Archive for the ‘Cultural Ideas’ category

“Life is too short to be small.”

February 17, 2008

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I’m into quotes lately. This one comes from Benjamin Disraeli, and it sums up a huge area. When I think of living small, I tend to think of people who simply live for themselves. The extent that they wish to change culture and the human condition ends when it begins to concern someone else. Selfish people are small people. The true impact they have is small, and the life they live is a small one.

When we live a big life, we encourage others to be a part of our lives. We increase the number of people and ideas that we entertain when our lives are big. Considering yesterdays post about time, life is too short to concern yourself with just you. Lift up your head and look around and you will see a world waiting to become part of your world. Don’t settle for a small mediocre life – the decision is yours, and I’d choose to have a “big” life.

“Everything Popular Is Wrong”

February 15, 2008

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Oscar Wilde is quoted as saying, “Everything popular is wrong”. I tend to think he was correct. The context we find ourselves in today’s world exists on the ebb and flow of popular thought. Information overload has helped to destabilize the prediction process of the masses. Where once we could statistically predict certain outcomes of certain situations, now we are hit with a sharp shift in the population’s attitude about a given issue or occurrence.

We saw early on in the Presidential primary coverage that exit polls and projected winners were going to be far more difficult to decipher than had previously been thought.

It seemed the country’s collective psyche was transforming right in front of us. Things we had been told were so by statisticians were proven wrong, and in an instant our perception of candidates and their ability to lead changed. Those who were the front runners and the supposed party candidates suddenly found themselves gasping for footing amid a flood of popular anxiety.

Is “everything popular…wrong”? In many cases it seems so, but we cannot be against something because everyone else is for it. We must be people who examine issues and look at the substance of a debate. We must weigh the information we have in front of us objectively.

Will we make mistakes? Most certainly, but they will be mistakes made not because we did not have courage enough to pour over decisions, but mistakes made for incomplete or inaccurate information. Our decisions define us as both people and as a nation. When we choose based on what we ourselves know and believe, we step into a realm that has been paved for us and trod over by many generations before. If we choose based on the tabloids, we take the sacrifice of those generations for granted and cheapen the cause of liberty in our age.

The Gift of Love

February 14, 2008

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How can I not write about love today? The landscape is littered with hearts, candy and flowers. Yesterday I wrote about the gift of Hope, and today we look at Love. The ability to love is amazing. The idea that we can choose to love or not to love makes the concept of love even more grand.

The fact that I don’t have to love you, but I choose instead to love you gives a great weight to that decision.

In religious circles the love that was expressed by Jesus’ dying for mankind was a choice. It was an act He could choose to do or not do. Considering the pain of the consequences of His choice, it is also important to add the joy with which He progressed toward the end of His life. He knew the need of His act, but He also knew that it had to be done in love. That expression of love exemplifies to us, all other expressions of love.

The Gift of Hope

February 13, 2008

A lot has been said recently about the topic of Hope. It has been used by political figures to define either what they feel American people want or what American people need. I think the answer is both – we want and need hope. The human being was designed to live in an atmosphere of hope; to constantly be looking for the good positive and beautiful. The resource of this hope is not, I believe, a political figure. Although a person can embody a feeling of Hope, the action of believing and working for Hope lies in the person themselves.

Once Hope has been born within a person, there is not much that can cause it to go and leave. Hope is infectious and contagious – it passes from person to person with ease. Because we have a desire for it – Hope comes to us like a magnet.

It is true that Hope is a gift. A gift can be given and received; Hope has to be either given or received, if it is not it is simply belief. Hope is much stronger than belief; Hope goes beyond mere belief. Hope invades the person and pushes them to think further and do more. Hope energizes and invigorates a person to greatness and great things.

Hope lets us see how things can be and instead of dreaming with a big smile on our face, we are enable to make it happen.

May your day be filled with a passionate Hope both for yourself and for those around you.

What’s Wrong With the Ego?

February 11, 2008

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The question of the positive or negative aspects of ego could result in conversations lasting for years. The interest in and the commentary on the ego could also fill a library. The essence of this post is to make the point that in one great aspect, the ego is responsible for dividing our interests and progression in the path toward God.

Most religious teaching talks of severing the relationship with the ego: literally dying to its needs. Only then, it is taught, can we truly find God; only then can we be unified with our fellow man.

I offer another thought – the ego has a purpose and place in the whole person. I would even go so far as to say that in trying to kill off the ego, you are trying to kill off yourself. It is true that the ego has a powerful pull on the direction, interests and ultimate actions of the person, but like all human functions it can be harnessed to produce positive growth for the whole being. Instead of using great amounts of energy to conquer the ego, use that energy to define and enhance its positive effects.

