BETH > BETH's Quotes

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  • #1
    Karen Armstrong
    “A God who kept tinkering with the universe was absurd; a God
    who interfered with human freedom and creativity was a tyrant. If God is
    seen as a self in a world of his own, an ego that
    relates to a thought, a cause separate from its effect, he becomes a
    being, not Being itself. An omnipotent, all‐knowing tyrant is not so
    different from earthly dictators who make everything and
    everybody mere cogs in the machine which they controlled. An atheism
    that rejects such a God is amply justified.”
    Karen Armstrong

  • #2
    Karen Armstrong
    “If your understanding of the divine made you kinder, more empathetic, and impelled you to express sympathy in concrete acts of loving-kindness, this was good theology. But if your notion of God made you unkind, belligerent, cruel, of self-righteous, or if it led you to kill in God's name, it was bad theology. ”
    Karen Armstrong, The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness

  • #3
    Karen Armstrong
    “And sometimes it's the very otherness of a stranger, someone who doesn't belong to our ethnic or ideological or religious group, an otherness that can repel us initially, but which can jerk us out of our habitual selfishness, and give us intonations of that sacred otherness, which is God.”
    Karen Armstrong

  • #4
    Karen Armstrong
    “I discovered that I felt at home and alive in the silence, which compelled me to enter my interior world and around there. Without the distraction of constant conversation, the words on the page began to speak directly to my inner self. They were no long expressing ideas that were simply interesting intellectually, but were talking directly to my own yearning and perplexity.”
    Karen Armstrong, The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness

  • #5
    Karen Armstrong
    “[T]he family is a school of compassion because it is here that we learn to live with other people. (68)”
    Karen Armstrong, Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life

  • #6
    Karen Armstrong
    “Fundamentalists are not friends of democracy. And that includes your fundamentalists in the United States.”
    Karen Armstrong

  • #7
    Karen Armstrong
    “Respect only has meaning as respect for those with whom I do not agree.”
    Karen Armstrong, A History of God: The 4000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam

  • #8
    Karen Armstrong
    “Theologians in all the great faiths have devised all kinds of myths to show that this type of kenosis, of self-emptying, is found in the life of God itself. They do not do this because it sounds edifying, but because this is the way that human nature seems to work. We are most creative and sense other possibilities that transcend our ordinary experience when we leave ourselves behind.”
    Karen Armstrong, The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness

  • #9
    Karen Armstrong
    “Theology is-- or should be-- a species of poetry,which read quickly or encountered in a hubbub of noise makes no sense. You have to open yourself to a poem with a quiet, receptive mind, in the same way you might listen to a difficult piece of music... If you seize upon a poem and try to extort its meaning before you are ready, it remains opaque. If you bring your own personal agenda to bear upon it, the poem will close upon itself like a clam, because you have denied its unique and separate identity, its inviolate holiness.”
    Karen Armstrong, The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness

  • #10
    Karen Armstrong
    “Auschwitz was a dark epiphany, providing us with a terrible vision of what life is like when all sense of the sacred is lost and the human being--whoever he or she may be--is no longer revered as an inviolable mystery.”
    Karen Armstrong, The Case for God

  • #11
    Karen Armstrong
    “This was the scientific age, and people wanted to believe that their traditions were in line with the new era, but this was impossible if you thought that these myths should be understood literally. Hence the furor occasioned by The Origin of Species, published by Charles Darwin. The book was not intended as an attack on religion, but was a sober exploration of a scientific hypothesis. But because by this time people were reading the cosmogonies of Genesis as though they were factual, many Christians felt--and still feel--that the whole edifice of faith was in jeopardy. Creation stories had never been regarded as historically accurate; their purpose was therapeutic. But once you start reading Genesis as scientifically valid, you have bad science and bad religion.”
    Karen Armstrong, A Short History of Myth

  • #12
    Karen Armstrong
    “We need myths that will help us to identify with all our fellow-beings, not simply with those who belong to our ethnic, national or ideological tribe. We need myths that help us to realize the importance of compassion, which is not always regarded as sufficiently productive or efficient in our pragmatic, rational world. We need myths that help us to create a spiritual attitude, to see beyond our immediate requirements, and enable us to experience a transcendent value that challenges our solipsistic selfishness. We need myths that help us to venerate the earth as sacred once again, instead of merely using it as a 'resource.' This is crucial, because unless there is some kind of spiritual revolution that is able to keep abreast of our technological genius, we will not save our planet.”
    Karen Armstrong, A Short History of Myth

  • #13
    Karen Armstrong
    “If it is written and read with serious attention, a novel, like a myth or any great work of art, can become an initiation that helps us to make a painful rite of passage from one phase of life, one state of mind, to another. A novel, like a myth, teaches us to see the world differently; it shows us how to look into our own hearts and to see our world from a perspective that goes beyond our own self-interest.”
    Karen Armstrong, A Short History of Myth

  • #14
    Isabel Wilkerson
    “Slavery was not merely an unfortunate thing that happened to black people. It was an American innovation, an American institution created by and for the benefit of the elites of the dominant caste and enforced by poorer members of the dominant caste who tied their lot to the caste system rather than to their consciences.”
    Isabel Wilkerson, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents

  • #15
    James Baldwin
    “You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read. It was books that taught me that the things that tormented me most were the very things that connected me with all the people who were alive, who had ever been alive.”
    James Baldwin

  • #16
    Jordy Rosenberg
    “Love inscribes the body-- and this is a process as excruciating as it sounds. For some of us it is literal, Kafkaesque. A selbst-verlusting that is both terrifying and pleasurable. The body does not pre-exist love, but is cast in its fires.”
    Jordy Rosenberg, Confessions of the Fox



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