On Oct 8, 2024, at 11:14 PM, Don Bushman via OE <oe@lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:Well Jim-breathe-deep inhale twice as long exhale, 10 times. I have participated in his zooming and found it worth the effort. Unless you are going really far down hill, it is good stuff you can manage.I found the following likely sources. I suspect it was our Pierce, Matthews, Marshall, and the other creators of RS1 fascination with Kierkegaard-and several of these other sources could play into the statement:1. Viktor Frankl – "Man's Search for Meaning"
- Why it's useful: This book provides insight into how suffering can lead individuals to confront questions about meaning, purpose, and spirituality. Frankl, a Holocaust survivor, explores how the human spirit searches for meaning even in the most difficult circumstances.
- Key themes: Existential crisis, suffering, and the search for purpose.
2. Søren Kierkegaard – "The Sickness Unto Death"
- Why it's useful: Kierkegaard, considered the father of existentialism, deals with despair and how it leads to self-awareness and the need for reconciliation with the concept of God.
- Key themes: Despair, faith, the self, and the relationship with God in existential crises.
3. C.S. Lewis – "The Problem of Pain"
- Why it's useful: C.S. Lewis explores the problem of human suffering from a Christian theological perspective, addressing how pain forces individuals to turn toward God for answers.
- Key themes: Suffering, divine purpose, and spiritual transformation.
4. Paul Tillich – "The Courage to Be"
- Why it's useful: Tillich examines existential anxiety and the role of faith in overcoming the crises of meaninglessness. He addresses how individuals turn to spirituality when confronted with the anxiety of existence.
- Key themes: Existential anxiety, courage, and the divine.
5. Thomas Merton – "No Man Is an Island"
- Why it's useful: Merton, a Trappist monk, reflects on the importance of contemplation and how internal crises often direct us to seek answers in God and spiritual truths.
- Key themes: Spiritual life, contemplation, and God’s role in personal crises.
6. Simone Weil – "Waiting for God"
- Why it's useful: Weil’s writings emphasize how suffering and affliction lead individuals to spiritual growth and a deeper understanding of God’s presence.
- Key themes: Suffering, spiritual growth, and divine presence.
7. St. Augustine – "Confessions"
- Why it's useful: This autobiographical work shows St. Augustine’s own spiritual crisis and his journey toward understanding God’s role in his life. His reflections are a profound exploration of human restlessness and the search for divine truth.
- Key themes: Sin, grace, spiritual crisis, and divine revelation.
828-292-9696_______________________________________________On Tue, Oct 8, 2024 at 7:39 PM James Wiegel via OE <oe@lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:The statement, "When the external situation creates an internal crisis from which we seek to escape, it is at that point that the question of God is raised" -- or something like that, was used to give a framework to the Question of God lecture in the Ecumenical Institute's "Question of God" lecture._______________________________________________What was the source of this statement? Something in Kierkegaard?Thanks for any help. I am frantically trying to swim in the deep waters of Gene Marshall's Zoom Symposium on a new Christian theology.Jim Wiegel“We are all time travelers journeying into the future. But let us make that future a place we want to visit. “ Stephen Hawking
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