T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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644.1 | | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Tue Apr 13 1993 13:49 | 46 |
| The Healing Nature of the Mandorla
"The mandorla is so important for our torn world that we will explore
it in detail. We have been talking about pairs of opposites in our
examination of the shadow. It has been the nature of our cultural
life to set a good possibility against a bad one and banish the bad one
so thoroughly that we lose track of its existence. These banished
elements make up our shadow, but they will not stay in exile forever,
and about midlife they come back like Old Testament scapegoats
returning the from the desert. What can one do when the banished
elements demand a day of reckoning? Then it is time for an
understanding of the mandorla.
The mandorla has a wonderfully healing and encouraging function. When
one is tired or discouraged or so battered by life that one can no
longer live in the tension of the opposites, the mandorla shows what
one may do. When the most herculean efforts and the finest discipline
no longer keep the painful contradictions of life at bay, we are all
in need of the mandorla. It helps us transfer from a cultural life to
a religious life. (Fortunately, this does not end our cultural life,
for by now it is well enough established to survive on its own.)
The mandorla begins the healing of the split. The overlap generally is
very tiny at first, only a sliver of a new moon, but it is a
beginning. As time passes, the greater the overlap, the greater and
more complete is the healing. The mandorla binds together that which
was torn apart and made unwhole--unholy. It is the most profound
religious experience we can have in life.
The mandorla is the place of poetry. It is the duty of a true poet to
take the fragmented world that we find ourselves in and to make unity
of it. In the Four Quartets, T.S. Eliot writes, "The fire and the
rose are one." By overlapping the two elements of fire and a rose, he
makes a mandorla. We are pleased to the depth of our soul to be told
that the fire of transformation and the flower of rebirth are one and
the same. All poetry is based upon the assertion that this is that.
When the images overlap, we have a mystical statement of unity. We
feel there is safety and sureness in our fractured world, and the poet
has given us the gift of synthesis.
Great poetry makes these leaps and unites the beauty and the terror of
existence. It has the ability to surprise and shock--to remind us
that there are links between the things we have always thought of as
opposites."
|
644.2 | | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Tue Apr 13 1993 13:49 | 108 |
| Language as a Mandorla
.
.
.
"All good stories are mandorlas. They speak of 'this' and 'that' and
gradually, through the miracle of story, demonstrate that the
opposite overlap and are finally the same. We like to think that a
story is based on the triumph of good over evil; but the deeper truth
is that good and evil are superseded and the two become one. Since
our capacity for synthesis is limited, any stories can only hint at
this unity. But any unity, even a hint, is healing.
Do you remember the story of Moses and the burning bush? There are
many bushes and much burning; but in *this* story the bush and the
burning overlap; the bush is not consumed and we know that two orders
of reality have been superimposed. In a moment we find that God is
near--the result of the overlap.
Whenever you have a clash of opposites in your being and neither will
give way to the other (the bush will not be consumed and the fire will
not stop), you can be certain that God is present. We dislike this
experience intensely and avoid it at any cost; but if we an endure it,
the conflict-without-resolution is a direct experience of God.
A mandorla is a prototype of conflict resolution. It is the art of
healing, if you will.
Shakespeare wrote of his art:
The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling,
Doth glance from heaven to earth, from
earth to heaven;
And as imagination bodies forth
The forms of things unknown, the poet's
pen
Turns them to shapes and gives to airy
nothing
A local habitation and a name.
Here Shakespeare is reconciling heaven and earth and giving a place
and a name to the human faculties that can cope with this wide vision.
To reconcile so great a span as heaven and earth is beyond our
ordinary way of seeing; generally, two irreconcilable opposites (guilt
and need) make neurotic structures in us. It takes a poet--or the
poet in us--to overlap such a pair and make a sublime whole of them.
Who but Shakespeare could bring the airy nothing of heaven into
consonance with the heavy reality of earth and give it a form that
ordinary humans can understand? Who but the Shakespeare in yourself?
