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        A Simple Message 
        There are many reasons for slipping into simplicity.... Simplicity 
        makes it possible for life to become uncomplicated enough so that 
        the mind can become clear, revealing what is truly important and 
        fulfilling. It helps clarify the reality of ownership in life: what 
        we own, who/what owns us, what duties snare us, what skills claim 
        us, what passions possess us. Such clarity makes it possible for 
        us to make choices for truly living rather than only half-living. 
        One of the early desert fathers, Abba Moses, said to his disciples, 
        "Sit in your cell, and your cell will teach you everything." 
        That 
        is a bit austere for 21st Century America, but there is a principle 
        in that advice that should not be lost. Because our lives are so 
        filled to the brim with things, people, responsibilities, demands, 
        time commitments, emotions, questions and passions, we seldom experience 
        the luxury of seeing what is really deep within us. When the pot 
        of our life is continually stirred with complexity, we move through 
        life at a slow boiling point. We end up feeling like a mixed-up 
        14-bean soup, rather than a cool clear glass of water over ice, or 
        a sage green, soft, smooth slice of avocado. The desert father's 
        advice reminds us of the importance of 'singularity' in coming to 
        an understanding of what it means to be truly human, truly alive. 
         
        --From the essay "Simply Satisfied" 
        by The Rev. Canon Renée Miller 
         
      Read 
        the sermon in its entirety. 
        
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