Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Saturday, 27 April 2019
Saturday, 12 January 2019
Thursday, 26 July 2018
Divine Wisdom
We treasure wisdom. Wisdom is not the amassing of
knowledge and the ability to recall it at appropriate moment. Wisdom
is not the understanding of diverse fields of study. Wisdom is not
the ability to predict the outcomes of different courses of action.
Wisdom is more, and less, than that.
Wisdom is not intellect, for great wisdom may come
from those who cannot claim any great intelligence. It is not reason,
for it need not follow any line of thought or logic. It is not
intuition, for we can often see its sense once it is revealed.
Thursday, 19 July 2018
What I Fear
I have fears, when I write things like this. When
I write down what I am led to write, or when I sit down to write
deliberately, certain worries are always on my mind.
There are the usual worries of anyone writing
things others will read, of course. Have I written this well? Is it
understandable? Will people criticise harshly, perhaps even mock me?
When writing down ministry, there are extra
worries. Have I faithfully rendered that which has been given to me?
How sure am I of the leading?
Thursday, 10 May 2018
The Great Lord and His Sons
There was once a great lord. His realm was
peaceful and prosperous. He had five sons, and he gave thought to how
they should be raised.
He had not been raised to rule himself, as he had
elder brothers. They had all died before their father, so the rule
had fallen to him. So it was in his mind to raise them all to know
what it is good for lords to know. He saw that it would be best for
his realm if any one of them could take up the rule of the realm,
govern rightly and judge fairly.
Yet his aunt had married the lord of another
realm, and had had many sons. They had all wished to take the place
of the lord their father when he died, and so had schemed and plotted
and killed, and in the end gone to war on one another. All had died,
in assassination or in war, and the last at the hands of his people
when he claimed rule over a land broken by war. The lord of that
realm now was the the great lord's aunt's grandson, and the power in
the hands of courtiers ruling in his name. So it was that the great
lord saw that it would be best for his realm, and for his family, if
none of his sons should greatly desire to succeed him.
Thursday, 9 November 2017
Pantheons and Archetypes: Wisdom
In an
earlier post, I wrote about the role of pantheons in various
faiths, and how liberal Quakers might find them useful in their own
spiritual approach and practice. This post is the first of what I
hope will be a series – if there is enough interest in them – of
looking at specific cases of this principle, specific archetypes and
the deities that evoke them in various pantheons. This will include
ways that Friends might find meaningful to incorporate these ideas in
their own practice, if they feel so inclined.
In this first such post, I will consider the
archetype of the wisdom deity. Wisdom is, in this case, distinct from
knowledge, and somewhat distinct from intellect – in that some
examples we will consider see the ideas of wisdom and intellect as
more interconnected, and some less. Wisdom is not related to the
acquisition of knowledge, but may be related to the ability to put
together information to come to an appropriate conclusion, and is
generally related to the ability to determine the right course to
take beyond a simple optimisation of the outcome – looking past
immediate objectives to peripheral or longer-term results.
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