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May 15, 2007
Coming From the Lighthouse Newsletter
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Everything
Must Change! says Brian McLaren
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From
spiritual formation to the Eucharist to
a paradigm shift, this tour has it all.
The presenters of the Everything Must Change Tour, scheduled for 2008, are proclaiming
that a Deep Shift is taking place, and
they are encouraging seekers to become a part
of it. In honor of Brian McLaren's upcoming
new release, Everything Must Change
(Fall 2007, Thomas Nelson), the tour will present McLaren
to eleven cities throughout the U.S. The
question Deep Shift asks is, "What does it mean, in today's
world, to be a follower of God in
the way of Jesus?"
To better understand what McLaren and
the other Deep Shift Guides mean by "way of Jesus," we must have
some understanding of the spiritual
formation movement. Roger Oakland
explains:
Spiritual formation is based
upon experiences promoted by desert monks
and Roman Catholic mystics; these mystics
encourage the use of rituals and practices
that if performed will bring the practitioner
closer to God (or enable him to enter
God's presence). The premise is that if
one goes into the silence or sacred space,
then the mind is emptied of distractions,
and the voice of God can be heard and
personal transformation will take place.
In truth, these hypnotic, mantric style
practices bring one into altered states
of consciousness, and rather than the
believer being changed by the Holy Spirit
and the indwelling of the person of Jesus
Christ, he is supposedly changed (transformed)
by entering this altered realm.
While proponents of spiritual formation
(like Richard Foster) say these methods
show that the Holy Spirit is doing something
new to refresh Christianity, sadly these
methods leave the practitioner duped and
deceived by the workings of a counterfeit
Holy Spirit.
And thus the term "way
of Jesus" is more fitting than the
term Christian (to leaders of the emergent paradigm
shift) because to be a true Christian,
Jesus lives inside and He is Lord and
Savior over all. But to follow McLaren's
"way of Jesus" means you must
only see Him as a model and an example
and not necessarily the only way to salvation
and a Lord to be worshiped. Actually,
we must be so bold in this article to
take it to the extreme that it really
is. To follow this "way of Jesus"
as McLaren and other New Age prophets
declare means the atonement (Christ's
shed blood for our sins) must be kicked
in the mud, and the Bible must be shattered
and tossed as debris. Strong you say ...
not near enough. And it's time to say
so, because this Deep Shift will
take place according to Scripture. But
Scripture calls it what it truly is ...
a great falling away where doctrines of
demons seduce and delude, and where Satan
will deceive the whole world (Revelation
12:9 - see A Time of Departing).
On the atonement, Brian McLaren sees it
as "false advertising for God."
His cohorts agree with him that God would
be barbaric to send His Son to a violent
death (see atonement article below). Jesus'
going to the cross was an example of servanthood,
but that is all, they say. No blood
necessary. In fact, the idea of spilt
blood is called vile by some.1
On the Word of God, emergent teachers
condemn those who take the Bible literally
and call such people legalistic fundamentalists
who are the cause of all the ills of the
earth. Dan Kimball, in his new book They
Like Jesus But Not the Church, insists
(p. 19) that "those who are rejecting
faith in Jesus" do so because of
their views of Christians and the church.
But he makes it clear throughout the book
that these distorted views are not the
fault of the unbeliever but are the fault
of Christians, but not all Christians,
just those fundamentalist ones who take
the Bible literally.2
A perfect example of this "way of
Jesus" that tosses the authority
of the Word of God to the wind is in an
article by Pastor Dave White of Pantano
Christian Church in Arizona. In White's
sermon titled "Is the Bible True?"3, White states:
One day I mustered the courage
to actually ask myself out loud, "Is
the entire Bible to be read primarily
as literal and factual or could at least
parts of it be read as metaphorical stories
that illustrate truth?" Could some
of the Bible not be literally and factually
true but be PROFOUNDLY TURE [sic]?
I want to make it clear that some of you
here might just say, "NO WAY"
to that question. If you do, that is OK
with me. I am not trying to get you to
believe that some of the Bible may not
be factual. My point is that in my own
journey considering that possibility and
confronting it has been revolutionary
to my faith in both God and the Bible.
