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Sharing an Easter Reflection from Richard Rohr & Ilia Delio

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Real Estate Agent with Woodland Management Service / Woodland Real Estate, KW Diversified #1 in Forest Land Mgmt

Sharing an Easter Reflection from Richard Rohr & Ilia Delio

I was catching up on a little paperwork today related to my job as the leader of the local group of Third Order Franciscans when I came across an email that our Spiritual Assistant, Sister Rose sent a few days ago.

I actually already had the reflection in my inbox before she sent it, I am also a subscriber to Richard Rohr, but had ignored it in my usual email triage of dealing with only the critical stuff.

But since Sister Rose wanted me to bring the subject of this email up with our council this week, I thought it wise to actually read it, and I am glad that I did.

When put in Fr Rohr’s words and perspective, the story of Jesus and his time on earth so long ago holds a mirror forward to the world today in so many ways.

Makes you wonder, am I recognizing Jesus in the people of today (the homeless, the refugee, the accused), or just ignoring Him and thinking of my own critical needs?

 

 

Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation

Bias from the Bottom: Week 1

 

God's Most Distressing Disguise

 

In Jesus we have an almost extreme example of God taking sides. It starts with one who empties himself of all divinity (see Philippians 2:6-7), comes as a homeless baby in a poor family, then a refugee in a foreign country, then an invisible carpenter in his own country which is colonized and occupied by an imperial power, ending as a "criminal," accused and tortured by heads of both systems of power, temple and empire, abandoned by most of his inner circle, subjected to the death penalty by a most humiliating and bizarre public ritual, and finally buried quickly in an unmarked grave. If God in any way planned this story line, God surely intended the message to be subversive, clear, and unavoidable. Yet we largely made Jesus into a churchy icon that any priestly or policing establishment could gather around without even blushing.

 

Ilia Delio, a Franciscan scientist and theologian, challenges us to take the scandal and downward movement of the Incarnation quite seriously and to let it rearrange our priorities.

 An incarnational bias is evident today in our globalized culture. The "problem" of immigrants, welfare recipients, incarcerated, mentally ill, . . . disabled, and all who are marginalized by mainstream society, is a problem of the incarnation. When we reject our relatedness to the poor, the weak, the simple, and the unlovable we define the family of creation over and against God. In place of God we decide who is worthy of our attention and who can be rejected. Because of our deep fears, we spend time, attention, and money on preserving our boundaries of privacy and increasing our knowledge and power. We hermetically seal ourselves off from the undesired "other," the stranger, and in doing so, we seal ourselves off from God. By rejecting God in the neighbor, we reject the love that can heal us.

 Until we come to accept created reality with all its limits and pains as the living presence of God, Christianity has nothing to offer to the world. It is sound bites of empty promises. When we lose the priority of God's love in weak, fragile humanity, we lose the Christ, the foundation on which we stand as Christians.

 Compassion continues the Incarnation by allowing the Word of God to take root within us, to be enfleshed in us. The Incarnation is not finished; it is not yet complete for it is to be completed in us. [1]

Gateway to Silence

Humble me.

Reference:

[1] Ilia Delio, Compassion: Living in the Spirit of St. Francis, (Franciscan Media: 2011), 61

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comments (3)

Barbara Todaro
RE/MAX Executive Realty - Happily Retired - Franklin, MA
Previously Affiliated with The Todaro Team

Good morning, Bob Crane wishing you and your family a Happy and Blessed Easter..... enjoy ..... a day to rejoice.

Apr 01, 2018 03:29 AM
Lise Howe
Keller Williams Capital Properties - Washington, DC
Assoc. Broker in DC, MD, VA and attorney in DC

Thank you for this - it is a timely piece for reflection and appropriate for us to always remember that Jesus embraced the poor and the homeless, the ill and the unwashed.  Who are we to turn our backs on people that God and Jesus embraced. 

Wishing you a joyful Easter Sunday. I hope you enjoy the day with your family! 

Apr 01, 2018 05:48 AM