Small Potatoes are the Tastiest

Jesus said, “If you are faithful in the small things, you will also be faithful in the large things.” So we must pay attention to the small things.

Prompted by the words of Jesus I decided to title my article Small Potatoes are the Tastiest. I remembered when I was a boy growing up in England during the Second World War. We had a victory garden. There wasn’t much food being imported into Britain at that time, so people created victory gardens where we could grow our own food.

In our victory garden we grew vegetables; we had potatoes, peas, beets and cabbage, and some fruit such as raspberries and strawberries. It was fun working with that garden, and I was the one to go out and pick the potatoes. I loved to pick them when they were very small, what we called new potatoes. I’d take up the potato plant and all those new little potatoes were hanging there; I would shake off the dirt and gather the new potatoes to take them in the house and wash them. Then we’d have them for dinner. And they were always the tastiest, especially with lots of butter on them.

The small potatoes were always the tastiest. And I thought, “That’s really true about life too; it’s the small things that are really the tastiest.”

I thought about some of the small things my parents did which they didn’t really think about but which affected my life and the direction of my life.

I thought about my mother, who would take us on picnics when my Dad was in the service and the country was at war. My mother would take us down to the bus station and we’d catch a bus for some distance then get off and go across some fields to a little stream near a small village to have our picnic. I can still see it. It always created in me a sense of adventure, of not being confined to one place because of what was going on around me. That was a seemingly small thing, but it was a real gift to me and has affected my life all the way through.

My Dad didn’t like to show his affection too much in an outward way. But one way he would do it is that we would wrestle; I’d grab him around the neck and we’d wrestle lovingly and he’d let me win. And I think that contributed to my love of the martial arts that I later went into and which in turn led into my spiritual path, and eventually into becoming a Unity minister.

It’s the small things we remember that really touch our lives; it’s the kind word, it’s the loving touch, it’s a loving glance, it’s an attentive listening, being present, just being there for us. It’s those things that make the difference.

There’s a true story about a young man called David who now is a Junior High School teacher. When David was a young boy, he loved throwing stones and one day he was in his backyard and he threw a big stone over the top of the fence. He heard a crashing sound, so he threw more stones over the fence, with a resulting crash of breaking glass.

A few days went by and the man next door came over; he was there talking to his parents when the boy came home from school. The parents were ashamed and disappointed in David. But the man said to them, “I’d like to bring David to my home to show him some things.” So the parents agreed to that and David sheepishly followed this man into the garden next door toward the shattered greenhouse.

David was wondering what was going to happen to him. But the man simply said to him, “Look, I want to show you these flowers. Look, these are gladiolus and they grow so tall and in so many different colors. Aren’t they beautiful? And these here are violets; these were my wife’s favorites; I miss her so much and whenever I look at these violets in the deep purple I remember her. These over here, these are orchids; they are difficult to grow but you’ve never really seen such a beautiful flower, you cannot believe your own eyes until you see that orchid and the different varieties with the exquisite shapes and colors these flowers produce.”

He stayed about an hour in the greenhouse showing the boy all the different flowers. Finally the man said, “O.K. David, you can go home now.”

David said, “I knew on that day that I was going to grow up and be a teacher, because this man had shown me how important it was to teach, to show, to share.” He said, “He could have yelled at me or done all kinds of things to punish me, but he didn’t; he just showed me his flowers and how beautiful they were.”

Those kind words made the whole difference in David’s life.

It’s the small potatoes that are the tastiest.

The keys of heaven turn on small things. Heaven is born on this earth in these small things: an hour in a greenhouse, the gift of a teddy bear, a small spark of hope, leaven, or a small seed planted in one’s mind that grows to become a Unity minister.

We are the agents of the Divine Spirit on earth and it’s up to us to awake to that possibility with us. We don’t have to do grandiose things; when we think of heaven it doesn’t have to be something dramatic or grandiose. It’s that which expresses in and through us and it’s born on earth through the small things that we do for others, for our world, and for ourselves.

God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

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 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

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Is It Time to Just Let Go?

Do you feel like you’re constantly chasing after something?
  
It might be a better job, a bigger car, more money, more friends.
  
Or you might be chasing after your own happiness.
 
But the Buddhists don’t believe in chasing.
  
They believe you should simply “let go” of anything that makes you UN-happy.
  
