Advent Devotion: Action in Waiting

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

A quote from Christoph Friedrich Blumhardt as found in the Advent/Christmas devotional book Watch for the Light:

The all important thing is to keep your eyes on what comes from God and to make way for it to come into being here on earth. If you always try to be heavenly and spiritually minded, you won’t understand the everyday work God has for you to do. But if you embrace what is to come from God, if you live for Christ’s coming in practical life, you will learn that divine things can be experienced here and now, things quite different from what our human brains can ever imagine.

Today’s Best Potter Quote on the ‘Net

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

This comes from Julie Clawson:

Loved it. Loved it. Loved it. It was satisfying in all ways. I think I cried for the last 300 pages or so (kinda hard not to when you read something like this when you are utterly exhausted and worn raw). I’ll wait for now to post spoilery type things. But I do have to say that after this concluding book all conservative Christians need to make a huge apology to JK Rowling, lift the bans on the books, and give them a place of honor on the spiritual fiction shelf next to the Chronicles of Narnia and The Lord of the Rings (where I’ve kept my set all along…).

I’ve not read the books, but I’ve enjoyed the movies and have long felt that children have a far better sense of imagination and ability to simply enjoy a good story than many of us adults. And who can argue with a story where love wins the day?

Lenten Quote: On this Gallows

Friday, March 23rd, 2007

…those who suffer in vain and without respect depend on those who suffer in accord with justice. If there were no one who said, “I die, but I shall live,” no one who said, “I and the Father are one,” then there would be no hope for those who suffer mute and devoid of hoping. All suffering would then be senseless, destructive pain that could not be worked on, all grief would be “worldly grief” and would lead to death.
Dorothee Soelle

Lenten Quote: Truth to Tell

Monday, March 19th, 2007

What happened then goes on happening now. In the presence of his integrity, our own pretense is exposed. In the presence of his constancy, our cowardice is brought to light. In the presence of his fierce love for God and for us, our own hardness of heart is revealed. Take him out of the room and those things become relative. I am not that much worse than you are nor you than I, but leave him in the room and there is no room to hide. He is the light of the world. In his presence, people either fall down to worship him or do everything they can to extinguish his light.
Barbara Brown Taylor

Lenten Quote: The Divine Scandal

Friday, March 16th, 2007

I’ve often puzzled over the “he descended into hell” phrase of the Apostle’s Creed. Here are, perhaps, some helpful words from Emil Brunner:

God goes to the end. He reaches the goal. To be sure, this end is exactly the opposite of what we fix as our goal. We wish to climb up to heaven: God, however, descends - down to where? To death on a cross. This is why Jesus Christ has to descend into hell. He had to go the way to its very end. Our rightful end is hell, that is, banishment from God - godforsakeness. Only there has God completely come to us, there where he has taken upon himself everything, even the cursed end of our way.

Jesus Christ has gone into hell in order to get us out of there. For with everything he does, that is his goal, that he may get us out, reconcile us with God, and fill us with God’s Spirit. He had to despair of God for us (”My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”) so that we do not have to despair of God. He has taken this upon himself so that we may become free of it.
Emil Brunner

Lenten Quote: Temptation

Monday, March 12th, 2007

Psychological studies reveal that Americans live in less than forty percent awareness, as though our minds and spirits cringe before the banality and ugliness of national life. Such studies imply an enormous waste of potential lost to trivial pursuits - game-playing, fantasizing, daydreaming, television, self-pity, brooding, boredom, gluttony in food or drink. Lost is the prospect of personal and social renewal, reading, study, meditation, prayer, teaching, service to the poor, justice, peacemaking, and non-violent resistance to power-mongering government and corporations. The scripture likens such crippled attentiveness to death - death before one dies.
Philip Berrigan

Lenten Quote: Cosmic Significance

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

Christ’s love is so great, it must lift our minds above our little struggles - and any preoccupation with our own salvation - so that we can see the needs of others, and beyond that the greatness of God and his Creation. The cross is so much greater than the personal; it has cosmic significance, for its power embraces the whole earth and more than this earth!
J. Heinrich Arnold

Lenten Quote: A Look Inside

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

The spirit of truth does not seek comfort. The purpose of Lent is not to escape the conscience, but to create a healthy hatred for evil, a heartfelt contrition for sin, and a passionately felt need for grace. This continuous movement of faith from a sense of sin to grace and forgiveness ends only when the spirit is ultimately released.
Edna Hong

Lenten Quote: Repent

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

We may come {to baptism} singing “Just as I Am,” but we will not stay by being our same old selves. The needs of the world are too great, the suffering and pain too extensive, the lures of the world too seductive for us to begin to change the world unless we are changed, unless conversion of life and morals becomes our pattern. The status quo is too alluring. It is the air we breathe, the food we eat, the six-thirty news, our institutions, our theologies, and politics. The only way we shall break its hold on us is to be transferred to another dominion, to be cut loose from our old certainties, to be thrust under the flood and then pulled forth fresh and new-born. Baptism takes us there.
William Willimon

This quote and others to come are from the devotional book Bread and Wine: Readings for Lent and Easter.

Lenten Quote: Followers, Not Admirers

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

It is well known that Christ consistently used the expression “follower.” He never asks for admirers, worshipers, or adherents. No, he calls disciples. It is not adherents of a teaching but followers of a life Christ is looking for.
Soren Kierkegaard

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