Dawn Clark > Dawn's Quotes

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  • #1
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “To make bread or love, to dig in the earth, to feed an animal or cook for a stranger—these activities require no extensive commentary, no lucid theology. All they require is someone willing to bend, reach, chop, stir. Most of these tasks are so full of pleasure that there is no need to complicate things by calling them holy. And yet these are the same activities that change lives, sometimes all at once and sometimes more slowly, the way dripping water changes stone. In a world where faith is often construed as a way of thinking, bodily practices remind the willing that faith is a way of life.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #2
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “People encounter God under shady oak trees, on riverbanks, at the tops of mountains, and in long stretches of barren wilderness. God shows up in whirlwinds, starry skies, burning bushes, and perfect strangers. When people want to know more about God, the son of God tells them to pay attention to the lilies of the field and the birds of the air, to women kneading bread and workers lining up for their pay. Whoever wrote this stuff believed that people could learn as much about the ways of God from paying attention to the world as they could from paying attention to scripture. What is true is what happens, even if what happens is not always right. People can learn as much about the ways of God from business deals gone bad or sparrows falling to the ground as they can from reciting the books of the Bible in order. They can learn as much from a love affair or a wildflower as they can from knowing the Ten Commandments by heart.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #3
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Wisdom is not gained by knowing what is right. Wisdom is gained by practicing what is right, and noticing what happens when that practice succeeds and when it fails.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #4
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “The problem is, many of the people in need of saving are in churches, and at least part of what they need saving from is the idea that God sees the world the same way they do.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #5
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “No one longs for what he or she already has, and yet the accumulated insight of those wise about the spiritual life suggests that the reason so many of us cannot see the red X that marks the spot is because we are standing on it. The treasure we seek requires no lengthy expedition, no expensive equipment, no superior aptitude or special company. All we lack is the willingness to imagine that we already have everything we need. The only thing missing is our consent to be where we are.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #6
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Every human interaction offers you the chance to make things better or to make things worse.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #7
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “With so much effort being poured into church growth, so much press being given to the benefits of faith, and so much flexing of religious muscle in the public square, the poor in spirit have no one but Jesus to call them blessed anymore.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #8
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “What is saving my life now is the conviction that there is no spiritual treasure to be found apart from the bodily experiences of human life on earth. My life depends on engaging the most ordinary physical activities with the most exquisite attention I can give them. My life depends on ignoring all touted distinctions between the secular and the sacred, the physical and the spiritual, the body and the soul. What is saving my life now is becoming more fully human, trusting that there is no way to God apart from real life in the real world.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #9
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “I know plenty of people who find God most reliably in books, in buildings, and even in other people. I have found God in all of these places too, but the most reliable meeting place for me has always been creation. Since I first became aware of the Divine Presence in that lit-up field in Kansas, I have known where to go when my own flame is guttering. To lie with my back flat on the fragrant ground is to receive a transfusion of the same power that makes the green blade rise. To remember that I am dirt and to dirt I shall return is to be given my life back again, if only for one present moment at a time. Where other people see acreage, timber, soil, and river frontage, I see God's body, or at least as much of it as I am able to see. In the only wisdom I have at my disposal, the Creator does not live apart from creation but spans and suffuses it. When I take a breath, God's Holy Spirit enters me. When a cricket speaks to me, I talk back. Like everything else on earth, I am an embodied soul, who leaps to life when I recognize my kin. If this makes me a pagan, then I am a grateful one.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #10
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “I am not in charge of this House, and never will be. I have no say about who is in and who is out. I do not get to make the rules. Like Job, I was nowhere when God laid the foundations of the earth. I cannot bind the chains of the Pleiades or loose the cords of Orion. I do not even know when the mountain goats give birth, much less the ordinances of the heavens. I am a guest here, charged with serving other guests—even those who present themselves as my enemies. I am allowed to resist them, but as long as I trust in one God who made us all, I cannot act as if they are no kin to me. There is only one House. Human beings will either learn to live in it together or we will not survive to hear its sigh of relief when our numbered days are done.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #11
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “The world for which you have been so carefully prepared is being taken away from you,' he said, 'by the grace of God.' (Walter Brueggemann)”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #12
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “once I gave up the hunt for villains, I had little recourse but to take responsibility for my choices ...Needless to say, this is far less satisfying that nailing villains. It also turned out to be more healing in the end.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor

  • #13
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Whoever you are, you are human. Wherever you are, you live in the world, which is just waiting for you to notice the holiness in it.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #14
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “According to the Talmud, every blade of grass has its own angel bending over it, whispering, “Grow, grow.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #15
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “There comes a time when it is vitally important for your spiritual health to drop your clothes, look in the mirror, and say, ‘Here I am. This is the body-like-no-other that my life has shaped. I live here. This is my soul’s address”
    Barbara Brown Taylor

