Wednesday, 07 March 2012

  • Richard Rohr on Scripture and Ashes

    I came across this quote last week and have since read it numerous times. It’s convicting, freeing and humbling.

    The sacred texts of the Bible are filled with absolute breakthroughs, epiphanies, and manifestations of the highest level of encounter, conversion, transformation, and Spirit. The Bible also contains texts which are punitive, petty, tribal, and idiotic. A person can prove anything he or she wants from a single line of the Bible. To tell you the truth, the Bible says just about everything you might want to hear—somewhere! Maybe this sad and humiliating recognition can be your ashes today. Like a phoenix you can rise and rebuild your knowledge of Scripture in a prayerful, calm, skillful, and mature way. Then you can read with head and heart and Spirit working as one, and not just a search for quick answers.

    Maybe one of the biggest mistakes in the history of Christianity is that we have separated spirituality from theology and scripture study. In other words, we put the Scriptures in the hands of very immature and unconverted people, even clergy. We put the Scriptures in the hands of people at entirely egocentric levels, who still think “It’s all about me,” and who use the Bible in a very willful way. It is all dualistic win or lose. The egocentric will still dominates: the need to be right, the need to be first, the need to think I am saved and other people are not. This is the lowest level of human consciousness, and God cannot be heard from that heady place. Perhaps it is not accidental that we place the ashes of Ash Wednesday precisely on the forehead.

    From Richard Rohr’s Wondrous Encounters: Scripture for Lent (affiliate link)

    This is a part of a series of daily reflections on the season of Lent.

Comments (1)

  • Pollypinks@xanga

    Sometimes the Bible is used as a weapon, scaring people into becoming Christians, and I find that unnecessary.  I have too much work on myself to do to go around beating other people about the head with legalistic Bible scriptures taken out of context, and completely rid of their original Greek meaning.

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  • SamMahlstadt
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