Posts

🌿 How Being Pleased or Proud Leads to Inner Peace

Image
  Inner peace doesn’t come from silence alone. It comes from how we relate to our own feelings — especially the quiet ones that follow success. When we are pleased , we rest in harmony with what is. The feeling is light, brief, and balanced. It acknowledges goodness without clinging to it. It lets gratitude breathe. Being pleased is peaceful because it doesn’t demand more. It says, this moment is enough. It’s the kind of satisfaction that dissolves tension rather than feeding it. When we are proud , we stand in harmony with who we are. The feeling is deeper, rooted in identity and effort. It affirms our values and our growth. It gives courage to continue. Pride, when humble and honest, strengthens inner peace. It says, I am becoming who I hoped to be. But pride without humility can fracture peace — turning self‑respect into self‑importance. So, the path to inner peace lies in balance: Be pleased with what happens. Be proud of who you are becoming. Be humble enough to keep ...

This week's editor's choice: A Theology for the Rest of Us (Yavelberg)

Image
  This week's editor's choice is  A Theology for the Rest of Us  by Arthur Yavelberg. This book is a highly respected book, well reviewed, and recipient of some excellent awards. For seekers, skeptics, and spiritually curious readers who want depth—not doctrine—this book offers a path worth exploring. Book description: Why does evil exist? Does God? Do we have free will—or are we shaped by forces we barely understand? In an age of disillusionment with organized religion and frustration with shallow “spirituality,” more and more thoughtful people are searching for a path that is honest, coherent, and intellectually alive. A Theology for the Rest of Us offers a clear, rational exploration of the deepest questions humans ask, drawing on wisdom from both Eastern and Western traditions—including Buddhism, Taoism, Hindu philosophy, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Instead of defending dogma, the book invites readers into a cross‑cultural conversation about meaning, suff...

Christian Nationalism and the Fragility of Pluralism

Image
  Every generation faces its own temptations. Ours includes the rise of Christian nationalism — the belief that a nation’s identity and destiny are tied to a single religious tradition. Many scholars and faith leaders have warned that this fusion distorts both Christianity and democracy. It narrows the gospel into a cultural identity and narrows citizenship into a religious test. Christian nationalism is not the same as Christians participating in public life. People of faith have always contributed to civic conversations. The concern arises when Christianity becomes a political brand, a boundary marker, or a tool for exclusion. When that happens, the faith’s universal call — to love neighbor, welcome stranger, and seek justice — becomes overshadowed by the desire to preserve power. Pluralism is fragile. It requires humility, restraint, and the willingness to share public space with those who believe differently. When any group claims divine authority for its political agenda, the ...