Average Americans feel their voice and their lives have become compromised. That navigating to their goals and dreams has become complicated and control over their lives elusive. Some lay blame on the actions of governmental, financial, educational or spiritual centers of power. What do you think? Pack your suitcase with your beliefs and ideas and join the journey to debate and evangelize the state of our sovereign right to economic, social, educational and spiritual liberty.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Finding Peace in a Mad World
If I let myself, I can be angry too. But I don’t want to be angry. I want to be at peace. So I choose to be at peace. Easy for me to say? Not really. I’d like to explore the idea of why I’m at peace. It has very little to do with economics. I think there are a bunch of reasons but the big one is that I am convinced that I am not my body. What? I’m talking about me personally, the essence of me, the real me, the me that is inside my head. That me is an immortal being, a real personal something that outlasts my body. There’s a great quote by a 20th century Jesuit named Teilhard de Chardin, “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings havng a human experience.” Let that sink in.
If you come to the place in your thought where you are convinced that you actually live forever, it does change how you view the anger of this world. You can be in the world, yet not of the world. Once you are at peace with immortality, then the focus becomes the nature of that immortal existence and that is a wonderful journey. The fruit of that journey takes us back to Main Street and we can ever so slightly ease the pain.