While there is probably not
a Christian on earth that hasn't at some
time had doubts and questions, White is
taking his doubts to a new level. Now,
when he says that some of the Bible is
not to be taken literally but rather metaphorically,
he isn't just referring to the parables
of Jesus. He includes the story of Adam
and Eve and original sin in the Garden
of Eden, the story of Job, and the story
of the prophet Jonah. White goes on to
say that "No where does inspiration
[of God's Word] seem to be connected with
the idea of guaranteeing the facts"
(p. 2), and "some of the passages
that can seem challenging if you think
of them as literally factual and see how
they read as stories that are profoundly
true but not literally true" (p.
3). White sums it up by saying that even
if the Bible is not all true, he would
"still be a follower
of Jesus! Why? Because the way of Jesus
- loving God and loving your neighbor
- has proven to me to be life I like living.
I believe I will enjoy the richest and
most satisfying life possible by following
in the way of Jesus and modeling my life
after Him.
In the Pantano Christian Church's
Spiritual Formation program, they offer
"tools" in solitude, which include fighting
"through all the internal and external
distractions by repeating a simple prayer
like 'Jesus, I belong to you,' or 'Jesus
Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me,'"
and reading contemplative author Fil Anderson's
Running on Empty: Contemplative Spirituality
for Overachievers, who incidentally
quotes and speaks highly of Thomas Merton
in his book. It makes sense that a
church would be promoting contemplative
spirituality as well as downplaying the
authority of Scripture. Such downplaying
is a product of deep contemplative meditation
that Anderson discusses in his book.
Roger Oakland of Understand the Times
believes that the emerging church is a
bridge between evangelical Christianity
and Rome (Catholicism). The fact that
there will be a Eucharist service at the Everything Must Change tour is
significant and is another indication
of the spiritual deception that many Christians
are falling prey to.4
You [Jesus] are worthy to
take the scroll, And to open its seals;
For You were slain, And have redeemed
us to God by Your blood ... Worthy
is the Lamb who was slain. (Revelation
5: 9 & 12)
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10,000 Expected to Attend
Women of Faith Conference
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LTRP
Note: The Women of Faith Amazing Freedom conference begins in a
few weeks. Last July we reported on the
organization because its online bookstore
was carrying (and still is) numerous titles
by New Age sympathizers and contemplative/emergent
authors. It is our concern that the millions
of women who attend Women of Faith conferences
will be exposed to mystical spirituality,
and because they trust Women of Faith,
they will be caught unaware and put in
harm's way. See our July 2006 report below
the following news article.
Outside source news article:
Lara Becker Liu
Staff writer
The Women of Faith, a national organization
of Christian women, plans to hold a women's
conference at Blue Cross Arena at the
War Memorial on June 1 and 2.
The conference, in Rochester for a second
time, is expected to draw 10,000 attendees.
A total of 28 cities will host the gathering
this year. The theme is "Amazing
Freedom."
More than a women's getaway, the conference
aims to tackle serious subjects, ranging
from political unrest and war to the average
woman's need for emotional freedom. Organizers
promise "a place where there is freedom
to laugh, to cry and to relate as women."
Click here to read the rest of this news story.
Our July 2006 report:
Women of Faith is a Christian franchise
that has held conferences for over 3 million
women since its inception in 1996. In
2000, Christian publisher Thomas Nelson
bought the Women of Faith franchise and
has a strong influence in the organization.
Nearly all of the regular Women of Faith
speakers are Thomas Nelson authors, and
Thomas Nelson books are sold at the Women
of Faith conferences, thus women attending
the conferences will get a hearty dose
of Thomas Nelson.
In light of books published by Thomas
Nelson that have contemplative/New Age
theologies, women attending these conferences
should use discernment and wisdom. Below
is a list of some Thomas Nelson books
and authors that have New Age and/or contemplative
content. Incidentally, nearly all of these
books below are sold through the Women of Faith online bookstore, including Yoga for
Christians and The Secret Message
of Jesus:
Yoga for Christians by Susan Bordenkircher
The Secret Message of Jesus by
Brian McLaren
Cure for the Common Life by Max
Lucado
Speaking My Mind by Tony Campolo
Celebration of Discipline (Spanish)
by Richard Foster
The Sacred Romance by John Eldredge
Turn My Mourning into Dancing by
Henri Nouwen
How to Make the Rest of Your Life the
Best of Your Life by Mark Victor Hansen
Seeing What is Sacred by Ken Gire
So You Want to Be Like Christ (Workbook)
by Chuck Swindoll
Other authors that Thomas Nelson publishes
include Donald Miller (Blue Like Jazz),
John Maxwell (Leadership Guru), Steven
Covey (New Age Mormon), and New Age sympathizers
Laurie Beth Jones and Ken Blanchard.
