merechristian.org is an online journal by the rev. j. barry vaughn, ph.d.
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In the 18th and 19th centuries well-educated young men and women (more often young women, I think) would keep "commonplace books" or journals containing interesting quotations they had run across in their reading. I've been doing this for years and have found it an invaluable resource for preaching. I'm sharing some of this with my weblog readers and hope it will spark some ideas for your preaching and teaching. In an ecumenical spirit I've named this section Loci Communes, the Latin equivalent of "commonplaces" and also the title of the 1521 book by Luther's colleague Phillip Melanchthon, which was the first systematic exposition of the Reformed faith. Loci communes "Nothing which is true or beautiful or good makes complete sense in any immediate context of history; therefore we must be saved by faith. Nothing we do however virtuous can be accomplished alone; therefore we are saved by love. No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as it is from our standpoint. Therefore we must be saved by the final form of love which is forgiveness."
--Reinhold Niebuhr, The Irony of American History.
"There is more simplicity in a man who eats caviar on impulse than in the man who eats Grapenuts on principle..."
--G.K. Chesterton.
O God, if we thank you for bread and meat, for home and family, for work and friends, for comfort and security, and have no pain of heart, no anguish that others are homeless, helpless and starving, then leave us without your blessing until we learn the ways of mercy. Deliver us from the sin of indifference and bless to us what we now enjoy by the courage and kindness with which we share it.
--Samuel Howard Miller.
We thank you when we look back on our life... even for what brought us disappointment, pain, and suffering, because we now know that it helped us to fulfill that for which we were born. And when new disappointments take hold of us and words of thanks die on our tongue, remind us that a day may come when we will be ready to give thanks for the dark road on which you have led us.
--Paul Tillich.
So, I come back to where I began, to that other King, one Jesus; to the Christian notion that man's efforts to make himself personally and collectively happy in earthly terms are doomed to failure. He must indeed, as Christ said, be born again, be a new man, or he is nothing. So at least I have concluded, after having failed to find in past experience, present dilemmas, and future expectations, any alternative proposition. As far as I am concerned, it is Christ or nothing.
--Malcolm Muggeridge
St. Augustine: "Perfection consists not in what we give to God, but in what we receive from him". (C. Williams, The Descent of the Dove, p. 72.)
"All is ordained, but man is nevertheless master of his own actions".
--Rabbi Akiba, Ethics of the Fathers (as quoted in Weintraub's Disraeli, p. 171.)
Even in our sleep, pain we cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.
--Aeschylus
Who loves fifty people has fifty sorrows; who loves twenty people has twenty sorrows; who loves no one has no sorrows.
--Buddha
Before you can have a love, you must have an unrequited love.
--Jack Miles, God: A Biography, p. 243
St. Therese of Lisieux. "When Jesus tells us about his Father, we distrust him. When he shows us his HOme, we turn away, but when he confides to us that he is "acquainted with Grief," we listen, for that also is an Acquaintance of our own."
quoted by Kathleen Norris in The Cloister Walk, p. 27.
Sebastian Moore, OSB. "God behaves in the Psalms in ways he is not allowed to behave in systematic theology."
Norris, Cloister Walk, p. 91
There are some griefs so loud They could bring down the sky, and there are griefs so still None knows how deep they lie. Endured, never expended, There are old griefs so proud They never speak a word.
May Sarton, Collected Poems, p. 77-78.
...I am convinced that we should solve many things if we went into the streets and uncovered our griefs, which perhaps would prove to be but one sole common grief, and joined together in beweeping them and crying aloud to the heavens and calling upon God. And this, even though God shold hear us not; but He wold hear us. The chiefest sanctity of a temple is that it is a place to which men go to weep in common.
Miguel Unamuno, The Tragic Sense of Life (Dover, 1954), p. 17.
