YEP. It really IS all about God.

“We can either stay within the Christianity we have mastered with the Jesus we have domesticated, or we can leave Christianity as a destination, embrace Christianity as a way of life, and then journey to reality where God is present and living in every person, every human community, and all creation” (Samir Selmanovic)

I know this has been a long time coming, but I’ve finally organised some thoughts in my head about this fabulous book by Samir Selmanovic.  Here are some of the ideas in the book that got me thinking more about how I live my life.

If God is present here (in my life, beliefs, church), does it mean he has to be absent elsewhere (in your life, beliefs, church)?

If you believe God favours anyone over anyone else, is he really worth worshiping?

Of course we want to defend the God we believe in, but can anything meaningful be said about God from a posture of defence?

We have shrunk the sacred and segregated life.   “A gospel that is not as wide as the earth, that is without meaning for the whole earth, is no gospel at all”

Why are so many Christians bent on denying grace outside the boundaries of Christianity?  This makes Christianity seem small, withdrawn from life, unappreciative of human experience, ungrateful.  “As long as those of us who are Christians insist on staying enclosed in our own world of meanings,  we have nothing more to say to the world”

Religion dreams of actually confining and managing God.  We want to use God to grow our religions. Religions have become ‘God management systems’. “Have we turned our religious texts, traditions, and rituals into containers and dispensers of God?”

“Jesus repeatedly said, ‘The Kingdom of God is here. Enter it.’ Jesus never said, ‘Christianity is here. Join it.’  Christianity is a religion. The Kingdom of God was, is, and will always be more.”

How is your religion good for all people? Are you willing to make your religion take a backseat to something larger than itself?

Some churches exist for the purpose of avoiding God – they think God can be contained by the words of our theology and tamed by the motions of our liturgy.

Forgive and absorb injustice instead of deflecting it back into the world.

Any meaning we attach to the word ‘God’ will sooner or later be found wanting.  Words reveal AND obscure.

“People who destroy themselves or others in the name of their religion are actually people who don’t know how to love and be loved.  And that’s why perhaps, paradoxically, there is nothing but love that can really stop them.”

We are actually lessening our understanding if we interpret revelation solely as something that makes God knowable.

Risk more, and sooner.

EVERYONE, no matter if you are religious or not, assigns worth to something. Everyone’s heart goes somewhere. Everyone worships. What if our differences are not nearly as significant as we think?  What if ‘religious’ or ‘nonreligious’ people are both just trying to simplify and manage the human experience?

Anything that isn’t God has the potential to become an idol.  Religion is not God, so it too has the potential to become an idol.

We must recognise that our understanding of God is NOT God.  When we talk about God, we need to realise that we are not really talking about God, but rather of our understanding of God (our religion). “When we free our religion from the burden of being our God, we empower it.”

But we also need religion – without it, we’re left drifting with our own meanings, isolated.  Religion, at it’s best, leaves us desiring more of God than that same religion can ever contain.

It’s not the question of whether God exists or not, that stops most people from becoming Christians – it’s the refusal of religious people to admit that they idolise themselves in the form of their own religion.

“Why don’t religious folk present their ideas where everyone else does? They don’t come to book clubs, poetry readings, discussion groups, community service events, and social clubs.  There are venues that we as a society set up together for people to share ideas.  Why are Christians, and other religious people for that matter, absent from the places where they can’t be in charge?”

People of other religions shouldn’t be thought of as ‘guests’ – they are part of our world, and without them we’d be worse off.

“When humans take and hold strong positions with humility, we all gain.”

Can a rejection of God be something that honours God?  God doesn’t have an ego that can be wounded by our disbelief in his existence.

“Religion must learn to live on earth. If religion does not work on earth, it does not work at all.”

Religious and nonreligious people often end up using God, and bringing conversation to an end.

The question shouldn’t be “Does God exist” (exist in what? in space? in time?), but the questions should be
(1)  what do you believe in when you believe – or not believe – in God?
(2) What can you do to protect and hear those who subvert your ideas about the God you believe in or don’t believe in?
(3) How to turn the tensions between us into something that is life-giving instead of destructive?

Religion approaches life by producing a map and putting it in everyone’s hands – we say that life is chaos and needs to be reined in.  We try to pull people out of this chaos and give them the purposes of our religion.  We collect these ‘maps’, look for the right map, compare maps, argue about which map is correct.  The problem with this is that we are left focusing on a destination – life loses its immediacy.  The journey IS the destination.  People aren’t looking for an escape from life.  They’re looking for someone to help them walk the journey of life.

“Life – not religion or theology – is the medium of love… people who know how to love well are our guides and the embodiment of the Christian story.”

You can see the height of how self centred we are, in how we are so focused on getting to heaven that it’s at the expense of excluding God’s life from the world we are actually living in.  “One world at a time, my friend, one world at a time.”

