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Things Hidden: Scripture As Spirituality
 
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137 of 139 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Quick! Tell me before I forget!", January 22, 2008
By Kerry Walters (Lewisburg, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Toward the end of his marvelous Things Hidden, Richard Rohr tells an equally marvelous story. Parents bring home a newly-born baby. Their 4-year-old daughter insists on speaking to her new sibling--alone, she insists. The amused parents leave, but stand at the doorway for easy eavesdropping. Their daughter gets close to the infant and urgently whispers: "Quick! Tell me where we came from and why we're here. I'm beginning to forget!"

This little parable is a nice encapsulation of what Rohr has to say about the spirit of scripture. For Rohr, following Rene Girard (whose influence, along with Nouwen's, is all over this book), the bible is a "text in travail," a fluid, living document that is often times messy and meandering, taking one step forward and two steps back. That's why it's important, insists Rohr, to be clear about the bible's trajectory and momentum, so that we won't get lost down a sidetrack and take the inessential as vital (the fundamentalist failing). The trajectory is the working out of the human recognition of God as a loving, nurturing parent who exhibits mercy, grace, faithfulness, forgiveness, and steadfast love; of recognition of ourselves as originally blessed, made in the image of a loving God and hence intrinsically lovable ourselves; and recognition that the bible encourages awakening, remembering, rather than accomplishing. (It's fascinating to reflect on the fact that the Greek word for truth used in the New Testament--aletheia--can be translated as "unforgetting.")

Readers familiar with Rohr's work won't necessarily find a great deal to surprise them in this lovely and wise book. But readers new to Rohr, as well as those (like myself) who have read and profited from him for years, will appreciate the insight and grace with which he puts scripture in a context that moves away from uninspired literalism on the one hand or academic textual crunching on the other. If spiritual knowing (cognition) is really, as Rohr argues, a re-cognition, an unforgetting of the soul, this book is as good a memory-jogger as one is likely to find.
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53 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THINGS HIDDEN: Scripture as Spirituality (Richard Rohr), April 16, 2008
By Rowland Croucher (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
THINGS HIDDEN: Scripture as Spirituality, Richard Rohr (2008).

Franciscan prophet and teacher Richard Rohr is a mystic rather than a systematic theologian: indeed he believes `systematizing' theology runs the risk of doing it violence and missing the point: theology is to be experienced in a life of faith, hope and love, not organized into creeds.

Is he `evangelical'? I would say `yes' though he doesn't use the term of himself: he has an unqualified commitment to Jesus as Lord and God's special revelation of God's character. Is he `progressive'? Yes: for example he likes Marcus Borg and reads the mainline liberal biblical scholars. Is he a dogmatist/ fundamentalist? Definitely not: any exclusionary system which divides humans made in God's image into `our people' and `those [heretics] not like us' is alien to the will of God as experienced in the life and teaching of Jesus.

He writes in the Introduction: `Only when inner and outer authority come together do we have true spiritual wisdom. We have for too long insisted on outer authority alone, without any teaching of prayer, inner journey and maturing consciousness. The results for the world and for religion have been disastrous... I offer these reflections to again unite what should never have been separated: sacred Scripture and Christian spirituality.'

He quotes Eugene Ionesco with approval: `Overexplanation separates us from astonishment.' Example: the humble recipient of God's love in the Eucharist/communion, who gazes at Christ on the cross with awe and wonder and love, is far more likely to `get the point' than a theologian who organizes dogma into theories of the atonement.

Here are some representative quotes:

* `Suffering seems to be the only thing strong enough to destabilize our arrogance and our ignorance. I would define suffering... as "whenever you are not in control".'

* `If you are not trained in a trust of mystery and some degree of tolerance for ambiguity, frankly you will not proceed very far on the spiritual journey. Immature religion creates a high degree of "cognitively rigid" people. If you want to hate somebody... do it for religious reasons... do it thinking you're following some verse from the Bible. It works quite well. Your untouched egocentricity can and will use religion to feel superior and "right".'