...however absurd it seems... [the Resurrection] is a concept of sublime courage and optimism. [footnote: See Updike, "Seven Stanzas at Easter" in Telephone Poles and Other Poems... and see the poems, each entitled "The Resurrection of the Body", by Linda Gregerson and Eric Pankey, Poetry 162 [Apr 1993), 14-15, 26.] It locates redemption there where ultimate horror also resides -- in pain, mutilation, death, and decay. Whether or not any of the images and answers I have surveyed in this long book carries conviction, those who articulated them faced without flinching the most negative of all the consequences of embodiment: the fragmentation, slime, and stench of the grave. It was this stench and fragmentation they saw lifted to glory in resurrection. To make body crucial to personhood is to court the possibility that (to misquote Paul) victory is swallowed up in death. But if there is resurrection, then what is redeemed includes all the fragments that concerned Tertullian and Athenagoras as well as the love for which Dante and Mechtild strove. We may not find their solutions plausible, but it is hard to feel that they got the problem wrong.
--Caroline Walker Bynum, The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity, 200-1336, New York: Columbia Univ Press (1995), p. 343.
Spinoza said that if a stone could think when thrown across a river, that stone "would believe itself to be completely free and would think that it continued in motion solely because of its own wish".
--quoted by William Willimon in The Intrusive Word, p. 10.
Man is a son of God on whom the Devil has laid his hand, not a child of the Devil whom God is trying to steal. That is the first truth of all religion.... "We called the chess-board white, we call it black;" but it is, this chess-board of our human life, white not black, -- black spotted on white, not white spotted upon black.
Phillips Brooks, "The Light of the World", p. 9, in The Light of the World (1904).
I think my prayer unanswered when really God not merely is answering it, but has been answering it for years, before ever it knew enough of itself to be prayed.
Brooks, "The Silence of Christ", p. 131, in The Light of the World (1904).
"What a wonderful sunrise... especially for such a small place".
--friend of E. Stanley Jones observing a sunset in India.
The rush and pressure of modern life are a form, perhaps the most common form, of its innate violence. To allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to surrender to too many demands, to commit oneself to too many projects, to want to help everyone in everything, is to succumb to violence. More than that, it is cooperation in violence. The frenzy of the activist neutralizes his work for peace. It destroys his own inner capacity for peace. It destroys the fruitfulness of his own work, because it kills the root of inner wisdom which makes work fruitful.
Thomas Merton, Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander, p. 86.
Music was as vital as the church edifice itself, more deeply stirring than all the glory of glass or stone. Many a stoic soul, doubtful of the creed, was melted by the music, and fell on his knees before the mystery that no words could speak.
Will Durant.
...the process of abandoning all beliefs, principles, values and policies in search of something in which no one believes, but to which no one objects; the process of avoiding the very issues that have to be solved, merely because you cannot get agreement on the way ahead. What great cause would have been fought and won under the banner, "I stand for consensus"?
Margaret Thatcher
Life is completely fair; it breaks everybody's heart.
Anonymous
From childhood on he had seen that might makes right, that man is stronger than chicken -- man eats chicken, not vice versa. That bothered him, for there was no evidence that people were more important than chickens. About his decision [to become a vegetarian], he commented, "So in a very small way, I do a favor for the chickens.... If I will ever get a monument, chickens will do it for me".
Isaac Bashevis Singer
It's often been said, boldly, that the saints in heaven rejoice over their sins, because through them they have been brought to greater and greater understanding of the endless endurance of God's love, to the knowledge that beyond every failure God's creative mercy still waits.
All we can be sure of is that whatever the deficiency and the drying-up of human capacity to love, the killing of love by pain, there is still, at the heart of everything, a love that cannot be killed by pain.
Rowan Williams , A Ray of Darkness, p. 52.
…in the church of the resurrection, the darkness of the cross is a promise of a love beyond our failure and cowardice and death.
Williams, A Ray of Darkness, p. 104.
A human being is holy, not because he or she triumphs by willpower over chaos and guilt and leads a flawless life, but because that life shows the victory of God’s faithfulness in the midst of disorder and imperfection. The church is holy – and this congregation here present is holy – not because it is a gathering of the good and the well-behaved, but because it speaks of the triumph of grace in the coming together of strangers and sinners who, miraculously, trust one another enough to join in common repentance and common praise – to express a deep and elusive unity in Jesus Christ, who is our righteousness and sanctification.
Williams, Ray of Darkness, pp. 114-115.
A man's work is nothing but a slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.
Albert Camus (quoted in Douglas Shand Tucci, Boston Bohemia, p. 74.)
