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Dear friends,
Make that four! I was also inspired by the Compass
television episode last night on the growth of the Inter-faith Movement
that is going on around the world. Unfortunately I cannot provide an easy
link where you might watch that program so I have confined my headline
to "Three Good Reasons to be Inspired". The only trouble is
that if you take the time out to listen to or read all that is on offer
it'll take about three or possibly even four hours out of your day. I've
put in that investment over the last few days a heck of a lot more
in fact and I think the investment is worthwhile.
What ties all this "inspiration" together? I've been pondering
that myself. I think it is this: there are a terrible lot of things about
at the moment that can cause us to feel depressed a sense that
the world is going to pot, the Church is on its way to ruin or total irrelevance,
even this sense that we are making our planet uninhabitable. The three
links I'm going to provide to you today are an antidote to all of that.
The
first link is to the audio recording of Sr Joan
Chittister's address on Benedictine Spirituality from last
Thursday night. It will be published on the Good Sams website this afternoon.
In that lecture Joan Chittister presents a hope-filled and hope-filling
message that we Catholics and Christians can make a difference to our
world in the same way that St Benedict did all those centuries ago when
singly-handedly he "saved Western civilisation". We do have
much to offer both ourselves and the world if only we can re-discover
the authentic and core insights and truth of Jesus Christ. To do that
we have to drop all these games we've been playing for a few centuries.
You'll find Sr Joan's address at: www.goodsams.org.au.
Still
with Sr Joan, but this time it's far
more personal: don't miss Joan's interview with Rachel Köhn which
was first broadcast last night on ABC Radio National's The Spirit
of Things. This is an interview in which this remarkable woman
tells us much about her personal story and the obstacles she had to walk
through in order to become this "woman of hope and inspiration".
Life is not some box of chocolates and it is enormous irony that so often
our pathway to hope, truth and authenticity comes through struggle and
overcoming adversity. Isn't that a central message of the Christ story
though? Isn't that the real story of the Cross not this game of
"oh woe is me, look what a little goody-two-shoes I am being suffering
with you Jesus?" but understanding how to turn adversity into alchemical
gold that lights our faces with hope, strength of character, compassion,
wisdom and the ability to inspire our children and our neighbours.
You can listen to Rachel Köhn's inspiring interview with Sr Joan
at: www.abc.net.au/rn/spiritofthings/.
The
third resource I want to direct your attention to is an address Latrobe
University academic, Dr David Tacey
gave a few years ago to religious educators in Australia. One of our readers
sent me a copy in the last few days as he thought it had much to say that
readers of Catholica would be interested in given recent commentaries
he'd read and also the questions that keep surfacing in our forum. Fortunately
I've found a copy of the address online so you can read it for yourself.
It's over 6,000 words though and is basically an hour-long lecture. But,
wow, this is simply brilliant stuff to be inspired by.
At heart his lecture examines why there is this increasing split going
on in Western society between spirituality and religion. He's examining
why people are moving away from institutionalised religion and seeking
spiritual answers and fulfilment in new places. In many ways this guy
is also a bit of a prophet in much the same way Joan Chittister is. He
delivered this lecture originally back in 2003. In it though you'll find
he was addressing back then many of the things that the Compass program
has been examining over the last two weeks, and which Sr Joan addresses
towards the end of her interview with Rachel Köhn this emerging
understanding that God speaks to us through the entire human family not
just the self-appointed elects.
What I find particularly compelling about David Tacey's argument though
is that he is not merely endeavouring to chart why this disjunction has
opened up in Western society between religion and spirituality. At the
core of this address is a powerful argument about why the decline of institutionalised
religion is a bad thing and why we are called to do something about that
and reverse the trend. He believes the institutional Church still has
an important role to play in society and we are called to a responsibility
to redress this situation. His argument though, is not some argument about
power. It's about disconnecting religion from the power and allure of
human politics and human egos and reconnecting it back to what it ought
be connected to spirituality
the power and allure that is
found in the Divine, the ultimate powerhouse that drives, sustains and
animates Creation.
Unfortunately the copy of his address available on the internet has not
been laid out with much care particularly for a long lecture. I
have taken the liberty of re-doing the layout so that the paragraphs are
better spaced and so that you can print it out from a pidf document. You
will find the new copy of David Tacey's lecture at: www.catholica.com.au/misc/ReligionVersusSpirituality.pdf.
The original version can be found on the Victorian Association of Religious
Educator's website at: www.aare.org.au/victoria/tacey.html.
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Brian
Coyne is the editor and publisher of Catholica Australia.
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We welcome your thoughts in response to this commentary in our forum.
Brian Coyne can be contacted at: Brian
Coyne <editor@catholica.com.au>
©2007
Brian Coyne
[Brian's Take Archive]
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