~ This is SO good ~ The Astonishing and Beautiful Name of God ~

posted in: Uncategorized | 0

~ SWEET REMINDER ~
Ponderings, Poems & Practices
    for Living Your Brilliance!

Breathing God

Hello Beloved,

This is a message from my heart.  Be sure to read to the end for the most lusciously beautiful, message about the name of God. I’m serious. Be sure to make it down below the pink line, for the love of your breath …

This morning sunrise, dancing Taiji on my rooftop, the soft pink-blue-orange sky whispered gently to me through the caress of the breeze.  Beginnings and endings.  My practice has been speaking to me about these.  Begin with consciousness. End with consciousness. Welcome a beginning.  Offer gratitude at an ending.
 
This morning I woke to news that my mother’s forever-best-friend had left her body the night before. This was anticipated news that has touched me with sweet love, heartache, gratitude and reverence.

Ordene & Sharon
I dance for Ordene.
 
An ending. A beginning.
 
A death. A birth.
 
An inhale. A last exhale.

I had already planned to send the following reflection to you. I saw it on FaceBook last week and been marinading in the beautifulness of this message. It’s even more precious to me this morning. I dedicate it to Ordene and to YOU.  
Blessed be,
Sharon

There was a moment when Moses had the nerve to ask God what his name is. God was gracious enough to answer, and the name he gave is recorded in the original Hebrew as YHWH.

Over time we’ve arbitrarily added an “a” and an “e” in there to get YaHWeH, presumably because we have a preference for vowels.

But scholars and Rabi’s have noted that the letters YHWH represent breathing sounds, or aspirated consonants. When pronounced without intervening vowels, it actually sounds like breathing.

YH (inhale): WH (exhale).

So a baby’s first cry, his first breath, speaks the name of God.  A deep sigh calls His name – or a groan or gasp that is too heavy for mere words.

Even an atheist would speak His name, unaware that their very breathe is giving constant acknowledgment to God.

Likewise, a person leaves this earth with their last breath, when God’s name is no longer filing their lungs.

So when I can’t utter anything else, is my cry calling out His name?

Being alive means I speak His name constantly.

So, is it heard the loudest when I’m the quietest?
In sadness, we breathe heavy sighs.
In joy, our lungs feel almost like they will burst.
In fear we hold our breath and have to be told to breathe slowly to help us calm down.

When we’re about to do something hard, we take a deep breath to find our courage.

When I think about it, breathing is giving him praise. Even in the hardest moments!

This is so beautiful and fills me with emotion every time I grasp the thought. God chose to give himself a name that we can’t help but speak every moment we’re alive.

All of us, always, everywhere.

Waking, sleeping, breathing, with the name of God on our lips.

written by – Sandra Thurman Caporale from the Memorial Church of Christ in Houston – shared with gratitude

*   Sealed with a breath  *