“When I hear people talk about what is wrong with organized religion, or why their mainline churches are failing, I hear about bad music, inept clergy, mean congregations, and preoccupations with institutional maintenance. I almost never hear about the intellectualization of the faith, which strikes me as a far greater danger than anything else on the list. In an age of information overload, when a vast variety of media delivers news faster than most of us can digest – when many of us have at least two e-mail addresses, two telephone numbers, and one fax number – the last thing any of us needs is more information about God. We need the practice of incarnation, by which God saves the lives of those whose intellectual assent has turned as dry as dust, who have run frighteningly low on the bread of life, who are dying to know more of God in their bodies. Not more about God. More God.
Barbara Brown Taylor
An Altar in the World
In chapter three, The Practice of Wearing Skin, Taylor explores how we live out our faith in our bodies. She erases the illusion of separateness between the spiritual life and the physical body. Approaching our spirituality from a more holistic perspective exposes the fallacy of increased knowledge of God resulting in transformation. Knowledge isn’t bad – it is just insufficient.
It is no accident that Jesus came as a man – a man with flesh, bones, muscles, blood, nerves and emotions. He came, wearing skin, just as we wear skin. It as much as part of His divinity as was His spirit…and so for us.
Today – do not seek more information about God – seek more of God. Notice how you might live out your faith, using your body as a gift offering back to God and to others. Thank Him today for the work your body allows you to do. And may you begin to see the wearing of skin as a beautiful spiritual practice.
Grace and peace,
Deb
Monday, March 29, 2010
skin
Posted by deb at 12:01 AM
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1 comments:
So true Deb. So very very true. You have me thinking about this... At times my deepest worship of God has come from more knowledge of Him for some reason. There are times when I'm challenged by what I learn about him and that excites my mind and then translates to my heart and moves me to a joyful place of connection with God. "Oh, that's who you are!! Wow"...Sort of like my relationship with my husband more knowledge can bring deeper intimacy, when the knowledge is about character. I can learn more facts about Malcolm which I did this weekend and that didn't bring more intimacy...but when tune into how he operates in love and care for me, when I tune into his words and actions of adoration of me, then I allow his already preexisting love to intersect and we have communion. But as you said knowledge is definitely part of the equation but incomplete if you stay with the facts and don't move to the emotions and experience. Alan Hirsch posted a great quote on FB: -"People are not convinced by teaching but by encounter ...doctrine follows as a way of explaining the impact" ~ J.V.Taylor. Thanks for sharing and challenging us to make sure we are involved in the 'encounter."
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