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Icy Comet NEAT

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Richard Rohr's Daily Meditations

Seven Underlying Themes of Richard Rohr's Teachings

Fourth Theme: Everything belongs and no one needs to be scapegoated or excluded. Evil and illusion only need to be named and exposed truthfully, and they die in exposure to the light (Ecumenism).

The Crack in Everything

Meditation 14 of 52

Leonard Cohen’s song, “Anthem,” states in the refrain: “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.” It sounds a lot like Paul’s statement about carrying “the treasure in earthen vessels” (2 Corinthians 4:7). These are both much more poetic ways of naming what we unfortunately called “original sin”—a poor choice of words because the word sin implies fault and culpability, and that is precisely not the point! Original sin was trying to warn us that the flaw at the heart of all reality is nothing we did personally, but that there is simply “a crack in everything” and so we should not be surprised when it shows itself in us or in everything else. This has the power to keep us patient, humble, and less judgmental. (One wonders if this does not also make the point that poetry and music are a better way to teach spiritual things than mental concepts.)

The deep intuitions of most church doctrines are invariably profound and correct, but they are still expressed in mechanical and literal language that everybody adores, stumbles over, denies, or fights. Hold on for a while until you get to the real meaning, which is far more than the literal meaning! That allows you to creatively both understand and critique things—without becoming oppositional, hateful, arrogant, and bitter yourself. Some call this “appreciative inquiry” and it has an entirely different tone that does not invite or create “the equal and opposite reactionof physics. The opposite of contemplation is not action; it is reaction. Much of the “inconsistent ethic of life,” in my opinion, is based on ideological reactions and groupthink, not humble discernment of how darkness hides and “how the light gets in” to almost everything. I hope I do not shock you, but it is really possible to have very “ugly morality” and sometimes rather “beautiful immorality.” Please think and pray about that.

Adapted from Spiral of Violence: The World, the Flesh, and the Devil
(CD, MP3)

 

Transforming the World through Contemplative Prayer -- Richard Rohr & Laurence Freeman offer wisdom for a world in crisis -- 7 hour audio teaching available as mp3 or CD -- Click here to order

A New Teaching from Rohr and Freeman:

Transforming the World
through Contemplative Prayer

These two spiritual friends offer practical guidance for the challenges of our time, a path toward lasting change and a more just and loving humanity.

“The work of religion is to make you aware that something is already happening and you’re a part of it! What we call ‘sins’ are simply obstacles to that knowing, experiencing, participating.”
— Richard Rohr

Listen to a brief excerpt, “Turning toward Participation,” at our online bookstore: cac.org/store.

CD set and MP3 download available from CAC.

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