Take 'this' and take 'that'--and make a mandorla of them.
In your own poetic struggles you may make only the tiniest sliver of a
mandorla that will vanish a few minutes later. Where is the
inspiration of yesterday that was so thrilling? But if you repeat
this often enough it will become the permanent base of your
functioning. It can be hoped that by the end of your life the two
circles will be entirely overlapped. When one is truly a citizen of
both worlds, heaven and earth are no longer antagonistic to each
other. Finally one sees that there was only one circle all the time.
This is the true fulfillment of the Christian goal, the beatific
vision so prized in medieval theology. The two circles were only the
optical illusion of our capacity--and need--to see things double.
Mandorla making is not confined to verbal form. An artist makes a
mandorla with form, color, visual tension. A musician does the same
with rhythm, form, and tone.
Since music is a developed faculty in me, I am aware of the mandorla
in this mode more than any other. There is a wonderful moment about
three-quarters of the way through Bach's St. Matthew Passion. The
scene is the crucifixion and an alto is singing the solo "Lord Jesus
Stretches Forth His Hand." The alto voice weaves its serene vocal
line while a contra faotto, a particularly rough instrument in the
lower register, makes a series of leaps of the natural seventh. This
interval (an octave minus one note) is forbidden in classical
counterpoint since it resembles the braying of a donkey to a
startling degree. Ferde Grofe makes dramatic use of this in his Grand
Canyon Suite to portray donkeys going down the canyon trails. But
Bach, in his genius, weaves these two elements together--the most
serene and the most ragged and disjointed--and makes a mandorla of it.
The serene alto voice goes its tranquil way while the contra fagotto
makes a grotesque buffoonery of the natural seventh leap in the bass
line. The two together make a sublime whole. It is one of the most
healing experiences in the world for me to listen to this moment of
genius. If these two extremes can be woven together to make a
masterpiece, perhaps I can bring the ragged, disjoined elements of my
own life together.
A particularly powerful form of mandorla can been seen in the customs
of South American *curanderos*, who are a curious mixture of primitive
shaman and Catholic priest. Their mesa (table) is an altar where they
say Mass for the healing of their patients. They divide this alter
into three distinct sections. The right is made up of inspiring
elements such as a statue of a saint, a flower, a magic talisman; the
left contains very dark and forbidding elements such as weapons,
knives, or other instruments of destruction. The space between thee
two opposing elements is a place of healing. The message is
unmistakable; our own healing proceeds from that overlap of what we
call good and evil, light and dark. It is not that the light element
alone does the healing; the place where light and dark begin to touch
is here miracles arise. This middle place is a mandorla."
.
.
.
|
644.3 | | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Tue Apr 13 1993 13:50 | 66 |
| .
.
.
"If you find a person who is particularly peaceful or has a healing
presence around her, it is probably because she has done her mandorla
work. If you want to affect your environment, don't get lost in your
activism. Stop for a moment and make a mandorla. Don't just do --
*be* something.
People often asked Dr. Jung, "Will we make it?" referring to the
cataclysm of our time. He always replied, "If enough people will do
their inner work." This soul work is the one thing that will pull us
through any emergency. The mandorla is peace making.
I think the loveliest lines in our Scripture are, "If they eye be
single, they whole body will be filled with light" (Matt. 6:22). The
right eye sees 'this', the left eye sees 'that'; but if one comes to
the third eye, the single eye, all will be filled with light.
Indian people put a spot of rouge in the center of the forehead to
indicate that they are enlightened (or on the way to enlightenment).
In the system of chakras that is the highest point attainable by human
consciousness. One more chakra, the seventh, exists, but that is
beyond our ordinary ability of experience.
