Great things are done when men and mountains meet.
William Blake
He has not learned to think like a mountain
Aldo Leopold
A Sand County Almanac
Can Aldo Leopold’s ecological conscience become
effective in America today?
Thomas Merton
‘The Wild Places’
There is a long line and lineage of contemplatives in the West and East that have turned to the mountains, white peaks and ancient spires as places to slake a deeper thirst and find a site for the soul to know a more meaningful quies. This reality has been well tracked and traced in evocative and visual mountaineering classics such as The Mountaineering Spirit (1979) and Sacred Mountains of the World (1990). Poets on the Peaks: Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen & Jack Kerouac in the North Cascades (2002) makes these connections, also, and we know Merton had an affinity with the Beats. My missive, Thomas Merton and the Beats of the North Cascades (2005), connects the dots between Merton, the Beats and mountains. Even the most casual read through these books make it most clear that there is a connection between mountains and the contemplative quest for meaning and depth.
Continue reading "Thomas Merton and the Mountains: Contemplative Cartographer" »
The time will come when the pursuit of contemplation will be a subversive activity. Daniel Berrigan - America is Hard to Find
1 Merton and the Contemplative Quest
Thomas Merton turned to the Roman Catholic Tradition, and to the monastic and Cistercian way within such a Tradition, in search of an older and forgotten contemplative path. The vita activa had come to dominate the modern world, and the vita contemplativa had been banished or subordinated to the active life. In short, Martha had trumped Mary, and there were serious consequences to be faced in both soul and society as a result of this inversion of the ancient and time tried way.
Continue reading "Thomas Merton: the Contemplative Dilemma by Ron Dart" »
Far away but invited
Distant but sought
wandering and apathetic
It's time to go back
Time to see
Time to hear
Continue reading "Invited by Jim Hall" »
Have Peace in Your Heart
"Someone who has actually tasted truth is not
contentious for truth.
"Someone who is considered among men to be zealous
for truth has not yet learnt what truth is really like: once he has truly
learned it, he will cease from zealousness on its behalf.
"The gift
of God and of knowledge of him is not a cause for turmoil or clamour; rather
this gift is entirely filled with a peace in which the Spirit, love and
humility reside.
"The following is a sign of the coming of the Spirit:
the person whom the Spirit has overshadowed is made perfect in these very
virtues.
"God is reality. The person whose mind has become aware of God
does not even possess a tongue with which to speak, but God resides in his
heart in great serenity. He experiences no stirring of zeal or
argumentativeness, nor is he stirred by anger. He cannot even be aroused
concerning the faith."
Continue reading "The Problem with Zeal - St Isaac of Syria" »
Dear Friends,
Firstly Partners wishes to express our sadness
over the loss of the KNU (Karen National Union) General Secretary,
Padoh Mahn Sha Lah Phan who was assassinated at his home on the 14th
February 2008.
We mourn the loss of a great, passionate and inspirational leader of the Karen people.
P'Doh
Mahn Sha not only inspired the Karen people but stood for a united
Burma and will be deeply missed by all. His vision, strength, and
understanding will be greatly missed throughout the Karen community and
Burma as a whole. Although he is no longer with us, his memory lives on
and he will not be forgotten as a man that stood firmly by his beliefs
and who's life works was for a free and democratic Burma.
Continue reading "Assassination and Call to Prayer for Burma" »
THINKING THEOLOGICALLY
INTENT
We are not going to re-examine the already familiar list of conflicting
beliefs that separate the Western creeds from the Orthodox Christian
Church, but rather speak of the way so many people think and talk about
God — the way they "theologize" about Him. Roman Catholicism and
Protestantism have essentially the same mind — the same culture and
history — and, in the final analysis, the same religion; hence, it is
not difficult to delineate both together as "Western" in their
theological approach and trace this fact to the idea and method of law
or what we would call the "juridical concept" of religion, begun in the
universities of the Latin Middle Ages.
The theology, or rather
the approach to theologizing, in the Orthodox Christian Church, is
sharply different from the Western approach. Her theologizing is
different because her Christianity is different — and it is this, more
than any other factor, which accounts for the so-called "separation of
the Churches" — or, more precisely, the schism of the old Roman
patriarchate from the Eastern patriarchates of the Christian Church,
and ultimately the creation of the Roman Catholic Church by Charlemagne.
Continue reading "Understanding Orthodoxy: How we think and talk about God by Archbishop Lazar" »
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