Friday, June 13, 2008

2000 yr old seed growing

I loved the palm trees in Israel, they were many and huge.  Check out this story from the Lekarev Report.

Israeli Scientists Get 2000 year old Seed to Sprout

Israeli scientists have succeeded in getting a 2,000-year-old date 
seed to sprout and grow into a palm of a native type that had been extinct for hundreds of years. 

The seed - nicknamed Methusaleh after the oldest person in the Bible -was found in the ancient fortress of Masada, on a hilltop in the Judean desert by the Dead Sea where Jewish zealots committed mass suicide to avoid surrender to the Romans in the first century CE. 

Project manager Sarah Sallon hopes the palm will prove to be a fruit-bearing female, but that she will know only in a few years time, when the now more than 1.20-meter-tall sprout grows into a palm tree.  If another of the seeds found at Masada can be cultivated and proves to be male, the two trees will be able to reproduce. 

Israel, which now grows only imported date species originating from countries like Morocco, Egypt and Iraq, would be able to cultivate its own native kind: the Judean date palm, or Phoenix dactylifera in Latin, hundreds of years after it died out. 

It is no surprise therefore that Sallon sounds excited. According to the 
first-century Roman author, zoologist and botanist Pliny the Elder, "huge" forests of date palms stretched in his time from the Sea of Galilee in what is now northern Israel to the Dead Sea in the south, she explains. 


Monday, June 09, 2008

Mercy prayer

Monday, June 9, 2008
Matthew 9:9-13


I've been saying Morning Prayer (Book of Common Prayer) since the beginning of Lent for my morning devotions.  I felt I needed the structure, especially as I returned from a silent retreat at a Catholic retreat center that first weekend in Lent.  I was helped and reminded there by entering into ancient forms of prayer and liturgy, and not left to my whims and feelings any given morning - which sometimes devolves into minimal Bible reading and prayer on the run.

Anyway, it's been good - though I have started to loosen up on strictly following the form. Morning Prayer begins with some opening sentences from Scripture, then immediately calls us to repentance and confession.  This has been good and important for me.  I have been trying to follow the Ignatian pattern of reflecting on the previous 24 hours with Jesus and confessing and repenting in the process.   

This morning as I began with repentance and confession I remembered the ancient "breath prayer:"
Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the living God
have mercy on me, a sinner.
It's been a while since I've practiced it, but the reason it's sometimes referred to as a breath prayer is that it can be prayed continuously, in fact,  it is encouraged to be done that way in prayer - 
as one breaths in, "Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the living God," 
and breaths out, "have mercy on me, a sinner."  

Repeating it over and over in prayer, in a disciplined (and yes, focused) manner.  It can become a "habit."  A way of training oneself to be praying it all through the day.

It can be reduced, as one becomes more familiar with it, 
"Lord Jesus Christ," and 
"Have mercy on me."  

It can even simply become, 
"Jesus.  
Mercy."  

We sang during communion last night, "This is the air I breath..."  
Indeed, may it be so.


"I desire mercy, not sacrifice."
(Hosea 6:6;  Matthew 9:13)