Daily Scripture

Thursday April 15, 2010

+ 2nd Week of Easter

They were living in revolutionary times but they were spiritual revolutionaries.

Readings: Acts 5:27-33 Psalm 34:2, 9, 17-20 John 3:31-36

The one who comes from heaven is above all. He testifies to what he has seen and heard. For the one whom God sent speaks the words of God. [John 3:32, 34]

We gave you strict orders, did we not, to stop teaching in that name. Yet you have filled Jerusalem with your teaching and want to bring this man’s blood upon us.” But Peter and the Apostles said in reply, “We must obey God rather than men.” [Acts 5:28-29]

I suppose the words ‘revolution’ and ‘revolutionary’ can be defined in different ways and surely had divers applications. George Washington led a revolution that resulted in the emancipation of our ancestors and the establishment of a new nation. We see this as a justified revolution. Native Americans have a slightly different take on the American Revolution.

Osama ben Laden is viewed by radical Moslems as a revolutionary but few in the east or west view his case and cause as anything but rampant barbarism.

The Apostles and early witnesses to Christ were indeed revolutionaries who, as their Master, were not intent on the establishment of a new nation but on the liberation of the soul and freedom of the spirit from the alienation of God’s affection that had been buried in laws and legalisms by ‘traditional’ religion and religious authorities who held people accountable to a false and punitive God rather than a God as mother and father of life and blessing.

I think we are living in similar times. Traditional religious practice has succumbed to a false image of God as primarily punitive—a God defined by rigid formulas and exclusionary categories to which religious leaders hold members hostage. We see this in biblical and doctrinal fundamentalism rampant in almost all ‘name brand’ religions including Catholicism. But we can also find elements of linear thinking on the far left. Polarized or dualistic thinking leaves no room for the engagement of open minds and hearts in the pursuit of wisdom and truth – ever evolving.

True progress among divided nations and disparate hearts can happen only both sides take the risk to engage one another in true dialogue of mind and heart.


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