Friday, June 1, 2012

Divine Dialog

Thank you, Josie and Fred for your "reply to all" responses. Now, this is what I call a dialog.

 Fred wrote (to me instead of "reply to all"):
"I cannot speak from experience, and I hit a lot of ports!!! I have known a lot of sailors with casual hook ups, some with bad memories for them.

I have to agree with Richard, I think he thinks the truth"

Y to Jack: Yeah, Richard is very truthful. Sometimes it's scary.

Gayle to Y:
"So on which of these sacred texts do you base your beliefs?    Does each person get to define what is sacred Scripture to himself/herself?  Do we get to say, "I accept this section of the text, but I reject that one?"  How do we know which parts are sacred?  What is the defining criteria for accepting one part as sacred but not another?"

Y to Gayle:
I don't know the answers. My problem is with people who think that any one person or group of people has the absolute answers for all peoples, in all places, and all times.

The reason I began this blog is that I am hoping to hear more of the stories of the sacred in the lives of those who may never have been exposed to the religious traditions and scriptures to which I have been exposed.

Gayle to Y:
I've been thinking about this.  Here's my perspective.  If someone asked who Rachel (Ys daughter) is, it would depend upon who was answering the question.  Her daughters would say, "She's my mother;" her husband would say, "She's my wife;" her parents would say, "she's our daughter;" her friends would say, "She's our friend."  Everyone would know her from a different perspective, depending upon their relationship to her.  The question is, What would Rachel say about herself?  She would not deny any of the perspectives given; she would acknowledge all of them -- but she might want to add her own perspective about who she is. 
 
And the perspective that would most closely match her own words would probably be that of her friends, or at least of those who want only to enjoy her for who she is, not those who want something from her.  They want to bask in her light, her warmth, her funniness, her out-flowing enjoyment of life, her enjoyment of them.  When her children are grown, they will come to know her as more friend than mother; hopefully, her husband will come to the same relationship, as will her parents. 
 
Jesus said, "I no longer call you 'servants,' but friends, but a servant does not know what his master is doing."  In the Greek, the word he used here means both 'children' and 'servants,' for both had the same role in Greek and Roman society. 
 
So my point is this:  we are all standing in different relationship to God -- but if we really want to know who God is, we should at least hear what He says about Himself and be in the relationship of "friend" to Him.  The only people who know who we are are our friends. I am so fortunate in life that both my mother and I lived long enough for me to know her as friend.  That was a great gift -- but not one given to every child.  Hopefully, our relationship with God will grow to that level, but it may not.

Y to Gayle:
I do believe that humankind is driven to search for the sacred, or the image and likeness of The Divine in ourselves, in others, and in all of creation. I don't believe that The Holy Spirit would be available to only certain people of certain times and places.

I would love to attend a retreat of Many Faiths where people spoke from their own life experiences without reference to what has been written by others, except as a particular scripture relates to their own experience. I would also like to have The Divine spoken of without gender specific names.




1 comment:

  1. Y, I am not much of a deep thinker. I live the best I can and if I start research, reading the wisdom of many I get too many questions. I don't need 'em. I deal a lot in logic, trying to think deep gets me in trouble!! LOL

    I do enjoy others thoughts, I don't like to live 'always' under a rock. LOL

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