Finding Our Way Again: An Interview with Brian McLaren

Everyday Liturgy: When I started this blog a year and a half ago I did it in part to begin to explore ways to expand my relationship with God.  I had recently graduated from a Bible college and wanted to build on the foundation in Scriptures I had been given.  The evangelical answers, quiet time and prayer cards, no longer seemed capable of leading me further in my spiritual journey.  Bible-software, inductive study, and individual petitions no longer seemed adequate.  What role do you see "Ancient Practices" having in our technological, individualistic world?

Brian McLaren: Thom, I think you've really diagnosed a key dimension of the problem: individualism. I think our spiritual lives languish in a "Jesus and me" isolation chamber, but they become robust and deep when we realize that God calls me into an "us for all of us" way of life. To echo Paul's amazing words in Ephesians 3, I come to know the love of God "with all the saints." Knowledge in this sense is a knowing with - knowing God with people of different periods of history, different cultures, different denominations, and so on. So the ancient practices draw us into a wider, deeper way of knowing God that includes but also transcends my individual experience. ... more

Sources for Spiritual Disciplines

I went on the North Jersey Men's Retreat this weekend and had a great time.  It was one of the best retreats I have ever been on, largely because it was not overly programmed.  It was the first retreat I had ever been on that functioned as a retreat---a chance to get away and relax, enjoy fellowship, and do what you want to unwind.  Most retreats are scheduled out so tightly you don't have time to relax from sun up to sun down.   This was different, and the environment of freedom at the retreat was such a great experience---to sit in a rocking chair and read a book with some friends or to play some basketball or walk around.

I was a co-leader of a breakout session on spiritual discipline along with the pastor of discipleship at my home church, Curt Leininger. I have attached the two page Sources for Spiritual Disciplines handout I created for the session. ... more

Syndicate content