This is a unique and thought-provoking perspective on the Atonement and faith. I found some helpful ideas here. These are some of my favorites:
"I capitalize certain words to invoke a sense of the Divine (p. xvii)."
"I didn't see Jesus walking by my side that evening, reassuring me he'd been there all along. My body simply relaxed. But that, exactly that, was heaven to me (p. 4)."
"By paying attention to how we pay attention, we can transform beyond what we imagined was possible (p. 5)."
"I was discovering little by little what it meant to 'live prayerfully.' Meditation has since become one of the most important tools I use when working with others (p. 5)."
"Choose what we take to be a worthy object of concentration (p. 6)."
"I've tried to relate to you the personal way in which Life invited me to transform (p. 17)."
"When we bounce around on the surface level of thougth and emotion, we are blinded to the deeper spiritual realities that literally constitute human-divine life (p. 18)."
"When we survey the wisdom traditions of the world, we see a pattern again and again. For millennia, humans have recognized and honored different ways of knowing (p. 22)."
"We forget what it's like to rest in the simple feelings of being, born of the Divine Light moment to moment (p. 23)."
"Becoming something new goes far beyond affirming a belief in certain ideas (p. 24)."
"The knowing of the heart is a totally distinct quality from the knowing of the mind (p. 25)."
"My mind was confused. I recall thinking, 'What am I doing at church?' But an inner knowing told me I'd come home (p. 26)."
"'Live prayerfully--walk softly and give God plenty of ways to get through to you' (p. 27)."
"Christ teaches us that true life comes in and through death (p. 30)."
"What I've learned through my body practicing stillness over the years is that when I am relaxed, openhearted, and willing enough moment-to-moment experience is consecrated. Everything takes on a tinge of the Holy (p. 32)."
"I was moving foward and backwads imultaneously. I was weightless and substantial all at once. For a moment, I enterned God's dance--the play of opposites (p. 32)."
"Rather than relating to this life as a test to get somewhere better, what if you treated this very moment as the better place you were hoping to get to? (p. 33)"
"The heart works by a totally distinct perceptual reality (p. 35)."
"To open up to the immensity of the heart's knowing requires us to humble ourselves in ways that cause the mind to recoil (p. 37)."
"Chasing a certain vision... we've lost touch with our own bodies as well as with the earth herself who sustains us (p. 41)."
"When the heart is awake and clear, we learn about unity and our Oneness with all that is Sacred. The intellect celebrates multiplicity and makes enpowering distinctions. Spirit, or Intelligence, animates all these diverse ways of knowing and more (p. 42)."
"Mortality exercises us in this way. Our sense of self contracts and expands julike like a muscle when we're working out at the gym (p. 43)."
"Much of the time all that people really need is to feel a grounded, embodied presence--something to steady them as an earthquake shakes them to the core. Other times when you're called to bear another's burden, the instrument of choice will be the heart. Oftentimes people don't need our advice or counsel. What they need is to feel felt. They need to feel like you're resonating with them. Like you know how they feel without even saying it (p. 44)."
"Be present with the people you love, and notice what you sense in a given moment: What is called for? (p. 46)"
"Reading scripture is transformative practice. Praying is transformative practice. Temple worship, ministering, and even attending your local pancake breakfast sponsored by the stake is transformative practice. Potentially (p. 47)."
"What we do outwardly is far less important than the depth from which we source our motivation (p. 49)."
"'If we can't rest in Sacred Presence in this moment, undistracted, how can we fully consecrate our lives over an entire lifetime?' (p. 52)"
"Jesus's life in its entirety was the quintessential example of Christian meditation (p. 53)."
"How can we as a people and a Church restore and evolve our own style of contemplation, including unique insights form our tradition that would lead to the theosis of humanity? (p. 56)"
"If we train our minds and our hearts to stay focused on the Glory of God, we will be filled with Light. We will come to comprehend all things and to know the very Mind and Heart of God (p. 57)."
"In the Doctrine and Covenants, we're given a simple set of practice instructions. We're told that if we can train our mind to be single to God's Glory as Christ did, this ability will catalyze a process whereby our own being is gradually transformed into pure Light (p. 60)."
"The elemental skill at play here is concentration, and concentration can be cultivated (p. 60)."
"We are born to comprehend more and more of Divine Reality until the perfect day (p. 61)."
