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Fast Fridays: 30 Minutes for God: Difference between revisions

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== Friday, July 26: the Living God ==
== Friday, July 26: the Living God ==
This week, Friday, July 26, we will discuss the "Our Father" prayer and the concept of the "Living God," which is a uniquely Christian insight.
Friday, July 26, we discussed the idea of a "Living God" -- we take it for granted today that our God is "living" and "personal" -- these are not obvious concepts to the ancient world, for whom the notion of "Our Father" was unthinkable. (Even some modern religions find the idea of a "living" and "personal" God abhorrent.)
 
The "living God" is expressed in the "Jesus prayer," which was used similarly to today's Rosary prayers as a meditative prayer. In fact, beads were used to count recitations of the Jesus prayer, which might be recited 100 times or more at a time.


=== The "Jesus prayer" ===
=== The "Jesus prayer" ===
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* what a "living God" is not:
* what a "living God" is not:
** an object or statue
** an object or statue
*** idolatry?
** ritualism and superstition  
** ritualism and superstition  
*** those are forms of idolatry, which means placement of anything above God.
* what a "living God" is:
* what a "living God" is:
** present
** present
** personal
** personal
When we kneel before an altar, or pray with a Cross, it is not idolatrous, as we are praying to a representation of the living God and not an object which is seen as a god unto itself.  (The Eucharist and transubstantiation is different, but we did not discuss that.)


=== Our Father ===
=== Our Father ===


* contemplating "Our Father"
* contemplating "Our Father"
* the "[[Our Father|Seven petitions]]"
We discussed how, when Jesus gave us the "Our Father" prayer he was changing our relationship to God, instructing us that we, collectively, have a Father in Heaven, and we are his children if we so choose.
 
To the ancient world, the notion that God was "the Father" was shocking. The "Desert Fathers and Mothers" were early Christians who escaped worldly attentions to live in isolated prayer in the lands outside of Alexandria, Egypt, and in the Holy Lands. One Desert Mother was so firmly moved by the notion of "Our Father," that should would spend three days sobbing in gratitude and wonder over those two words -- and she could never make it through the Our Father prayer!
 
Btw, here for the "[[Our Father|Seven petitions]]" in the Our Father prayer. (Protestants refer to it as "Lord's Prayer": it is the same.)


=== Christ reveals the Father ===
=== Christ reveals the Father ===
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''All things have been handed over to me by my Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, and who the Father is except the Son and anyone to whom the Son wishes to reveal him."''</blockquote>
''All things have been handed over to me by my Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, and who the Father is except the Son and anyone to whom the Son wishes to reveal him."''</blockquote>


== NEXT: Friday, Aug 2: the battle for our souls ==
== NEXT: Friday, Aug 2: Childlike ==
Continuing with the idea of "Our Father" as well as Matthew 11 and Luke 10, we will discuss the what it means to be "childlike" -- i.e. to have a father.
 
* What "childlike" faith is
** trusting
** loving
** in awe of
** obedient
* What "childlike" faith is not
** unthinking
** simplistic
** unlearned, not wise
 
Here for Bromley's post on [[Blog:Heaven is for the "childlike"? Matthew 11:25|Heaven is for the "childlike"? Matthew 11:25]]
 
== Next topics to do: ==


=== [[Deus Propicius Esto (God be favorable to me, a sinner)|Deus Propicius Esto]] ===
=== the battle for our souls ===


==== [[Deus Propicius Esto (God be favorable to me, a sinner)|Deus Propicius Esto]] ====
* a medieval prayer for God's protection in the "the dreadful judgment"
* a medieval prayer for God's protection in the "the dreadful judgment"
** perhaps originating from St. Augustine
** perhaps originating from St. Augustine
** was common in Medieval "psalters," or books of prayer
** was common in Medieval "psalters," or books of prayer


=== popular music ===
==== popular music / popular culture ====
 
* how do we Christians approach music and lyrics that celebrate sin?
* Bromley has a story about asking his Confessor for permission to see the Rolling Stones -- why ask the question in the first place? Why did the priest find it okay to attend the concert?
 
There is a much larger topic here about how to live in a fallen world