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Seeking God in All Things: Theology and Spiritual Direction

di William Reiser

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The practice of spiritual direction assumes a theology of the Holy Spirit, a theology of revelation and of the Church, and a theology of prayer. Seeking God in All Thingsexplores each of these themes as the underpinnings of spiritual direction and examines what makes the Christian religious experience distinctive. Since not every experience of God bears a Christian imprint, William Reiser, SJ, asks whether and in what way a Christian might be ale to assist someone who is not Christian in developing his or her interior life. This question looks beyond suggesting the concrete steps a person might take in initiating, nurturing, and solidifying a way of praying. It looks, rather, toward the fundamental issue of helping others as they discover and deepen their relationship to the mystery of God. Chapters are It Is God Who Directs," *Imagining Divine Action in Human Lives, - *Where Do Holy Desires Come From? - *What's Distinctive About the Christian Religious Experience? - *Further Elements of Christian Distinctiveness, - *The Incarnation as a Starting Point for Spiritual Direction, - and *Should Christian Spirituality Move Beyond Jesus? - William Reiser, SJ, PhD, is a professor of theology in the religious studies department at Holy Cross College, Worcester, Massachusetts. Over the past twelve years, he has also served as an associate staff member at the Center for Religious Development in Cambridge. He is the author of Jesus in Solidarity with His People, published by Liturgical Press. "… (altro)
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My appreciation for this book waxed and waned throughout my reading. So little did it hold my attention that while I had been reading it weekly, I put it down for for several months without even realizing it.

First of all, I was delighted with the treasure-trove of titles of other great books for one's spiritual journey found in Reiser's footnotes (and I so appreciated footnotes rather than endnotes!).

Reiser makes his case for Spiritual Direction right up front, quoting from Jeremiah 29:13-14:
"When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart, I will let you find me, says the LORD."

Much of my resistance to the book, I will admit, is it's Christian focus, for I do not agree that only Christians can give Spiritual Direction (SD). But actually, I don't think Reiser believes that, either. In his conclusion, he even treats gently those who may find their path to God is easiest through a different faith, and advises "the wise director" to "not intrude on the way the mystery of God is unfolding in the other person's life."

Instead of focusing then, on the passages that roused my ire, I would like to pull out a few of the gems that Reiser planted in my mind along the way.

"Where is God in your life?...Where are God's people?"
"What is God like for you?...Who exactly are the people you allow to step into your soul?"

"Jesus did not invent religion and thus Christians have no biblical warrant to preempt the religious potential of the human race.... human beings find themselves at the mercy of a light that absolutely transcends us, even to the point of blinding our most ambitious efforts to grasp what God is like."

"A monk [and Reiser says he thinks the monk was Thomas Merton, but cannot find the source] once replied to a woman seeking advice about which spiritual path she ought to take by indicating a field blanketed with snow. Just follow the path, he said, to the other side. Seeing no footsteps in the snow she asked where the path was. 'Exactly,' he answered. 'You have to create your own' " (p 17).

Reiser makes this wonderful observation (which I know I have heard before, somewhere): "Hence the often repeated observation that for those without faith no amount of argument will be sufficient while for those with faith nor argument is necessary" (60).

My favorite quotes comes from a footnote on page 112:
"Thomas Merton once compared the great traditions to spokes on a wheel that all lead to the same hub," quoted from Winifred Gallagher, [Working on God], Doubleday 1966, p 165. ( )
  kaulsu | Mar 26, 2011 |
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The practice of spiritual direction assumes a theology of the Holy Spirit, a theology of revelation and of the Church, and a theology of prayer. Seeking God in All Thingsexplores each of these themes as the underpinnings of spiritual direction and examines what makes the Christian religious experience distinctive. Since not every experience of God bears a Christian imprint, William Reiser, SJ, asks whether and in what way a Christian might be ale to assist someone who is not Christian in developing his or her interior life. This question looks beyond suggesting the concrete steps a person might take in initiating, nurturing, and solidifying a way of praying. It looks, rather, toward the fundamental issue of helping others as they discover and deepen their relationship to the mystery of God. Chapters are It Is God Who Directs," *Imagining Divine Action in Human Lives, - *Where Do Holy Desires Come From? - *What's Distinctive About the Christian Religious Experience? - *Further Elements of Christian Distinctiveness, - *The Incarnation as a Starting Point for Spiritual Direction, - and *Should Christian Spirituality Move Beyond Jesus? - William Reiser, SJ, PhD, is a professor of theology in the religious studies department at Holy Cross College, Worcester, Massachusetts. Over the past twelve years, he has also served as an associate staff member at the Center for Religious Development in Cambridge. He is the author of Jesus in Solidarity with His People, published by Liturgical Press. "

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