The Impermanent Nature Of The Self

Most people believe that who they are is something that remains constant throughout their life. But then this raises the question, If the self is a permanent constant thing, then, how does this fit with the idea that creation is a constant coming into being, and that the Divine alone is immutable? And that finite life by definition, as we have just seen, is change?

Creation From A Spiritual Perspective

All natural theories about creation based on sensual appearances that place causal power in nature are simply false. This is because creation isn’t a natural process, it’s a spiritual process and where the Lord and spiritual realities aren’t acknowledged then all that’s left is human reasoning and speculation that sees end, cause and effect as purely natural forces existing on a single plane of operation…. Reflections on the concept of creation and what the Word has to say about the activity of Divine Love and Wisdom in bringing creation into being.

The Paradox Of Perfection

We can’t know Perfection itself but we need some finite idea of perfection in order to comprehend what it is that we’re experiencing in these new ways of understanding. So we’re offered variety. Variations of different forms of the Divine in our finite understanding

When The Word Becomes Flesh

A reflection on the passion of the cross. On the way that Jesus is treated, the events that unfold and the way in which Jesus reacts to them. This is our own personal story of the Word moving and fluctuating in different lights of understanding and affections of love within us – and of the states of mind that resist.

On Dialogue And Engaging More Consciously In A Life Group

The need for our “person” to be heard is something that our culture places a lot of value on, but in Logopraxis we encourage a mode of being together that is counter-cultural. We seek to work (to be conscious of our states) as we enter into the exchanges in a Life Group. What this means is that effort is being made not to be person-centred but Word-centred and to have this mode of being serve as the basis for cultivating a sense of spiritual community.