Looking Into the "Our Father" and Link to My Main Blog
I've finally gotten my personal website up and running more or less how I like it, and I've decided to start publishing my stuff there. That being said, for anything likely to be relevant to the Ecosophia community, I'll post a link here and take comments here, as my current very-static set up doesn't have any way to handle comments.
At any rate, my latest post is doing a deep dive on what the Council of Trent had to say about the "Our Father" and then taking what I learned from that to propose a framework for writing a functionally-similar prayer for other religions. I'd be delighted if you check it out here:
Looking Into the "Our Father"
At any rate, my latest post is doing a deep dive on what the Council of Trent had to say about the "Our Father" and then taking what I learned from that to propose a framework for writing a functionally-similar prayer for other religions. I'd be delighted if you check it out here:
Looking Into the "Our Father"
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
From a theological perrspective, what's additionally interesting is the implication that God can, in fact, lead one into temptation (which hearkens back to Isaiah 45:7, "I make peace, and create evil.") The darkness as well as the light.
Speaking as an heterodox Christian, although there's certainly a lot of theology packed in there, the prayer additionally has an extremely potent quality when used in the proper circumstances...befitting a prayer given to humankind by the Divine (the other name for it is, of course, "The Lord's Prayer.")
Fra' Lupo
no subject
no subject
1) Huh, I had not linked "On Earth as it is in Heaven" with that Hermetic maxim, very interesting! It seems like a it might be a fruitful meditation to think through the seven Hermetic laws presented in various places with slight variations and how the Our Father/Lord's Prayer might reflect that.
2) Also quite interesting. Personally, I find the idea of an omnibenevolent deity causing evil to be one of the better arguments against monotheism, but even without going there, the thought that you will be presented with just the right amount of temptation to develop spiritually is an interesting one.
3) That's a fair point and one made quite often by the Council (and also by Montford in The Seccret of the Rosary). I glossed over that bit to some extent since it is a prayer given by a Deity I no longer worship, so it seemed like a less-helpful point for non-Christians. That being said, to the degree that holy traditions have words purported to come straight from the divine, those are likely potent religious-magical tools (as a Heathen, I draw a lot on Havamal, for example).
4) Thanks for the addendum - this is fascinating. I'm not going to lie: I'm sometimes jealous of the straightforwardness of "here's a prayer literally straight from the mouth of God, use this and good things will follow." I'm personally at an early enough stage of development that any intimations of the Divine I'm working with are vague and subject to lots of interpretation distortion, but I'm hoping if I keep up my practices, I'll be able to work it out.
Cheers,
Jeff