Skip to content
Facebook Instagram YouTube SoundCloud
Richmond Hill
  • About usExpand
    • MissionExpand
      • Prayer
      • Hospitality
      • Racial Healing
      • Spiritual Development
    • CommunityExpand
      • Current Residents & Staff
      • Open Positions
      • Full-Time Residency
      • Richmond Hill Sojourn
    • History
    • Facilities
  • Prayer & WorshipExpand
    • Daily Prayer
    • Community Worship & Meals
    • Metro Richmond at Prayer
    • Ministry of Spiritual Direction
    • Centering Prayer
  • RetreatsExpand
    • Personal Retreats
    • Organized Retreats
    • Group Retreats and Events
    • Attending a Retreat
  • Programs & SchoolsExpand
    • Armstrong Leadership Program
    • The Judy Project
    • KOINONIA School of Race & Justice
    • Micah Initiative
    • Ministry of Spiritual Direction
    • RUAH School of Spiritual Guidance
  • ConnectExpand
    • Contact Us
    • Visit Us
    • Latest News
    • Events
    • Newsletter
    • Sermons
    • Calendar
  • Donate
  • Make Payment
Richmond Hill
Articles

Belong to the longing

Updated onOctober 14, 2014

Writing in my journal this morning, I had a few questions: What/where are my longings? Can I feel them? Name them? Will I find them underneath and in between all the should-ings and the must-ings? Why pay attention to them?

Indeed. Why pay attention? For one thing, I can’t help it — it is in my nature, my DNA, my genes, my “nine-ness” (from the Enneagram, a dynamic personality system which describes nine distinct and fundamentally different patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting).

With regard to the Enneagram, as I understand the nature of a Nine, we are Mediators. We are hard-wired to pay attention — highly sensitive and tuned in to people and our surroundings. And what if that sensitivity is so occupied with outside stimuli that it cannot respond to any inner promptings? See, the outer drowns out the inner. Where does that leave me? Often too preoccupied to listen to the still small voice of the spirit. Not a good thing to be cut off from, I think.

As I read through The Essential Enneagram (a book we encountered in the RUAH program), it invited me to consider the following questions: How have all the people and things around me been pulling at and competing for my attention? How indecisive have I been? In what ways have I gone along with others’ agendas and plans? In what ways have I been sidetracked into focusing on secondary priorities or inessentials?

All this questioning leads me to wonder about finding and maintaining focus in a world chock-a-block full of distractions. What might be useful for finding one’s focus? And maintaining that focus once found? A tool, a discipline or a practice might be just the ticket here.

What can help me set my priorities straight? What already exists in our rich Christian tradition?

Lectio divina is an ancient monastic practice designed to be a “long, loving look at the real.” It works through four stages or steps: read, reflect, respond, and rest. Lectio becomes a container for awareness of inner movements and voices. That’s good, as far as it goes. But I need something more: action. Some outpouring of all that contained goodness.

Once these inner longings are heard clearly, then perhaps I will honor them through action. And action is surely required to build beloved community, which is where I long to belong.

Richard Rumble
September 2014

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Art for Praise & Thanksgiving
NextContinue
New Workshop: Healing in Our Words

Recent Posts

  • Creating Pathways through Grief — Thursday, August 7, 2025
  • First Friday Day Retreat – June 6, 2025
  • Application deadline extended for RUAH 2025-27
  • Job Openings Available in 2025
  • Garden Volunteer Days: May & June, 2025

Upcoming Retreats

Upcoming Programs

Daily Prayers

Joins us in the chapel at 7am, Noon & 5:30pm

Address & Phone

2209 E Grace St.
Richmond VA 23223
(804) 783-7903
info@richmondhillva.org

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Soundcloud

Privacy Policy

View our privacy policy.

© 2025 Richmond Hill - WordPress Theme by Kadence WP

  • About us
    • Mission
      • Prayer
      • Hospitality
      • Racial Healing
      • Spiritual Development
    • Community
      • Current Residents & Staff
      • Open Positions
      • Full-Time Residency
      • Richmond Hill Sojourn
    • History
    • Facilities
  • Prayer & Worship
    • Daily Prayer
    • Community Worship & Meals
    • Metro Richmond at Prayer
    • Ministry of Spiritual Direction
    • Centering Prayer
  • Retreats
    • Personal Retreats
    • Organized Retreats
    • Group Retreats and Events
    • Attending a Retreat
  • Programs & Schools
    • Armstrong Leadership Program
    • The Judy Project
    • KOINONIA School of Race & Justice
    • Micah Initiative
    • Ministry of Spiritual Direction
    • RUAH School of Spiritual Guidance
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Visit Us
    • Latest News
    • Events
    • Newsletter
    • Sermons
    • Calendar
  • Donate
  • Make Payment
Search