A friendship will be young after the lapse of half a century; a passion is old at the end of three months.
Arthur Crawshay Hall, quoted in Douglas Shand-Tucci, Boston Bohemia, p. 190.
God is "the fellow sufferer who understands".
Alfred North Whitehead
We are not born all at once, but by bits. The body first, and the spirit later.... Our mothers are racked with the pains of our physical birth; we ourselves suffer the longer pains of our spiritual growth.
Mary Antin
Forgiveness is the name of love practiced among people who love poorly. The hard truth is that all of us love poorly. We need to forgive and be forgiven every day, every hour -- unceasingly. That is the great work of love among the fellowship of the weak that is the human family.
Henri Nouwen
"What is sacred space? It is a place where, as Joseph Campbell put it, wonder can be revealed."
Peg Streep, Altars Made Easy, p. 1.
The way remains closed to those to whom God is less real than a "consuming fire", to those who know answers but no wonder.
Abraham Joshua Heschel.
Thornton Wilder in one of his three-minute plays, The Angel that Troubled the Waters, tells of a man who stood on a day by the pool of Bethesda, praying in fierce agony that God would touch his tortured soul into health. But the angel, coming, whispered in his ear saying, "Stand back; healing is not for you. Without your wound where would your power be? It is your very remorse that makes your low voice tremble into the hearts of men. Not the angels themselves in Heaven can persuade the wretched and blundering children of earth as can one human being broken on the wheels of living. In love's service only the wounded soldiers can serve". (emph added) And in that moment the angel stepped down into the waters and troubled them. As the lone sufferer drew back, a lame old neighbor, smiling his thanks, made his painful way into the pool and was healed. Joyously, with a song on his lips, he approached the other, still standing there like a statue of grief, thinking of the things which might have been. "Perhaps", said he, "it will be your turn next! But meanwhile come with me to my house. My son is lost in dark thoughts. I do not understand him. Only you have ever lifted his mood. And my daughter, since her child died, sits in the shadow. She will not listen to us. Come with me but an hour!" "I would make up the full sum of all that Christ has to suffer in my person" (Colossians 1.24).
Paul Scherer, For We Have this Treasure, p. 54.
All wisdom is plagiarism; only stupidity is original.
Hugh Kerr, "Preacher, Professor, Editor", Theology Today, 45:1 (April 1988), 1.
...Gilbert Keith Chesterton described paradox as "Truth standing on her head to attract attention".
The Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 19.
When Rabbi Bunam was asked why the first of the Ten Commandments speaks of God bringing us out of the land of Egypt, rather than of God creating heaven and earth, he expounded: "Heaven and earth! Then man might have said, "Heaven -- that is too much for me." So God said to man: "I am the one who fished you out of the mud. Now you come here and listen to me."
The Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 21.
"One of the main functions of formalized religion is to protect people against a direct experience of God". [Carl Jung]
The Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 23.
Concepts create idols; only wonder comprehends anything. People kill one another over idols. Wonder makes us fall to our knees. [St. Gregory of Nyssa]
The Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 30.
Karl Barth once said... that too much Christian preaching speaks about an obligation which must be met in order to receive a gift, whereas the real message of the New Testament is about a gift which then leads us to an obligation.
quoted in William Willimon, The Gospel for the Person Who Has Everything, p. 23.
"'Yes' is all the Christian life is about."
Karl Barth, quoted in Willimon, The Gospel for the Person Who Has Everything, p. 25.
"There is nothing you have to do, nothing you have to do, nothing you have to do to be in God's good graces."
Frederick Buechner, ibid., p. 26.
...Jesus told us about a God whose love contains no "ifs" at all.
Ibid., p. 27.
Only he who is already loved can love; only he who has been trusted can trust; only he who has been an object of devotion can give himself.
Bultmann, quoted in Willimon, ibid., p. 69.
For the productive character, giving has an entirely different meaning. Giving is the highest expression of potency. In the very act of giving, I experience my stength, my wealth, my power.... I experience myself as overflowing, spending, alive, hence as joyous. Giving is more joyous than receiving, not because it is a deprivation, but because in the act of giving lies the expression of my aliveness.
Erich Fromm, quoted in Willimon, p. 75.
