Visit the Abbey of the Arts online retreat platform to access your programs:

Give Me a Word (and second annual Abbey New Year Giveaway)

Last year I offered the invitation to my readers to consider a word shimmering for them that might carry them throughout the year.  There were 140 beautiful postings and I later created a Wordle from the entries as a celebration of the prayers gathered.  I offer the same invitation this year and again some prizes to give away:

In ancient times, wise men and women fled out into the desert to find a place where they could be fully present to God and to their own inner struggles at work within them.  The desert became a place to enter into the refiner’s fire and be stripped down to one’s holy essence. The desert was a threshold place where you emerged different than when you entered.

Many people followed these ammas and abbas, seeking their wisdom and guidance for a meaningful life.   One tradition was to ask for a word – this word or phrase would be something on which to ponder for many days, weeks, months, sometimes a whole lifetime.  This practice is connected to lectio divina, where we approach the sacred texts with the same request – “give me a word” we ask – something to nourish me, challenge me, a word I can wrestle with and grow into.

Last year my word for the year was sovereignty and it ripened in me as the year unfolded leading me to new discoveries about myself.  I resisted the word at first, as I didn’t like the sound of it.  But I knew in all the internal energy it stirred up that I needed to pay attention.  When I allowed my heart to soften, the word began to shimmer in me, rang long and clear like a chime (hint: sometimes the word which creates resistance in us is the one we most need to pay attention to).

This year my word is sanctuary.  This past week I had to go to the emergency room while alone in a foreign country because of leg pain and shortness of breath.  I was diagnosed with a pulmonary embolism and a blood clot in my leg and admitted to the hospital for two nights of treatment and observation.  I am being medically supervised now and will be fine, but the experience was dis-orienting in many ways (in the sense of calling me to a new orientation).  I have much to process in the coming weeks, but for now I remember as I lay there in the midst of unknowing, that my thoughts were aligned to home, to my husband, to my friends, to my heart-expanding work, to a longing for the refuge of the familiar, but also a profound sense of sanctuary right in the midst of where I was.  The sanctuary in a church is the place where the holy of holies dwells, but we also create sanctuaries for animals needing protection or for persons fleeing persecution.  The layers to this word and how it seems to reach out to me prompts me to choose it as my word for the year to see what else it has to reveal to me.

  • What is your word for the year ahead?  A word which contains within it a seed of invitation to cross a new threshold?
  • What word, phrase, or image is shimmering before you right now inviting you to dwell with it until it ripens fully inside of you?

Share your word in the comments below before Monday, January 3rd.

Leave your word for the year ahead in the comments below plus a couple of sentences describing your choice.  Please note that I have my comments moderated (meaning I need to manually approve them) so it may not show up immediately, but should within 24 hours.

You might also enjoy

Monk in the World Guest Post: Laura J. Collins

I am delighted to share another beautiful submission to the Monk in the World guest post series from the community. Read on for Laura J. Collins’s reflection on practicing biomimicry for spiritual well-being. Janine Benyus, the founder of the Biomimicry Institute, urges individuals, organizations and

Read More »

343 Responses

  1. My word for 2011 is “consecrate”… Using an online etymology dictionary, I see this word comes from the prefix “com” (meaning “together” or “with”) and the root word means “sacred”… I wonder to myself, what does it mean in the first chapter of Jeremiah (vs. 5) that the Lord consecrated Jeremiah before he was even created in the womb? What does it mean to consecrate something? Are all our lives consecrated? What makes something consecrated? Is my life consecrated? Our my material possessions consecrated to God? Hmmmm… lots to think and pray about… –www.juliemccarty.com

  2. Surrender like the river surrenders freely and fully into the sea. May I surrender freely, fully and joyfully into the next minute of my life no holding back.

  3. Thank you so much for writing this post! And for so beautifully presenting this practice to all of us.

    It seems that RESTORATION has chosen me for the coming year ;)

  4. Adventure! As I was reading your post this word jumped into my mind. Discover was my word for last year and wow….did I “discover” a lot last year. Now I guess I am ready for the “adventure” that will come out of all this discovery!

    Adventure, I claim you as my 2011 word! come and resided with me. You are welcome here.

    Thanks for asking! Namaste! Deb

  5. Benediction is my word for the new year. I want to use “good words” to keep my focus in the light of God in all creation. It is so easy to let slip the judgment, the gossip, the sarcastic quip. To think first and to speak what is good and true — this is my focus for the new year.