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Note: Our previous posting of last
evening, "Everything Must Change
says Brian McLaren" states that McLaren's
upcoming book, Everything Must Change,
is published by Thomas Nelson. This book
is not currently being offered by Women
of Faith.
For further research:
Women of Faith Newsroom
Thomas Nelson Publishes Yoga for Christians
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Rick Warren Still Propagating
New Age and Mysticism
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Webster's
definition on the word "Propagation":
"the spreading of something (as a
belief) abroad or into new regions."
The May 9th issue of Rick Warren's newsletter is propagating
New Age/emerging theologies through its
promotion of those who teach such.
This week's newsletter states the following
about the National Pastors Convention,
which took place earlier this year:
Zondervan podcasts its National
Pastors Conference - You can now get Zondervan's Pastor's Conference on your iPod. Eugene Peterson and John Eldredge were among the featured
speakers at the conference. Zondervan
also podcasts interviews with some of
its authors, including Phillip Yancey
and Ann Spangler.
The National Pastor's Convention, an event that Rick Warren
has also attended in the past, was originally
presented by Youth Specialties. Now, the
event is hosted by Zondervan publishers.
Both Zondervan and the convention have
become venues for contemplative (i.e.,
mystical) spirituality and the emerging church movement (both of which are New Age in
nature and premise).
This year's National Pastors Convention
list of speakers includes some of the strongest proponents
of contemplative/emerging spirituality:
Brian McLaren, Ruth Haley Barton, Eugene
Peterson, John Eldredge, Mark Yaconelli, and several others.
While over 400,000 churches have participated
in the Purpose Driven Life program thus
far, most people do not realize Rick Warren's
connections with mystical/New Age theologies.
Former New Age follower Warren Smith was
one of the first people to alert others
to Rick Warren's spiritual proclivities
in his 2004 book, Deceived on Purpose. Later in 2005, a special report
showed that Rick Warren had teamed up
with New Age sympathizer Ken Blanchard.1 Today, two years later, Purpose Driven is still going
strong, and Rick Warren is part of an
ecumenical, global movement to unite all
religions. Under the auspices of Warren's
global P.E.A.C.E. Plan, he is helping
to bring about a new reformation 2, one he says will be built on unity and works rather
than beliefs and doctrine. He has consistently
marginalized Bible believing Christians
3 and endorsed those who have taught a panentheistic gospel.
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For further documentation on Rick
Warren's propagation of mysticism and
the New Age, see:
Database of articles on Purpose Driven reformation
Rick Warren Distorts the Instructions of Jesus to Fit His
Global Peace Plan
Is Rick Warren Promoting Contemplative Prayer?
Community Connections
Also read: A Time of Departing
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ALERT:
Global Day of Prayer - May 27, 2007
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The next Global Day of Prayer
will take place on May 27th. People from
around the world from many different countries
will participate. The event began in 2000
in South Africa. The website describes
the event:
IMAGINE the emerging generation
from all the nations of the globe praying
on the high places on 27 May 2007, the
Global Day of Prayer . . . Yes, can you
imagine the effect when on this day people
from 220 nations of the globe fill stadiums,
community centres, city squares, churches
and all kinds of buildings?
The growing movement is hoping
to unite all "Christian traditions"
as this excerpt from an article in London UK explains:
Britain's [sic] is home to a wide range of Christian
traditions, each of them have something
to offer and we all have something to
learn from each other. The exciting
thing about the Global Day of Prayer
is that it will bring together Christians
from different ethnicities and different
expressions of the Christian faith to
pray for unity, London and the World.
To understand more of
the vision of the Global Day of Prayer,
we need only look to the organization's
youth program. In that section of the GDOP website, there are instructions
on how to "mobilize young people
far and wide." Unfortunately, this
includes Pete Greig's Red Moon Rising
book and the 24/7 Boiler Rooms. While
Greig's book and ministry may, at first
glance, appear to be a movement of Christian
prayer, research shows that both the book
and the movement are heavily influenced
by contemplative spirituality, Catholicism,
and New Age thought. And while youth around
the world are taking shifts (to pray)
in Greig's boiler rooms (prayer rooms),
they may be getting into something entirely
different than biblical prayer. Please
see links below to some of our previous
articles about 24/7 prayer rooms and Red
Moon Rising. We think you will find
what we say to be true, and if this is
the case, the Global Day of Prayer is
going to be a conduit for interspirituality
through mystical meditation, and the results
will be spiritually disastrous for millions.