"Joseph clearly understood that this high-energy spiritual states are somethign we can get used to. Absorption in Divine Glory isn't as much about a singular experience we attain somehow so much as a state of being we are continualy invited into through inexhaustible Grace (p. 61)."
"Meditation isn't something we learn to do, it's something we get used to (p. 62)."
"We're being filled with Light in a way and at a rate that is completely unique and personal to us. God is pouring out as much blessing over us as we can possibly stand (p. 62)."
"Think about when you're with somebody who pays complete attention to you. They are fully present with you and only you. You know by the quailty of their presence and attention that you are valuable. You are important to this person (p. 65)."
"When we give ourselves fully to something, we implicitly say, 'I value this. This is worthy of my life energy, of my spirit' (p. 66)."
"Like the horse, we can give 'both eyes' to whatever we choose (p. 67)."
"When I let my defenses down and trusted, Christ took hold of my heart and claimed me as His own Body and Spirit. Walking back into a sacrament meeting is where my experience led me. I wonder where yours will lead you (p. 68)."
"Withdraw as Jesus did, to lonely places, into solitude, if only for just a few minutes... Over time as we find a new equilibrium in stillness, it's not even about physically withdrawing. The practice becomes the subtle skill of paying attention in a new way and from a new place in ourselves (p. 75)."
"When we train ourselves to rest in stillness, we become more sensitive to the revelation and the inspiration that arises out of the Sacred Stillness itself (p. 77)."
"My first visit back to Church after so many seasons away was a master class in the heart's way of knowing. By Grace, the heart's knowing prevailed that day. I felt the touch of an immense Love and Power that had been with me all along. I just didn't always have the eyes to see. I felt deeply and I knew clearly that there was genuine spiritual nourishment to be found within these walls. Here was a spring of water welling up to eternal life (p. 83)."
"If our hearts are not awake and receptive, our ideas about who Christ is will prevent us from seeing Him (p. 84)."
"It is the heart that harmonizes with the song of redeeming Love. How do we know Christ? Do our hearts not burn within us? (p. 85)"
"The heart has the capacity to attune to the great beyond, to register and receive information from the sea of Spirit in which we're immersed (p. 86)."
"To exercise the heart's knowing, we rely on the foundational skill of keeping an eye single (p. 87)."
"As we wake up through the heart, we realize in a direct and awe-inspiring way that, like Divinity itself, we have no beginning or end (p. 87)."
"The heart can and must thaw to regain its proper function. The heart of stone becomes a heart of flesh. It's often painful (p. 91)."
"If avoiding pain is a major stumbling block in learning to live a more abundant life from the heart, then another challenged we face is sheer noise (p. 91)."
"Don't get too caught up in the content of your thoughts (p. 94)."
"Everything, everyone, is present right here and now... 'Eternity is in love with the production of time.' The intimacy and closer-than-close quality is hard to describe, but on that day, I felt I got a glimpse of the scriptural wisdom that says, 'They reside in the presence of God, on a globe like a sea of glass and fire, where all things for their glory are manifest, past, present, and future, and are continually before the Lord' (p. 95)."
"We don't like to get caught learning. We want to appear to others as masters in all situations to avoid experiencing our own vulnerability. Repentance in this context is a painful, even humilitating, process that we like to avoid (p. 101)."
"Paradoxically, God lights our way with a ray of darkness--with unknowing. We have faith that we are being guided, though we cannot know how or to what end (p. 102)."
"When our heart is soft, we spontaneously resonate with the spiritual aliveness of all things (p. 106)."
"Christ has walked this path. He has made peace with the core vulnerabilities of human-divinity, His and ours. He has subdued the appetities that would enslave us and steal energy from our higher nature. Christ has done this... He asks us to walk the path with Him (p. 127)."
"I can remain in God's rest. This is actually true abundance: no matter what life's circumstances are, no matter what discomfort is erupting in the body, at the deepest level, I can know that Divine Reality will provide for me (p. 129)."
"The more we can bring full awareness and compassion to our collective woundedness, the more these aspects of our One Body are transformed by Sacred Love (p. 138)."
"Obedience in its pure form is an alignment with true principles and spiritual patterns that guide us toward becoming what we're meant to become (p. 140)."
"True religion... is perfect repentance (p. 141)."
"He taught repentance, not because we should be ashamed of our depraved humanity but because it is and always has been God's good pleasure to give us the kingdom, if we only had eyes to see. This is the good news!... We are born vulnerable, not sinful. We are wounded, not estranged from God (p. 141)."
