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prayer for healing

Item No. C1093-01

square pillar - 2˝"x3˝", burns up to 65 hours

size: square pillar

 

price: $14.00

 

quote on label:

"Healing does not come from anyone else.

 You must accept guidance from within."

—From A Course in Miracles

 

color: white and light blue

scent: vanilla

gemstone: clear quartz

 

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Our Recommended Books, Music & Movies for Prayer

zena moon sells books, CDs and DVDs in association with Amazon.com. To order, click on the item's title or image, then add it to your Amazon shopping cart. Orders are then filled and shipped by Amazon. Send us your recommendations for this page--we may post them here.

 

Last updated 3/17/2005

 

Icon  Books

1.   Prayers: A Communion With Our Creator

    by Don Miguel Ruiz (Paperback - 2001)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars

 

    From Amazon.com: In The Four Agreements Don Miguel Ruiz touched the lives of millions of people with his four guided principles for life transformation. In Prayers he introduces his favorite prayers and meditations. Don Miguel begins each of his lectures and classes with a prayer or guided meditation to inspire and invoke a receptive frame of mind and to reinforce the concepts being introduced. Similarly, readers can use this book as a source of inspiration in times of need or as daily encouragement. The prayers address such topics as wisdom, healing, courage, love, self-love, forgiveness, integrity, freedom, happiness, and truth.


 

2.  Love, Medicine and Miracles: Lessons Learned About Self-Healing from a Surgeon's Experience with Exceptional Patients

    by Bernie S. Siegel (Paperback - 1998)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.76 out of 5 stars

 

    From Amazon.com: Unconditional love is the most powerful stimulant of the immune system. The truth is: love heals. Miracles happen to exceptional patients every day--patients who have the courage to love, those who have the courage to work with their doctors to participate in and influence their own recovery. "Run, don't walk, to the nearest bookstore and get this amazing book that explains how you can 'think' yourself sick or well...Every family should have a copy. It can be a lifesaver." --Ann Landers

 

 

3.   Grace's Window: Entering the Seasons of Prayer

    by Suzanne Guthrie (Paperback - 1996)

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.7 out of 5 stars

 

    From the Author: In Grace's Window, Suzanne Guthrie (an Episcopal priest who ministers in the Hudson Valley region) teaches the reader about the seasons of prayer by showing us her own. In these 40 meditations from Advent through Pentecost, Guthrie weaves together her mystical awareness of the presence of god and the experiences of childhood and childbirth, ministry and housekeeping, summer firestorms and family life, suffering and dying. For Guthrie, ordinary life is a window of grace into the holy, where nothing is wasted because everything can teach us the art of prayer -- circling hawks and church liturgies, winter rains and supper tables, music lessons and folding laundry. In the language of contemporary mysticism, we learn to pray because eventually we learn to see. Grace's Window is inspirational reading for anyone seeking to find the mystical in the commonplace, the divine in the ordinary, the spirit in the flesh, the touch of god within us all.


 

 

Icon  Music

1.   The Prayer Cycle

  ~ Jonathan Elias (Composer) (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 1999

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.7 out of 5 stars

 

A zena moon Essential CD

From Amazon.com: It is with primitive urgency and lustrous clarity rising like flickering embers from a fire that Jonathan Elias's ambitious Prayer Cycle is given voice. Woven together like knotty wool, silk, and fine strands of silvery water, the disparate yet complementary voices of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Alanis Morissette, Yungchen Lhamo, Ofra Haza, the American Boychoir, Salif Keita, and others intertwine in multiple languages with the superb English Chamber Orchestra and Chorus. Prayers of supplication, gratitude, and longing build in layers, one on top of and 'twixt and 'tween the other, as movements titled "Mercy," "Grace," "Innocence," "Compassion," and the like. Remarkably, Elias's Prayer Cycle eloquently captures the ecstasy, pain, grief, and sublime beauty of humanity--as he simply and poignantly writes in his liner notes, "The world we live in is both joyous and cruel."

 

 

2.   Tibetan Prayer Chants

    ~ Buddhist Nuns at Chuckikjall (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 1994

    Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: Tibetan Prayer Chants starts with the blowing of a conch shell to start the morning for these nuns. Then begins a fantastically uplifting, yet calming recording of these women who live a simple monastic life and say these daily, communal prayers. They go through many different cadences and rhythms, weaving a spell based on compassion for all beings. There is no background instrumentation, and none is needed. Great for driving, thinking, meditating, or doing the dishes. This is one of my desert island albums.

