A Challenge…

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Don’t wage your Christian struggle with sermons and arguments, but with true love. When we argue, others react. When we love people, they are moved and we win them over. When we love we think that we offer something to others, but in reality we are the first to benefit.

Elder Porphyrios

I’m Discovering…

that it’s more and more difficult to speak across the fence these days.

In recent weeks I’ve had conversations about any number of topics and occasionally the topics sometimes moved into place where myself and another person disagreed. That happens. Yet what struck me was that the normal means for working through disagreements, finding some commonality and then using that to interpret our vision to another often simply doesn’t exist. When it comes to discussions of history, morals, politics, religion, you name the topic, it more and more seems like one person speaking Russian and the other Chinese. Both are fervent, both have a grounds for their thoughts, but there is no mutually held language through which to communicate.

How does one share their ideas and ideals when there is no common frame of reference? What happens when there is nothing between two people that’s mutually understood? It seems in this culture we have many platforms from which to speak out to the world but no common intellectual, spiritual, political, or social language or concepts to express ourselves. We really are many people shouting past each other in different tongues and growing increasingly frustrated, perhaps even hateful, with everyone who doesn’t understand.

Perhaps, in the end, only power or separation will have the final say. If I have power I can impress my “language” on you and frame any discussion on terms that are favorable to my reckoning of the world. This seems to be the reality of our politics at the present and it seems to have trickled down through many layers of culture. Separation may also be the end of it all. Already people are engaging only with people who speak the same language and in many ways we’ve already gone tribal even while we still live inside one border. This tribalism, I suppose, is less bad than some kind of dictatorship but it has its own kind of sorrow as well.

More importantly how do we communicate the reality of our Faith in and to a world where people may have never had a worldview, a “language” that touches on what we know and understand? The truth is that even people in our churches are more aware of the “language” of the world than the “language” of our Faith. It’s a question that’s on my mind lately and I’ll try to work it out. Until then I have to make do with the knowledge that even close friends may be worlds apart from me, farther than I ever recognized.

Good Friday from Rome…

“Christians must respond to evil with good, taking the cross upon themselves as Jesus did,” said Francis, who followed the ceremony from under a canopy overlooking the 2,000-year-old Roman amphitheatre.

An Interesting Post…

from Get Religion on a Chicago journalist dealing with media constructs of those who stand for traditional marriage and the future of those who may end up in the minority on this issue. Worth reading.

A Sign of the Times…

Planned Parenthood representative defends potential post birth killing of babies who survive abortion. Madness. Now we know why we must reach out to the world with our Faith in the hopes that we could, perhaps, change such an attitude one person at a time.

Not All…

that can be known is discovered or affirmed by science. We human beings are too complex, too aware of things beyond ourselves, things real but invisible to ever fit all of who we are in a laboratory. Science can be a good but if a person limits what they accept as real and true to only what can be measured and described by science they will know existence with one eye closed.

St. John Chrysostom on Marriage…

You have heard how important obedience is; you have praised and marveled at Paul, how he welds our whole life together, as we would expect from an admirable and spiritual man. You have done well. But now listen to what else he requires from you; he has not finished with his example. Husbands, he says, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church. You have seen the amount of obedience necessary; now hear about the amount of love necessary. Do you want your wife to be obedient to you, as the Church is to Christ? Then be responsible for the same providential care of her, as Christ is for the Church. And even if it becomes necessary for you to give your life for her, yes, and even to endure and undergo suffering of any kind, do not refuse. Even though you undergo all this, you will never have done anything equal to what Christ has done. You are sacrificing yourself for someone to whom you are already joined, but He offered Himself up for one who turned her back on Him and hated Him. In the same way, then, as He honored her by putting at His feet one who turned her back on Him, who hated, rejected, and disdained Him as tie accomplished this not with threats, or violence, or terror, or anything else like that, but through His untiring love; so also you should behave toward your wife. Even if you see her belittling you, or despising and mocking you, still you will be able to subject her to yourself, through affection, kindness, and your great regard for her. There is no influence more powerful than the bond of love, especially for husband and wife. A servant can be taught submission through fear; but even he, if provoked too much, will soon seek his escape. But one’s partner for life, the mother of one’s children, the source of one’s every joy, should never be fettered with fear and threats, but with love and patience. What kind of marriage can there be when the wife is afraid of her husband? What sort of satisfaction could a husband himself have, if he lives with his wife as if she were a slave, and not with a woman by her own free will? Suffer anything for her sake, but never disgrace her, for Christ never did this with the Church.

If we are to defend marriage in the public arena perhaps it would be good to know what we should be supporting.

Read more here.