Outside Reading #2
The Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning explores the grace of God. It asks the reader to truly contemplate the gracious God in whom they are in relation with. He discusses being men and women of the Spirit, men and women who seek peace and silence. He uses part of Martin Luther's Christmas sermon of 1522 to preface his argument. Luther writes, "[of learning the Word] It is an eternal word and must be understood and contemplated with a quiet mind. No one else can understand except a mind that contemplates in silence." Manning builds off of this and writes, "I mean simply that a living, loving God can and does make His presence felt, can and does speak to us in the silence of our hearts, can and does warm and caress us till we no longer doubt that He is near, that He is here... In essence, there is only one thing God asks of us-- that we be men and women of prayer, people who live close to God, people for whom God is everything and for whom God is enough. That is the root of peace." Again, themes of silence and contemplation arise. In the Christian life, silence and contemplation are necessary to truly understanding and being transformed by God.
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