One of the charges which the Pharisees leveled against Jesus was that he ate and drank with sinners. Every time the church eats and drinks the Lord's Supper, it is claiming that Jesus chooses the same kind of dinner companions today!
Willimon, ibid., p. 86.
In a delightful essay, "The Shadow of Great-Grandmama's Dress", in her book, Yes, World, Mary Jean Irion notes that "in matters of deepest importance the church does not proceed on the faith of our fathers, but on the faith of little old ladies".
Willimon, ibid., p. 87.
Both becoming a Christian and becoming a scientist involve incorporation into a community, sharing its accumulated knowledge and wisdom, growing into its outlook and venerating its saints. Only when one has received a tremendous amount can one begin to make an original contribution.
W.G. Pollard, Physicist and Christian (SPCK, 1962); quoted by Christopher Bryant, The Heart in Pilgrimage, p. 11.
No one is as whole as he who has a broken heart.
Rabbi Moshe Leib of Sasov (Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 61)
Act yourselves into a new way of thinking.
William James (Spirituality of Imperfection, p. 91.)
If you see a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be sure he had a lot of help getting there.
Anonymous
A procession of angels pass before man and the heralds proclaim before him saying, "Make room for the icon of God'".
Talmud, Deut. Rabbah, Re'eh: 4 (Rabbi Joshua ben Levi)
Human love is often but the encounter of two weaknesses.
Francois Mauriac
We don't love qualities, we love persons; sometimes by reason of their defects as well as their qualities.
Jacques Maritain
The last function of reason is to recognize that there are an infinity of things which surpass it.
Pascal
Life is a maze in which we take the wrong turn before we learn to walk.
Cyril Connolly
There are no wrong turns. Only wrong thinking on the turns our life has taken.
Zen saying.
Love listens more often than it advises.
Noah benShea
What a nation needs more than anything else is not a Christian ruler in the palace but a Christian prophet within earshot.
Kenneth Kaunda, former president of Zambia.
In his book The Company of Strangers, Parker Palmer defines community as "that place where the person you least want to live with always lives!"
Quoted by Barbara Brown Taylor, Bread of Angels, p. 87.
You think because you understand one you must understand two, because one and one make two. But you must also understand and.
Sufi saying, quoted by Taylor, Bread of Angels, p. 90.
To have a child is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body.
Elizabeth Stone.
How else but in custom and ceremony are innocence and beauty born?
William Butler Yeats
A former principal of Brasenose College, Oxford, preached to the college once a year and would begin his sermons in this way: "The Greek word allotrioepiskopos, as I was saying last year..."
quoted by Austin Farrer, in "Emptying out the sense", Farrer: The Essential Sermons.
The more you put on externally [eg, trappings of priestly or episcopal offices], the more you are called to take off internally through a greater intimacy with Christ.
The Most Rev. Frank M. Griswold
Something is your vocation if it keeps making more of you.
Gail Godwin (quoted by Frank Griswold)
....the wrath of God is completely identical with His love. It is not another aspect of God, but one and the same thing. God's love for me the publican is His wrath for me the pharisee who tries to exclude the publican.
Harry Williams, The True Wilderness, p. 146.
We have just enough religion to make us hate , but not enough to make us love one another.
Jonathan Swift, Thoughts on Various Subjects (quoted in The Anglican Digest, Transfiguration 1998, p. 45)
When I get to heaven, if I do, I imagine I shall be surprised at three things. First I’ll be surprised that I’m there. Second, I shall be surprised at many of the other people who are there. Third, and most astonishing, will be their surprise that I’m there at all.
William Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury.
With regard to undergraduates and their religion I think there are various mistakes which have to be avoided….Another is to imagine that one’s attempt to cope with one’s own insecurities is a desire to bring people to God. Pastoral lust is the most insidious form of lust because it is the one most easily disguised as virtue.
Harry Williams, Some Day I’ll Find You, p. 211.
Instead of praying, “Speak, Lord, thy servant heareth”, our prayers too often are, “Hear, Lord, for thy servant speaketh”.
Paraphrased. Williams, Some Day I’ll Find You, p. 211.
