M
Mystical_Seeker
Guest
I was going on the basis that Jesus referred to the Holy Spirit as living water that will flow from within us.
So that’s where I got the idea about the Holy Spirit coming from within us.
The “inexpressible groanings” of the Spirit are kind of hard to locate. I’ve never reliably identified “this one is just a hunch” and “this one is a conviction” and “this one is the Holy Spirit.” And during contemplative prayer or exercises, if I were to challenge the “spirits” to identify themselves and their point of origin, that would cease to be a contemplative form but an anal-ytical form. There is a time to judge and identify spirits, but I would think an exorcism is more where that skill is really needed, not so much for comtemplative prayer unless it’s some fancy new age kind I don’t know about.
If we are trying to match up terminology and words, then sure I want to be as close as I can with the terms I use, but for common human experiences, if we have to insist on having common words to describe it or common things one must believe and report experiencing before this experience is considered a “valid” application of the term Holy Spirit, then we’re sunk. Because that is exactly what I’m trying to cut through. :banghead:
So yes I appreciate improvements and expansions in the way I describe things, but if the terminology has to match before we can identify common human experiences, that is opposite what I’m even trying to do here. We have apologist and apologist wannabees standing in line to prove what is different about us. The more our terms match up the better, but we are still dealing with observations and remedies for much of the same “human condition.”
Religion provides a language by which we communicate our experiences, mysteries, and inner movements, of the divine and related mysteries. Just because one speaks Buddhist and one speaks Christian and one speaks “atheist” or whatever, we still eat, breathe, feel, grieve losses of loved ones. If the only thing that makes our human condition different is the beliefs we have in the supernatural forces governing it and the words to describe it, then to me that says nothing about the substance of the experience itself.
So that’s where I got the idea about the Holy Spirit coming from within us.
The “inexpressible groanings” of the Spirit are kind of hard to locate. I’ve never reliably identified “this one is just a hunch” and “this one is a conviction” and “this one is the Holy Spirit.” And during contemplative prayer or exercises, if I were to challenge the “spirits” to identify themselves and their point of origin, that would cease to be a contemplative form but an anal-ytical form. There is a time to judge and identify spirits, but I would think an exorcism is more where that skill is really needed, not so much for comtemplative prayer unless it’s some fancy new age kind I don’t know about.
If we are trying to match up terminology and words, then sure I want to be as close as I can with the terms I use, but for common human experiences, if we have to insist on having common words to describe it or common things one must believe and report experiencing before this experience is considered a “valid” application of the term Holy Spirit, then we’re sunk. Because that is exactly what I’m trying to cut through. :banghead:
So yes I appreciate improvements and expansions in the way I describe things, but if the terminology has to match before we can identify common human experiences, that is opposite what I’m even trying to do here. We have apologist and apologist wannabees standing in line to prove what is different about us. The more our terms match up the better, but we are still dealing with observations and remedies for much of the same “human condition.”
Religion provides a language by which we communicate our experiences, mysteries, and inner movements, of the divine and related mysteries. Just because one speaks Buddhist and one speaks Christian and one speaks “atheist” or whatever, we still eat, breathe, feel, grieve losses of loved ones. If the only thing that makes our human condition different is the beliefs we have in the supernatural forces governing it and the words to describe it, then to me that says nothing about the substance of the experience itself.