Chittister on Religion

One of the books with me on my trip is Joan Chittister’s “Called to Question”.  In this spiritual memoir, she wrestles with many aspects of her life, one of them being the relationship between religion and spirituality.  Here a couple quotes of how she perceives the differences:

1) “Religion gives us the structures that weld the habits and disciplines of the soul into one integrated whole.  Those same structures can also, however, smother the very spirit they intend to shape.”

2) “We can make the mistake of thinking that God and religion are synonyms and make religion God.  We can, as general semanticists teach us, mistake the way for the thing and the thing for the way.”

3) “Spirituality is about the hunger in the human heart.  When we develop a spiritual life that is beyond some kind of simple, unthinking attachment to an inherited canon of behaviours, the soul goes beyond adherence to a system to the growth of the soul.”

4) “Spirituality is not what we do to satisfy the requirements of a religion; it is the way we come into contact with the Holy.  However we do it, whatever form or shape it takes… spirituality makes real what religion talks about.”

Finally, in looking back on her own Catholic heritage, she muses about how any of us become who we are:

5) “What forms us lives in us forever.  The important thing is that it not be allowed to stunt our growth.”

Any of those resonate with you and your journey?

How has religion contributed to your journey toward God?

How has it smothered life when it should have been giving it?  W

hat do you do with it now?

Amman to Petra

On our way out of Amman, we were bus-toured through the newest and wealthiest part of the city.  Many of the homes in that area are worth over $1 000 000 US.  Mingled among the homes are a number of embassies from around the globe.  The American embassy is especially large, and especially guarded as well.  Several blocks away, an even larger embassy is being constructed by Saudi Arabia.  Then it was highway time.  An hour south on the King’s Highway, the world’s oldest and most continuously used communication route (first mentioned in Genesis 14), would deliver us to Mount Nebo.

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Not Quite TSN

Last night, I was flipping through the hotel’s TV channels in a restful moment.  I’d noticed on a paper that they had three sports networks.  Might I catch some NBA Playoffs?  Surely not hockey.  Even the Middle East’s version of Sportscenter would be a great.

Channel 1: Soccer

Channel 2: Soccer

Channel 3: Camel Racing (with no riders!)

So whatever you’re watching tonight, enjoy it on my behalf!

A Cashier in Amman

On our first evening in Amman, I ventured to a supermarket with a few others.  One was a middle-aged lady, who was shopping for a notebook.  The store reminded me greatly of time spent in China.  The first floor was a supermarket, the second was everything else.  Upstairs, every little section had a man at a desk.  If you wanted an item from his section, he filled out a bill for you.  You then walked to a cashier who manned all the money on the floor.  Once he was paid, you were set free with your goods.

So my companion, having never been in this place, approaches the till with her purchase.

“Two and half dinars,” he totals.

“Two and a half dollars,” she muses to herself, more repeating the total with her familiar currency attached than actually trying to adjust the price.

Disdain-filled face and wounding voice, he replied flatly, “Dinars, not dollars.  This is Jordan, not America.”

Without even looking up, he made change and handed it to her.

The whole encounter happened quickly enough to snap our heads back and make us wonder.

I’ve never known anything but exceptional hospitality in Jordan, but this moment showed something else: Maybe a Jordanian tired of tourists, maybe a cashier in need of a holiday, maybe little more than a crusty fellow, or maybe something altogether different.

Whatever the case, he’s locked himself into a few bytes of my mind’s memory, in less-than-flattering fashion.