Right now, 24/7 prayer rooms are being
added all over the world, and each year
more countries are joining the Global
Day of Prayer. With the strong emphasis
on meditation in both the prayer rooms
and the global prayer event, we believe
this warning is warranted and vital.
For more information:
Red Moon Rising: An Army for God with a "Violent Reaction"
ALERT: 24-7 Prayer Rooms Increasing in North America
Red Moon Rising: 24-7 Prayer Leads Youth into Contemplative
and New Age Thought
Pete Greig's The Vision and the Vow"
More about the Global Day of Prayer
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England and the Occult
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CBS News
May 13, 2007
A Look At Black Magic In Great Britain
"[W]hen it comes to the occult, we've
[England] cornered the market. Harry Potter
isn't just a best seller and an international
movie hit - it is real life for many of
us. There are parts of England where one
in ten of the people believe they have
the power to teleport their neighbors
- pick them up and spirit them away, literally."
Click here to read the rest of this article.
Related Information:
What is the New Age? by Ray Yungen (from For Many Shall Come in My Name)
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Wycliffe Not Included
on Sponsor List for 2007 Cornerstone Festival
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The 2007 Cornerstone Festival will take place June 25th - 30th
in Bushnell, Illinois. The festival promotes
contemplative spirituality and the emerging
church. Last year, we reported that World Vision and Wycliffe Bible Translators
were two of the festival's sponsors. In
our report, we stated:
Cornerstone Festival (July 2006) offers a labyrinth, contemplative
"prayer rhythms" and more.
On July 4th through 8th, Cornerstone
Festival (a ministry of Jesus People
USA) took place. Sponsors of the event
included World Vision and Wycliffe Bible
Translators. The event offered a prayer
labyrinth and "contemplative journeys
of prayer." In addition, the festival
offered an Imaginarium titled Days of the Dead. (Caution: Young children should not
view this link.)
The festival also presented The Burning Bush Program, which offers labyrinths and
"Mystical Art Soup ... helping
young people identify and develop their
gifts in the arts."
The question must be asked, what were
World Vision and Wycliffe Bible Translators
thinking when they agreed to sponsor
this event? With seminars on Celtic
Monasticism, Kierkegaard's Relevance
to the Contemporary Church, Martial
Arts and Missions, and The Revolutionary
Way of Christ: Toward a Postmodern Christology,
it would be difficult to mistake this
for anything other than a promotion
for contemplative and emerging spiritualities
with overtones in the occult.
While this year's festival
will still present features like Imaginarium (no children viewing please), The Burning Bush and many workshops and seminars on contemplative/emerging
spiritualities (which are based on occultic
philosophy), World Vision and Wycliffe
do not appear to be sponsoring the event
this year. On the Sponsors page, both organizations' names are missing.
There have been growing concerns that
World Vision is being influenced by contemplative/emerging
leaders. A May 2006 article titled "World
Vision Promotes Emerging Leader",
reported that World Vision's Child View
magazine carried a full page article by
emerging church leader Brian McLaren.
World Vision later responded with the
following comments:
[R]egarding Brian McLaren's column in the "Faith in Action"
section of Childview. At World Vision,
we recognize that the body of Christ
includes all who follow Jesus and who
seek God's kingdom here on earth. As
Christians, we may not all agree on
the same doctrines. But let us strive
for tolerance and inclusion as we work
toward our common purpose of being the
hands and feet of Jesus in a suffering
world.
Unfortunately, this "inclusion"
creates a serious problem for the Bible
believing Christian because contemplative/emerging
spiritualities ultimately are panentheistic
(God in all) and occultic in nature.
According to archived web files, 2005
was the first year Cornerstone Festival
website showed its sponsors1. The 2005 sponsor list included World Vision, Wycliffe,
Zondervan publishers, Teen Mania, and
Greenville College. The 2006 Sponsor list
also included Zondervan, Teen Mania, and Greenville College (along with World Vision
and Wycliffe).2 The 2007 list not only is missing World Vision
and Wycliffe Bible Translators, it does
not include Teen Mania and Zondervan.
However, Greenville College is still sponsoring
the event. Added to this year's list is
Compassion International.
