Category Archives: Fear, the root of all evil.

Questions for Believers

What is the difference between saved and loved?                                                                        Does being saved mean being finished?                                                                 Is the Bible the Word of God or is Jesus the Word of God fleshed out for us?                                               

Was Jesus making choices to love more and more people other than his own religion and nationality, even the Roman enemy, a major part of Being the Word of God?                                                                                Is the WAY of Jesus’ life and willingness to love even those that killed him supposed to be the WAY of Christian’s lives?                                                       Did Jesus love unconditionally?                                                                                 Does God love unconditionally?                                                                                   Do we?

What is the difference between need and love? 

Could our life journey from the neediness of a baby be a process of becoming able to love unconditionally?                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Does loving our neighbor mean only loving others whom we know and who are like us?                                                                                                                       Does loving Jesus mean we get to be rich? What did Jesus say about the rich man?                                                                                                                                                        Are our heroes rich? Are they kind? Are they like Jesus?

If, as he was dying, Hitler recognized the horrors he had caused and was stricken with sorrow and regret, would God forgive him?

Is our Spiritual journey more than following a set of ten rules basic to the survival of humans living together?                                                                             In fact, are the Beatitudes the challenges that Jesus gave us for our adult Spiritual journey to loving BOTH ourselves AND others unconditionally, because Jesus fleshed out the unconditional love of God for all?

Do you love all your children even when they fail, hurt you, and abandon you?

Does God?

Have you ever failed God?

A Universal Christ

Christianity is the most radical of all world religions                                               

Franciscan sister and scientist Ilia Delio focuses on the theology of the incarnation and the universal nature of the Christ mystery:

The Christian message is that God has become flesh [sarx in Greek or “matter”]—not a part of God or one aspect of God but the whole infinite, eternal God Creator has become matter. The claim—God has become flesh—is so radical that it is virtually unthinkable and illogical. Christianity is the most radical of all world religions because it takes matter seriously as the home of divinity. [1]

So does everyone have to become Christian to know the Christ? Absolutely not. Christ is more than Jesus. Christ is the communion of divine personal love expressed in every created form of reality—every star, leaf, bird, fish, tree, rabbit, and human person. Everything is christified because everything expresses divine love incarnate. However, Jesus Christ is the “thisness” of God, so what Jesus is by nature everything else is by grace (divine love). We are not God, but every single person is born out of the love of God, expresses this love in [their] unique personal form, and has the capacity to be united with God…. Because Jesus is the Christ, every human is already reconciled with every other human in the mystery of the divine, so that Christ is more than Jesus alone. Christ is the whole of reality bound in a union of love.

We are transformed by experiencing the presence of Christ in all things.

Eileen: (And all people.)

I believe this. But find expressing it difficult without it becoming so complex that only theologians can “get” it.  In the fifty-eight years since I experienced the incredible unconditional Love of God fleshed out in Jesus, my view of Jesus and Christianity has been expanded, rather than changed, until I realized that we have mostly missed the point of Jesus.  Our importance is as a part of the whole…..we are part of God with God’s Spirit within us, but we limit the Spirit because of fear.  Fear is literally the root of all evil. It’s the root of Musk’s need for power and my need for pleasure as escapes from the reality of our human vulnerability. We are fragile physical beings in a huge universe beyond even our understanding, never-the-less, our control. Unconsciously, we are all aware that the possibility of heartbreaking disaster lurks in the next minute.  We do all we can to make this life pain free……our idea of heaven. We miss the point of Jesus. We want Him to be a “get out of this life’s possibility of being hell free” card.  And we consider Him our key to the spiritual country club of escape from it. And we miss the point of both His life journey and His death as the prototype for ours.  He grew spiritually.  He became aware of the need to balance achievement with simple kindness through his mom.  He was literally pushed into the increased danger of becoming known for doing miracles by His mom’s caring about a family’s social embarrassment. He was challenged over and over to love the least of these (lepers, tax collectors, fallen women, Roman Soldiers, people unwilling to help themselves, cowardly best friends, and the leaders of His own religion who had Him tortured and killed) and even God when He felt God had abandoned Him. 

This life is not meant to be heaven. It is school. It is the journey from Self as number one, to being willing to lay down our lives for not only those who are different from us, but those that would kill us.  That takes Growth through Grace with a capital G!  Ultimately it takes a willingness to die to what we value most in our lives and ourselves.

This may not sound like the “good news,” but it’s a letting go that ultimately frees us from the fear that controls and corrupts us, so that we can ultimately Love all others unconditionally.

Is Our Suffering Redemptive for Others?

To me the root of sin is fear.  We dull fear with pleasure and we try to fight it with power. And human power is an illusion…..as Adam and Eve found out. A tiny, microscopic germ can wipe us out. The question of why the good suffer is confusing. Perhaps accepting suffering and trusting the grace of God to get us through it is somehow redemptive not just for us, but possibly for those that don’t get it together with God until the last minute or even until they see God. This may be wishful thinking on my part because of being the matriarch of five generations, some of whom don’t seem to be getting it together with or without God in a world that is increasingly scary.  Perhaps our suffering somehow helps those we love unconditionally. Perhaps like Jesus, we can say, “Father, forgive them. They know not what they do.” If we who are imperfect can hurt for them and forgive, surely a God who is Love does.

Empathy, the Key to Love

No one has all the truth and nothing but the truth even with the Holy Spirit. That would make us equal to God and that’s what in the creation story got Adam and Even into big trouble from the beginning. We are physically vulnerable and sentient creatures desperately wanting the safety of power. And knowledge is power. And power almost always corrupts and get’s misused. Jesus had knowledge and power! He could have used it for himself or just his own people. What did Jesus have that made him use it differently.

He had empathy.

When foreigners, sinners, turncoat Jewish tax collectors, the lepers of his time society, and even the enemy Roman soldier came to him in need, he saw them as fellow human beings, fragile, imperfect, frightened and in pain. Ultimately he even saw the self-righteous religious leaders who got him tortured and killed with empathy.

“Father, forgive them. They know not what they do.”

This came even after the terror of foreseeing his own suffering made him sweat blood and plead for there being an easier way.

Acceptance came not through faith, but through empathy which frees us to love the unlovable. It freed him to love even his best friends who denied and abandoned him. Jesus had empathy, the gift of understanding even those without empathy. He understood those different from him both inside and outside.

Empathy for others involves a dying to self, to the limits of our own ways of seeing and understanding, to our own values and way of being in the world. Empathy frees us to understand not just those like us, but even those whose ways of seeing and being in the world are totally different from ours.

Empathy doesn’t make us see the world the same way, but it allows us to understand and forgive and to care.

And that is LOVE.

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