Encouraged by Christian practice, most Westerns invest the energy that
might go into a mandorla in useless guilt. guilt is a total waste of
time and energy. I used to tease my Baptist grandmother, telling her
guilt was a sin. She would get very angry since I was depriving her
of her favorite pastime. She though she was not doing her duty to
Jesus if she were not wringing her hands in guilt at her (or my)
sinful condition. Guilt creates nothing; conscious work constructs a
mandorla and is healing. The mandorla has no place for remorse. It
asks conscious work of us, not self-indulgence. Guilt is also a cheap
substitute for paradox. The energy consumed by guilt would be far
better invested in the courageous act of looking at two sets of
truths that have collided in our personality. Guilt is also arrogant
because it means we have taken sides in an issue and are sure that we
are right. While this one-sidedness may be part of the cultural
process, it is severely detrimental to the religious life. to lose
the power of confrontation is to lose one's chance at unity--and to
miss the healing power of the mandorla.
It is good to remember that the old symbol for Christ--the two lines
indicating a stylized fish--is a mandorla. By definition, Christ
himself is the intersection of the divine and the human. he is the
prototype for the reconciliation of opposites and our guide out of the
realm of conflict and duality. Early Christians would make themselves
known to one another in this way; upon meeting, one would scratch a
small circle in the dust. The other would make a second circle that
was slightly overlapping--thus completing a mandorla. This way of
greeting--at a time when Christians were severely persecuted--was
powerful and eloquent. It also has meaning for us today. If one has
a statement to make, it is good to invite another statement--generally
one coming from the shadow--and thus make a mandorla that is greater
than either point of view alone.
I remember in high school debating class, our teacher once made us
change our positions one minute before the debate. I was in a panic
for a moment, then felt the flood of energy that came from getting the
overview in a new and different way. Indeed, this experience was so
powerful that I won the debate. I think I have won (or superseded)
some very serious spiritual debates in my inner life by giving
credence to both sides, until a superior point of view could be
achieved."
|
644.4 | | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Tue Apr 13 1993 13:50 | 47 |
| The Human Dimensions of the Mandorla
"Once can view a human life as a mandorla and as the ground upon which
the opposites find their reconciliation. In this way every human
being is a redeemer, and Christ is the prototype for this human task.
Every glance between a man and a woman is also a mandorla, a place
where the great opposites of masculinity and femininity meet and honor
one another. The mandorla is the divine container in which a new
creation begins to form and germinate. Scripture never tires of
speaking about courtship and marriage as the symbol for our
reconciliation with the spirit.
.
.
.
Our human situation divides us over and over again into ego-shadow
opposition, no matter where we start. This is probably why St.
Augustine said, "To act is to sin." As long as we take our place in
society, we will pay for it by bearing a shadow. And society will pay
a general price with collective phenomena such as war, violence, and
racism. This is why the religious life speaks of another realm,
heaven and of the millennium, as the culmination of the inner life.
Culture and religion have different aims.
To balance out our cultural indoctrination, we need to do our shadow
work on a daily basis. The first reward for this is that we diminish
the shadow we impose on others. We contribute less to the general
darkness of the world and do not add to the collective shadow that
fuels war and strife. But the second result is that we prepare the
way for the mandorla--that high vision of beauty and wholeness that is
the great prize of human consciousness.
The ancient alchemists understood this process. In alchemy one goes
through four stages of development: the negredo, in which one
experiences the darkness and depression of life; the albedo, in which
one sees the brightness of things; the rubedo, where one discovers
passion; and finally the citrino, where one appreciates the goldenness
of life. After all this comes a full-color mandorla. This is the
pavanis, the peacock's tail that contains all the preceding hues. One
cannot stop this process until one has brought it to the pavanis, that
concert of colors that contains everything.
Wrongly done, the many colors of life produce a grayness, and all the
colors neutralize each other into a dull monotony. Correctly done,
the pavanis comes and all the colors of life make a magnificent and
rich pattern. The mandorla is not the place of neutrality or
compromise; it is the place of the peacock's tail and rainbows."
|
644.5 | | MSBCS::JMARTIN | | Tue Apr 13 1993 16:25 | 12 |
| Hi Ro:
NOT SUPPORTED BY SCRIPTURE!!!!!
Just kidding Ro. Thought I'd get your gander! I will print these out
and take a look at what you wrote. Thanks for taking the time to put
this in.
