Does God exist?

Published in Announcements on Nov 5, 2007

Two new books are reviewed in the New York Times that argue the existance of God. One is written by a former believer and the other by a former athiest. Stanley Fish, dean emeritus of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago writes:

 

Perhaps an individual reader of either will have his or her mind changed, but their chief value is that together they testify to the continuing vitality and significance of their shared subject. Both are serious inquiries into matters that have been discussed and debated by sincere and learned persons for many centuries. The project is an old one, but these authors pursue it with an energy and goodwill that invite further conversation with sympathetic and unsympathetic readers alike.

In short, these books neither trivialize their subject nor demonize those who have a different view of it, which is more than can be said for the efforts of those fashionable atheist writers whose major form of argument would seem to be ridicule.
Click here to read his entire review.

Find the holiness in the ordinary

Published in Announcements on Nov 1, 2007

Presbyterian pastor Jim Bonewald writes of the extraordinary ordinariness of Naaman, "the General Schwarzkopf of the Aramean Army."

 

 

Often it’s faithfulness to the common, everyday, ordinary things that God uses to work the extraordinary in our midst. So let’s work to pay better attention to those things, to listen, to be faithful so that we might begin to discern what it is that God wants to do with the ordinary in order to accomplish the extraordinary in our lives.
Click here to read the entire reflection.

Creative journaling

Published in Announcements on Oct 31, 2007
June Mack Maffin offers journal prompting questions on her Soulistry blog. For example:
Would you identify yourself as one who expectantly looks to each day as "the very life of life!"; or are you more a person who looks to each day with dread?

If the latter, what can you do to be more a person who celebrates life?

It’s not just Buddhism/ Hinduism/ Jainism/ Sanskirt proverbs which espouses this philosophy (Look well therefore to this day) of celebrating life. Jewish people often shout “L’cheim … To life!” at special celebrations and Jews and Christians find solace in the Deuteronomist’s encouragement to “Choose life!” Are there some little things you can do to make “every tomorrow a vision of hope” beginning today?
For more, click here.

David Steindl-Rast, OSB, interviewed

Published in Announcements on Oct 18, 2007

Brother David Steindl-Rast is a Benedictine monk who for decades has divided his time between a hermit’s life with periods of silence and lecture tours on five continents. He has been a leader in building bridges between religious traditions, working closely with Thomas Merton in the early years of the Christian dialogue with Eastern traditions. He is perhaps best known for his work on gratitude, and at present, serves a world wide Network for Grateful Living through www.gratefulness.org, an interactive Web sitewebsite with several thousand participants daily from more than 242 countries. Kate Olson spoke with Brother David about how the ‘way of love’ is revealed in the teachings and practices in the Christian tradition.

Click here to listen to a 13 minute interview of Brother David.

 

[via The Fetzer Institute]

The Dalai Lama honored by the United States

Published in Announcements on Oct 17, 2007
Today, [October 17] the Dalai Lama is scheduled to meet with President Bush at the White House. Wednesday, Bush and congressional leaders are to present the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize winner with the Congressional Gold Medal — the highest civilian honor awarded by Congress — during a ceremony in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda. Thousands of the Dalai Lama's supporters will celebrate on the Capitol's West Lawn.
Click here to read the entire story.

Is spiritual direction a fad?

Published in Announcements on Oct 16, 2007
Randall Friesen is noticing more and more people are intertested in spiritual direction.
For whatever reasons, it seems that Spiritual Direction has been on the radar of a number of different people and organizations lately. It’s coming up in conversations I’m having with people about leadership, and in peoples personal development stories. Interesting to me is that I’m not initiating those discussions.

He wonders if this is a passing trend or a confluence of new thinking in the world. What do you think?

Spiritual Direction on the Rise
Is the spiritual direction a passing fad?

Yes, it seems to be a 1970s style trend that will eventually fade.
No, there is a real shift going on in the world, and spiritual direction is an integral part of new thinking.

 

Click here to read Friesen's original post.

Are you spiritually malnurished?

Published in Announcements on Oct 2, 2007
Mark Earley, president of Prison Fellowship Ministries, recently wrote on the value of having a soul friend. He writes from an evangelical Christian perspective, but his ideas are easily applicable in any tradition.
[T]he amazing disappearing act of deep personal friendships is a tell-tale sign of spiritual malnutrition. Think about it. As Mindy Caliguire asks in her new small-group study guide, Spiritual Friendship, “What do you do when you can’t stand the thought of praying, when the words of the Bible seem plastic and false . . . when you have been doing everything ‘right’ and the bottom falls out?” It’s at these times when it is the spiritual friends who throw us a life-preserver.
Click here to read the entire post.

