Reflections for Your Journey |
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Spiritual pilgrim though she was, Simone Weil
remained outside the church to the end.
Even in her attraction to Catholicism, she could not
limit God to any dogma or creed; the very certainty
of faith was for her a luxury to be shunned.
For Weil, it was enough to gaze toward the empty
place left by a God who was always just out of sight.
Attention animated by desire is the whole
foundation of religious practices, she wrote in
"Forms of the Implicit Love of God." "[L]ooking is
what saves us." Not possessing, not consuming, not
controlling, but simply watching and waiting,
expecting nothing, surrendering all.
by Susan Hanson
from
"Looking into the Void: The Sacrificial Faith of
Simone Weil"
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A Time of Miracles: Journaling for the Holidays |
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As much as we resist the commercial emphasis on gift
giving at Christmas, who does not find an "ah"
escaping from deep within when presented with a gift
that was neither expected nor deserved?
When buying presents becomes obligatory, however,
and we run around the mall days before the holidays,
frantic to find something for everyone "on our
list," the grace of gift giving gets lost from the
moment.
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In the News: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe |
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As millions of us await the opening of what is said
to be a
remarkable film, the debate continues as to whether
or not C. S. Lewis' Narnia was written to be
Christian.
Did Lewis intend his series of young adult novels to
be Christian allegory?
by Jon M. Sweeney
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Advent:
The Days of Waiting |
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DAY 4
I long for you so much
I follow barefoot Your frozen tracks
I long for You so much
I have even begun to travel
Where I have never been before.
--Hafiz
14th c. Sufi poet
28 Thoughts on the Message of Advent
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