* `It is painful but necessary to be critical of your own system, whatever it is. But do know it will never make you popular. As you know the prophets are always rejected by their own (see Luke 12:50-51)... Until you are excluded from any system, you are not able to recognize the idolatries, lies or shadow side of that system. It is the privileged "knowledge of the victim". Insiders are by nature dualistic, because they divide themselves from the so-called outsiders.'

* `Law is the thesis; it lays the ground against which the Prophets develop a positive antithesis... the Wisdom books are a synthesis and integration of the first two. Transcendance to higher levels of consciousness always means inclusion of the previous levels. Walter Brueggeman finds [a similar progression] in the Psalms: Psalms of Orientation (confirming Tradition), Psalms of Disorientation (the prophetic recognition of things not working or not being true) and Psalms of Reorientation (the Wisdom level of a new faith-synthesis). All three levels are affirmed in the Psalms, and unlike today, one or the other level is not called heretical or faithless. (Although people trapped at stage one will normally call people at the other two levels "sinners" or "heretics", which is what we see happening in the Gospels.) True transcendence always includes the previous stages and does not dismiss them.'

* `True orthodoxy ("right ideas") is important, but in the Bible orthodoxy is never defined as something that happens only in the head... Jesus consistently declares people to be saved or healed who are in right relationship with him, and he never grills them on their belief or belonging systems... I observe that the people who find God are usually people who are very serious about their quest and their questions, more so than being absolutely certain about their answers.'

* `Prayer and suffering are the two primary paths of transformation. Only people who have first lived and loved, suffered and failed, and lived and loved again, are in a position to read the Scriptures in a humble, needy, inclusive and finally fruitful way.'

* `My lifetime of studying Jesus would lead me to summarize all of his teaching inside of two prime ideas: forgiveness and inclusion.'

It's the best book I've read for a couple of years. And it's best read devotionally, in small doses...

Rowland Croucher
April 2008
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Things Hidden -- Scripture as spitituality, February 8, 2008
By Dr. William Stecher (New Smyrna Beach, FL) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Lucid, profound insights into what passages of scripture really contribute to our understanding of spiritual growth. A remarkable treatise from one of the leading retreat leaders of the church.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding book on spirituality and prayer
Anyone who professes to be Christian will find much fruit for prayer and growth in spirituality.
Published 12 days ago by J. Hydar

5.0 out of 5 stars Richard Rohr on things hidden in scrpiture.

As historians study history they rarely seem to have a personal curiosity as to why history continues to repeat itself with violence, hatred and war. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Stephen V. Riley

3.0 out of 5 stars Still Hidden
Richard makes many excellent points and has a way of espressing spiritual realities in new and interesting ways. The main message is clear. This is God's world, trust. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Dennis Pearson

5.0 out of 5 stars God Loves Me!
Richard Rohr captures the truly "hidden" message of Sacred Scripture,and explains, like a Zen Master, the spirituality of the WORD. Read more
Published 10 months ago by James Cremin, Jr.

5.0 out of 5 stars Transformative Reading with Discussion Group
"Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality" was chosen for use by an ongoing group of adults working together to journey through Scripture and other Spiritual works. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Cal's Kid

5.0 out of 5 stars Mysticism within the Bible
His old books on "The great Themes of Scripture" are updated with the evidence of much prayer, reflection, meditation, contemplation all based on his study of the scriptures, I... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Denali.fire

5.0 out of 5 stars Counterintuitive common wisdom
Rohr is improving. He's an experienced practical pastor, whose reflections on scripture are direct and commonsensical. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Brian Griffith

4.0 out of 5 stars Nothing To Be Afraid of in God
"The amazing wonder of biblical revelation that I hope to make clear in this book is that God is much different than we thought, and also much better than we feared," promises... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Carol Blank

5.0 out of 5 stars Things Hidden
Things Hidden: Scripture As Spirituality This is the most important book I have read in a long time. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Elizabeth A. Harris

5.0 out of 5 stars richard releases the freshest breeze of resurrection air
with this book, once again richard
releases the freshest breeze of resurrection air
within the catholic tradition. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Hector Lasala

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