Karen Armstrong
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Fundamentalism
"..."fundamentalisms" all follow a certain pattern. They are embattled forms of spirituality, which have emerged as a response to a perceived crisis. They are engaged in a conflict with enemies whose secularist policies and beliefs seem inimical to religion itself. Fundamentalists do not regard this battle as a conventional political struggle, but experience it as a cosmic war between the forces of good and evil. They fear annihilation, and try to fortify their beleaguered identity by means of a selective retrieval of certain doctrines and practices of the past."
Friday, January 9, 2009
Messy Spirituality
You and I are incomplete. I'm unfinished. I'm unfixed. And the reality is that's where God meets me is in the mess of my life, in the unfixedness, in the brokenness. I thought he did the opposite, he got rid of all that stuff. But if you read the Bible, if you look at it at all, constantly he was showing up in people's lives at the worst possible time of their life.
- Mike Yaconelli
Labels:
God,
human beings,
Humility,
Scripture,
vulnerability
The drive to write
“Writing is like breathing, it’s possible to do it well, but the point is to do it no matter what”
Julia Cameron
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Tolkein on Evil
I sometimes feel appalled at the thought of the sum total of human misery all over the world at the present moment: The millions parted, fretting, wasting in unprofitable days - quite apart from torture, pain, death, bereavement, injustice. If anguish were visible, almost the whole of this benighted planet would be enveloped in a dense dark vapour, shrouded from the amazed vision of the heavens! And the products of it all will be mainly evil - historically considered. But the historic version is, of course, not the only one. All things and all deeds have a value in themselves, apart from their 'causes' and 'effects'. No man can estimate what is really happening sub specie aeternitatis. All we do know, and that to a large extent by direct experience, is that evil labors with vast power and perpetual success - in vain: preparing always the soil for unexpected good to sprout in.
J.R.R. Tolkein
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Proclaiming the Gospel
In the proclamation of this Gospel, we must not fear hostility or unpopularity, and we must refuse any compromise or ambiguity which might conform us to the world's way of thinking (cf. Rom 12:2). We must be in the world but not of the world (cf. Jn 15:19; 17:16), drawing our strength from Christ, who by his Death and Resurrection has overcome the world (cf. Jn 16:33).
Pope John Paul II
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Seeking the Star
“We hunger for truth, we thirst to drink beauty, we yearn to celebrate, we seek to delight, we stretch out to love and to be loved. That is why anything less than everything is not enough.”
Thomas Dubay, S.M.
Monday, January 5, 2009
Death Penalty
“The nature and extent of the punishment… ought not to go to the extreme of executing the offender except in cases of absolute necessity: in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise to defend society. Today, however, as a result of steady improvements in the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare if not practically nonexistent.”
Pope John Paul II
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Compassion
“True ‘compassion’ leads to sharing another’s pain; it does not kill the person whose suffering we cannot bear”
Pope John Paul II
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