Today's Thinker: Ed Silvoso
"Many do not respond to the gospel we preach because we do not love them as much as we love ourselves -- and that contaminates our message." Ed Silvoso
Think about that.
Thoughts which engage both faith and intellect. Preach them, teach them, develop them, engage them.
"Many do not respond to the gospel we preach because we do not love them as much as we love ourselves -- and that contaminates our message." Ed Silvoso
In the way that perhaps only Nouwen could, he writes in In the Name of Jesus:
[Jesus] asks us to move from a concern for relevance to a life of prayer, from worries about popularity to communal and mutual ministry, and from a leadership built on power to a leadership in which we critically discern where God is leading us and our people.
On "the practical everyday life" habits, which are exemplified by Jesus:
If we refuse to practice, it is not God's grace that fails when a crisis comes, but our own nature. When the crisis comes, we ask God to help us, but He cannot if we have not made our nature our
ally.
So we're told that Jonah runs from God, "as far away from God as he could get," according to The Message. Yet in the middle of the most furious storm the ship crew has ever seen, Jonah is below sound asleep. We wonder: How can you sleep through The Perfect Storm?
To kick off the blog, I have to challenge everyone to think about these words from Dallas Willard's The Spirit of the Disciplines:
Christ's death [was]...the point where his life was most fully displayed and triumphant, forever breaking the power of sin over concrete human existence.