"Christ would have us be whole. He would heal us from our need to escape vulnerability and reach us the way of Divinity by fully embracing the wounds of all worlds (p. 142)."
"How do we become a new creature in Christ?... As our minds wake up and become single, we learn to abide in greater Light. As the heart becomes pure, Divine Love reveals itself to be both our substance and salvation. As we become more willing to submit to the full range of anguish and ecstasy in our physical tabernacle, we experience Life more abundantly (p. 143)."
"We have the opportunity to fall up from one stage of maturity into a fuller embodiment, a greater Majesty, without end (p. 145)."
"In Latter-day Saint theology, the Fall is better understood as an ascent. Physical embodiment is a leap into a greater measure of divinity. Our desire is to continually progress on our path to godhood (p. 149)."
"I was a Latter-day Saint, a faithful one at that--and my heart longed to return to the community in worship and service (p. 152)."
"Second-person perspective is the great shift from 'I' to 'we.' I can actually see you for the first time--at least, gradually. You are different from me, and together we form a we. Your wants matter just like my wants matter, and so the negotiating begins. From this perspective, we have to learn to start sharing with others and getting along. Over time we learn what it means to be in a family with others, in a church, in a community (p. 162)."
"A monumental shift occurs as our minds become capable of constructing the experience of other (p. 163)."
"As Latter-day Saints, some of our highest, shared purposes include becoming more like Christ and building a Zion community (p. 163)."
"I envy the Baha'i people for how meticulously they take care of one another by not saying hurtful things behind one another's backs (p. 166)."
"God's purpose is to grow us into autonomous beings capable of discerning for ourselves what is good. If we outsource this process of discernment to another, we will never exercise our divine capacity to choose for ourselves... What Christ wants is to change the substance of our beings. Anyone can go with the flow, following the rules in order to blend with the masses. Following the rules alone does not forge us into celestial beings (p. 171)."
"Based on our talents and passions, we engage across seemingly unrelated systems and create combinations never before seen (p. 181)."
"The Buddhist approach to spiritual life has deepend my intimacy with God immensely (p. 183)."
"'Tell me what it's like to be you.' She didn't presume to know the way poeple should be so much as she let others teach her what kind of diversity was possible in human life. Her open heart didn't arbitrarily stop at the borders of her family, either. She was radiant towards me and my wife, towards other people in her neighborhood--I imagine towards everyone (p. 184)."
"We cannot be whole without one another's unique emobidments. I recover more of my innate commplexity, more of the fullness of being by appreciating the way you live out the fullness of your being... The notion that there are absolute truths that we must cleave to softens. Notice how I say 'softens.' Truth doesn't go away. (Where could it go?) We still very much respond to Truth in this new walk of life. But our naive belief that we have mastered the truth, that this is what we call it and this is how we do it, all of that starts to soften. We realize that Truth bodies forth innumerable forms. Through a plurality of perspectives, we learn more about the Fullness and the Wholeness of Truth (p. 185)."
"If we don't have access to compassionate awareness in our dealing with others, then the problem is not with them. It's with us. The more we accept ourselves in all our shortcomings, the more readily we fully accept and forgive others in turn (p. 188)."
"Think of a person who holds a perspective that you find to be challenging or ever irriatating and patently wrong. Take some deep breaths, relax through the body, and try to find yourself holding this same view. Ask yourself, What's right about this perspective? (p. 189)"
"Who we are is so infinite, it is beyond thought and belief altogether (p. 201)."
"To realize our true nature, Christ asks us to take up our cross and join Him in death (p. 202)."
"When we've learned to steady our attention, we can keep an eye single on what matteres most for as long as we choose. With a unified mind, we can get used to greater degrees of Glory (p. 204)."
"So often we equate faith with belief. But I like to understand faith as free fall (p. 206)."
"'If God cares so wonderfully for wildflowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith?' Why do we hedge our bets in spiritual life? Why do we fear losing control of who we think we are? Why do we wish to build bigger barns for our harvest as an insurance plan against tomorrow's unkown?" (p. 209)"
"As Christ lives through us in increasing measure, we become more dynamic, more creative, more alive (p. 210)."
"In Christ we are brought to life. And this divine life cannot be understood apart from collective participation (p. 216)."
"This is Zion by any other name: a community of beings waking up to our unique personhood while knowing this personhood to be inescapably constituted by Divine Life, Love, and Light (p. 219)."