Posts by Luke Healy
Love is Not All You Need

In the English language, love is a “mega-multi-meaning word,” combining a number of different emotions, relations, aspects of connection, affection, romance, attraction, actions, and more. As such, it can seem all-encompassing, a singular monolith.

Especially in Christianity, it is the heart of our spiritual life as well. It is the first and second greatest commandments. It is the center of the life and teaching of Jesus. It is literally the prime word for how we describe God.

And yet, even still, it is not all we need.

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Our Spiritual Charge in a Rapidly Evolving World

The world is evolving. We are going through a time of great change, which is always disruptive and challenging.

The invitation in WeCreating is to take up the charge and step into our power to be an active part of making the future what it needs to become. Rather than be tossed about by the waves of tumult, we sink deeper into the underlying currents of spirit, with the divine flow in the greater movements of God, the work of evolution.

How is consciousness evolving? And how do we participate in the process?

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Coming into WeCreating from WeSpace

Our divine transfiguration into our Christ being—our mystical becoming beyond individuality.

It calls forth new ways of living and enacting in the world, creating and co-generating the future together in loving evolution.

When we speak of the necessity of an evolution of consciousness in order to survive and thrive in the future, this is the way we come into it holistically.

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Longing for a Glorious World

Lent is often practiced as a time of waiting. We all have seasons of life that are about waiting. We have seasons that feel like preparation or support for something yet to come. In these times, we can fall into the posture of simply enduring. We live in the resistance of just waiting for the time to pass, for the season to be over. For Easter and resurrection to come. Then things will be ok.

Or we can hold the times of anticipation with an eager hope. With a glorious longing.

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In Lament with the World

Whether we be in personal grief or not, we all carry and hold in some way the pain of global distress, crises, and suffering. We have feelings of powerlessness, anger, fear, and sadness. They may be close to the surface or deep within. We carry on with life, for we can only consciously be with this sorrow so much.

The spiritual practice of lament gives us a way to welcome the pain and grief intentionally and allow it to express, rather than trying to keep it contained within. This form of mourning gives us space to let the grief flow however it needs to—as a rushing torrent or a trickling rivulet.

If you are ready and feel able to move in this way, click to read more and move into the practice.

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