"...what is life...when you come to think upon it, but a most excellent, accurately set, infinitely complicated machine for turning fat playful puppies into old mangy blind dogs, and proud war horses into skinny nags, and succulent young boys, to whom the world holds great delights and terrors, into old weak men, with running eyes, who drink ground rhino-horn?
"... what is man when you come to think upon him, but a minutely set, ingenious machine for turning, with infinite artfulness, the red wine of Shiraz into urine? ... But in the mean time, what has been done? A song has been composed, a kiss taken, a slanderer slain, a prophet begotten, a righteous judgment given, a joke made. The world drank in the young story-teller Mira. He went to its head, he ran in its veins, he made it glow with warmth and color. Now I am on my way down a little; the effect has worn off. The world will soon be equally pleased to piss me out again, and I do not know but that I am pressing on a little myself. But the tales which I made -- they shall last."
Isak Dinesen, "The Dreamers", Seven Gothic Tales (Modern Library), p. 275.
I think we have lost the old knowledge that happiness is overrated -- that, in a way, life is overrated. We have lost, somehow, a sense of mystery -- about us, our purpose, our meaning, our role. Our ancestors believed in two worlds, and understood this to be the solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short one. We are the first generations of man that actually expected to find happiness here on earth, and our search for it has caused such -- unhappiness. the reason: If you do not believe in another, higher world, if you believe only in the flat material world around you, if you believe that this is your only chance at happiness -- if that is what you believe, then you are not disappointed when the world does not give you a good measure of its riches, you are despairing.
In a Catholic childhood in America, you were once given, as the answer to the big questions: It is a mystery. As I grew older I was impatient with this answer. Now I am probably as old, intellectually, as I am going to get, and more and more I think: It is a mystery. I am more comfortable with this now; it seems the only rational and scientific answer.
Forbes, 9/14/92. Peggy Noonan. "You'd cry too if it happened to you". p. 65.
Above all, the church must celebrate the Eucharist as the dramatic depiction, and as the succession of tableaux, that it intrinsically is. How can we point our lives to the Kingdom’s great Banquet, if its foretaste is spread before us with all the beauty of a McDonald’s counter?
Robert Jenson, “How the world lost its story”, First Things, Oct. ’93, p. 24.
Suddenly my youth was gone, and my heart was wild, but the voice at the edge of the night said, “You no longer need to run and climb like an aging child.
Forget the beach, the woodland and the hill.
There is space for speed and motion still.”
Suddenly my sight was gone; and the voice in the cloudy dawn eased my pain, telling me, “You will see again in a new way the lengthening shadows on the lawn, the unseen birds that bring you in their beaks the newborn day.”…
Suddenly then I had no place to live But, “You still have much to give.”
You will enter an unexpected door and I will make you see and be as never before,” said the voice on the edge of light.
Virginia Hamilton Adair in The New York Times, Nov. 1, 1998.
Men do not differ much about what things they will call evils; they differ enormously about what evils they will call excusable.
G.K. Chesterton
All men thirst to confess their crimes more than tired beasts thirst for water; but they naturally object to confessing them while other people, who have also committed the same crimes, sit by and laugh at them.
G.K. Chesterton
Precisely because of the greatness of God, we don't have to be great at all. Just in awe. (Joan Chittister?)
There must be always remaining in every one's life someplace for the singing of the angels -- some place for that which in itself is breathlessly beautiful and by an inherent prerogative throwing all the rest of life into a new and creative relatedness....
That the commonplace is shot through with new glory -- old burdens become lighter, deep and ancient wounds lose much of their old, old hurting. A crown is placed over our heads that for the rest of our lives we are trying to grow tall enough to wear.... (Howard Thurman)
Does anyone have the foggiest idea what sort of power we so blithely invoke? Or, as I suspect, does not one believe a word of it? The churches are children playing on the floor with their chemistry sets, mixing up a batch of TNT to kill a Sunday morning. It is madness to wear ladies’ straw hats and velvet hats to church; we should all be wearing crash helmets. Ushers should issue life preservers and signal flares: they should lash us to our pews.
Annie Dillard (from either Pilgrim at Tinker Creek or Teaching a Stone to Talk)
I would rather, I think, undergo the famous dark night of the soul than encounter in church the dread hootenanny, but these purely personal preferences are of no account, and maladaptive to boot.
