If you change the way you look a things, the things you look at change.
-Wayne W. Dyer
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a creative force...
Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a creative force...When we are listened to, it creates us, makes us unfold and expand. Ideas actually begin to grow within us and come to life...When we listen to people there is an alternating current, and this recharges us so that we never get tired of each other...and it is this little creative fountain inside us that begins to spring and cast up new thoughts and unexpected laughter and wisdom. ...Well, it is when people really listen to us, with quiet facinated attention, that the little fountain begins to work again, to accelerate in the most surprising way.
-Brenda Ueland
-Brenda Ueland
Thursday, February 15, 2007
There is no smaller package in the world...
There is no smaller package in the world that that of a person all wrapped up in himself.
-William Sloane Coffin
-William Sloane Coffin
I began to wonder if fighting fire with fire...
I began to wonder if fighting fire with fire didn't just leave more ashes.
-William Sloane Coffin
-William Sloane Coffin
Sacrifice in and of itself confers no sanctity...
Sacrifice in and of itself confers no sanctity.
William Sloane Coffin
William Sloane Coffin
The primary problems of the planet arise not from the poor...
The primary problems of the planet arise not from the poor, for whom education is the answer; they arise from the well-educated, for whom self-interest is the problem.
-William Sloane Coffin
-William Sloane Coffin
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
An eye for an eye is about limiting vengeance...
An eye for an eye is about limiting vengeance. You can only take an eye out for an eye; you may not kill someone for knocking out your eye. It means restraining tribal violence.
-Karen Armstrong
-Karen Armstrong
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
When you grow up on fantasy, you grow old in brutality...
I recall a line from William Butler Yeats that when you grow up on fantasy, you grow old in brutality. Fantasy is fine as a vacation, but when it becomes the bulk of our daily diet I fear that we no longer know the difference between fantasy and reality - and that breeds brutality.
-John Dominic Crossan
-John Dominic Crossan
Monday, February 05, 2007
The centrality of our mission is to love each other...
... the centrality of our mission is to love each other. That means caring for our neighbors. And this does not mean bickering about the fine points of doctrine.
-Katharine Jefferts Schori
-Katharine Jefferts Schori
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Capital punishment as more evil than murder...
When someone talks to you, you know they are talking to you. When these flashes of light came to me, I knew someone was communicating messages to me. I did not know who, but I knew the messages were not mine. One insight in particular was shocking. I had always felt that capital punishment was theologically justified because it was allowed and prescribed in the Old Testament. But this new insight told me that when people execute someone, they are tearing that person out of God's hands and refusing to allow God to continue His unfinished work in that soul.
That thought frightened me; I began to see capital punishment as more evil than murder, because it was the act of the self-righteous intentionally snatching from the Creator a person whom God was still in the process of saving. From then on I saw execution as an arrogant ssault on God's control over human life and as a subtle denial of belief in God. I could see clearly then that the executioner and those demanding execution are no different in God's eyes from the murderer who tries to justify his crime. Both deny to the Creator control over human life, he right to finish the divine work of redemption in the souls of those they execute.
-Joseph F. Girzone
That thought frightened me; I began to see capital punishment as more evil than murder, because it was the act of the self-righteous intentionally snatching from the Creator a person whom God was still in the process of saving. From then on I saw execution as an arrogant ssault on God's control over human life and as a subtle denial of belief in God. I could see clearly then that the executioner and those demanding execution are no different in God's eyes from the murderer who tries to justify his crime. Both deny to the Creator control over human life, he right to finish the divine work of redemption in the souls of those they execute.
-Joseph F. Girzone
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