And you’ll achieve the same results — only without the effort!
 
 
Of course, sometimes it’s easier said than done. But I guess we can even let go that thought too, and just keep on letting go.
  
You can read all about the idea of letting go (and simultaneously finding yourself) in the following article by Craig Harper.
Guest contributor Craig Harper (B.Ex.Sci.) describes himself as a qualified exercise scientist, author, columnist, radio presenter, television host, motivational speaker and university lecturer. 
 
Enjoy – and live for the moment!
 
 
Remember, God is Blessing You Right Now!
 
 
Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

 

Here’s the article:

I like the concept of letting go.It’s mostly where I find joy, calm, peace and purpose. It’s so much easier than chasing. And so much more effective.

Rather than chasing happiness, the Buddhist philosophy suggests that we simply choose to let go of that which makes us unhappy.

The very notion of chasing something has a sense of urgency about it, doesn’t it?

And, of course, with urgency comes anxiety. And with anxiety comes illness. And with illness comes unhappiness.
 
Maybe our gentle Buddhist friends are onto something.
 
Some people spend their lives chasing acceptance and approval.
 
       Perhaps it’s time for some of us to let go of the need to seek the acceptance, approval and even permission of others?
 
       Perhaps we’re good enough all by ourselves?

Perhaps we should stop giving away our power?

Perhaps in the letting go we’ll find the only acceptance we need: self-acceptance. Some will spend their lives chasing physical perfection. I have some expertise in this area. While it’s great to be in shape, it’s not great when our confidence, self-esteem and sense of self are dependant on our physical appearance.
 
Considering that we spend most of our lives in a slowly deteriorating physical shell, this pursuit is an exercise in frustration. This desire for physical perfection arises out of fear. Fear of not being pretty enough. Good enough. Desirable enough. And, of course, fear is at the root of unhappiness.
 
Some will spend their lives chasing financial wealth, only to wake up one day and discover that all they’ve created is emotional and spiritual poverty. Of course, there’s nothing wrong with being wealthy, except when that wealth defines us. If only we taught our kids (and ourselves) that being rich has nothing to do with money or material possessions. Some of us have spent years (and years) trying to ‘find’ ourselves.
 
Maybe it’s time to stop looking and simply let go of everything that isn’t us?
 
When I let go of everything I am trying to do, be, create and own, there I am. And while I might do, be, create and own much in my life, I am none of those things and they are not me.
 
I can’t be found in things. And neither can you.
 
What do you need to let go of?
 

 By Craig Harper   

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 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

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Have a Generous Heart

 

 

Here’s a wonderful letter from a friend and a true testimony to the universal power of the law of compensation active in our lives when we let ourselves be motivated by generosity:

“I often shop the Goodwill and Salvation Army Thrift Stores. I would suggest others stop in those stores not only to see what ‘bargains and treasures’ you can find, but also once in awhile you will encounter someone who might be shopping for clothing for their children, as I once did.  After watching him holding shirts and pants up to his three children to see if they’d fit, he went to the checkout counter, and I got in line behind him.  When he was told the total amount of his purchases, I handed the clerk the money to pay for his children’s clothing.  Of course, he didn’t want me to pay his bill, but I insisted.  I knew in my soul that I was making a difference in someone else’s life.

Last week while shopping Goodwill, I got behind an obviously very poor mom.  She had a baby and two toddlers, and it was just past lunch time.  She had a small bag of potato chips for the three children to share.  The toddlers were all looking at the candy and potato chips on the display case and begging for more to eat.  They handed her several bags of treats, which she put back.  I picked up several little bags of candy/treats, gave them to her with $3.00 to pay for them.  She thanked me profusely.  When I got home, I went to my mailbox and there was a completely unexpected check for a consulting job I had done about 6 months previously which I had forgotten about.  The amount of the check…………….. $300.00 I was “paid back”.   Unbelievable how the Universe takes care of us, maybe not always with money, but with JOY to our soul”.

Carole

 

Remember, God is Blessing You Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

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Life Made New!

In the Easter story, one particular image in the gospel of John captures me; it is the image of Mary weeping as she stoops and peers into the tomb. The body of Jesus has disappeared. But right there quite close to her, standing near her shoulder, is a figure simply waiting for her to turn around, to turn from the tomb to life.