Annie Dillard.
Week after week we witness the same miracle: that God, for reasons unfathomable, refrains from blowing our dancing bear act to smithereens. Week after week, Christ washes the disciples’ dirty feet, handles their very toes, and repeats, “It is all right, believe it or not, to be people.”
Annie Dillard.
In a written examination where the students are allotted four hours, it is neither here nor there if an individual student happens to finish before the time is up, or uses the entire time. Here, the task is one thing, the time another.
But when the time itself is the task, it becomes a fault to finish before the time is up. Suppose a man were given the task of entertaining himself for an entire day, and he finishes as early as noon: Then his speed would not be meritorious. So it is when life constitutes the task. To be finished with life before life has finished with one is not to have finished the task.
Soren Kierkegaard, Concluding Unscientific Postscript.
...Christianity is about water: “Everyone that thirsteth, come ye to the waters.” It’s about baptism... It’s about full immersion, about falling into something elemental and wet. Most of what we do in worldly life is geared toward our staying dry, looking good, not going under. But in baptism, in lakes and rain and tanks and fonts, you agree to do something that’s a little sloppy because at the same time it’s also holy, and absurd. It’s about surrender, giving into all those things we can’t control; it’s a willingness to let go of balance and decorum and get drenched.
...in the Christian experience of baptism, the hope is that when you go under and you come out, maybe a little disoriented, you haven’t dragged the old day along behind you. The hope, the belief, is that a new day is upon you now. A day when you are emboldened to take God at God’s word about cleanness and protection: “When you passeth through the water, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee.”
Anne Lamott, Traveling Mercies, pp. 231-232.
Christ did not come to bring a Bible but a Gospel; the Bible came afterward. So, preach the Gospel.
P.T. Forsyth
If Luther sounded the trumpet for reform, Calvin orchestrated the score by which the Reformation became a part of Western civilization.
Wendell C. Harden (student in HY101)
Last sentence of John Donne’s last sermon.: There we leave you in that blessed dependency, to hang upon him that hangs upon the cross.
And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.
Anais Nin.
...for Paul, “flesh” referred not to the whole person but to that in us which resists God...
Countryman, Dirt, Greed, and Sex, p. 204.
Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith but in doubt. It is when we are not sure that we are doubly sure.
Reinhold Niebuhr (quoted by George Stephanopolous)
O Sacred Providence, who from end to end Strongly and sweetly movest! Shall I write, And not of Thee, through whom my fingers bend To hold my quill? Shall they not do thee right?
Of all the creatures both in sea and land Only to Man thou hast made known thy wayes And put the penne alone into his hand, And made him Secretarie of thy praise...
George Herbert (as quoted by Herbert O’Driscoll in “The View from the Hill of Mars”)
Man is born broken. He lives by mending. The grace of God is glue.
Eugene O’Neill (as quoted by Anne Lamott in Traveling Mercies)
The foundations of Empire are often occasions of woe; their dismemberment, always.
Evelyn Waugh
What is the knocking? What is the knocking at the door in the night? It is somebody wants to do us harm.
No, no, it is the three strange angels. Admit them, admit them.
D.H. Lawrence (quoted by Anne Lamott)
This is not He alone Whom I have known, This is all Christs since time began The blood of all the dead His veins have shed, For He is God and Ghost and Everyman.
George Buttrick (quoted in The Book of Jesus, ed., Calvin Miller, p. 79)
Christ’s command to love God is not obeyed if it is obeyed as a command.