 

 

3.   Prayers to the Protector

    ~ Thupten Pema Lama & Steve Roach (Audio CD)

    Original Release Date: 2000

    Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: It was inevitable that synthesist Steve Roach would apply his soundscape designs to the deep, ancient, and often harrowing chants of Tibetan Buddhist monks. He's gone into the primal core with Aboriginal sounds and cultures on albums such as Dreamtime Return, and his Magnificent Void CD stepped into the abyss. On Prayers to the Protector, he works with the chants of Thupten Pema Lama of the Dip Tse Chok Ling Monastery. In Roach's studio, Thupten Pema Lama sang these devotional prayers and entreaties unaccompanied. Then Roach slipped them into his own soundworld, surrounding the monk with evanescent waves of synthesized ambiences. Being Steve Roach, this isn't the usual pretty New Age synth-glissandos, but darkly hued textures with metallic edges. On "Djewa takgya lingchee lhunbur dje" (a prayer for the world, according to the liner notes), he evokes the metal gongs and bowls of Tibetan chants as well as a freight train putting on the brakes in space. Prayers to the Protector doesn't dress up Buddhist chants, it just sends them into deeper space.
 

 

 

Icon  Movies

1.   13 Conversations About One Thing

     Starring: John Turturro

     (2001) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

    

From Amazon.com: A smartly written and wonderfully acted movie about happiness and fate. 13 Conversations About One Thing takes four characters (a lawyer who hits a housecleaner with his car, then flees the scene; the housecleaner herself; a science professor who leaves his wife; and an insurance claims adjuster who's deeply envious of a coworker who seems irrepressibly happy) and blends their stories into a delicate but potent mix. The characters cross paths at various points, but more often the events reverberate off each other in funny, surprising, or sorrowful ways. For all its cleverness, 13 Conversations never loses sight of the characters' humanity. The remarkable performances (from Matthew McConaughey, Clea DuVall, Amy Irving, John Turturro, and especially Alan Arkin) are riveting. On top of that, this movie, for all its quiet and talkative nature, is visually stunning, each shot a carefully composed portrait of a state of mind.

 

 

2.   The Last Temptation of Christ

    Starring: Willem Dafoe, Harvey Keitel

    (1988) ~ DVD

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.1 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: In this reverential, and spiritually moving retelling of the Jesus story, director Martin Scorsese has made his finest film. The story dares to explore the human side of Jesus instead of depicting him as the religious cypher that is typical of the other movies that have been made about the life of this flesh and blood man. The film explores the implicit conflict between Jesus' human side, and his manifest destiny as the son of God. Assertions by Amazon's reviewer that this film is no more accurate, or relevant than The Life of Brian are ridiculous! Almost nothing is known about the historical life of Jesus, and that life IS open to meditation, and speculation. By the way, the character of Jesus, doesn't have "sex with Barbara Hershey" as Mike Bethany implies (this is a "dream" sequence, part of both the Temptation, and Jesus' vision of what it would mean to have a human life!). The dialogue of the movie is decidedly modern and is meant to approximate common speech: the fact that it is not a literal translation gives it the beauty of the ordinary, the sense of way the real people talk in real life; which in turn gives the ideas and action of the film a modern urgency and connection. Willem Dafoe, despite his blond hair and blue eyes (Jesus is usually Europeanized to fit the expectation of modern Christians who wish to see him in the image of themselves), is tremendous in this challenging role, that calls for him to be both believably "real" and spiritually compelling. It is sad to think that Dafoe has worked so little of late; he is one of the best actors of his generation. In fact, the acting, all around, with Barbara Hershey, and Harvey Keitel in particular, is laudable. I love the period detail of this film: Morocco, I think, stood in believably for the Middle East, and in the cameras continual sweep of the dry hills, and plateau's, one gets a feel for the harsh, yet beautiful landscape that Jesus walked. Peter Gabriel composed, and assembled a particularly evocative score, that combines synthesizer and traditional rhythms. Those "Christian" groups that picketed this film, either didn't see it, or are simply closed minded, for this is truly one of the most deeply and affirmingly religious films ever produced!

 

 

3.   Baraka (Special Collector's Edition)

     Director: Don Fricke

     (1993) ~ DVD

     Avg. Customer Rating: 4.7 out of 5 stars

 

From Amazon.com: The word Baraka means "blessing" in several languages; watching this film, the viewer is blessed with a dazzling barrage of images that transcend language. Filmed in 24 countries and set to an ever-changing global soundtrack, the movie draws some surprising connections between various peoples and the spaces they inhabit, whether that space is a lonely mountaintop or a crowded cigarette factory. Some of these attempts at connection are more successful than others: for instance, an early sequence segues between the daily devotions of Tibetan monks, Orthodox Jews, and whirling dervishes, finding more similarity among these rituals than one might expect. And there are other amazing moments, as when sped-up footage of a busy Hong Kong intersection reveals a beautiful symmetry to urban life that could only be appreciated from the perspective of film. The lack of context is occasionally frustrating--not knowing where a section was filmed, or the meaning of the ritual taking place--and some of the transitions are puzzling. However, the DVD includes a short behind-the-scenes featurette in which cinematographer Ron Fricke (Koyaanisqatsi) explains that the effect was intentional: "It's not where you are that's important, it's what's there." And what's here, in Baraka, is a whole world summed up in 104 minutes.

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