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Religion of the Heart
Published on 13/12/08
by randy
The basic meaning behind ‘theology’ involves ‘going deeper’. As such, curiosity may be one of the most divine attributes we could cultivate. The strength of our religion may interestingly go to the core of our willingness to forever go deeper. While our cognitive belief systems stop our spiritual depth with notions of right and wrong, our heart energy forever drills deeper into the felt experience of our interconnection. The challenge is to find God within the heart of ‘all’. In his book Honest to God, John Robinson writes:
A statement is ‘theological’ not because it relates to a particular Being called ‘God’, but because it asks ultimate questions about the meaning of existence: it asks what, at the level of theos, at the deepest mystery, is the reality and significance of our life. p. 49
He goes on to point to the main question of ‘where’ is God. A didactic approach, one based on subject/object, would place God ‘out there’ or ‘up there’. Yet, the Christian theologian Paul Tillich speaks of God as the ‘ground of Being’, stating:
The centre of our whole being is involved in the centre of all being; and the centre of all being rests in the centre of our our being.
The god whom he cannot flee is the Ground of his being. And this being, his nature, soul, and body, is a work of infinite wisdom, awful and wonderful. p. 53 from The Shaking of the Foundation
Forever drilling deeper, outside the walls of knowing, further into the abyss of the heart, we touch the Divine, as Tillich referenced, ‘the ground of our Being’, beyond notions of the subject/object divide, touching the mystery of subject as one.
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