Wednesday, 28 January 2009
soul biographies
Thanks to Dave Ebenhoh for putting me onto soulbiographies.com - a delightful and inspiring collection of short films by Nic Askew.
reflections on calling and gift
John Ortberg's lovely book If You Want to Walk on Water, You've Got to Get Out of the Boat contains some lovely material on calling and gifts. Here are two quotes he uses:
My calling is 'the place where my deep gladness meets the world's deep need'. (Frederich Buechner)
'There's an electricity associated with giftedness. Give a person the chance, and he'll jolt you.' (Arthur Miller)
My calling is 'the place where my deep gladness meets the world's deep need'. (Frederich Buechner)
'There's an electricity associated with giftedness. Give a person the chance, and he'll jolt you.' (Arthur Miller)
the soul is a wild animal
A lovely description of the soul from Parker J Palmer, of the centre for courage and renewal.
'Just like a wild animal, the soul is tough, resilient, savvy, resourceful and self-sufficient: it knows how to survive in hard places. Many of us learn about these qualities in the darkest moments of our lives when the faculties we normally depend upon utterly fail us—the intellect is useless, the emotions dead, the will impotent, and the ego shattered. But sometimes, way back in the thickets of our inner lives, we sense the presence of something that knows how to stay alive and helps us to keep going. That something, I suggest, is the tough and tenacious soul.
'And yet the soul, despite its toughness, is also essentially shy—just like a wild animal. It will flee from the noisy crowd and seek safety in the deep underbrush. If we want to see a wild animal, we know that the last thing we should do is go crashing through the woods yelling for it to come out! But if we will walk into the woods quietly and sit at the base of a tree, breathing with the earth and fading into our surroundings, the wild creature we seek may eventually show up.'
He writes beautifully about how to explore a 'pedagogy of the soul'. Read more here.
'Just like a wild animal, the soul is tough, resilient, savvy, resourceful and self-sufficient: it knows how to survive in hard places. Many of us learn about these qualities in the darkest moments of our lives when the faculties we normally depend upon utterly fail us—the intellect is useless, the emotions dead, the will impotent, and the ego shattered. But sometimes, way back in the thickets of our inner lives, we sense the presence of something that knows how to stay alive and helps us to keep going. That something, I suggest, is the tough and tenacious soul.
'And yet the soul, despite its toughness, is also essentially shy—just like a wild animal. It will flee from the noisy crowd and seek safety in the deep underbrush. If we want to see a wild animal, we know that the last thing we should do is go crashing through the woods yelling for it to come out! But if we will walk into the woods quietly and sit at the base of a tree, breathing with the earth and fading into our surroundings, the wild creature we seek may eventually show up.'
He writes beautifully about how to explore a 'pedagogy of the soul'. Read more here.
Friday, 9 January 2009
Evelyn Underhill

Recently, I went on retreat to an Anglican retreat centre at Pleshey in Essex. There, I discovered Evelyn Underhill, a mystic who straddled the 19th and 20th centuries.
Here are two quotes that I gleaned from her book The Mystics of the Church, while sitting in the wonderfully atmospheric library at Pleshey.
‘We cannot say that there is a separate ‘mystical sense’ which some men have and some men have not, but rather that every human soul has a certain latent capacity for God, and that in some capacity is realised with an astonishing richness.’.
‘We might indeed call mystics the eyes of the Body of Christ. They maintain that awestruck outlook towards the infinite, and that warmly loving sense of God’s indwelling grace, without which all religious institutions quickly become mechanical and cold.’
I am trying to open my eyes, all of the time.
website
I have finally got round to creating a little website about Echosounder. Do you go corporate and try to appeal to business people, or organic and keep the feel as un-corporate as possible? It's hard to know. You want to communicate effectively without sounding like the latest same old same old... Anyway, it's here: echosounder.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)