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Recommended Reading-Part Three

By request herewith yet another batch of books you may wish to consider for your collection;

Hearing God-Developing a Conversational Relationship with God-Dallas Willard

Life with God-Reading the Bible for Spiritual Transformation-Richard J. Foster

Jesus Manifesto-Restoring the Supremacy and Sovereignty of Jesus Christ-Leonard Sweet and Frank Viola

Longing for God:Seven Paths of Christian Devotion-Richard J.Foster and Gayle D. Beebe

A Book of Hours-Thomas Merton

Enjoy! 

 

 

 


 


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Home NEWS Updates from Grant What is my experience of breaking away from the secular worldview?
What is my experience of breaking away from the secular worldview? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Grant Nuss   
Monday, 26 July 2010 13:32

Richard Rohr's question for the day;

The contemplative mind is the most absolute assault on the secular worldview that one can have, because it is a different mind from what we’ve been taught in our time.  The calculative mind, or the egocentric mind, reads everything in terms of personal advantage and personal preferences.  As long as we read reality from that small self with a narrow and calculating mind, I don’t think we’re going to see things in any new or truly helpful way.

 

All the great religions have talked about a different way of seeing that is actually a different perspective, a different vantage point, a different goal than what I want or need the moment to be.  Christians called it contemplation, and some Eastern religions called it meditation.  To quote Albert Einstein, “No problem can be solved with the same consciousness that caused it.”  Contemplation is a different consciousness, and its starting point is precisely not what I prefer or what I need things to be.