For me, we are a projection of our ego, so that when we diminish it’s life, we diminish our own vitality. However, when we seek to examine and augment the impact of our ego, we are, in fact, increasing the ego’s ability to combine and unify with others. 

Scandalous God

February 10, 2008

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One of the great scandals of man’s search for God has to be something that was mentioned in the previous post. I said that our church has a saying – Truth is truth wherever you find it. This fact has a huge implication in view of the us/them approach to God searching. Typically we enjoy a perception of preeminence in relation to our chosen path. If we are Christian, we assume all others, the “thems” are wrong and we are right. The same for any other flavor of religion or sect.

In fact we not only believe others to be wrong, but very wrong, and ourselves to be right about everything we think in relation to our religion. The great scandal is that God has allowed His truth to make it’s way into all sorts of “paths” – both the approved ones and the ones not approved. If truth is truth, then there is no difference whether Jesus or Buddah says that we should “love each other”. 

The essence of the truth is not in who says it, but in what is contained in the words.   

TRUTH:Where is it?

February 9, 2008

At our church we have a saying, “Truth is truth wherever you find it.” This comes from a sereis we did a few months back where we looked at the sacred texts of other religions and stated that when the Buddah says to love everyone, or the Tao says to love all, that those statements are truth. God is large enough for His truth to be found within other religions and in the conversations of those searching for Him.

In essence, when you search for truth you are searching for God. As you search He is big enough to find you where you are and communicate to you in whatever way you can best hear about the unending love He has for you.

Communion With God

February 8, 2008

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When we tend to think about communion we think of a time of deep thought and prayer centered around the sacrifice of Jesus and the last meal the disciples and Jesus shared. We think about the sacrament in the church that is a religious ceremony involving the eating of a small wafer and the drinking of either wine or grape juice, depending on religious faith.

I want to look at the interpretation of the word “communion” and our need to turn a choice meeting of Jesus and His disciples into a rote ceremony. I think the first thing to examine is the fact that the original “communion” was a meal, a dinner shared with friends. When we take time to eat together we develop relational bonds that go further than just superficial exchanges.

Another aspect that I want to focus on is that in the sharing of a meal we do two things:talk and listen. There is a give and take in  the dialogue and both parties lean from the time spent with each other. The next time you experience the rite of communion in your given faith, think about the sharing of intimacy between each of us and God. This aspect can enhance the meaning given and give relevance to an activity that generations of those following Christ have participated in.

One Month to Live

February 7, 2008

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I had to comment on this new book. I had read an article that mentioned it and then during the Super Bowl, I saw and advertisement for it. I picked it up at the local Books-a-Million and found an interesting idea. What would you do if you knew that you only had 30 days to live.

Who would you talk to, what would you write, where would you go; what would you do? I found the questions compelling and decided that I would actively ponder the thought and put action to some of my conclusions.

What I found was an immediate sense of anxiety. There were so many things that shot through my mind. So many people and places and events. What struck me though, probably the most, was that after the initial shock and feeling of being overwhelmed, I quickly began to automatically sift through and decipher the important things that had value.

My conclusion is that this exercise can be extremely beneficial in helping us to see the things of great value that surround us each and every day. We have many scattered ideas about what things we have to do, but in light of the question of being gone in 30 days, reality helps us really see around us.

I remember as a youth I became busy, as most of us have, and walked up the steps to my house and noticed that the flowers on the dogwood by the front door were falling. I had been so consumed with my own perceived important things, that I had missed the blooming and grandeur of the flowers. I only realized and recognized them when it was too late to enjoy their gift of beauty.

Take a moment today and think about that question: what would you do if you had only 30 days to live?

Seekers

February 6, 2008

Why do we seek religious experiences? Is is so that we can revel in feeling something other-worldly or mystical? Is it because we are in fear of the “regular world” and need a fix of something sublimely different?

I think that in our constant search for an Experience, we become distracted from the real void that exists in our lives. In seeking an experience we also are seeking validation – ultimate validation, if we are honest – from God Himself.

We look around and feel lacking in some area, so we go to the Supreme Power of the Universe to get His take on our own feelings of impotence. We figure that if He at least says we are OK , we can deal with the rest of the world’s oppressive comments. We try to form a spiritual allegiance with the Godhead so that we can what? Feel good about ourselves? How twisted is that?

Instead, if we are seeking, why not seek to know ourselves better. In learning to know ourselves and accepting ourselves we will find, I am sure, that the God who dwelt among us will become the God that dwells with us. In other words, there are so few people actively trying to figure themselves out and really live life, that God is compelled to check it out.

No this isn’t Keats or Longfellow or Kant, but I do think it is true. Even Jesus said, “The Kingdom is within.” Why do we search so much in the exterior when the real action is in the interior?