Austin Kleon — “Religion is about doing things and it is hard...

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

Karen Armstrong talks about our “remarkably undeveloped” and “even primitive” understanding of God in the West, and our loss of religion as a “a practical discipline,” or, “not the quest for an abstract truth but a practical way of life.” In other words, religion has become a noun instead of a verb.

If you don’t do religion, you don’t get it. In the modern period, however, we have turned faith into a head-trip. Originally, the English word “belief”, like the Greek pistis and the Latin credo, meant “commitment”. When Jesus asked his followers to have “faith”, he was not asking them to accept him blindly as the Second Person of the Trinity (an idea he would have found puzzling). Instead, he was asking his disciples to give all they had to the poor, live rough and work selflessly for the coming of a kingdom in which rich and poor would sit together at the same table.

“Credo ut intellegam – I commit myself in order that I may understand,” said Saint Anselm (1033-1109). In the late 17th century, the English word “belief” changed its meaning and became the intellectual acceptance of a somewhat dubious proposition. Religious people now think that they have to “believe” a set of incomprehensible doctrines before embarking on a religious way of life. This makes no sense. On the contrary, faith demands a disciplined and practical transcendence of egotism, a “stepping outside” the self which brings intimations of transcendent meaning that makes sense of our flawed and tragic world.

She could just as easily be talking about “art” or “creativity.”

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karen armstrong religion practice god

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