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Sunday, 26 August 2018
Saturday, 18 August 2018
Monday, 13 August 2018
Divine Love
Love is so much more than the romantic sort. We
have known this for a long time, but we tend to forget it. We have
the love of family, of course, and that is well understood, but love
without context generally refers to romantic love, or euphemistically
to sex, as in physical “acts of love”. We have love songs, and
love stories, and (more's the pity) Love Island.
Love is more than
wanting to be with someone, more than caring deeply for some specific
individuals. It is more than selfless devotion to a lover or a child.
There is love in fast friendship, love in care for anyone. There is
love throughout life, if we allow there to be.
Saturday, 11 August 2018
Tuesday, 7 August 2018
Divine Justice
Justice is a primal drive. It finds many forms of
expression – the desire to see good conduct rewarded and bad
conduct punished, the reluctance to benefit from undeserved reward,
and also the desire for revenge, to see people hoist on their own
petard, and even, perhaps, schadenfreude.
Like any primal drive it can lead us to right
action or to wrong action. What is just is not simple, nor possible
to know in all circumstances. Indeed, even our basic urge to justice
does not reliably lead to just outcomes, for while it is that drive
that pushes us to vengeance, vengeance is rarely just.
Yet it also drives us to protect those who suffer
unjustly, to stand against persecution and scapegoating. It causes us
to wish to see credit given where it is due, and it drives us to let
others know that we appreciate their work, their actions, indeed that
we appreciate them as people.
Saturday, 4 August 2018
Thursday, 2 August 2018
Ego, Inner Light, and the Individual Journey
One of the allegations made about theologically
pluralistic liberal Quakerism is that it feeds ego; that if we all
have our own path that may look dramatically different from another
Friends, we may become dominated, each individually and the Meeting
and wider community of Friends collectively, by the worst sort of
individualism. If we are all following our individual leadings, at
least in terms of our spiritual development, it is all too easy to be
led astray by our subconscious (or conscious) desires. Where a
regimented, hierarchical faith community with a central authority can
be a check on individual development through doctrine and review by
the clerical hierarchy, a levelled faith community such as that of
Friends can only apply any such check through a sort of collective
supervision.
This is, frankly, obviously true in a logical
sense. What is less obvious is how much of a problem it is in
reality, and – related to that – what level of supervision, or
even collective control, is appropriate.
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