Welcome, Friends!
Twenty years ago, I felt a strong call to dedicate
my ministry to the promotion of the spiritual
renewal of our nation. My work has taken me to
local congregations, seminaries, ecumenical organizations,
civic agencies and denominational headquarters.
In each setting, my concern has been to discern
the growing edge of spiritual revitalization.
What are the longings of the people? What are
the problems blocking the flow of the Spirit?
What ethical and moral issues cry out for wisdom
and grace? What are the manifestations of self-centeredness,
self-righteousness, inhospitality, incivility,
and inordinate pride?
These questions function in a diagnostic mode,
but I have also tried to be sensitive to the spiritual
flowering that could prove to be a harbinger of
fruitfulness. Where do we see signs of community
occurring in new ways? What rituals are reviving
hope and inspiring acts of justice? Where is liberation
proving to be the new order of the day? Where
are families finding the strength to hold together
in the midst of pressures threatening their covenants
of love? What disciplines and traditions of nurturance
set people free from greed, prejudice and violence?
have used the word “spiritual” several times. I have
discovered through the years that there is no
consensus about what it means, how important it is,
or the best way to appropriate what it would seem to
promise. It is clear to me that the richness of
God’s revelation is not limited to one system of
belief. Therefore I am interested in being
challenged and inspired by others. But such openness
to other faith traditions is no substitute for a
deep devotion to the Christian tradition in which I
find the truth of life and the way of salvation
through Jesus Christ. Contrary to some of my
co-religionists, the more open I am to the Spirit of
Love, made known in Jesus Christ, the more open I am
to such love and truth genuinely shared from those
who pray in different places or give another name to
the transcendent reality I call God.
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