Tag Archives: christianity

Discipline, Action, Suffering, Death

Stations on the Road to Freedom
Dietrich Bonhoeffer; July 21, 1944
Written the day after his failed attempt to assassinate Hitler

Discipline

If you set out to seek freedom, then learn above all
discipline of soul and senses, so that your passions
and your limbs might not lead you confusedly hither and yon.
Chaste be your spirit and body, subject to your own will,
and obedient to seek out the goal that they have been given.
No one discovers the secret of freedom but through self-control

Action

Dare to do what is just, not what fancy may call for;
Lose not time with what may be, but boldly grasp what is real.
The world of thought is escape; freedom only comes through action.
Step out beyond anxious waiting and into the storm of events,
carried only by God’s command and by your own faith;
then will freedom exultantly cry out to welcome your spirit.

Suffering

Wondrous transformation! Your strong and active hands
are tied now. Powerless, alone, you see the end of your action.
Still, you take a deep breath and lay your struggle for justice,
quietly and in faith, into a mightier hand.
Just for one blissful moment, you tasted the sweetness of freedom,
then you handed it over to God, that he might make it whole.

Death

Come now, highest moment on the road to freedom eternal,
Death, put down the ponderous chains and demolish the walls
of our mortal bodies, the walls of our blinded souls,
that we might finally see what mortals have kept us from seeing.
Freedom, how long we have sought you through discipline, action, and suffering.
Dying, now we behold your face in the countenance of God.

Finding my voice

I am beginning a course at George Fox Seminary called The History of Christian Spirituality and Renewal. I am eating it up… loving the opportunity to explore the depths of the tradition I call my own. At the same time, I am learning so much of my own ancestral lineage (at www.myheritage.com) and how my heritage fits into the story of England, the United States, and Christianity. Fascinating!
I have known at a very early age that my life is to be about guiding people on the spiritual path. And yet, for so long, I really didn’t understand what benefit Christianity offered to the world other than security in the afterlife. It is only after being in Bend, OR, where so many of my community really don’t want to have anything to do with Christianity or the church that I am learning what I have to offer. It is an interesting journey to learn the joy of my spiritual tradition from engaging in community with those who don’t practice it.
And yet, I still haven’t found my voice. I know the “what” but I don’t understand the “how” yet. My heart is overflowing these days as I study, research, write, and contemplate the depth at which I desire to engage the world around me. Here I am, resonating so deeply with Celtic spirituality, Christian mysticism, creation spirituality, indigenous and wisdom-based cultures, elements of Shamanism and Native American spirituality, masculine / feminine spirituality, psychology… and at the same time so very committed to the reality that is Christ in the world.
The clarity of my offering is within me somewhere. These times at present are so focused on living it, experimenting, and experiencing. My writing is not always clear. My speaking is often incomplete and jumbled… a heartfelt, and often spirit-led “BLEGH” of thoughts that come to me in the moment. I know… I feel… and yet I am so often still a baby trying to get my legs under me.

Rohr – Christians have a phd in “either/or”

Thank you for your words, once again, Richard. Here, he talks about the all-too-common dualism in Christianity (about the 7:00 mark). From the Evolutionary Christianity website.

Richard Rohr on Evolutionary Christianity

Other highlights…

  • how did we go from the inclusive son of God, who spends time with tax collectors, sinners, and prostitutes into an exclusive religion in his honor? (44:00)
  • all creation is incarnation, not just in us, or in Jesus, but all the way back t0 15 billion years ago.
  • If it’s compassion, it’s universal compassion.
  • If only we can stop seeing ourselves merely as a religion in competition with, and see ourselves as a gift, as all religions are a gift to us. If we can just be Jesus to the world and let the cards fall where they may (as Mother theresa said). If Christians could just be Jesus, rather than making him into a product or an opponent, always one who builds boundaries instead of bridges… that would be the evolution of Christianity and a much more gracious world. (54:00)

Religiocentrism… a must go for the next 500 years

Been thinking a lot about Phyllis Tickle’s work with The Great Emergence, as we talked a lot in church yesterday about the 500 year transitions that Christianity has gone through and the shift in authority that has taken place in each time. To refresh:

  • 45-50AD – Rise of the Early Church (Shift in Authority to the Apostles and local communities of Christ followers)
  • 500 AD – Fall of Rome (Shift in authority in the rise of Monasticism)
  • 1000 AD – Great Schism (Shift in authority towards the Western Roman Catholic Church)
  • 1500 AD – The Protestant Reformation (Thanks to Luther, we have a shift towards authority in scripture alone) We ended up watching Luther (with Joseph Fiennes) to refresh
  • 2000 AD – the Great Emergence (What is the shift of authority now?)

Let’s keep in mind that during all these transitions, the old system still held in place. There was just a majority shift that took place and it has brought us to where we are now. Each shift in history was appropriate for the cultural changes at the time. There were many, many people who did not understand this shift and those who helped make the change very often got labeled as heretics.

As Tickle talks about (check out the video below… so GOOD!), the time we live in is much, much different than ever before. It is the information age and we can access things with the click of a button that we never could have before. We understand the challenges of different languages and cultures. Because of this, it is going to be very hard to fully trust a limited number of scriptural interpretations any more. The authority of scripture is changing as we learn more about science and reality and the things that we cannot know. There is a very small minority of people who believe that everything in scripture happened the way it says it happened.

So where does the authority rest? Tickle says that we have to answer two very important questions:

  1. What is human consciousness and/or what is the humanness of humanity?
  2. What is the relation between all the religions to one another? How do we faithfully practice our own religion in the midst of a much smaller world in the awareness and respect of the other religions?

These are HUGE questions. And I agree. I would also add that we need to ask ourselves a few other questions:

  • In a world of consumption and globalization, very addicted to non-renewable resources, what choices do we make in regards to community and how we treat the earth?

My guess, and it may sound pretty heretical to many of my conservative Evangelical friends and family, is that the transition of authority is going to shift towards more local unified communities, emphasizing generational sustainability and a dissemination of religiocentrism and priority on traditional religious forms.

Here’s a great video of Phyllis Tickle, talking about the changes…


“Islam will overwhelm Christendom…”

The summary that the person who posted this video writes:

Islam will overwhelm Christendom unless Christians recognize the demographic realities, begin reproducing again, and share the gospel with Muslims.

WHAT!?!? Since when are we supposed to perpetuate Christendom?!? The fear is dripping off this video. I’m interested in what you all think about this.

According to the video, we have three options right?

1. Start increasing our fertility rate (not that this is going to help Christianity since church sizes are shrinking. We cannot count on children having the same religion as their parents anymore.)
2. Decrease their growth rate (does this mean we should start killing them more readily… or outlaw their immigration?)
3. Convert them (i mean “share the gospel” with them)… that way we have more Christians than Muslims. For what reason though? Fear of take over?

I wonder why the video didn’t give these answers from Jesus:
1. Pray for your enemies
2. Serve your enemies
3. Sacrificial love
4. He that doesn’t have love doesn’t know God
5. Make them one, as you and I are one
6. Give them food to eat, clothes, visit them in prison