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IgnatianPhilo
Guest
Why do you insist on discussing this topic in a thread in which it does not belong? Are you so afraid as to be challanged on a thread that actually deals with how Christians are supposed live, their relationship to the past? C.S Lewis doesn’t recommend this reckless Christianity you do, that is the abandoning of the men of the past, rather he makes the point that Christianity has been built up by such men, tested and defined for us. Again i invite you to discuss this in a thread that is actually dedicated this subject, unless your afraid.There is a quote from J.B. Phillips that reads:
“The greatest difference between present day Christianity and that which we read in the letters (of the New Testament), is that to us it is primarily a performance; to them it was real experience. We are apt to reduce the Christian religion to a code or, at best, a rule of heart and life. Perhaps, if we believed what they believed, we could achieve what they achieved.”
There are those of us that do believe as they believed, that know what they knew–The Great I Am. But, we are all struggling within our own lives and are often afraid to speak for fear that the “holders of all rules” will call us blasphemers. If we truly believe, could we not find our way to each other, to uniting if only once, and raise our hearts together, if only once? The effects of just one cry in this way for this purpose could shake the world. Remember Josiah? This is what the Baha’i writings lead us to do–to live with God as one within our own sacredly held faith and love of God.
"To this point, when asked about my faith, sometimes I simply call myself a “Christian Mystic.” I got the term first from C. S. Lewis. His definition of Christian Mysticism is simple: “the direct experience of God, immediate as a taste or color.” Lewis writes,
“Discovering spirituality is like discovering you are in a boat. Mysticism is like pushing off from the dock. Since many leave safe mooring and perish in the waves, this is not to be done in a cavalier fashion – even though it can be exciting to push off into the deep. The issue is not of whether we should push off, for Christians must do so as well if they intend to get anywhere (and that is what boats are for), but rather of where you are going…The Christian casts off from this world as well, but with clear intent to where he is headed, with the best of maps, circumspectly, deliberately. The Christian Mystic arrives, against all dangers and odds. Thus we launch out with fear and trembling, but trust that He who commanded us to do so can calm the waves, and see us through to His real, safe port.”
bstrait.wordpress.com/2011/08/22/what-is-a-christian-mystic/
“Let us look at our own faults, and not at other persons’. People who are extremely correct themselves are often shocked at everything they see; however, we might often learn a great deal that is essential from the very persons whom we censure. Our exterior comportment and manners may be better–this is well enough, but not of the first importance. We ought not to insist on every one following in our footsteps, nor to take upon ourselves to give instructions in spirituality when, perhaps, we do not even know what it is. Zeal for the good of souls, though given us by God, may often lead us astray, sisters; it is best to keep our rule, which bids us ever to live in silence and in hope. Our Lord will care for the souls belonging to Him.”
TERESA OF AVILA, The Interior Castle
To the Baha’i:
“Let nothing disturb thee,
Let nothing affright thee;
All passeth away:
God only shall stay.
Patience wins all:
Who hath God, needeth nothing;
For God is his All.”
SAINT TERESA OF AVILA, Exclamations of the Soul to God
God bless and keep you,
Little Star
“I have reached the inner vision and through thy spirit in me, I have heard thy wondrous secret. Through thy mystic insight Thou hast caused a spring of knowledge to well up within me. A fountain of power pouring forth living waters, a flood of love and of all embracing wisdom like the splendor of eternal light.”
The Book of Enoch