How often do we find ourselves in situations where we think it’s all over, that there’s nothing and nowhere to turn? Yet all we have to do is look away from the problem, away from the darkness and from what seems to be; then we can see that which we thought was dead has risen and is still alive in us.

We hear the Easter celebrant declare, “He is risen! Christ is risen!”

But what does that mean? Is it only an event which happened over 2000 years ago? Or is it something which can happen in our lives today?

The truth is, Easter is all about life made new again. When we think it’s over, it’s not. We have a God that makes the impossible possible.

When the Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, were flying their first airplane in 1903, an astronomer named Simon Newcomb was writing a thesis about the impossibility of being able to fly. He said, “There is no possible combination of known substances, known forms of machinery, and known forms of force that can be united in a practical machine by which men shall fly long distances through the air. It is impossible.”

You’ve got to be careful who you are listening to, and who you hang out with, because it can destroy your potential.

The Wright brothers’ father was a minister, who also founded the Union Theological Seminary. When he saw his two boys seemingly limited to working repairing bicycles, he decided to share with them his philosophy about the empty tomb and the ability to rise up into newness of life.

He said, “I shared with them my philosophy about the empty tomb and then I just stood back to watch them fly.” How wonderful it is to have someone who encourages us like that and then stands back to watch us fly, to see the potential within us take flight.

The truth is that the potential for triumph is still there, the potential to rise above limitation is still there.

In another version of the Easter story (in Matthew 28), we read that Mary Magdalene and the other Mary (the mother of Jesus) went to the tomb. The stone that blocked the entrance had been rolled away and an angel sat upon it. The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid.”

Not knowing what to do after the crucifixion of Jesus, the disciples hid in a room together. They were depressed, they were down. Then Jesus appeared to them in the room and said, “Don’t be afraid. Only believe!” Don’t be afraid.

That’s the first thing to remember when things happen. Don’t be afraid!

Fear paralyzes our potential. We become stuck, we become rigid.

Fear breaks down our relationship with God, our trust in God. When we become fearful, we lose the sense of trust. We may say, “Oh yes, I believe in God.” But there’s a big difference between believing in God and trusting in God.

Doubts about our potential and doubts about God’s presence within us limit our possibilities.

What are you dealing with in your life right now? What situation is present in your life? There is never any situation that is beyond hope. There’s always hope, there’s always possibility, there’s always potential.

One of my favorite passages in the Bible is in Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” That’s a wonderful scripture to use as an affirmation. You may not know where to turn, but as you turn to the Christ within, as you turn to God’s presence, you are strengthened. And that which seemed impossible becomes possible.

Our God is a God who makes the impossible possible. We can come through all things. “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” – through the presence and power of the living God within me. In any situation you face there is always a God-given solution available to you.

It is important to remind ourselves that even though all seems lost, the unexpected is always possible.

I’d like to share with you three action steps prompted by the Easter story:

1. Surround yourself with Easter-thinking people. Don’t get caught up with people who put you down, and don’t put yourself down. You can rise up over your limitations. Hang around with people who remind you of the potential that is always there. If you have to change your friends, do so, and let your friends be those who support you in your potential for growth.

2. Don’t be afraid; refuse to give up. On the Friday before Easter, the worst scenario happened. Jesus died. The disciples went back to their fishing; they didn’t know what else to do. Then three days later the unexpected happened. Jesus appeared to them. So refuse to give up; it’s always possible. Even death couldn’t stop God’s plan.

3. Rise triumphant. You were created to fly. You were created to soar, to rise up above any limitations, to soar above those situations that would hold you back and down. You were created in the image and likeness of God, you have the possibilities and potentials within you to rise triumphant. What’s keeping you from flying? Let your spirit soar!

God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

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Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

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Easter Sunday

THE RESURRECTION

Easter Sunday. Read John 20:1-18.

Easter is the celebration of the resurrection of Jesus. Its inner meaning and spiritual significance is the awakening and raising to spiritual consciousness of the I AM in man, which has been dead in trespass and sin and buried in the tomb of materiality.

“I came that they may have life, and may have it abundantly.” The resurrection is the raising up of the whole man–spirit, soul, and body–into the Christ consciousness of life and wholeness. This Jesus did. The tomb could not hold His redeemed perfected body temple. Resurrection is accomplished by the quickening power of the Holy Spirit.

