Lent is about more than going to church on weekdays and giving up chocolate or social media. It’s also a time to form one’s heart and mind through study and prayer. In Where the Eye A
		
		
		
			
			Lent is about more than going to church on weekdays and giving up chocolate or social media. It’s also a time to form one’s heart and mind through study and prayer. In Where the Eye Alights, Marilyn McEntyre offers forty short meditations, based on excerpts from Scripture and poetry, that guide readers on a devotional journey from Ash Wednesday through Holy Saturday. As in lectio divina—the spiritual practice of reading Scripture repetitively and meditatively—McEntyre invites us to notice words that may give us pause and summon us to reflection. This book calls our attention to how the Spirit speaks through phrases that can open doors to deep places for those willing to sit still with them. 
“Lent is a time of permission,” says McEntyre. “Many of us find it hard to give ourselves permission to pause, to sit still, to reflect or meditate or pray in the midst of daily occupations—most of them very likely worthy in themselves—that fill our waking minds and propel us out of bed and on to the next thing. We need the explicit invitation the liturgical year provides to change pace, to curtail our busyness a bit, to make our times with self and God a little more spacious, a little more leisurely, and see what comes. The reflections I offer here come from a very simple practice of daily meditation on whatever has come to mind in the quiet of early morning.”
		 
		
		
			
				
					Marilyn McEntyre is the award-winning author of several books on language and faith, including What's in a Phrase? Pausing Where Scripture Gives You Pause (winner of a Christianity Today 2015 book award in spirituality), When Poets Pray, Speaking Peace in a Climate of Conflict, and Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies.
				
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					Table of Contents
Preface
 Schedule of Readings
 1. Remember that you are dust . . .
 2. Into the wilderness
 3. Watch and pray
 4. Repentance and rest
 5. Broader than the measures of the mind
 6. Like birds hovering
 7. Every riven thing
 8. Centering first
 9. Unfolding
 10. A people prepared
 11. By every word
 12. Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his
 13. Their humble little souls
 14. Going about our business
 15. Like pollen or manna
 16. A way of knowing
 17. Love in the open hand
 18. We’ll pass it on to you
 19. Where we walk
 20. Loving listening
 21. “I don’t have all the time in the world, but I have all night”
 22. Getting the news from poems
 23. Could I have a word?
 24. Suffer the little children
 25. Weep with those who weep
 26. Dulce et decorum
 27. Riding on the wind
 28. Recognition and epiphany
 29. Evils done on our behalf
 30. Prayer is a place
 31. And the Spirit of God came upon him
 32. Imitation of Christ
 33. Too much with us
 34. A multitude keeping festival
 35. Money changing
 36. What is common to mankind
 37. Whom shall I fear?
 38. Different from all other nights
 39. Stations of the Cross
 40. The harrowing of hell
				 
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