Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Richard Rohr's Meditation: "Dying with Christ" Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States for Wednesday, 7 September 2016 “God is radically involved with the world, empowering the world toward fullness in love.”[Ilia Delio]

Richard Rohr's Meditation: "Dying with Christ" Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States for Wednesday, 7 September 2016 “God is radically involved with the world, empowering the world toward fullness in love.”[Ilia Delio]
Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation

"Spirituality of Letting Go: Week 2"
Dying with Christ
Wednesday, September 7, 2016

My good friend and colleague, Franciscan Sister Ilia Delio, writes:

God is radically involved with the world, empowering the world toward fullness in love, but God is unable to bring about this fullness without the cooperation of humans. Human and divine cannot co-create unto the fullness of life without death as an integral part of life. Isolated, independent existence must be given up in order to enter into broader and potentially deeper levels of existence. Bonaventure speaks of life in God as a “mystical death,” a dying into love: “Let us, then, die and enter into the darkness; let us impose silence upon our cares, our desires and our imaginings. With Christ Crucified let us pass out of this world to the Father.” [1] [2]
Contemplative prayer is one way to practice imposing “silence upon our cares, our desires and our imaginings.” Contemplative practice might be twenty minutes of “dying,” of letting go of the small mind in order to experience the big mind, of letting go of the false self in order to experience the True Self, of letting go of the illusion of our separation from God in order to experience our inherent union. Prayer is quite simply a profound experience of our core—who we are, as Paul says, “hidden with Christ in God” (Colossians 3:3).
Delio continues:
Only by dying into God can we become one with God, letting go of everything that hinders us from God. Clare of Assisi spoke of “the mirror of the cross” in which she saw in the tragic death of Jesus our own human capacity for violence and, yet, our great capacity for love. [3] Empty in itself, the mirror simply absorbs an image and returns it to the one who gives it. Discovering ourselves in the mirror of the cross can empower us to love beyond the needs of the ego or the need for self-gratification. We love despite our fragile flaws when we see ourselves loved by One greater than ourselves. In the mirror of the cross we see what it means to share in divine power. To find oneself in the mirror of the cross is to see the world not from the foot of the cross but from the cross itself. How we see is how we love, and what we love is what we become. [4]
True life comes only through many, many journeys of loss and regeneration wherein we gradually learn who God is for us in a very experiential way. Letting go is the nature of all true spirituality and transformation, summed up in the mythic phrase: “Christ is dying. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.” Following Christ is a vocation to share the fate of God for the life of the world, not a requirement for going to heaven in the next world.
Gateway to Silence: Surrender to love.
References:
[1] Bonaventure, Itinerarium mentis in Deum 7.6., translated by Ewert H. Cousins,Bonaventure: The Soul’s Journey into God, The Tree of Life, The Life of St. Francis(Paulist Press: 1978), 16.
[2] Ilia Delio, Making All Things New: Catholicity, Cosmology, Consciousness (Orbis Books: 2015), 82.
[3] Ilia Delio, Clare of Assisi: A Heart Full of Life (Franciscan Press: 2007), 26-41.
[3] Ilia Delio, Making All Things New, 82-83.
Adapted from Richard Rohr, Everything Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer (The Crossroad Publishing Company: 1999, 2003), 21, 178.
What if changing our perception of God has
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The Trinity is a central doctrine of Christianity, but it has mostly been ignored or relegated to the realm of blind faith. Does this ancient view of God have anything to teach us today?
In his new book, The Divine Dance (coming October 4), Richard Rohr invites us to join the mystery of perichoresis, a circle dance of love.
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Center for Action and Contemplation
Center for Action and Contemplation
1823 Five Points Road South West (physical)
PO Box 12464 (mailing)
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87195, United States
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