Greenville College has an emphasis on spiritual formation and offers courses such
as COR102: Christian Thought & Life, which include Henri
Nouwen, M. Scott Peck, Robert Webber (Ancient-Future
worship), and Richard Foster as "possible
text" material. A 2005 new materials list in the Greenville library shows titles
by Brian McLaren, Eugene Peterson, and
Michael Frost. With regard to Cornerstone
Festival, a 2004 press release shows that
Greenville's decision to be a part of
the festival had to do, at least in part,
with the music.3 Greenville College is affiliated with the Free Methodist
denomination.
We hope that Greenville College and Compassion
International will reconsider their sponsorship
toward Cornerstone Festival, which is
a conduit for mystical spirituality.
For related information:
The Music and the Mystical by Pastor Larry DeBruyn
Our List of Contemplative Promoting Christian Colleges
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Rick Warren Says Christians
Have "Big Mouth[s]" and "Haven't
Done Zip"
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Commentary:
Rick Warren once again condemns conservative Christians and
further marginalizes them, according to
a Los Angeles Times article.1 The article states:
Evangelical leader Rick Warren came to the heart of the religious
right movement last week to criticize
a narrow focus on abortion, homosexuality
and pornography as un-Christian.
Strikingly, top Christian conservatives
agreed.
During a three-day summit here, members
of Focus on the Family and Campus Crusade
for Christ joined Warren and dozens
of other pastors from across the nation
in a pledge to devote more of their
resources and clout to helping children
in need.
"We've got some people who only
focus on moral purity and couldn't care less about
the poor, the sick, the uneducated.
And they haven't done zip for
those people," said Warren, a mega-church
pastor in California and author of the
best-selling "The Purpose-Driven
Life."
Warren hastened to say that he also
opposed abortion and gay marriage. But
too often, he said, Christians these
days are defined by their "big mouth" -- what
they argue against, not what they embrace.
He pointed to a verse from the Book
of James that calls caring for orphans
an essential element of a "pure
and undefiled" faith.
Rick Warren believes that Christians have done little to help
the needy and that the world needs the
Purpose Driven agenda to bring about a
new reformation and world peace. In the
past few years, Warren has consistently
stated that conservative Christians who
are against abortion and homosexuality
(and Purpose Driven) are fundamentalists
(he likens them to Islamic fundamentalists
- see article below) and says these kind
of Christians are one of the biggest enemies
facing our society. A Saddleback pastor
has gone so far as to call resisting Christians
"leaders from hell."2 Warren says change can't come about until they are out
of the way, either through leaving the
church or dying (see article below).
According to the LA Times article,
Warren has now added pornography to his
abortion/homosexuality list. This could
be because of recent stories that report
Rick Warren's connection to Rupert Murdoch
and Murdoch's investments in pornographic-promoting
companies.3
Using language like "big mouth,"
"couldn't care less," and "haven't
done zip," Rick Warren is coming
out of the gate with his hair on fire
... he appears to be hopping mad at people
who criticize him for his non-biblical
theologies. And he's going to the let
the world know he condemns those who question
and challenge him.
Rick Warren is wrong in what he says.
True Christians (those with Jesus Christ
indwelling them) have been serving the
Lord faithfully since the church began
2000 years ago. Charities, missionary
societies, Christian foster parents and
adoptive parents, martyrs, inner city
missions, and more are all proof of this.
To say that believers have nothing but
big mouths and don't do zip is inaccurate,
misleading, and shameful. The Bible is
very clear that those who are born into
Jesus Christ through faith by His grace
are being prepared to be a spotless
Bride for Christ. This is not saying that
believers are without sin, for the Bible
says in I John that if we say we are without
sin, we are liars. But the Bible also
says that He is faithful never to leave
us or forsake us, and we are His workmanship
created for good works, (Ephesians 2:10)
and He is changing us all the time to
become more like Him (II Corinthians 3:18).
To say that the church has done nothing
is to say that God has done nothing, for
as believers we are in Him. While the
New Testament does condemn those who live
in habitual ongoing sin and calls them
to repent, and it does distinguish between
those who are really born again and those
who are not (the sheep and the goats),
it does not speak in a derogatory manner
about the true church as Rick Warren does.
While he continues to promote contemplative
spirituality, leading followers further
from truth, he also appears to be zealously
condemning those who will not go along
with the Purpose Driven paradigm (see video).
