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<blockquote data-quote="Childofmine" data-source="post: 659723" data-attributes="member: 17542"><p>Another amazing post by RR today...wanted to share it with you all. I love defining contemplation---something I want to learn to do more of---as "a long loving look at the real." Just sitting with this definition is well, amazing. If you aren't a Christian or are agnostic or atheist, there is still a lot of "stuff" here for consideration and growth. Like they say in Al-Anon, your Higher Power can be a doorknob---don't let that get the way of your own growth as a healthy person. I also love the idea that the only "thing I need to be saved from...is myself." I am so often my own worst enemy. Corralling ME is my greatest challenge in life. I hope you can mine the gems here as I am doing, in your own way and interpretation. </p><p></p><p>*************************************</p><p></p><p><strong>Shared Identity </strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Tuesday, June 23, 2015 </p><p></p><p>Francis spent much of his time praying in solitude in nature. He practiced contemplation, or "a long loving look at the real," which allowed him to see in a new way. Seeing from a pair of glasses beyond our own is what I call "participative seeing." This is the new self that can say excitedly with Paul, "I live no longer, not 'I' but it is Christ now living in me" (Galatians 2:20). In the truest sense, <em>I am that which I am seeking</em>. This primal communion communicates spaciousness, joy, and a quiet contentment. It is not anxious, because the essential gap between me and everything else has already been overcome. I am at home in a sacred and benevolent universe, and I do not need to prove myself to anybody, nor do I need to be "right," nor do others have to agree with me. </p><p></p><p>A mature believer, of course, knows that it is impossible <em>not</em> to be connected to the Source, or to be "on the Vine," as Jesus says. But most people are not consciously there yet. They are not "saved" from themselves, which is the only thing we really need to be saved from. They do not yet live out of their objective, totally given, and unearned identity, "hidden with Christ in God" (Colossians 3:3). This is what saints like Francis and Clare allowed, enjoyed, and "fell into." It is always a falling! For most of us, our own deepest identity is still well hidden from us. We are all "Sleeping Beauty" waiting for the redemptive kiss. Religion's primary and irreplaceable job is to bring this foundational truth of our shared identity in God to full and grateful consciousness. This is the only true meaning of holiness. </p><p></p><p>The irony is that this "holiness" is actually our "first nature"; yet we made it into such a contest that it did not even become most people's "second nature." This core identity in Christ was made into a worthiness contest at which almost no one wins and so most do not even try or give up early. Francis and Clare totally undermined this contest by rejoicing in their ordinariness and seeming unworthiness--which I believe is the core freedom of the Gospel itself, the ultimate <em>coup d'etat</em> of the soul. Now losers are the real winners, and that includes just about everybody.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Childofmine, post: 659723, member: 17542"] Another amazing post by RR today...wanted to share it with you all. I love defining contemplation---something I want to learn to do more of---as "a long loving look at the real." Just sitting with this definition is well, amazing. If you aren't a Christian or are agnostic or atheist, there is still a lot of "stuff" here for consideration and growth. Like they say in Al-Anon, your Higher Power can be a doorknob---don't let that get the way of your own growth as a healthy person. I also love the idea that the only "thing I need to be saved from...is myself." I am so often my own worst enemy. Corralling ME is my greatest challenge in life. I hope you can mine the gems here as I am doing, in your own way and interpretation. ************************************* [B]Shared Identity [/B] Tuesday, June 23, 2015 Francis spent much of his time praying in solitude in nature. He practiced contemplation, or "a long loving look at the real," which allowed him to see in a new way. Seeing from a pair of glasses beyond our own is what I call "participative seeing." This is the new self that can say excitedly with Paul, "I live no longer, not 'I' but it is Christ now living in me" (Galatians 2:20). In the truest sense, [I]I am that which I am seeking[/I]. This primal communion communicates spaciousness, joy, and a quiet contentment. It is not anxious, because the essential gap between me and everything else has already been overcome. I am at home in a sacred and benevolent universe, and I do not need to prove myself to anybody, nor do I need to be "right," nor do others have to agree with me. A mature believer, of course, knows that it is impossible [I]not[/I] to be connected to the Source, or to be "on the Vine," as Jesus says. But most people are not consciously there yet. They are not "saved" from themselves, which is the only thing we really need to be saved from. They do not yet live out of their objective, totally given, and unearned identity, "hidden with Christ in God" (Colossians 3:3). This is what saints like Francis and Clare allowed, enjoyed, and "fell into." It is always a falling! For most of us, our own deepest identity is still well hidden from us. We are all "Sleeping Beauty" waiting for the redemptive kiss. Religion's primary and irreplaceable job is to bring this foundational truth of our shared identity in God to full and grateful consciousness. This is the only true meaning of holiness. The irony is that this "holiness" is actually our "first nature"; yet we made it into such a contest that it did not even become most people's "second nature." This core identity in Christ was made into a worthiness contest at which almost no one wins and so most do not even try or give up early. Francis and Clare totally undermined this contest by rejoicing in their ordinariness and seeming unworthiness--which I believe is the core freedom of the Gospel itself, the ultimate [I]coup d'etat[/I] of the soul. Now losers are the real winners, and that includes just about everybody. [/QUOTE]
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