Awestruck
Garish, your caricature Perish the fair at your Ceaseless libations and Peace-less privations Absent, your poets While present - all-know-its Whose knowing is depth-less Ne'er sensing the breathless All wonders surceasing Misunders e’er fleecing You of your true nature For what? Nomenclature Flatlander, look up. Definitions took up And away founts of splendor Until counts surrender Beyond all reduction A grand introduction To your ground of being To laughter - to seeing Let truth and spirit meld Transcendent joy beheld Reverie, mystery Every bliss for...
info_outlineAwestruck
You brought music back into the house. I had forgotten. These are the words spoken by Captain Von Trapp in the 1965 musical The Sound of Music. He utters them to Fralein Maria moments after his miraculous transformation from angry and militant to warm and joyous. And it all happened because he heard his children singing in the house - singing he had silenced with insatiable demands for order and obedience. Our deepest desires call us to the transcendent, and yet we too often conflate the fulfillment of those desires with earthly trappings in which the futile search for them exists on a...
info_outlineAwestruck
Discovery begets truth. Begets transformation. And discovery begins with exploration. The impulse to explore has largely been stunted in our time by the erroneous assumption nothing remains to explore. We’ve mapped the earth. We have GPS systems to tell us exactly where we are at any given time. We’ve been to the moon. We’ve sent probes to Mars and even beyond the edge of our solar system. Our telescopes now give us glimpses of the furthest shores of the Universe. Microscopes have deconstructed the atom and beyond. We have relinquished real exploration to the experts, and we wait...
info_outlineAwestruck
Doubt is mostly viewed as a negative trait or as even as the opposite of faith. We think this way largely because we imagine doubt and faith in still life, or rigidly defined - devoid of motion. Such attempts at crystallization lose sight of the inner dynamics and play when we struggle with doubt. When we doubt, a number of forces arise within us: curiosity, fear, urgency, to name only a few. These forces compel us to know - to experience - and to do so we act. We move. We seek answers. We position ourselves to see with our own eyes and hear with our own ears. Doubt drives the struggle -...
info_outlineAwestruck
We have unwittingly exchanged the active experience of being alive in the present for living in a dank library filled with atomized facts that we read not with just our eyes, but with our whole physical bodies. We willingly plug ourselves into a matrix of technology and information that, given the right combination, can summon fleeting fulfillment of our selfish desires: popularity, prosperity, pleasure, and power. These four pillars serve as the supports that bear the table of lifeless and soul-less reductionism where we spend our lives attempting to put together the one-million piece puzzle...
info_outlineAwestruck
Heaven doth with us as we with torches do, not light them for themselves; for if our virtues did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike as if we had them not. William Shakespeare Such words capture the essence of a latent power within us, awaiting the spark of purpose to ignite. From our first breath, we are cradled in potential, but our world orbits around primal needs, each cry a beacon of dependence. Yet, as the veil of infancy lifts, the tender choreography of growth and guidance train us to wield the sword of power. And once trained, we are free to choose how to fulfill our potential. ...
info_outlineAwestruck
To see is to discern with clarity what is… C.S. Lewis addressed what he saw as the oncoming blindness to what is in his book The Abolition of Man. Plato before him had said the same. The little human animal will not at first have the right responses. It must be trained to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likeable, disgusting and hateful. In the Republic, the well-nurtured youth is one ‘who would see most clearly whatever was amiss in ill-made works of man or ill-grown works of nature, and with a just distaste would blame and hate...
info_outlineAwestruck
Acceptance - we yearn for it in our inmost being. We long for others to accept us as we are, and yet we are terrified that who we are - which includes our shortcomings, our fears, our secret stories of horror, the terrible things we have thought and done - will repel others and deny us the very acceptance we seek. And so we don costumes, adapting some role that isn't us, hoping to finally earn acceptance. But is it really acceptance if we gain it as someone other than our true self? Maintaining the false self requires exerting so much effort that we then collapse when in solitude and wonder...
info_outlineAwestruck
Our modern way of thinking has created a false dichotomy between truth and experience. We have become obsessed with the reduction of truth into facts: atomic sentences and numbers and equations that we can use as a periodic table of elements. But this obsession holds no real power. No matter how well you know that two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen combine to form water, this fact will not help you when you are on your knees in the desert and dying of thirst. Water is life, and your experience of consuming it is vital. Spiritual truths exemplify this need for active participation even more...
info_outlineAwestruck
Our quest for peace - contentment, rest, fulfillment - is, paradoxically, most often filled with frustration, anger, exhaustion, and even rage. Make more money, acquire necessary things, secure fulfilling relationships, and fulfill sensual desires. Over and over again, great obstacles present themselves. Storms arise. Obstacles roll over us. People thwart us. Disasters destroy all that we have worked for and take away those that we love. And when we find ourselves naked and afraid - when all is lost except loss itself - where do we go? What do we do? We could, like the great phoenix, resolve...
info_outlineYou brought music back into the house. I had forgotten.
These are the words spoken by Captain Von Trapp in the 1965 musical The Sound of Music. He utters them to Fralein Maria moments after his miraculous transformation from angry and militant to warm and joyous. And it all happened because he heard his children singing in the house - singing he had silenced with insatiable demands for order and obedience.
Our deepest desires call us to the transcendent, and yet we too often conflate the fulfillment of those desires with earthly trappings in which the futile search for them exists on a spectrum ranging from aggresorial austeria to bedlamic bacchanalia. Yet both of these, and everything in between, still exist on a plane of existence that excludes the divine.
Music, nature, art, sacred texts, poetry - all of these are spiritual languages that call us to transcendence - to fly high above the draconian Baconian single-vision prison we have voluntarily locked ourselves into. Like Captain von Trapp was before he heard the sound of music, we are trapped in a wasteland devoid of spirit, of joy, of wonder, of meaning, of purpose, of love and of mercy.
This reductionist flatland of the scientific reality principle is a disease that affects all of us. It is a way of thinking that we have accepted as the only lenses with which to discern what is real and what is not. And it compounds another disease that has existed from the beginning: selfishness. In selfishness we see people, places, things, and systems of thought as utilitarian - they are for us to cultivate and harvest pleasures and tools that benefit us most.
In many parts of the world, especially the West, theology, so-called, has surprisingly drifted and deflated into the flatlands, and Churches and Christians with it. We have traded the experience of loving God and loving others for the study of God and of the heresy of others that will justify why we do not love them.
It is time to bring music back into the house of God. We have forgotten.
Source Scripture
Matthew 11:16-19; Luke 7:31-35
Connect
X: @AwestruckPod
Email: [email protected]
Extras