Peace in Christ,
Jack
|
644.6 | 8^) | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Tue Apr 13 1993 16:32 | 4 |
| Jack! 8^) 8^)
|
644.7 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 14 1993 14:12 | 13 |
| The mandorla is not a "religious experience", it is an artistic
convention of Roman Catholic and other Christian artists of the Middle
Ages and Renaissance.
"The mandorla is an oval frame enclosing an important figure."
Handbook of symbols in Christian Art, Gertrude Sill, Collier Books 1975
By far, the most common mandorla of Christian art is the one enclosing
Christ on the throne of glory at the Last Judgment. Oddly enough,
that reality hasn't been mentioned in the excerpts of Robert A.
Johnson's book.
The most common mandorla of today is the MasterCard symbol.
|
644.8 | His Word has promised PEACE | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Wed Apr 14 1993 16:00 | 23 |
| Pat,
< The mandorla is not a "religious experience", it is an artistic
< convention of Roman Catholic and other Christian artists of the Middle
< Ages and Renaissance.
So the mandorla is not a 'religous experience' for you Pat, what is
your point? That because it is not a 'religous experience' for you,
then it must not be for anyone else? That it isn't for Johnson?
Must you always attempt to invalidate someone else's experience
because it is not your own.
My reason for entering this topic was at attempt to show that there
are peacemaking tools within Christian history that people may
not be aware of. It seemed to me a rich symbol that could be worked
with in one's every day life. I find the constant bickering in here
tiring and disheartening. I was looking for a way to heal some of
that. I'm sorry that you don't understand the author's intent or mine.
Sigh,
Ro
|
644.9 | | MSBCS::JMARTIN | | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:07 | 24 |
| Gosh Ro:
Don't you think you were being a little hard on Patrick?! As I have
mentioned before, look at this conference as a pseudo para ministry for
all people. It is an informal and inpersonal medium to exchange
perspectives and ideas, that's all! Okay, so we have bickered a few
times over things! My wife and I bicker too, but we always make up and
even laugh it off!!
Look at this conference as an exercise in critical thinking. If you
think I'm ignorant, arrogant, forebearing...Okay..cool, I respect your
1st ammendment right and your opinion. So we just agree to disagree
and start a new day. Don't take all this personally! I consider any
difference of opinion a wonderful challenge to my beliefs and a great
opportunity to teach or be taught.
Patrick says it isn't a religious experience. Maybe he's right, maybe
your right. Now if your right, then darn it straighten that guy out!!
Come on, let's show fortitude here. We could live in Albania and you
would have to die for teaching him a lesson!!!
Press on Ro, we need to get your insight!!!
-Jack
|
644.10 | | BUSY::DKATZ | Water, Water, Everyhare... | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:23 | 5 |
| maybe religious experiences are a personal thing and Ro, like lots of
ordinary people, doesn't like others telling them their personal
experiences are invalid?
just a hunch....
|
644.11 | | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:23 | 6 |
|
Ro,
Thanks so much for entering those!
Dorian
|
644.12 | ugh | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:50 | 26 |
|
<< Don't you think you were being a little hard on Patrick?! As I have
Well Jack, I think if Pat would preface his remarks with 'I believe'
or in 'my opinion', people would not react so strongly to his remarks.
<< Patrick says it isn't a religious experience. Maybe he's right, maybe
<< your right. Now if your right, then darn it straighten that guy out!!
The point is this isn't about winning/losing - right/wrong; it is
about sharing and learning from each other. Patrick doesn't give
people the space to introduce their beliefs/ideas without condemning
them or attempting to invalidate them. Someone's experience is
someone's experience...there is no right or wrong about it.
You say you bicker with your wife sometimes; I've been know to bicker
with the hubby! ;') But underlying that is respect and Love for the
other and an honoring of their beliefs (or I would hope so); I don't
see that in Pat's notes. I often disagree with notes that Collis
writes; however, I highly respect his integrity and have admired his
sharing and openness. There isn't the mean spiritedness that is
often shown by some here.