"For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto
good works, which God hath before ordained
that we should walk in them." (Ephesians
2:10)
"Wherefore we receiving a kingdom
which cannot be moved, let us have grace,
whereby we may serve God acceptably
with reverence and godly fear: For our
God is a consuming fire." (Hebrews
12:28-29)
For further documentation,
please see:
RickWarren Predicts Christian Fundamentalism To Be Enemy of
21st Century!
RickWarren's New Reformation
Purpose Driven Resisters
On Pornography: Ted Haggard Story Will Raise Serious Questions For All
Purpose Driven Global Peace Plan
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Is Kundalini Similar
to Contemplative Silence?
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by
Ray Yungen
Kundalini
is a Hindu term for the mystical power
or force that underlies their spirituality.
In Hinduism it is commonly referred to
as the serpent power. Philip St. Romain,
a substance abuse counselor and devout
Catholic lay minister, began his journey
while practicing contemplative prayer
or resting in the still point, as he called
it. What happened to him following this
practice should bear the utmost scrutiny
from the evangelical community-especially
from our leadership. Having rejected mental
prayer as "unproductive" he
embraced the prayer form that switches
off the mind, creating what he described
as a mental passivity. What he encountered
next underscores my concern with sobering
clarity:
Then came the lights! The gold swirls
that I had noted on occasion began to
intensify, forming themselves into patterns
that both intrigued and captivated me
... There were always four or five of
these; as soon as one would fade, another
would appear, even brighter and more intense
... They came through complete passivity
and only after I had been in the silence
for a while.
After this, St. Romain began to
sense "wise sayings" coming
into his mind and felt he was "receiving
messages from another." He also had
physical developments occur during his
periods in the silence. He would feel
"prickly sensations" on the
top of his head and at times it would
"fizzle with energy." This sensation
would go on for days. The culmination
of St. Romain's mystical excursion was
predictable:
When you do Christian yoga or Christian
zen you end up with Christian samadhi
as did he. He proclaimed:
No longer is there any sense of
alienation, for the Ground that flows
throughout my being is identical with
the Reality of all creation. It seems
that the mystics of all the world"s
religions know something of this.
St. Romain, logically, passed on
to the next stage with:
[T]he significance of this work,
perhaps, lies in its potential to contribute
to the dialogue between Christianity
and Eastern forms of mysticism such
as are promoted in what is called New
Age spirituality.
(To read more of this article and for endnotes, click here.)
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Los Angeles Housing Department and ZEN
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By Jessica Garrison and Ted
Rohrlich
Times Staff Writers
The Los Angeles Housing Department has
paid thousands of dollars to a Zen Buddhist
priest from Hawaii for management training
that includes teaching breathing with
sphincter control, learning "how
to stand" and playing with wooden
sticks.
Norma Wong, a former Hawaii state legislator
and leadership consultant, has been paid
$18,819 since 2005 to conduct at least
four training sessions for executives
and other staff. The most recent one was
last week.
Mercedes Marquez, the general manager
of the department, said the training was
designed to help "center" Housing
Department managers and teach them to
react nimbly to problems such as the city's
housing shortage. Up to 30 people attended
each session.
"She asks when you center yourself
to hold yourself in," Marquez said
of the instructor.
The breathing exercises and stick play,
she said, were a small part of two-day
sessions, which also included discussions
of team building and improving department
procedures.Click here to read rest of story.
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Publishing News - For Many Shall Come in My Name
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NEW
BOOK ARRIVING - MAY 15TH, 2007!
An Ancient Wisdom is
drawing millions of people into mystical
experiences and preparing the world for
the end of the age ... find out how.
For Many Shall Come in My Name will be back from press on May 15th.
If
you have already ordered a copy/copies,
we will be shipping backorders on May
15th.
Chapter One
Media Sheet
Most people believe the New Age has
been long gone from our society, and if
practiced at all now it is only by unconventional
fringe types. For Many Shall Come in My Name reveals
this is not the case. In fact, quite the
opposite has occurred. The New Age movement
(a term not normally used by its proponents)
has permeated virtually all aspects of
our society. This "Ancient Wisdom"
spirituality can be quite readily encountered
in the following fields: Business, Education,
Health, Self- Help, Religion, and Arts
& Entertainment. This book examines
them all. Order today, receive this week.
* * * *
SAMPLE CHAPTERS OF LIGHTHOUSE TRAILS BOOKS: | | | | | |