Augustine (quoted by Harry Williams in The True Wilderness, p. 119)
Baptism is the fundamental sacrament of Christianity: "By one Spirit we were all baptised into one body" (1 Cor. 12.13). Confirmation appropriates it, the eucharist presupposes it; ordination authorises the expression of the priesthood into which all the baptised are incorporated. Baptism constitutes the ground of our unity -- the unity that exists and cries out to be realised in shared holy communion. (p. 304)
The baptismal paradigm, as I understand it, involves a mystical perception of that fundamental ecclesial reality. It is response to the transcendent mystery of the God who may be loved but not thought, as The Cloud of Unknowing puts it. It takes that love of God in Christ as the central Christian phenomenon, and doctrines and dogmas as necessary and valid ways of discerning the mystery, provided we never forget that they are human productions, essentially personal and existential statements....Instead, through the conflictual process itself -- through argument, criticism and attempts to understand one another on the baiss of respect and acceptance -- beliefs may be refined and agreement perhaps discovered. (p. 310)
We need an acceptance of the principle (inculcated so often by the classical Anglican divines) that there are no theological grounds for breaching communion over an issue, such as the ordination of women to the priesthood or the episcopate, that is not itself a condition of the church's communion. (p. 311)
All quotations from Paul Avis, Anglicanism and the Christian Church (Fortress, 1989)
He comes to us on Sunday morning and leaves on Tuesday. While he is here, he tells us stories from the Bible, sings hymns, leads us in prayer. He listens; with all his being he listens, and does not judge. The disturbed are quieted; the drunks are calmed; the angry begin to see that there may be ways they can help themselves. He looks, and he sees; he listens, and he hears. This alone is an unusual experience for most homeless people: We are used to being either invisible or an annoyance. He brings dignity into the lives of those who have lost it. He is like... he is like a small fire that we warm our hands over. What else can I say?
Laurie King, To Play the Fool, pp. 122-123.
One night a woman dreamed that she walked into shop. Much to her surprise, she found God working behind the counter. She asked God, “What do you sell here?” “Everything your heart desires,” God replied. It was incredible. She was talking face to face with God. God just told her she could have anything she desired. “I want peace of mind and love and happiness and wisdom and freedom from fear”, she told God. Then almost as an afterthought she added, “Not just for me, but for everyone on earth.” God smiled, “I think you’ve got me wrong, my dear. We don’t sell fruits here. Only seeds.”
A Western reporter interviewed Boris Yeltsin several months ago. When asked what gave him the courage to stand firm and help ensure the fall of communism in the former USSR, Yeltsin credited the story he read of Lech Walesa, the electrician who helped bring democracy to Poland. Similarly, Walesa stated that he was inspired by reading accounts of the civil rights movement in America led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. King indicated that he was spurred to action when he learned of the courage of one woman, Rosa Parks, who simply refused to sit in the back of the bus. We seldom know the potential of the seed we sow, but is it possible that the fall of the Soviet Union was in small way brought about by a black woman who refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus?
“Let us risk the wildest places lest we go down in comfort and despair.” And “What is death but a refusal to grow?”
From “Magellan” a poem by Mary Oliver.
They know everything. Unfortunately, they don’t know anything else.
Comment made about graduates of the French hautes ecoles. Quoted by Henry Kissinger.
Sign in front of dry cleaners: “Thirty years on the same spot”.
Most people don’t need discernment; they need courage. They know what to do.
Douglas Brown, OHC.
People don’t own what they don’t create.
Myron Kellner Rogers
People don’t resist change; they resist being changed.
MKR.
In living systems the preservation of life motivates change.
MKR.
You can’t sacrifice yourself until you have a self to sacrifice.
Guy Lytle.
The way real work gets done is by breaking the rules.
MKR.
“’I did it’ says memory; ‘I couldn’t have’, says pride, and remains relentless. Eventually memory yields.”
Nietszche
Above me, wind does its best To blow leaves off the aspen Tree a month too soon. No use, Wind, all you succeed in doing Is making music, the noise of failure growing beautiful.
Bill Holm
For me, the Nicene Creed is not a demand for intellectual surrender to a set of non-negotiable propositions; instead it represents the summary of insights and experience garnered from the founding centuries of the Church’s history.
John Polkinghorne, The Faith of a Physicist, p. 6.
All bodies, the firmament, the stars, the earth and its kingdoms are not worth the least of minds, for it knows them all and itself, too, while bodies know nothing.
Pascal. Quoted in Polkinghorne, p. 11.
It is those who are not seekers who must account for not being so since there are fundamental questions concerning the existence and order of the universe that are vitally important to how we shall live and what we shall hope for.
Diogenes Allen, quoted in Polkinghorne, p. 15.
Man alone can construct and parse the grammar of hope... Of all evolutionary tools towards survival, it is the ability to use future tenses of the verb – when, how did the psyche acquire this monstrous and liberating power? – which I take to be foremost.
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