Ro
|
644.13 | | MSBCS::JMARTIN | | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:53 | 13 |
| Re: .10
Your hunch is probably correct. If somebody slandered my name to my
manager, would the proper reaction be to be offended or to go to my
boss and speak the truth and gain back his/her respect.
Ro, if I ever slander your religious experiences, then put the slam on
me by defending your position with logic, fact, evidence, whatever.
It'll teach me a valuable lesson and add tremendous credibility to your
beliefs. This is how Jesus converted some of the Jews, by using the
Old Testament and adding validity to his claims.
-Jack
|
644.14 | just what the word means | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Apr 14 1993 18:01 | 2 |
| If an oval frame can be a "religious experience", then a madorla can be
a religious experience.
|
644.15 | | MSBCS::JMARTIN | | Wed Apr 14 1993 18:03 | 23 |
| Ro:
In defense I think it fair to point out that you and Collis are in the
same building. Your input on Patricks methods may or may not be
correct but if you met him personally, you may find he's an alright
guy, especilly for somebody who works in N.Y.C. I don't know, I'm only
conjecturing.
Ro, I also believe that everybody (and I mean everybody) in this
conference is searching. Even the perceived agitators are looking for
truth, they just don't realize it. I agree this forum shouldn't be
about winning or losing an argument, it is meaningless in the eternal
perspective. However, if one disagrees with somebody, then one needs
to submit evidence to substantiate one's claims. God tells us in the
O.T. to "..Test the spirits." It is the prudent thing to do!
If Patrick seems condescending, just say, "Hey Patrick, what the heck's
eatin you!!!!????" Then leave it at that. No sense in getting worked
up over what these types of forums have proved, inevitable!!!
Peace in Christ,
-Jack
|
644.16 | | ROKEPA::REINKE | Atalanta! Wow, look at her run! | Wed Apr 14 1993 18:08 | 18 |
|
< Ro, if I ever slander your religious experiences, then put the slam on
< me by defending your position with logic, fact, evidence, whatever.
< It'll teach me a valuable lesson and add tremendous credibility to your
< beliefs. This is how Jesus converted some of the Jews, by using the
< Old Testament and adding validity to his claims.
I'm not interested in proving or defending my experiences. This topic
describes an experiential process - it isn't about acting from the
mind so much as opening to the heart and *feeling*, *being*, with the
experience. Something is lost in trying to defend with 'logic, fact,
evidence etc.' a mystical experience. The author was suggesting a way
to merge these opposites and I thought he successfully demonstrated
what he meant by this through his examples of poetry, music, and
language.
Ro
|
644.17 | Don't understand mandorlas | CSC32::KINSELLA | Eternity...smoking or non-smoking? | Wed Apr 14 1993 18:35 | 18 |
|
I'll be honest here Ro. I'm not putting this down, it's just that
it didn't make any sense to me. How is it a religious experience?
What do you do? Do you look at mandorlas do you draw them? Do
you try to find mandorlas in stories or conversations? I'm completely
lost and I've even read some of your entries twice.
As for the attitudes towards Patrick. I personally feel that Patrick's
bluntness is simply a part of his personality. He's extremely
direct and doesn't see any reason to add what he might consider
unnecessary words. I don't think he's trying to offend you. I
find that he's a "Just the facts ma'am" type guy. Now, this style
doesn't work for me, but I'm aware that it is a style. So I don't
take offense and I look at the content. I've seen it suggested that
Patrick change his style. Not an easy thing to do if it's more of
a lifestyle rather than just a writing style.
