By Rev. Lloyd
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May 2, 2019
Some Thoughts from “The Roots of Christian Mysticism” by Olivier Clement in this Great 50 Day Season of Easter + “The power of resurrection is given definitively to the Church in the Eucharist and offered to human beings; it then is up to us to live in that power”…. Olivier Clement + “God came among human beings that we might meet him”…… Balai + “Were not Christians during the first centuries called ‘those who have no fear of death’? Being now set free from anguish, we are able to love.” Olivier Clement + We have to learn to get round obstacles, to tear away dead skin, to let the very life of Christ arise in us by the power of his resurrection.” Olivier Clement + “God is Breath, for the breath of the wind is shared by all, goes everywhere; nothing shuts it in, nothing holds it prisoner.” Maximus the Confessor + “Spiritual birth is the result of free choice and we are thus, in a sense, our own parents, creating ourselves as we want to be, freely fashioning ourselves according to the pattern of our choice.” Gregory of Nyssa + “Who gave you the ability to contemplate the beauty of the skies, the course of the sun, the round moon, the millions of stars, the harmony and rhythm that issue from the world as from a lyre, the return of the seasons, the alternation of the months, the demarcation of day and night, the fruits of the earth, the vastness of the air, the ceaseless motion of the waves, the sound of the wind? Who gave you the rain, the soil to cultivate, food to eat, arts, houses, laws, a republic, cultivated manners, friendship with your fellows?” Gregory Nazianzen + “Birds fly, fishes swim, and humans pray. Islamic spiritual writers would later express the same idea, saying that the first cry of the new-born babe and the last breath of the dying person together make up and proclaim the divine name.” Jean-Claude Barreau From “ Dogmatics in Outline ” by Karl Barth + “This is the promise that God gives us: I am there for you……….. Because God is for us, we may also be for God.” + “Faith is not concerned with a special realm, that of religion, say, but with real life in its totality, the outward as well as the inward questions, that which is bodily as well as that which is spiritual, the brightness as well as the gloom in our life. Faith is concerned with our being permitted to rely on God as regards ourselves and also as regards what moves us on behalf of others, of the whole humanity; it is concerned with the whole of living and the whole of dying. The freedom to have this trust is faith.”