For many reasons we have chosen St. John the Baptist as the patron of our Center for
Action and Contemplation. Our feast day is celebrated on June 24, as the
sun (reminiscent of John 3:30) agrees to decrease. John the Baptist is the prophet who rejects the system without
apology, eats the harsh food of that choice and wears the clothes of
rejection. Like our native peoples here in New Mexico, he goes on his vision quest into
the desert where he faces his aloneness, boredom and naked self. He returns with a message, a clarity, a
surety of heart that reveals a totally surrendered man. First he listens long and self-forgetfully;
then he speaks, acts and accepts the consequences. Surely he is
the ultimate wild man! Or is it wise man? He is both.
Continue reading "John the Baptist: Wild Wise Man - Excerpt from Radical Grace by Richard Rohr" »
There is a Hebrew
word that most Christians are aware of: Shalom. It is generally
understood to mean “peace”, but this word contains a deeper and broader
meaning. Shalom more accurately means an absolutely unbroken and whole,
as well as peaceful, state of existence and reality. In such a state
there is no separation or enmity between anyone and anything in
existence. All relationships are whole and unbroken, perfectly
interconnected. In such an idyllic state the relationships between God
and humans, humans and humans, humans and nature, and nature and God are whole
and unbroken. Where and when did such a state of reality exist? It
was the blueprint with which God created the earth and everything in it.
If Shalom is the foundation for community that we are trying to discover then
we must first consider the source of Shalom and in doing so we shall see that
it is of immense value, for it is a very part of the nature of God.
Continue reading "Thinking on Community by Eric Janzen" »
Preface:
Faith is an orientation of the soul, not an accord with a collection of
facts . Faith is not only the fact that we believe, but what we
believe. God calls us to the former, and has given us the latter. Not
all faith is good, not all religion is good. The truth in anything
comes by the actions of the Word, Jesus Christ. He "enlightens every
man that comes into the world." Mere faith is not true and living
faith. Mere faith does not "orient" us to God, because mere faith has
not the true God and His Revelation as its raison d'etre. Mere faith is
not "an orientation of the soul."
Continue reading "On the Nature of Sin by Archbishop Lazar Puhalo" »
This
Christmas season there has been something that has been gnawing away at me more
than it has in other years.
Like
everyone else, I enjoy the nativity pageants: the children waving at their
parents, re-inventing their lines (if they remember them at all), picking their
noses, or dropping the baby Jesus on his head! Indeed some kids are true angels on the stage; while others we all know
will become the future Jim Carries of entertainment, like one of the kids I saw
at the Catholic elementary school concert this week playing an unscripted role
of a ‘donkey’ without the costume!
Continue reading "Where is God at Christmas? Sermon by Brian Schmidt" »
Nothing can be farther from the truth
than the facile belief that God only manifests himself in progress, in the
improvement of standards of living, in the spread of medicine and the reform of
abuses, in the diffusion of organized Christianity. The reaction from this type of theistic
dilution, which a few years ago had almost completely supplanted the faith of
Moses and Elijah and Jesus among modern Christians, both Protestant and Catholic,
is now sweeping multitudes from their religious moorings. Real spiritual progress can only be achieved
through catastrophe and suffering, reaching new levels after the profound
catharsis which accompanies major upheavals. Every such period of mental and physical agony, while the old is being
swept away and the new is still unborn, yields different social patterns and
deeper spiritual insights. (W.F.
Albright)
It
has become glaringly obvious in my own experience that I cannot seem to attach
myself to any one social cause or endeavor. As a pastor who wants to live with eyes wide open, I see things that
prod my compassion into fight mode. Yet even though I often take steps onto
various battlefields, I find myself once again poling my boat out into the
great river of suffering looking for that one beachhead upon which I am
supposed to sacrifice myself.
Continue reading "Poling the Great River of Suffering: Social Justice and Pastoring by Andy MacPherson" »
My Intro to Meg Tilly: Agnes of God
I first experienced Meg Tilly via her Golden Globe winning
onscreen portrayal of an enigmatic young nun named Sister Agnes (Agnes of God, 1985). Her mysterious
encounters with God trigger investigator Dr. Martha Livingstone (Jane Fonda)
into a spiritual crisis which may just lead her back to faith. The providential
interface between Agnes’ spirituality and Livingstone’s cynicism impacted me.
It mirrored my own internal struggles as a young theology student whose heart
and head were plagued by a serious disconnect.
Novels:
Twenty
years later, it’s happening again. Meg Tilly left the acting trade to pick up
the novelist’s pen. I’ve only just discovered her body of work and I’m pleased
to say that I have not emerged
unscathed. In each of her first three books—Singing
Songs, Gemma and Porcupine—we
hear the authentic voice and feel the true heart of courageous young girls who
reflect some aspect of Tilly’s reality. The stories reveal an acquaintance with
grief and fight and hope that are deeper than fiction. They have the capacity
to heal.
Continue reading "Meg Tilly: A Spirituality of Courage and Hope" »
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