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January 14, 2014 at 7:33 pm #208362
Anonymous
GuestThis showed up in my facebook feed this morning. I really liked it and thought I’d share. Quote:“It seems that in the spiritual world, we do not really find something until we first lose it, ignore it, miss it, long for it, choose it, and personally find it again—but now on a new level. Three of the parables of Jesus are about losing something, searching for it anew with some effort, finding it, and in each case throwing a big party afterwards . . . . Falling, losing, failing, transgression, and sin are the pattern, I am sorry to report. Yet they all lead toward home.” — Richard Rohr, Falling Upward, 66-67
January 14, 2014 at 7:43 pm #278842Anonymous
GuestI think that in some ways the teaching of spirit paradise/prison is an archetype to help convey the same message. As premortal spirits we have no concept of the blessings a body can bring. We come here and receive a body. Still, there’s little appreciation because we haven’t leaned anythingabout our bodies… and by the time we’ve grown comfortable in our own skin (pun) we can no longer juxtapose it with our premortal existence. Then we die and go to spirit paradise/prison. I imagined such a place to be a bit torturous regardless of which side of the fence you end up on because we then knowwhat it’s like to have a body, we miss it, and desperately want it back. Then boom we get it and for the first time become truly grateful for it. January 14, 2014 at 9:07 pm #278843Anonymous
GuestThat’s definitely been my experience, momof3. Now… off to post it on my FB feed. LOL.
January 14, 2014 at 9:13 pm #278844Anonymous
GuestIndeed that is the overwhelming theme by a wide margin in the BOM. Count the years the success before falling and getting back up and falling and getting back up. It’s usually between 6 months and 2-3 years in tween major failures and collapse. It happens over and over and over again. A lesson there when we hold ourselves up to standees that were never achieved. The lesson seems to be just the effort or journey to get there.
January 14, 2014 at 9:34 pm #278845Anonymous
GuestLove it! Thanks.
January 15, 2014 at 4:29 pm #278846Anonymous
GuestYes, there’s great truth in this. If you lose something, you treasure it more. January 20, 2014 at 6:55 pm #278847Anonymous
GuestSo I purchased Falling Upward on audible and have been listening over the last few days. It’s very good and I like the paradigm he uses of a pre-fall/post-fall. I think a lot of stayldsers would be able to relate to this. Funny thing – he mentions Mormons in chapter 5. Some might get a chuckle out of that as well.
May 4, 2018 at 2:46 pm #278848Anonymous
Guestmom3 wrote:
This showed up in my facebook feed this morning. I really liked it and thought I’d share.Quote:“It seems that in the spiritual world, we do not really find something until we first lose it, ignore it, miss it, long for it, choose it, and personally find it again—but now on a new level. Three of the parables of Jesus are about losing something, searching for it anew with some effort, finding it, and in each case throwing a big party afterwards . . . . Falling, losing, failing, transgression, and sin are the pattern, I am sorry to report. Yet they all lead toward home.” — Richard Rohr, Falling Upward, 66-67
Bump.
I find these parables to contain meaning.
May 4, 2018 at 8:12 pm #278849Anonymous
GuestThank you Amy, I have been displaced from my work room for the year and completely forgot about my Richard Rohr books. Thanks to you I am digging them out again. And yes – that paragraph alone has so much impact on me.
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