  • #16
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “...salvation is not something that happens only at the end of a person's life. Salvation happens every time someone with a key uses it to open a door he could lock instead.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #17
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “I know that the Bible is a special kind of book, but I find it as seductive as any other. If I am not careful, I can begin to mistake the words on the page for the realities they describe. I can begin to love the dried ink marks on the page more than I love the encounters that gave rise to them. If I am not careful, I can decide that I am really much happier reading my Bible than I am entering into what God is doing in my own time and place, since shutting the book to go outside will involve the very great risk of taking part in stories that are still taking shape. Neither I nor anyone else knows how these stories will turn out, since at this point they involve more blood than ink. The whole purpose of the Bible, it seems to me, is to convince people to set the written word down in order to become living words in the world for God's sake. For me, this willing conversion of ink back to blood is the full substance of faith.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #18
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “I discovered a version of the sinner's prayer that increased my faith far more than the one that I had said years earlier...In this version, there were no formulas, no set phrases that promised us safe passage across the abyss. There was only our tattered trust that the Spirit who had given us life would not leave us in the wilderness without offering us life again.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #19
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Salvation is a word for the divine spaciousness that comes to human beings in all the tight places where their lives are at risk, regardless of how they got there or whether they know God's name. Sometimes it comes as an extended human hand and sometimes as a bolt from the blue, but either way it opens a door in what looked for all the world like a wall. This is the way of life, and God alone knows how it works.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #20
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Committing myself to the task of becoming fully human is saving my life now...to become fully human is something extra, a conscious choice that not everyone makes. Based on my limited wisdom and experience, there is more than one way to do this. If I were a Buddhist, I might do it by taking the bodhisattva vow, and if I were a Jew, I might do it by following Torah. Because I am a Christian, I do it by imitating Christ, although i will be the first to admit that I want to stop about a day short of following him all the way.

    In Luke's gospel, there comes a point when he turns around and says to the large crowd of those trailing after him, "Whoever comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself, cannot be my disciple" (14:26). Make of that what you will, but I think it was his way of telling them to go home. He did not need people to go to Jerusalem to die with him. He needed people to go back where they came from and live the kinds of lives that he had risked his own life to show them: lives of resisting the powers of death, of standing up for the little and the least, of turning cheeks and washing feet, of praying for enemies and loving the unlovable.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #21
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “This is good, and all good things cast shadows.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #22
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “Although I never found a church where I felt completely at home again, I made a new home in the world. I renewed my membership in the priesthood of all believers, who may not have as much power as we would like, but whose consolation prize is the freedome to meet God after work, well away from all centers of religious command, wherever God shows up.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #23
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “In a quip that makes the rounds, Jesus preached the coming of the kingdom, but it was the church that came. All these years later, the way many of us are doing church is broken and we know it, even if we do not know what to do about it. We proclaim the priesthood of all believers while we continue with hierarchical clergy, liturgy, and architecture. We follow a Lord who challenged the religious and political institutions of his time while we fund and defend our own. We speak and sing of divine transformation while we do everything in our power to maintain our equilibrium. If redeeming things continue to happen to us in spite of these deep contradictions in our life together, then I think that is because God is faithful even when we are not.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #24
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “I have learned to prize holy ignorance more highly than religious certainty and to seek companions who have arrived at the same place. We are a motley crew, distinguished not only by our inability to explain ourselves to those who are more certain of their beliefs than we are but in many cases by our distance from the centers of our faith communities as well.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #25
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “The only real difference between Anxiety and Excitement was my willingness to let go of Fear.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Learning to Walk in the Dark: Because Sometimes God Shows Up at Night

  • #26
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “but I know that I have an easier time loving humankind than I do loving particular human beings.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #27
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “As a general rule, I would say that human beings never behave more badly toward one another than when they believe they are protecting God.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

  • #28
    Barbara Brown Taylor
    “All I am saying is that anyone can do this. Anyone can ask and anyone can bless, whether anyone has authorized you to do it or not. All I am saying is that the world needs you to do this, because there is a real shortage of people willing to kneel wherever they are and recognize the holiness holding its sometimes bony, often tender, always life-giving hand above their heads. That we are able to bless one another at all is evidence that we have been blessed, whether we can remember when or not. That we are willing to bless one another is miracle enough to stagger the very stars.”
    Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

  • #29
    Edgar Allan Poe
    “All religion, my friend, is simply evolved out of fraud, fear, greed, imagination, and poetry.”
    Edgar Allan Poe

  • #30
    Jon   Stewart
    “Religion. It's given people hope in a world torn apart by religion.”
    Jon Stewart



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