Every time we rise to the realization of eternal, indwelling life, making union with the Father-Mind, the resurrection of Jesus takes place within us. All thoughts of limitation and inevitable obedience to material law are left in the tomb of materiality.

Jesus was born into the race thought so that He might reconstruct it in conformity with the divine law. He thus became our Way-Shower, our Saviour, our Helper.

Today the light of Truth is illumining my mind, and I rise up in the majesty of my divine sonship and proclaim myself to be the child of the Most High, free from all belief in sin, sickness, and death.

I affirm: “In unity with Christ I realize that I am resurrected into the life, light, and power of God.”

Questions:

1. What is the spiritual significance of Easter?

2. What is the resurrection?

3. How is resurrection accomplished?

4. Why was Jesus born into the race thought?

Christ within me is the resurrection and the life. Christ within me is the power that enables me to rise triumphant out of every trial.

 

About the Author of Keep a True Lent

Charles Fillmore was an innovative thinker, a pioneer in metaphysical thought at a time when most religious thought in America was entirely orthodox. He was a lifelong advocate of the open, inquiring mind, and he took pride in keeping abreast of the latest scientific and educational discoveries and theories. Many years ago he wrote, “What you think today may not be the measure for your thought tomorrow”; and it seems likely that were he to compile this book today, he might use different metaphors, different scientific references, and so on.

Truth is changeless. Those who knew Charles Fillmore best believe that he would like to be able to rephrase some of his observations for today’s readers, thus giving them the added effectiveness of contemporary thought. But the ideas themselves–the core of Charles Fillmore’s writings–are as timeless now (and will be tomorrow) as when they were first published.

Charles Fillmore was born on an Indian reservation just outside the town of St. Cloud, Minnesota, on August 22, 1854. He made his transition on July 5, 1948, at Unity Village, Missouri, at the age of 93. To get a sense of history, when Charles was eleven, Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; when Charles died, Harry Truman was President.

With his wife Myrtle, Charles Fillmore founded the Unity movement and Silent Unity, the international prayer ministry that publishes Daily Word Charles and Myrtle built the worldwide organization that continues their work today, Unity School of Christianity. Through Unity School’s ministries of prayer, education, and publishing, millions of people around the world are finding the teachings of Truth discovered and practiced by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore.

Charles Fillmore was a spiritual pioneer whose impact has yet to be assessed. No lesser leaders than Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and Dr. Emmet Fox were profoundly influenced by him. Dr. Peale borrowed his catchphrase of positive thinking from Charles Fillmore. Emmet Fox was so affected by Fillmore’s ideas that he changed his profession. From an engineer, he became the well-known writer and speaker.

Charles Fillmore–author, teacher, metaphysician, practical mystic, husband, father, spiritual leader, visionary–has left a legacy that continues to impact the lives of millions of people. By his fruits, he is continuously known.

 

Remember, God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

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 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

Please feel free to publish this article in your blog or newsletter or share it with a friend, as long as you include this resource box.

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Lent – Day 40

RESTING IN GOD

40th Day, Saturday. Read Isaiah 11:1-10; 12:1-6.

After Jesus’ crucifixion He was laid to rest in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea. Jesus represents the expression of the I AM identity. Arimathea represents an aggregation of thoughts of lofty character, a high state of consciousness in man. Joseph represents a state of consciousness in which we improve in character along all lines. We not only grow into a broader understanding but also we increase in vitality and substance. We are resting in God, and at the same time gathering strength for the power of greater demonstrations to follow.

A degree of cleansing, a wiping out of sense consciousness has been accomplished. By mentally reviewing our experiences, we recognize that nothing is really destroyed, but rather transmuted. Through faith we take stock of the progress we have made and find that we are getting a consciousness of radiant substance and of a higher life. Nothing is lost. When sense consciousness is raised to a higher plane all that belongs to it is saved with it.

In reality the invisible cannot be seen, touched, or comprehended by the outer senses, yet in this realm a great and mighty work is being accomplished.

Today I realize that the leaven that “leaveneth the whole lump” is the Truth. The word of Truth within me is not idle, but quietly spreading from point to point. This process will continue until my whole consciousness is vitalized by the Holy Spirit.

I affirm: “I rest in the consciousness of eternal life and strength, and I am made perfect.”

