Jack Burgess: His Poetry, expression views on social justice.

Creation, then, at its core, is about relation. It is the spiraling, dancing, crouching, spiring, leaping, surprising act of relatedness, of communing, of responding, of letting go, of being. Being is about relation. Eckhart says that, “relation is the essence of everything that exists and that “isness is God.” – Matthew Fox
Reading:
“The New Creation Story” by Matthew Fox.
Topic: Creation Spirituality: An Introduction
Speaker: Fr. Michael Tigner, OP
Suggested Reading on or related to the topic of Creation Spirituality:
Original Blessing by Matthew Fox
Creation Spirituality by Matthew Fox
Any works by or about the following:
Hildegard of Bingen
Julian of Norwich
Mechtild of Magdeburg
Francis of Assisi
About the Speaker:
Fr. Michael Tigner, OP is Rector of Sacred Heart Anglican Church. He is the Master of the Emergent Order of Preachers, a Postmodern Dominican Order. He is also President of the Emergent School of Theology, where the first semester will commence in September 2008.
“A testimonial of my study of ubiquitous energy, my human nature to react with it and how to become Love conscious in an effort to continue my journey towards enlightenment.”
- Marco Valdez
Recommended Reading:
Buddhism view of selfcenteredness.
The works of author Frithjof Schuon.
The works of author Thaddeus Golas.
Breaking the light speed limit: Drs. Nimitz and Stahlhofen, University of Koblenz.
Speaker: James Crowley
Subject: “What the Bleep do we know?”
Eugene Ionesco said: “It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question”. What could he have meant? Is not the knowledge in the contents of the answer?
Quite often we might think that we gain knowledge from the answers that people give us. Think carefully for a moment! Is it really the answer that enlightens?
Firstly, if you are not able to as a question, there is no need for an answer. So then, it seems appropriate to say that “It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question”.
Secondly, if you stop at the first answer you get, there is no further enlightenment. It is only if the answer triggers you to think of the next question that you further get enlightened.
More knowledge and the joy of learning actually exists in the ability to keep asking more questions when you do not know enough. If you went away satisfied with the first answer you got but not asking for more because it is too much trouble to understand further, then you cannot really drill into matters and get the full extent of knowledge.
There is great power in questions. I cannot remember where I read this technique about asking yourself this question every morning, “What am I happy about?” Sometimes the answer is not very positive.
Then the next question to ask is “What can I be happy about?” When you ask yourself this question, there seems to be another meaning to “It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.” To be enlightened, we must ask the right question.
How often do we ask ourselves “What is life so tough?” Will it not be different if we asked ourselves “What can I do to respond to the situation in hand?” instead?
The next time you ask a question or do not want to ask a question, remember that “It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question”
Published by Regina Maniam on March, 25, 2007 07:26am.