Are you interpreting the Bible in a way that helps you to love well?  We need to learn to interpret (or reinterpret) the Bible through the eyes of reality. “Whatever separates us from one another is what separates us from God.  Whatever brings us to one another brings us to God.”  The world will need Christians once Christians learn to need the world.  Don’t seek God out of this life – seek him further, and deeper into it.

When you imagine a boundary, is it a wall?  Why not a window, a door, a bridge?

We’re called to bless and TO BE blessed, to give (strength) and to receive (weakness). We don’t know how to love because we don’t know how to receive.

Understanding our relationship with a Divine Other is inextricably linked with our relationships with Human Others.

“Follow me, and you might be happy – or you might not.  Follow me, and you might be empowered – or you might not.  Follow me, and you might have more friends – or you might not. Follow me, and you might have the answers – or you might not. Follow me, and you might be better off – or you might not. If you follow me, you may be worse off in every way you use to measure life.  Follow me nevertheless. Because I have an offer that is worth giving up everything you have: you will learn to love well.”

Is that all a bit heavy for a Tuesday night read?

friday ruminations

Ahhhh.  But what is it about Friday afternoon that gets me pondering the meaning of life and all?
The things that make us happy.  It’s the simple things, isn’t it?  The Popstar and DaisyBaby were delighted this week with ribbons from our local Crafty Type Shop.

And this interior I just love.  My one and only comment is that it’s probably a little too masculine for my tastes.  But that is to be expected since it belongs to two men.

And I can’t help but wonder what happened to this poor man in our household Legoland.  It looks like a ghost town.  Would somebody clean those pizza shop windows already?  It’s just unhygienic.

I have a spot on my buffet where I keep a handful of books that I intend to read in the Not Too Distant Future, or that I am currently reading.  This is it at the moment.
I’ve started The End of Poverty but can’t seem to get to the End of The Book…it’s full of wonderful ideas and comments but has a few too many charts and graphs for my liking.  I would really like to know how to end poverty so I’m determined to read till the end of the book!  I hope Sachs or Bono tell me the answer eventually.
I’ve started Oprah, but I wish it was written with a little more impartiality…yes, I know she’s not God, but she’s not the devil either.
365 Manners Kids Should Know is fantastic.  Of course a lot of common sense in it {like Say Please, Thank You and I’m Sorry} but it never hurts to be reminded about the niceties of life.  And it has prompted me to start a list {on my Big Family Whiteboard} of age appropriate etiquette for The Popstar and DaisyBaby.
I just finished The Kids Guide to Service Projects and I was disappointed.  Even though I knew it was for older kids, my hope for it was that it would give me some ideas to work towards with my own kids.  Problem is that many of the ideas in the book involve long term projects and writing proposals and reports.  I’m more interested in actually helping people straight away, and in projects that are not too long term as my life is quite hectic with little kids and I don’t want to commit to something I can’t sustain.
The only book that isn’t there that I’m currently reading is An Autobiography by Mohandas {Mahatma} Gandhi.  I’ve only just finished the introduction, so I’ll have to keep you posted on that one.
I can’t wait to sink my teeth into The Male Brain and The Female Brain.  But I think I’ve got enough books on the go at the moment!!

Happy weekend to my loyal followers {and by that, I mean the one that I have which is my mother, lol}.  I hope your weekend is as balmy as mine is shaping up to be.

travelling books

How is it possible that I am an avid book reader and have only just heard of Book Crossing?  My mother recently returned from a trip to Melbourne with her usual pile of books gleaned from op shops along the way.  I actually found it after she’d already returned home.  She just put it on my bookshelf and left.  She must have had the same idea that I did, because I’m sure she wouldn’t have picked it solely from the enthralling title and intriguing cover photo.

The book {South by Java Head, Alistair Maclean} had a note on the front that said:

Howdy! Hola! Bonjour! Guten Tag! I’m a very special book. You see, I’m travelling around the world making new friends. I hope I’ve met another friend in you. Please go to www.bookcrossing.com and enter my BCID number…{blah blah blah}.

So I did. And I found that someone in Melbourne had indeed read and reviewed it. So despite the fact that it looks boring as all Get Out, and seems to be about a Blood and Guts Type War, I’m determined to read it and send it forth into the world to be found by another dedicated book lover.


Sorry about this tiny picture. It’s the only one {that looks the same as mine} I could find when I googled it.

I love the idea, and I’ll be damned if I’m going to be the broken link in the chain letter of book reading. So there.

books books books books books {everywhere you look}

I love reading.  I dream of the house I’m going to live in that has a library and one of those sliding ladders.  While my parents are overseas, for the next 4 years or so, my husband and I are living in their home while renting out our own house.  The most difficult thing about this is that nothing is my own. I’m living in someone’s house, with all of their belongings.  I’m also living with my brother and his wife and all of their worldly possessions.  So you can only imagine – two families, and three families worth of belongings in one house.  It’s nerve racking, frustrating, and can be quite emotional at times!  We keep reminding ourselves about the money we’re saving for a few years and that is helping us push through!

So humour me as I dream about the way my house will look when I finally move back in to it.  An amazing bookcase tree by Shawn Soh