Questions:

1. What does Arimathea represent?

2. What does Joseph represent?

3. What happens when sense consciousness is raised to a higher plane?

4. What is the leaven that “leaveneth the whole lump”?

Father-God, I rest in the consciousness of Your presence within me and about me. I rest in the consciousness of Your life and perfection within me.

 

Remember, God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

—————————————————–             

 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

Please feel free to publish this article in your blog or newsletter or share it with a friend, as long as you include this resource box.

 If you’d like to receive weekday inspirational quotes, you can subscribe at Rich Words.

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Lent – Day 39 (Good Friday)

CRUCIFIXION

39th Day, Good Friday. Read John 19:1-42.

Jesus’ crucifixion on Calvary was a final step in a work that had been going on in Him for thirty-three years, and when He arose He was entirely free from the carnal mind with all its limitations. He had overcome all the carnal tendencies which He had taken on that He might free the race from its bondage.

The word crucifixion means the crossing out in consciousness of certain errors that have become fixed states of mind; it is the enactment by a master of the final extinction of carnal mind, the giving up of the whole personality in order that the Christ Mind may be expressed in all its fullness. This is represented by the crucifixion of Jesus.

Calvary means “the place of a skull.” The carnal mind has appropriated the brain and its skull and it is here that the final battle is fought. Every time we give up error there is a crucifixion.

The three days Jesus was in the tomb represent the three steps in overcoming error. First, nonresistance; second, the taking on of divine activity, or receiving the will of God; third, the assimilation and fulfillment of the divine will.

I deny the self that I may unite with the selfless. I give up the mortal that I may attain the immortal. I dissolve the thought of the physical body that I may realize the spiritual body. This is a mental process with a physical effect.

I affirm: “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.”

Questions:

1. What was the final step of Jesus’ work?

2. What does the word “crucifixion” mean?

3. What does “calvary” mean?

4. What do the three days Jesus was in the tomb represent?

God’s spirit in me is invincible and indestructible. Thank You, Father, for Your spirit in me that gives me victory over death itself.

 

Remember, God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

—————————————————–             

 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

Please feel free to publish this article in your blog or newsletter or share it with a friend, as long as you include this resource box.

 If you’d like to receive weekday inspirational quotes, you can subscribe at Rich Words.

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Lent – Day 38

GETHSEMANE

38th Day, Thursday. Read Mark 14:32-42.

Gethsemane is symbolic of the struggle that takes place within the consciousness when Truth is realized as the one reality. It is a condition that man works through when he recognizes that God is all and that he must be willing to sacrifice all for God.

There are always deeply rooted error thoughts stored away in the subconsciousness, and on their own account they come forward to crucify the new unknown power, the so-called imposter, the in-dwelling Christ. The Christ is presumably captured by these thoughts, which try to carry out their aims in the darkness of the subconscious mind. But error can kill out only error. The Christ itself may be held in obscurity for a while, but it cannot be done away with. That which died on the Cross when Jesus was crucified was the personality; the Christ resurrects itself from the very depths of the subconsciousness, and error is hanged on the gallows it prepared for the doing away of the newborn spiritual ego.

This breaking up and passing away of old error states of mind and making ready for the new is a process in soul evolution of all those who are faithfully following Jesus. In all systems of thought concentration and spiritual attainment, the will, the executive faculty, plays the leading part. Therefore I prepare my consciousness for the reception of these new ideas. I say with Jesus, “Not my will, but thine, be done.” I realize that new inspiration is flowing steadily into my consciousness as I affirm: “Old error thoughts are passed away. I am a new creature in Christ.”

Questions:

1. What does Gethsemane symbolize?

2. What is the function of error thoughts in the subconscious?

3. What was crucified on the Cross?

4. What plays the leading part in spiritual attainment?

I call on God’s power to dissolve old error thoughts. I let my thoughts follow after the pattern of Truth set for me by Jesus Christ.

 

Remember, God is Blessing You, Right Now!

Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham

—————————————————–             

 Rev. Alan A. Rowbotham, a Unity minister for over thirty-eight years, invites you to subscribe to his free inspirational newsletter, Spiritual Solutions.

Please feel free to publish this article in your blog or newsletter or share it with a friend, as long as you include this resource box.

 If you’d like to receive weekday inspirational quotes, you can subscribe at Rich Words.

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