Center for Action and Contemplation - Richard
Rohr's Meditation “Trinity” – Sunday, 1 December 2013
Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation
Seven Themes of an Alternative Orthodoxy
Seventh Theme: Reality is paradoxical and
complementary. Non-dual thinking is the highest level of consciousness. Divine
union, not private perfection, is the goal of all religion (Goal).
“Trinity”
Meditation 23 of 52
Niels Bohr, the Danish physicist who was
a major contributor to quantum physics and nuclear fission, said the universe
is “not only stranger than we think, but stranger than we can think.” Our
supposed logic has to break down before we can comprehend the nature of the
universe and the bare beginnings of the nature of God. I think the doctrine of
the Trinity is saying the same thing. The “principle of three” breaks down all
dualistic either-or thinking and sets us on a dynamic course of ongoing
experience.
There are some things that can only be
known experientially, and each generation must learn them for themselves. The
“prayer of quiet” is a most simple and universal path. Of all the religious
rituals and practices I know of, nothing will lead us to that place of
nakedness and vulnerability more than regular experiences of solitude and
silence, where our ego identity falls away, where our explanations don’t mean
anything, where our superiority doesn’t matter and we have to sit there in our
naked “who-ness.”
If God wants to get through to us, and
the Trinitarian Flow wants to come alive in us, that’s when God has the best
chance. God is not only stranger than we think, but stranger than the logical
mind can think. Perhaps much of the weakness of the first two thousand years of
reflection on the Trinity, and many of our doctrines and dogmas, is that we’ve
tried to do it with a logical mind instead of with prayer. The belief in God as
a Trinity is saying God is more an active verb than a stable noun. You know it
in the flow of life itself.(Adapted from The Shape of God: Deepening the
Mystery of the Trinity(CD, DVD, MP3)The Daily Meditations for 2013 are now
available in Fr. Richard’s new book Yes, And . . . .)
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