- Sep 27, 2019
- 4,866
- 5,027
- 35
- Country
- United Kingdom
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- In Relationship
I thought everybody on the "Hell no! team." agreed that there is no word in Hebrew or Greek that means "eternal,""everlasting,""for ever." Oh wait I know Hebrew "olam" and Greek "aionios" only mean "eternal" etc. when it fits UR assumptions/presuppositions.
All,
An alternative way of reading scripture than the above way is Lectio Divina (literally "divine reading"). It's a way of becoming immersed in the Scriptures very personally. It draws on the way Jews read the Haggadah, a text read during Passover that retells the Exodus story, where they try to imagine actually being there, relating to God at that time, and so in a sense reliving the experience rather than simply reciting the story.
A description from Wikipedia:
"In Western Christianity, Lectio Divina is a traditional monastic practice of scriptural reading, meditation and prayer intended to promote communion with God and to increase the knowledge of God's word. In the view of one commentator, it does not treat scripture as texts to be studied, but as the living word."
I'm sure we've all experienced the Bible as being the "living word". Sometimes when you read scripture a verse jumps off the page at you and seems to speak directly to your heart. Lectio Divina is sometimes described as reading scripture with the “ear of the heart.” and it's a way to connect to God.
Let me practice it and try to describe it as an illustration in case someone's never heard of it before. I scanned down the list of verses in the post above and selected no. 13, Luke 2:10. This kind of lept out, probably because it's quite short and easy to read in this special way.
The text is:
“good tidings of great joy will be to all people.”
I read this slowly a number of times, thinking about what it is saying to me. I imagine being a recipient of a good gift from God that will give me great joy and then looking around and seeing God bestowing the same great gift on every single person in the world. Because of the universality of the gift, it's obvious that I haven't been given it as a reward for anything I've done.
Sorry I've not explained it better but I hope I've introduced Lectio Divina to someone who hasn't heard of it before.
Not that it's particularly relevant, but it's interesting to note in a thread like this that the Christian form of Lectio Divina was first introduced by St. Gregory of Nyssa (c 330- 395), the beloved universalist aka "the father of fathers".
Upvote
0