Jill
|
644.18 | | BSS::VANFLEET | Helpless jello | Wed Apr 14 1993 19:38 | 32 |
|
Jill -
To me, the difference in presentation is that Patrick tends to present
his *opinions* as *facts*. I know he does that. I've seen it over and
over in here. However, knowing that doesn't always make it any easier
to swallow especially when he seems to be passing judgement on
something I hold to be very valuable. In this case, this subject is
not religious in Patrick's opinion. I can accept that. However when
he says this subject is not religious period that negates anyone's
religious experience of it. We all come from different paths and
experience things in different ways. Patrick's path is not mine or Ro's
or Jack's. That's fine. But because my path is different does that give
ANYone the right to assert that MY experience is invalid?
Patrick, I apologize if you feel I'm talking about you as if you're not
here. I was trying to respond to Jill's characterization of what you
said. The above was only my perception of what happened and, as we all
know, perception varies according to where you're standing.
Jack - as far as logic is concerned, I think Ro has a good point.
There are some things that just cannot be proved logically...God, for
instance. :-) Given that, I really appreciate the reconciliatory
nature of your last few notes. Thanks.
Nanci
|
644.19 | What's common within the almond? | CSC32::KINSELLA | Eternity...smoking or non-smoking? | Wed Apr 14 1993 20:24 | 23 |
|
Nanci, while I respect your feelings and Ro's, I don't think either of
you are being objective. I reread Patrick's note. I do not find that
he even implied "Ro, you didn't have a religious experience." Ro
presented info from a book, and it looks like Patrick came back and
quoted information from several sources that happen to define a
mandorla differently. After all it appears to be a symbol from his
denomination. Anyone whose been here for any length of time is going to
know that if you present anything about Catholism that isn't in
accordance with the way Catholism presents it, Patrick will clarify it.
Kinda like when I've said something about New Age and you or others
have quickly jumped in to clarify what New Age teaches. Both appear
to me as equal.
I think this is somewhat ironic since the whole concept behind this
string is reconciliation. It might be nice if you would try to
find a mandorla with what Patrick presented which looks to me as if
it's clearly factual and not judgemental. But you need to find that
within yourself. You have to be willing to put your prejudices about
Patrick that have built up over time aside and see his note for what it
was - info he's gathered within Roman Catholism on the mandorla.
Jill
|
644.20 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Apr 15 1993 09:12 | 15 |
| The book "Owning Your Shadow" by acclaimed Jungian analyst Robert A.
Johnson can be both wrong as it states the facts of what is a mandorla
and be a source of a religious experience for someone else.
The mandorla is an artistic convention like drawing a halo around
Jesus, the angels, and the saints. That's a fact that no one should
flee from.
Where there is an artistic representation of a sacred scene, it can
inspire one to pray. The worship of the image itself as opposed to the
person of God is iconolatry.
Reconciliation, which according to Johnson is mystical, is to me an
ordinary human activity of forgiveness and restoration of relationship
and taught by Jesus in the parable of the Prodigal Son.
|
644.21 | | BSS::VANFLEET | Helpless jello | Thu Apr 15 1993 16:47 | 9 |
| Patrick -
I agree!
(Would somebody get Patrick the smelling salts please?)
:-)
Nanci
|
644.22 | Christians OVERCOME sin through Christ | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:32 | 67 |
| I do not see any Christian connection with the way that mandorla's are
described in .0-.5. It is not Christian the gospel of Christ that says
we are to reconcile good and evil or in any way unify these things.
This method is a gnostic concept which is inconsistant with Christianity.
Jesus says to turn away from sin through him by the power of the Holy
Spirit. We are to set our sights on Him and His Way alone. Jesus never
taught reconciliation with our evilness. He taught coming to Him for
reconciliation with God for the sins we commit. Our hope and trust is
in His forgiveness rather than through us becoming 'comfortable' with
who we are, sin and all.
My sin hurts me, and also others, because it disrupts the harmony and
peace that is between me and God. Unless I return to the right path
then this sin will lead to more sin and more disunity because there is
only one Way in life, God's Way. Only by seeking reconciliation with God
first will that peace be restored to myself and others. Living in Christ
is the only way to successfully reject occasions of sin.
