SHARE:  
 
 
St. Francis of Assisi painting by Sr. Nancy Earle

Painting by Sr. Nancy Earle

Richard’s Daily Meditations

Seven Underlying Themes
of Richard Rohr’s Teachings

Third Theme: There is only one Reality. Any distinction between natural and supernatural, sacred and profane, is a bogus one (Frame).

Major Misplacement of Attention

Meditation 28 of 49

The Christian tradition became so concerned with making Jesus into its God, and making sure everybody believed that Jesus was God, that it often ignored his very practical and clear teachings. (Has Christianity been known for loving its enemies, or even building bridges of understanding between peoples?) Instead, we made the important issues abstract theological questions about the nature of God (which ask almost nothing of us except argument). Much of our church life has been on that level, and no one ever really “wins,” and so it goes on for centuries. Churches divide and separate largely over nonessential Gospel issues. “Who can pour the water, when, and what do they say?”

What the Buddha made clear to his people is that the crucial questions are first of all psychological and personal, and here and now. I think that Jesus was also first talking about the human situation and describing the issues of human liberation right here and now. Clearly the Kingdom of God, as Jesus describes it, is first of all here and now, and is the very thing we ask for in our official “Our Father” prayer: “thy kingdom come” here!

Despite it all, we turned Jesus’ message into a reward-or-punishment contest that would hopefully come later—instead of a transformational experience that was verifiable here and now by the fruits of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23). Probably more than anything else, this huge misplacement of attention anesthetized and weakened the actual transformative power of Christianity. It all got moved into “later” and frankly only for a few. For both Jesus and for the Buddha, rewards and punishments are first of all inherent to the action and in this world. Goodness is its own reward and evil is its own punishment, and then we must all leave the future to the mercy and love of God, instead of thinking we are the umpires and judges of who goes where, when, and how. What a cosmic waste of time and energy and attention.

Adapted from Jesus and Buddha: Paths to Awakening (CD, DVD, MP3)

 

 

Falling Upward book + companion journal

Back by popular demand:

Breathing Under Water

a self-paced, online course
June 19 – August 14, 2013

Join fellow freedom-seekers in an eight-week exploration of spirituality and the Twelve Steps.

Space is limited. Register today!

Did you get this message forwarded from someone else? Wish to sign up for CAC's email lists yourself? Subscribe to CAC email lists here.

You are receiving this message because you subscribed to the CAC's "Daily Meditations" email list. You can unsubscribe or change your preferences or email address at any time.

Please do not reply to this email. For more info about: