Showing posts with label Spiritual Quotations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spiritual Quotations. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Wise Words for Personal Reflection

~day 17: the Kingdom of God is among you~Image by theroamincatholic via Flickr

Jesus forms a movement of people who trust him and believe his message. They believe that they don’t have to wait for this or that to happen, but rather that they can begin living in a new and better way now, a way of life Jesus conveys by the pregnant phrase “kingdom of God.” Life for them now is about an interactive relationship – reconciled to lives as an opportunity to make the beautiful music of God’s kingdom so that more and more people will be drawn into it, and so the world will be changed by their growing influence. Everyone can have a role in this expanding kingdom – women and men, masters and servants, powerful and powerless, old and young, urban and rural, white collar and blue collar, previously religious and previously irreligious. Each life can add beauty to the secret message of Jesus. Each person can be a secret agent of the secret kingdom.

Brian McLaren

(from The Secret Message of Jesus)
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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Wise Words for Today

Jesus is considered by scholars such as Weber ...Image via Wikipedia

For generations the church has been polarized between those who see the main task being the saving of souls for heaven and the nurturing of those souls through the valley of this dark world, on the one hand, and on the other hand those who see the task of improving the lot of human beings and the world, rescuing the poor from their misery. The longer I have gone on as a New Testament scholar and wrestled with what the early Christians were actually talking about, the more it’s been borne in on me that that distinction is one that we modern Westerners bring to the text rather than finding in the text. Because the great emphasis in the New Testament is that the gospel is not how to escape the world, the gospel is that the crucified and risen Jesus is Lord of the world. And that his death and Resurrection transform the world, and that transformation can happen to you. You, in turn, can be part of the transforming work. That draws together what we traditionally called evangelism, bring people to the point where they come to know God in Christ for themselves, with working for God’s kingdom on earth as it is in heaven. That has always been at the heart of the Lord’s Prayer, and how we’ve managed for years to say the Lord’s Prayer without realizing that Jesus really meant it is very curious. Our Western culture since the 18th century has made a virtue of separating out religion from real life, or faith from politics. When I lecture about this, people will pop up and say, “Surely Jesus said my kingdom is not of this world.” And the answer is no, what Jesus said in John 18 is, “My kingdom is not from this world.” That’s ek tou kosmoutoutou. It’s quite clear in the text that Jesus’ kingdom doesn’t start with this world. It isn’t a worldly kingdom, but it is for this world. It’s from somewhere else, but it’s for this world.

N.T. Wright
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