This true relationship does not put one into a life of guilt. Instead it
is freeing for two reasons : 1) we learn that Jesus does indeed forgive
sin and bring healing through repentance and we are also graced with
added power to sin no more, and 2) we come to know that 'To live is
to sin', therefore, we are not to hide or ignore sin, but to trust God
through reconciliation. A confessed and repentant person is a free and
happy person. Those who deny this and spend their efforts trying to
make peace with sin itself or its presence in their lives, or who fight
internal battles to justify sin (why it isn't really a sin), do not
know peace.
'Shadow work' and the 'mandorla' as described here are, at best,
humanistic means of dealing with sinfulness. It is not the way that
Christ, the prophets, or the apostles taught about dealing with sin in
our lives.
The Christian 'mandorla', as Patrick said, is a framing technique used
to highlight portions of icons. It is true that this was for the
purpose of prayer and meditation on the Christian meaning represented
in the mandorla. The Virgin or Baby Jesus are often framed this way,
but it is a misrepresentation to say that it was to point to some
'cosmic meaning or association with God's creation (example, earth
goddess cults). It is rather to proclaim the awesome reality of God
Incarnate of a Woman, as scriptures foretold.
The Incarnation of God as man in Jesus Christ is the greatest event and
work of God in all of history, past, present, and future. To place
another meaning to the artistic iconography which, in essence, would
set the Incarnation aside seeking a 'greater meaning' is to reject our
Savior yet finding 'something greater'.
As Christians, if we wish to promote unity between all religions and
peoples, then what we should be doing is showing others how their
understanding of God is made clearer and complete in Jesus Christ, and
how He is the Savior of all people through his Incarnation as God and
Man, and through His complete and perfect sacrifice for our sins on
the cross.
Eastern mandorla techniques and religions can, at best, make a person
more comfortable with their sins, it is only God, through Christ and
His Body, the Church, that can forgive them.
Peace of Jesus,
Mary
|
644.23 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | When will I ever learn? | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:35 | 8 |
|
AMEN!
|
644.24 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Strawberry notes forever. | Tue Apr 20 1993 15:06 | 13 |
| If you believe that reconciliation is not a part of Christianity, then
you might want to take a look at Matthew 6:23-24:
"When you are offering your gift at the altar, if you remember that
your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift
there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother
or sister, and then come and offer your gift."
For what it's worth, the concept of reconciliation with those who
differ with you serves as the foundation of the Quaker meeting for
business.
-- Mike
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644.25 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | When will I ever learn? | Tue Apr 20 1993 15:37 | 12 |
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It is one thing to be reconciled to a brother or sister one has wronged,
and quite another to reconcile oneself to sin/evil
Jim
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644.26 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Strawberry notes forever. | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:33 | 35 |
| The quote from the Sermon on the mount doesn't say anything about
anyone "wronging" another person. It merely says that if someone has
something against you, go reconcile yourself with them.
Reconciliation comes in many forms. Reconciliation is an important
principle of Quakerism, and because of this the Quaker business meeting
is a process of worship that is founded on reconciliation. Wars,
conflicts, or simple disputes often exist because of needless
antagonisms that exist among the parties involved. To polarize this
important issue by simply dismissing as one of good (my side) versus
evil (the other side) is precisely the mentality that a philosophy of
reconciliation seeks to overcome. In a way, then, this discussion
illustrates precisely the problem that needs to be solved.
The Quaker business meeting is founded on this principle. Many people
mistakenly describe the Quaker meeting for business as based on
"consensus". But consensus is a secular concept, frequently based on
compromise. The Quaker business meeting is not a secular process, but
a form of worship, in which the parties in conflict seek to reach a
higher truth out of their respective and conflicting positions. This
has nothing to do with reconciling one's self to evil, but rather both
parties reconciling themselves to truth, and to each other, as they
reach out to one another to overcome their antagonisms and search
together for what is right.
To confuse this with reconciling one's self with evil is to miss the
point. If there is one thing that Quakers don't believe in, it is
reconciling one's self with evil. Just consider the example of John
Woolman, who was uncompromising in his opposition to slavery, but who
always expressed his views through love and through the Quaker process
of truth seeking that is mistakenly called "consensus". The result was
remarkable--Quakers, even those from the south, became universally
opposed to slavery.
