put away the incense and forget the incantations they taught you. Ask no permission from the authorities. Slip away. Close your eyes and follow your breath to the still place that leads to the invisible path that leads you home.
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Mirabai Starr (The Interior Castle)
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The more you turn inward, the more available the sacred becomes. when you sit in. silence and turn your gaze toward the holy mystery you once called God, the mystery follows you back out into the world. When you walk with purposeful focus on breath and birdsong, your breathing and the twitter of the chickadee reveal themselves as miracles. .
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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Julian of Norwich's message is as relevant now as it was in the Middle Ages: God loves us completely, exactly as we are. βThen he
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Mirabai Starr (The Showings of Julian of Norwich)
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Sometimes God feels very far away, and so we long for God. Not because we believe that God and self are ultimately existentially separate, but because here in the midst of our relative reality our souls yearn to return to where we come from: Absolute Love.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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So you sit down to meditate not only because it helps you to find rest in the arms of the formless Beloved but also because it increases your chances of being stunned by beauty when you get back up. Encounters with the sacred that radiate from the core of the ordinary embolden you to cultivate stillness and simple awareness. In the midst of a world that is begging you to distract yourself, this is no easy practice. Yet you keep showing up. You are indomitable. You are thirsty for wonder.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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Shabbat is about harmony. Itβs about restoring balanceβthe balance between the masculine and feminine aspects of our own souls and the balance of power between women and men. Itβs about building community and remembering our interdependence with each other and with the Earth herself, taking responsibility for our habits of consumption and allowing ourselves to rest and recharge. Shabbat is about forging a direct relationship with the Shekinah, the feminine face of God. Itβs about taking refuge in her arms. Her time of exile is over now. We do not need to keep sending her away. We are called now to reinstate the feminine to her rightful place in our lives, in our relationships, and throughout creation. She belongs here and itβs time to celebrate her presence, draw on her strength, drink in her consolation, and let her guide us in repairing the world.
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce and Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics)
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Let nothing disturb you. Let nothing upset you. Everything changes. God alone is unchanging. With patience all things are possible. Whoever has God lacks nothing. God alone is enough.
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Mirabai Starr (Saint Teresa of Avila: Passionate Mystic)
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Ever since that troublemaker Eve handed that gullible Adam the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, they say, human beings have been continuously messing up and suffering the consequences. But in the depths of your darkest despair your Beloved calls to you: "Look," he says, and opens the fathomless beautiful wound of his heart so that you can peer inside. All creation is nestled there, bathed in beauty. "Do you see any sin here?" he asks. "Do you detect a shred of retribution?" You do not. All you perceive, from horizon to endless horizon, is love.
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Mirabai Starr (The Showings of Julian of Norwich)
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For women mystics, contemplative life is not so much a matter of transcending the illusions of mundane existence or attaining states of perfect equanimity as it is about becoming as fully present as possible to the realities of the human experience. In showing up for what is, no matter how pedestrian or tedious, how aggravating or shameful, the what is begins to reveal itself as imbued with holiness. How do we make space in our lives for this kind of sacred seeing?
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Mirabai Starr (Wild Mercy)
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Letting your heart break open all over again when you remember the unbearable beauty of the Beloved's in visible face.
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Mirabai Starr
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My God is too vast to be contained by theology, too mysterious to be defined, too holy to be personified. My God neither punishes nor rewards, but invites me into a living relationship that unfolds in the heart of all that is. My God belongs to everyone, and this belonging connects me to the web of all life.
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Mirabai Starr (God of Love: A Guide to the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam)
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I am told that only two groups carry very little negative baggage inside of Christianity: Franciscans and Quakers.
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Mirabai Starr (Saint Francis of Assisi: Brother of Creation (Devotions, Prayers, and Living Wisdom Ser. Book 1))
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sin has no substance because it is the absence of all that is good and kind, loving and caringβall that is of God. Sin is nothing but separation from our divine source. And separation from the Holy One is nothing but illusion. We are always and forever βonedβ in love with our Beloved.
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Mirabai Starr (Julian of Norwich: The Showings: Uncovering the Face of the Feminine in Revelations of Divine Love)
Mirabai Starr (Ordinary Mysticism: Your Life as Sacred Ground)
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MIRABAI STARR Author of God of Love: A Guide to the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam and Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce & Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics
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A. Helwa (Secrets of Divine Love: A Spiritual Journey into the Heart of Islam (Studying Qur'an & Hadith Book 2))