Mercurial > hg > rsof
changeset 119:3658b1fa657e
as sent to The Friend
author | ht |
---|---|
date | Wed, 13 Dec 2017 12:13:58 -0500 |
parents | bbda1b9895b2 |
children | 191550c1e091 |
files | but_a_way.xml |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 39 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/but_a_way.xml Tue Dec 12 11:44:07 2017 -0500 +++ b/but_a_way.xml Wed Dec 13 12:13:58 2017 -0500 @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ <head> <title>Not a notion but a way</title> <author>Henry S. Thompson</author> - <date>11 Dec 2017</date> + <date>13 Dec 2017</date> </head> <body> <div> @@ -87,7 +87,44 @@ </div> <div> <title>And this [we know] experimentally</title> - <p>So, what's the problem? </p> + <p>But, what does that have to do with us, you may well ask? All that old +language may be all very well, and give us a warm feeling of in-group-ness when +we hear it, but what does it actually amount to here and now? It may be +interesting in an intellectual sense to hear that historical Christianity and +contemporary Judaism were/are founded on practice, but we're not about water +baptism or attending Mass or circumcision keeping kosher. What's so special +about Meeting for Worship that it can sustain us in unity, preserve the +effectiveness of our business method and allow our disagreements about belief +language to be recognised without fear?</p> + <p>It's simple, readlly. In Meeting for Worship, on a good day, we +experience two things: a presence and a possibility. That's why we keep +coming back, because at some level we know we need to keep having that experience.</p> + <p>What presence? The technical term for it is 'transcendence'. We're not very good at talking about it. We refer to a +"gathered" meeting. We say "Meeting for Worship is not just meditation". We +know it when it happens. It's +elusive, and if we try to pin it down we lose it, that feeling that we are +joined with one another into something more than just our physical co-location. +Accepting that it is "not just me" isn't easy in the resolutely individualistic +culture we live in today, but if there is one item of faith we +<emph>must</emph> confess, at least to one another, it is the truth of that +experience, joining with and encouraged by 350 years of history and hundreds of +Meetings around the world today.</p> + <p>What possibility? The technical term for it is 'immanence'. We see and +hear it in the witness of those around +us: the possibility of living an inspired life. We <emph>recognise</emph> it +most vividly in Meeting for Worship, when we hear authentic ministry, 'authentic' because it comes from someone +we know is speaking as they live. It cannot be be faked, it is unmistakeble, +terrifying and uplifting in equal measure. It +calls us to what we aspire to. It is at once daunting (how can I possibly do +what they do) and reassuring (it is possible). These are not celebrities or +distant missionaries, they are each <emph>one of us</emph>.</p> + <p>Whole books have been written about both of these, I have barely scratched +the surface. My point is simply that <emph>this</emph> is what we need most to +be talking about, and we don't need to agree about the <emph>words</emph> in +order to get started, we just have to acknowledge that there is a shared +<emph>experience</emph> that matters, deeply, to us, and that its reality and +its significance are <emph>not</emph> compromised by our unsatisfactory +attempts to talk about it.</p> </div> <div> <title>There's nothing wrong with talking about belief</title>