-- Mike
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644.27 | I agree with you, Mike | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Tue Apr 20 1993 19:03 | 43 |
| re:.26
Mike,
I don't see where what I have written has contradicted the
reconciliation that you describe in the Quaker business meeting,
in fact, I would say it is the same concept that we seek God's
Will and God's Truth in the matter and to put our own personal
desires under God's Will in obedience.
This, I think is entirely different than the concept of
reconciling good and evil as expressed through the articles in .0
through .5.
In the gospel, Jesus warns us about compromising and he said
that in the this can get so bad that people will call evil good and
good evil. He did not make excuses for sin, but rather invited the
sinner to repentance and to 'go and sin no more'. These words of
Jesus through our meeting with Him in confession where we admit our
sins with contrition gives us grace to do just that, 'go and sin no
more'. It is the sinner who tries to justify the sin that is not
free since it is not admitted as a sin.
Satan uses this tactic - to argue that "x" is really not a sin.
If not rejected, the person stays bound by it and the sins accumulate
and pretty soon the person is rejecting even the idea of God's
authority to establish what is right and wrong in His eyes.
The true end to conflicts between people or nations cannot come
until both sides seek God's Will. If only one side recognizes this
then they become the victim of the other side. Even if peace is forced
economically or militarily, until the sides recognize god's plan and
wisdom in their lives there will be no real peace.
The lack of actual, immediate conflict, then, is not the true
peace. Rather, it is the right relationship with God and our
willingness to be obedient to God's Will for us that assures peace.
Given mankind's current willingness to set the desires of self aside,
I would say that we are living in extremely dangerous times despite
the perceived peace due to the end of the Cold War.
Mary
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644.28 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Apr 20 1993 22:23 | 18 |
| Mike, I believe that you and Mary are on the same side of the line.
However, if you seek out conflict where none exists, then go ahead.
The excerpt from .2 that follows may not be what Johnson or Ro
believes, but to me it strikes me as pagan Manichaeism, that third
century philosophy that has a cosmology of dualism: two supreme forces,
one good and one evil:
> We like to think that a story is based on the triumph of good over
> evil; but the deeper truth is that good and evil are superseded and
> the two become one.
Reconciliation is the restoration of our relationship with God, on
God's terms. That's the common view, I believe. The manner in which
God makes his will know to all is where different Christian views
become distinct.
Pat Sweeney
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644.29 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Strawberry notes forever. | Tue Apr 20 1993 23:27 | 6 |
| The problem that I see is that when you tend to see all conflict in
terms of absolutes and good versus evil (with "my" side presumably
being on the side of good), then reconciliation doesn't really become
possible.
-- Mike
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644.30 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Apr 21 1993 01:20 | 12 |
| That is precisely the Christian point, which is so different from .0-.5.
It is not "two absolutes, good versus evil" but only one absolute:
God, who is completely good.
The Christian concept of evil is not an opposing evil power but a tendency
to put self before God, to rebel against him, to do our will instead of His.
Vices are almost always misapplications of faculties which would be virtues
if done according to His will.
/john
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644.31 | dumb question department... | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Wed Apr 21 1993 08:58 | 4 |
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what about the Devil, who is completely bad?
Dorian
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644.32 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Apr 21 1993 09:07 | 11 |
| In Christianity, the devil is not an absolute.
God created him, and initially he was good.
His pride caused him to rebel against God and to tempt others to also
rebel, by playing on their pride, laziness, and intellectual snobbishness.
The devil himself remains good, as is all of God's creation; but his
actions, his rejection of God, are evil.
/john
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644.33 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Sanitized for your protection. | Wed Apr 21 1993 09:21 | 4 |
| I don't see any contradiction between Christianity and .0-.5, but then
maybe some people are seeking conflict where none exists. :-)
-- Mike
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