Too busy for spiritual direction?

Published in Announcements on Sep 28, 2007
Mike, an interm Presbyterian pastor in Orlando, Florida, USA, is way too busy. He's been blogging about a book he is reading, The Contemplative Pastor, by Eugene Peterson. Peterson says of busy-ness:
The word busy is the symptom not of commitment but of betrayal. It is not devotion but defection. The adjective busy set as a modifier to pastor should sound to our ears like adulterous to characterize a wife or embezzling to describe a banker. It is an outrageous scandal, a blasphemous affront.
Read the full post here.

Students need spiritual direction

Published in Announcements on Sep 20, 2007
Anthony Kronman, in the September 16, 2007 edition of the Boston Globe, writes about the failure of colleges and universities to help students grapple with the search for meaning in their lives.
The students who have won this prize are about to enter an academic environment richer than any they have known. They will find courses devoted to every question under the sun. But there is one question for which most of them will search their catalogs in vain: The question of the meaning of life, of what one should care about and why, of what living is for.
He goes on to say:
Our culture may be spiritually impoverished, but what it needs is not more religion. What it needs is an alternative to religion, for colleges and universities to become again the places they once were - spiritually serious but nondogmatic, concerned with the soul but agnostic about God.

Read the entire article here.

[via The Line]

Dhamma behind bars

Published in Announcements on Sep 14, 2007
Jenny Phillips, a cultural anthropologist, psychotherapist, and documentary filmmaker, interviewed the 36  prisoners (called “the dhamma brothers”) for her documentary of their participation in a 10-day Vipassana meditation course held at the Donaldson Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison  outside Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
As Buddhism inches toward the pop culture mainstream, practitioners are taking its tenets of mindfulness, acceptance and compassion to populations in need of spiritual guidance, namely prisons and centers for troubled youths.

Prisoners have been practicing meditation on their own through outreach programs for years. The Prison-Ashram Project began in 1973 and in 1989 the Prison Dharma Network was founded, an umbrella organization now encompassing over 100 prison volunteer groups from different Buddhist traditions.

To see a preview of the documentary, click here.

Read the entire story here [via DallasNews Religion]

New Web site about Judaism for Muslims

Published in Announcements on Sep 13, 2007
The Simon Wiesenthal Center has launched a multilingual Web site whose main purpose is to inform Muslims about Judaism through a forum that allows visitors to post live questions in Arabic, Farsi, Urdu, Bahasa and English.

The concept for the Web site was developed by Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Los Angeles-based organization that focuses on Holocaust remembrance and human rights.

"In an environment where the current perception of Jews is largely shaped by the most extreme elements," Cooper said in a statement Monday, "we have to reach out so that the truth about Jews and Judaism is readily available to Arab and Muslim societies."
[Associated Press via DallasNews Religion]

Unwilling to be separate

Published in Announcements on Sep 5, 2007
Angel Kyodo Williams, is a spiritual teacher, activist, artist and founder of New Dharma Meditation Center for Urban Peace. She is the author of Being Black: Zen and the Art of Living with Fearlessness and Grace. She serves as guiding teacher and spiritual director of the New Dharma Meditation Center for Urban Peace in Oakland, California, USA, a training center for engaging individual, community, and social transformation as spiritual practice. In the clip below, she says society will be unwilling to bear separation as a way of doing things.

Help evaluate Presence

Published in Announcements on Aug 31, 2007
Please share your thoughts about the September issue of Presence: An International Journal of Spiritual Direction. You can fill out a simple survey online and make your thoughts known. Click here to start the evaluation survey.

Tips for a great day

Published in Announcements on Aug 30, 2007
Pastor Jeff Berg lists seven ways to have a great day at the office. Check out number 6.
6. Engage in personal development. Read a book, watch your sermon on video and see how you can improve, meet with a mentor or spiritual director...do something to better yourself. If you improve yourself as a part of your daily routine, you will feel better about the direction of your life and God's ability to use you.
See the other six here.

A saint's dark night

Published in Announcements on Aug 29, 2007

Mother Teresa of Calcuta's privite journals and letters are about to be published under the title Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light. Exerpts appeared in the the August 23 issue of Time from which we learned that Mother Teresa spent the last decades of her life in an agonizing feeling of separation from God. In a New York Times editorial, James Martin, SJ, comments about her struggle:

Mother Teresa’s “dark night” was of a different magnitude, lasting for decades. It is almost unparalleled in the lives of the saints. In time, with the aid of the priest who acted as her spiritual director, Mother Teresa concluded that these painful experiences could help her identify not only with the abandonment that Jesus Christ felt during the crucifixion, but also with the abandonment that the poor faced daily.
Read the rest of Martin's comments here.
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