Thursday, August 24, 2017

First things

Dana Greene in NCR remebers an exchange she had with Dorothy Day:

My earnest query was, “What must be done next?” She replied: “First scrub the toilets.”
First things first. A saying with various ascriptions:
If you don't know what to do, do what is in front of you.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Oh, THAT word

A presentation, especially one an hour long, is an exercise in storytelling.  Your audience can't flip back a few pages to figure out what you are talking about if you are not clear, if you have not brought everyone with you by telling a story.  You can sometimes get away with breaking it up into small pieces so that the immediate perspective is obvious. (This is one of the errors that Power Point enables.)  You have to  tell a story that makes sense all the way through.

Like any other form of storytelling, backstory is an issue.  This is all the material you work out that underlies what you are presenting -- the hidden skeleton beneath the visible skin.  This could be biographies of main characters.  (Of course, the ultimate backstory builder was J.R.R. Tolkien - the formal backstory to The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings is several volumes headed by the magnificent Simarillion.)  But you can't spend your time talking fascinating backstory instead of the story you are trying to tell.

One of my backstory issues is how far to go in the triplet of concepts that make up my definition of spirituality, designated by their Greek names:

  • Eros -- desire
  • Doxa -- knowledge, understanding or opinion
  • Praxis -- a or action.
More about all three and how they fit together later.  But we have to deal with the top term, eros

Eros is the Greek word for desire, and is often used in connection with sexual desire, hence the term erotic. In fact,  many people find it difficult to grasp that larger meaning, but get stuck and zero in on that one concern.  They miss the point.

One of the best current writers on spirituality is Fr. Ron Rollheiser.  He makes this point in his 1982 essay Spirituality An Erotic Urge:

 ... When in fact someone in all sincerity believes that they are too full of life and eros, restlessness and complexity, to live the spiritual life they are being sucked in by a viral heresy which would have us believe that eros, the drive for life, is fundamentally irreligious. That is always a serious and costly mistake because eros is the very basis of the spiritual life and everyone, absolutely everyone, must live a spiritual life. 

What we do with the eros inside of us, be it heroic or perverse, is our spiritual life. The tragedy is that so many persons, full of riches and bursting with life, see this drive as something that is essentially irreligious, as something that sets them against what is spiritual. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our erotic pulses are God’s lure in us. They are our spirit! We experience them precisely as “spirit,” as that which makes us more than mere mammals. However, again and again, in my ministry and in my friendships I am confronted with persons who sincerely believe that they are unspiritual when, in fact, they are deeply spiritual persons. Unable to form a vision within which they can integrate their drive for life, celebration and sexuality, into a commitment which includes church-going, Christian sexual morality, prayer and involvement in a Eucharistic community, they are forced into a false dilemma: They must choose between a Christian commitment (which appears as erotic suicide) and a life partially away from Christian community, sacraments, prayer and morality, but within which they feel they can be fully human, sensual, sexual and celebrating. This dilemma, within which the church is seen as a parasite, sucking life’s pulse out of its subjects, then allows society’s amorality to parade itself as being ultimately life-giving and the true defender of eros.

Our discussion of spirituality must begin with eros, even if the term bothers or scares us.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Dialogue cannot exist without humility.

Some relevant bits from Paulo Freire:

No one is born fully-formed: it is through self-experience in the world that we become what we are.
No one can be authentically human while he prevents others from being so. 
Within the word we find two dimensions-reflection and action. If one is sacrificed even in part, the other immediately suffers. To speak a true word is to transform the world.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Nice Try

Here is one of the descriptions I put togethere for the talk -- one that did not get into the registration book.


Achieve Enlightenment with this one stupid trick - spirituality in a time of clickbait, packaged "religion" and transhumanism

Spirituality is as natural and universal as breathing -- and we as Catholics recognize that spiritual development is necessary for becoming fully human

But the path to that humanity can be hard to find today. There are:weapons of mass distraction such as click-bait, fake news, and online pornography. "Spirituality" is becoming just one more consumer product. Explosive progress in artificial intelligence and neuroscience alters for some the idea of what humanity is, and what it might become.

We don't need to retreat to some enclave of imagined safety or to try to ignore the whole thing. Our challenge is to make a pilgrimage back to our roots as a Christian community to understand better not only our own spiritual needs but how to accompany others in this confusing time.
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My experience includes several years as journalism, followed by 20+ years of software development. For the past 10 years i have worked for this diocese in detention ministry and as the sometime webmaster. I'm now a year into being the full time webmaster as part of CommNet Media.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Coming Detractions

Well it finally happened. No, not the fall of Western civilization. I am scheduled as a presenter At the Diocese of Fresno Congress October 14 in Visalia. My session is D.03 - Spirituality for Webmasters and Social Media Mavens. My intention is to start posting some of the pieces of my presentation here, as a sort of tryout, once concept at a time. In the end, my intention is to post any materials for the session here. Stay tuned.