Tag: jesus

A “welcoming” prayer

The “Philippian Hymn” likely was an early Christian song quoted by Paul, declaring that life is not about how much praise, power or money we can accumulate, but rather how much we can give away. Throughout The Wisdom Jesus, Cynthia Bourgeaut returns to the theme of kenosis (“he emptied himself”) and the cross/crucifixion. She begins Chapter 15, “Welcoming,” with Paul’s introduction to this beautiful kenotic hymn: “Let the same mind be in you as was seen in Christ Jesus.” Bourgeault said:

When we hear the word “mind” we immediately think of some mental construct, and “putting on the mind of Christ” gets interpreted as “putting on the attitude of Christ.” This in turn, is usually interpreted as trying to imitate those admirable qualities we see in Jesus’s being: kindness, compassion, gentleness, integrity.To really put on the “mind” means … discovering in our own selves the secret of Jesus’s capacity to open himself to life in such an extraordinary way.

Bourgeault invites us to consider a “Welcoming Prayer” rhythm developed in the 1980s following the work of Thomas Keating. It “demonstrates … that the kenosis Jesus taught and modeled, far from being passive or spiritually indifferent … is in fact a pathway of vibrant spiritual strength and creativity connecting us to energetic fields far beyond our own finite resources.”

A Welcoming Prayer is: a three-step process of acknowledging what is going on internally during a distressing physical or emotional situation, “welcoming” it, and letting it go.

Tomorrow’s post will conclude this week’s excursion into Cynthia Bourgeault’s The Wisdom Jesus.

From “The Welcoming Prayer by Thomas Keating OCSO,” by the Diocese of Charlottetown (Prince Edward Island), January 21, 2024.

Kenosis

Cynthia Bourgeaut’s excursion into the Gospel of Thomas ends with (what I see as her book’s thesis): It is not a ladder but a circle that brings us to God: the continuously renewed giving and receiving which in its totality is where God dwells. This kenotic spirituality (self-emptying as the path to fullness) is in my opinion Jesus’s unique and profoundly original contribution to the spiritual consciousness of humankind.

Seeing Jesus through this new filter … gives us the freedom to go deeper. I find nothing in the Gospel of Thomas that contradicts any of Jesus’s teachings in the canonical gospels. Rather, it rounds them outand creates a newfound sense of awe as we see just how original and subtle his understanding really is. He is the first truly integral teacher to appear on this planet. She elaborates:

I think … all of the great spiritual paths lead toward … this larger, nondual mind as the seat of personal consciousness—but they get there by different routes. While Jesus is typical of the wisdom tradition in his vision of what a whole and unified human being looks like, the route he lays out for getting there is very different from anything that had ever been seen on the planet up to that point. She continues:

In Jesus everything hangs together around a single center of gravity …. What name might we give to this center? The apostle Paul suggests the word kenosisin Philippians 2:5-16 … to describe what “the mind of Christ” is all about. (This is from Bourgeault’s Chapter 5, “Kenosis–The Path of Self-Emptying Love.” The Greek word kenosis means “to empty,” like letting the air out of a balloon.)

From “Kenosis,” a Daily Meditation by Richard Rohr, December 10, 2017 (which draws from Bourgeault’s The Wisdom Jesus).

Catch-up metaphors

Sometimes Don Saliers‘ first words in response to a deep theological question are: “Within the limitations of human speech….” Metaphor is the language of faith. As humanity evolves, we find new metaphors to describe our experience with, and our (always limited) understanding of, “God.”

Ilia Delio’s use of “God” (in quotes) reminds us that it (and every word) is inadequate, an important lesson from Moses’ encounter with the burning bush, where he was inspired to go back to Egypt (from where he fled) to lead his people out of slavery. He asks the Voice, “What is your name?”

The answer was, “I am.” The point of this ancient story is that Divine Reality is beyond any name. Ironically, and profoundly, YHWH (the Hebrew term for “I am”) became the name of the Nameless One. To put Delio in my words, we need to refresh the metaphors of our God-language.

An “up there” God worked on a flat earth. (Our son Cully met some flat earth believers on a hike awhile back in New Zealand.) We (most of us, at least) know the Universe is populated with many burning, light-giving spheres such as our sun, as well as cooled, spinning spheres we call planets.

Delio says an “out there,” or “up there” God is first-axial age language. We need a metaphor refresh for the second-axial age. Look within yourself, as well as beyond yourself, to dis-cover God. A burning bush inspired Moses to take action; maybe trillions of burning stars can inspire us to take action.

From “Light Up the Sky: How Many Stars Are in the Universe?“, Little Passports

Just ask questions

This morning, a waking thought was, “Just ask questions.” A lingering issue for me is how to function during the new Trump administration. At times, anger will be justified when he becomes vengeful or largely untruthful, such as during his recent “news conference.” But, I will resist angry reactions.

Anger is a valid response to untruth, injustice, or oppression. It’s part of the biblical prophetic tradition. But anger isn’t a useful strategy. Anger can waste energy and divert attention from crucial issues. And, we’re facing a boatload of crucial issues. My goal is to respect him and everyone in this new era.

My strategy will be simple: Just ask questions. Donald Trump resists questioners and fact-checkers, which he will dismiss, demean, ridicule, undermine or persecute. Prophets like Elijah, Amos and Jeremiah kept leaders honest with a spirit of objectivity that didn’t defer to wealth or power. Prophetic voices in the religious community are always a minority, but they are always present. Some prophetic voices are secular people, including some reporters who strive for objectivity and are simply seeking truth. Bless reporters who seek straight, cogent, relevant answers from Trump and all leaders.

Bloggers Heather Cox Richardson, Joyce Vance, Jay Kuo and Steven Beschloss ask good questions, as do The Atlantic and The Bulwark. I’ll rely on these and many other good sources. Next week, I’ll ask some questions about the financial news media’s post-election excitement about potentially lower taxes and potentially less government regulation. Some of them have been more sober in recent weeks as the stock and bond markets declined, rattled by the threat of tariffs, higher national debt and disturbing comments about annexing Canada, Greenland and the Panama Canal.

From “Sentenced,” by Joyce Vance, Civil Discourse, January 11, 2025. The audio recording of Judge Juan Merchan’s sentencing of Donald Trump is insightful, and it is available online at CBS.