Jesus Christ, Detail of De�sis mosaic, Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, Turkey.   

Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation

Jesus, the Christ

Sabbath Meditation

Saturday, July 19, 2014

 
Remember
:

 
The cross of Jesus was a mirror held up to history, so we could utterly change our normal image of God. (Sunday)
 

Jesus hung on the cross and did not return the negative energy directed at him. (Monday)
 

The Gospel gives our suffering personal and cosmic meaning, by connecting our pain to the pain of others and, finally, by connecting us to the very pain of God. (Tuesday)
 

“I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End.”
— Revelation 21:6 (Wednesday)
 

Jesus is the historical figure, and Christ is the cosmic figure—and together they carry both the individual and history forward. (Thursday)
 

Authentic mystical experience connects us and just keeps connecting at ever-newer levels, breadths, and depths, “until God can be all in all.” (Friday)
 

Rest: The Jesus Prayer

Let’s look closely at the familiar Eastern Orthodox prayer, “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, the sinner.” Within the context of this week’s study on Jesus, the Christ, these words can now hold rich meaning for you. Let’s look at the words.

Lord—While the word can connote dominion and hierarchical authority (the Greek, kurios, means “master”), remember the authority with which Jesus taught was an inner authority, born of his awareness that he was God’s own child. And we have inherited this power!

Jesus Christ—He is both human and divine, personal and infinite. “Jesus” was a common name (Joshua in Hebrew); “Christ” means anointed, chosen. We need both to ground us in the ordinary, suffering world and to draw us toward the “heaven” of union.

Sinner—Remember that “sin” is simply that which keeps us from knowing and living out of our True Self. We are forgetful of our inherent belovedness. Don’t think of sin as just individual “nastiness,” which is largely shame-based thinking and in itself does not get you to a good place. We settle for moralism when we do not get to mysticism.

Mercy—We need the “salvation” of Love to overcome our fear-based disconnection, to return us to wholeness. Abundant, never-withheld, restorative grace brings us back into intimacy with self, God, and others. Pope Francis says that mercy is the highest virtue in the hierarchy of Christian truths.

Using this prayer as a focal point, say the words repeatedly until the prayer moves from your head into your heart and you connect with the Presence already praying ceaselessly within.

“Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, the sinner.”

Gateway to Silence:
In Christ all things hold together (Colossians 1:17).

 
 

Immortal Diamond:

A Study in Search of the True Self

 

September 24-December 3, 2014

Self-paced, 10-week, in-depth study
of Fr. Richard�s book, Immortal Diamond

 

�CAC�s online courses have shown me
for the first time the reality of my true self.�
— Brenda, course participant

 

Register at cac.org

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 and CAC Updates ” email list. You can unsubscribe or change your email preferences at any time. If you would like to change your email address, please email a request to techassist@cac.org with your current and new email addresses.

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

•  Living School, visit cac.org/rohr-inst.

•  CAC Events, visit cac.org/events.

•  CAC Bookstore, visit store.cac.org.

•  Supporting CAC, visit cac.org/support-cac.

•  Technical Help, email techassist@cac.org.