On the Road to Emmaus

Meditations, musings and traveler’s tales…

Entries Comments


Category: Theology

First Be Filled, Then Control the Outpouring (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 2b)

18 July, 2010 (16:33) | Spiritual Theology | No comments

The person who is wise, therefore, will see their life as more like a reservoir than a canal. The canal simultaneously pours out what it receives; the reservoir retains the water till it is filled, then discharges the overflow without loss to itself. He knows that a curse is on the person who allows their own [...]

Becoming a Deep Person is the Most Fruitful Long-term Approach to Loving God and Neighbor (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 2a)

16 July, 2010 (17:43) | John (Gospel and Epistles), Spiritual Theology | No comments

“Superficiality is the curse of our age. The doctrine of instant satisfaction is a primary spiritual problem. The desperate need today is not for a greater number of intelligent people, or gifted people, but for deep people.” (Richard Foster, Celebration of Discipline)

I read these lines when I was a freshman in college. They set [...]

Practices of Love (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 1e)

13 July, 2010 (17:40) | Spiritual Theology | 1 comment

In this series I am attempting to describe central principles for the spiritual life as well as practices that directly and strategically implement them.  Thus far we have been discussing the principle:
A life poured out in love is the starting point of all true Christianity, the source and summit of all true humanity.

with [...]

Love is How We Open to Life (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 1d)

2 July, 2010 (14:55) | Spiritual Theology | No comments

There are two general postures toward life: open or closed. The former is characterized by the risk, passion, wonder and joy of giving one’s self in a whole and undivided way. We reach beyond the encroachment of our self-contained shell by engaging with the people and experiences of life. In these experiences, we necessarily give [...]

Love Allows No Syncretism with Consumerism (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 1c)

29 June, 2010 (13:35) | Spiritual Theology | 2 comments

On Sunday morning you worship at church, on Tuesday attend a Buddhist meditation session, on Thursday, a Muslim recitation of the Qu’ran and Friday a Jewish Sabbath Eve service. Of course to modern ears this sounds like stretching the bounds of sanity. In the ancient world, the phenomenon of combining religions, sometimes fusing them, at [...]

Love Means Renouncing Indifference (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 1b)

19 June, 2010 (16:39) | Spiritual Theology | 1 comment

A life poured out in love is the starting point of all true Christianity, the source and summit of all true humanity. God in Christ has invited us as His people to live as redeemed and redemptive truly human beings by loving God and neighbor with the totality of our being. The full and unreserved [...]

A Life Poured Out in Love is the Starting Point of All True Christianity (Principles and Practices for the Spiritual Life, Part 1a)

13 June, 2010 (19:50) | Genesis, Gospels, Spiritual Theology | 1 comment

This is the beginning of a series in which I hope to distill a synthesis of my learning and experience with respect to the manner in which one cultivates a deep spiritual life.  My intention is to combine both an understanding of how the spiritual life works along with what practically to do to experience [...]

What is Spirituality? Part 2 – Heaven and Earth Converge

1 June, 2010 (17:15) | Pneumatology (Spirit) | No comments

Spirituality means “Life in God’s Spirit” rather than a vague and ethereal sense of “religiousness” or “inner attunement.” From briefly looking at the role of the Holy Spirit in the Bible (see part 1 – Christian Spirituality is Not Spiritual), we see that the Holy Spirit, rather than being in contrast to the physical and material [...]

What is Spirituality? Part 1 – Christian Spirituality is Not Spiritual

30 May, 2010 (19:36) | Pneumatology (Spirit) | 1 comment

What is “spirituality?” Or, what does it mean to be “spiritual”? Spirituality is often understood as that which relates to the immaterial spirit or soul in contrast to that which is physical or material. In another sense, spirituality is that which relates to a certain form of religion or religious belief. Then “spirituality” means a [...]

Religion is Not a Bad Word

2 February, 2010 (21:01) | Ecclesiology (Church), Theology | 2 comments

“Christianity is not a religion, its a relationship,” is a mantra I occasionally hear. The more I hear it, the more I am taken aback, wondering what exactly people mean. Whatever they specifically intend, the implication is that “religion” is something negative which we would not want to be in any way associated with. However, [...]

« Older entries