Elizabeth O'Connor

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Elizabeth O'Connor

Goodreads Author


Member Since
July 2012


Average rating: 3.93 · 128 ratings · 24 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
Famiglie arcobaleno: Consig...

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The Hunt for Death (Bloodst...

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Call to Commitment

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Our May Selves: A Handbook ...

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The Hunt for Death
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4.75 avg rating — 8 ratings

Quotes by Elizabeth O'Connor  (?)
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“We do not experience ourselves as a gift until we are engaged in the act of creating.”
Elizabeth O'Connor, Eighth Day of Creation

“[on "proportionate giving"]
Proportionate to what? Proportionate to the accumulated wealth of one's family? Proportionate to one's income and the demands upon it, which vary from family to family? Proportionate to one's sense of security and to the degree of anxiety with which one lives? Proportionate to the keenness of our awareness of those who suffer? Proportionate to our sense of justice and of God's ownership for those who follow after us...? The answer, of course, is in proportion to all of these things.”
Elizabeth O'Connor, Letters to scattered pilgrims

“The contemplative life must be the foundation of all the church's missions or task forces, as well as the foundation of our individual vocations. We are twentieth-and twenty-first century people; nonetheless, we have hints that we can receive directions as clear as those given Ananias, who answered as Isaiah had answered centuries before him:
'Here I am, Lord' and the Lord said to him, 'Rise and go to the street called Straight, and inquire in the house of Judas for a man of Tarsus named Saul; for behold, he is praying...' (Acts 9:10-11, RSV)

When a community has listened to instructions like these and move din obedience to them, then any arguments as to whether or not the church should be where it is are groundless. The only sensible inquiry is whether the church heard its directions correctly. We carry the treasure in earthenware vessels. The Word we say we heard is always subject to questioning, always to e tested within the fellowship and confirmed or denied by those among us who have the gift of distinguishing true spirits from false. When we become serious about prayer, we learn how important this gift is, for the contemplative person will be addressed, will be given dreams and will see visions.”
Elizabeth O'Connor, Search for Silence

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