Phil Keaggy

Tonight veteran Christian singer/guitarist Phil Keaggy gave a benefit concert at a Baptist Church in Lilburn (just north of Atlanta) for the Gwinnett County Special Olympics. I’ve been a fan of Phil Keaggy since the mid-1970s when a friend introduced me to his albums What a Day and Love Broke Thru. Keaggy is a masterful guitarist whose virtuosity is straight out of the classic rock/jam band era, and his vocals and musical styling are reminiscent of Paul McCartney.  This is the third time I’ve seen him in concert. We purchased “Artist’s Circle” tickets this year, which enabled us to attend a reception before the concert, meet Phil, and have our picture taken with him.

PFRC-062709

Here’s the setlist:

Just the Same
Thank You For Today
Strong Tower
The Wind and the Wheat
Little Star
John the Revelator
What a Day
Here Comes the Sun -> Jesus is Just Alright
Shades of Green
Look Deep Inside
Rockin’ in a Hard Place
Little Ones
Love Broke Thru -> Jam -> Amazing Grace

Love Divine
Reunion of Friends
Salvation Army Band
If I Fell
Jam
You Have My Heart
County Down
Let Everything Else Go

This is the second year that Phil Keaggy headlined a benefit concert for the Gwinnett Special Olympics, and there’s already talk about doing it again next year. If you are in or near Atlanta, plan on being there — we certainly will.

Quote for the Day

There is no need to be peculiar in order to find God. The Magi were taught by the heavens to follow a star and it brought them, not to a paralyzing disclosure of the Transcendent, but to a little boy on his mother’s knee.

— Evelyn Underhill, The House of the Soul

Quote for the Day

My own experience in a variety of contexts suggests that the number one problem, the most common source of resistance to both evangelization and spiritual growth in Christian terms, is the angry, punishing father-god of patriarchal oppression. It is something of a mystery to me that this God concept, so foreign to the actual contents of the gospel and Jesus’ picture of his Abba, should be assumed by so many to be what in fact Christianity offers, and the degree to which it remains embedded in Christian literature and art. Furthermore, I find this problematic image deeply infecting all “brands” of Christianity, from the most anti-ecclesial charismatic/evangelical to Catholic to liberal. I do not mean they all deliberately teach it, but rather that all are somehow infected by it, one way or another, indeed have embraced it, even in rejection of it. Many have abandoned or rejected Christianity because their affective and intellectual development has rendered this notion of God intolerable, and they do not know and indeed often cannot imagine that Christianity has something else to offer. Intellectual conversion will mean, as Shug says to Celie in The Color Purple, first, you gotta get that angry old white man out of your head. It will then mean finding truer images of God in the tradition itself. For most of us this will obviously also include some psychological sorting out of our own family/childhood issues.

— Robert Davis Hughes III, Beloved Dust:
Tides of the Spirit in the Christian Life

Upcoming Events: Mysticism Retreat and Class

Friends, here are the two events I have coming up, that may be of interest to folks who read this blog. The first is a a retreat on Christian mysticism that will be held at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit in Conyers, Georgia; the second is a class on world mysticism through the Evening at Emory Continuing Education Program at Emory University in Atlanta. Space is limited at both these events, so if you’re interested, please register soon. Hope to see you there…

Wisdom of the Christian Mystics
Retreat Weekend at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit, Conyers, Georgia
July 17-19, 2009
(Retreat leaders: Fr. Tom Francis, OCSO and Carl McColman)
From the Desert Fathers to Julian of Norwich to Thomas Merton, Christian history is filled with stories of men and women who experienced a profound sense of God’s presence in their lives. Can the teachings of the mystics still speak to us today? The mystics themselves would say “yes” – and furthermore, that their message is not just for priests or monks or nuns, but is indeed meant for the entire people of God. With this in mind, during this weekend we will look at several ways in which the wisdom of the Christian mystics can provide insight and inspiration for our age. This will include the universal call to holiness – St. Paul ‘s directive to “pray without ceasing,” and the promise from the Psalms to “be still and know God.”
Suggested donation $120 – $200 (sliding scale) includes room and board for two nights
For more information or to register, call 770-760-0959 or visit
www.trappist.net/retreat/

Introduction to World Mysticism through Emory University’s “Evening at Emory” Program.
Wednesday Evenings, July 22-August 12, 2009; 7:00-9:00 pm
Instructor: Carl McColman
Madonna is studying the Kabbalah. The Shack is a runaway bestseller. Centuries after he died, everyone’s reading Rumi. Yoga, Buddhism and other eastern practices are more popular among Americans than ever. So what gives? At the heart of all these cultural trends is mysticism, a vague word that can be translated as “the spiritual principle at the heart of religion.” Many people believe mysticism is the golden thread that unites all the world’s religions. Others scoff at the idea. Come decide for yourself in this class as we explore major themes and writings from the world’s great mystical traditions. Using Andrew Harvey’s The Essential Mystics as our textbook, we’ll examine the world’s great wisdom traditions — Taoism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as pagan and philosophical forms of mysticism — acknowledging both the common ground and the distinctive qualities of each mystical path. Class is taught from an academic/nonsectarian perspective.
Textbook: The Essential Mystics : Selections from the World’s Great Wisdom Traditions.
Tuition: $130
Click here to register

Carl McColman is the author of several books, including 366 Celt: A Year and a Day of Celtic Wisdom and Lore and Spirituality: A Postmodern, Interfaith Approach to Cultivating a Relationship with God. He blogs at www.anamchara.com. Carl is working on a book about Christian mysticism to be published in 2010.

C.S. Lewis and Deification

I haven’t read this yet, but it sure looks tasty… and I wanted to go ahead and post a link here, since I know some of my readers are interested in C. S. Lewis and some are interested in the doctrine of deification (in the Greek, theosis). So here’s a chance to ponder how this Orthodox doctrine figures in the thought of the most popular of Anglican authors…

Shine as the Sun: C. S. Lewis and the Doctrine of Deification

Which is actually part two of a two part essay; here is part one: The Orthodox Worldview and C. S. Lewis (Part I)

This essay originally appeared in Road to Emmaus: A Journal of Orthodox Faith and Culture. So many journals make you pay for PDF copies of essay reprints; it’s refreshing to see this one offer articles like this one free of charge (I’d encourage you to make a donation if you download the PDF — a link is provided).

Attention Book Lovers and Anglophiles…

I just stumbled across a rather fun blog, particularly for those who love Christian books and/or anything English:

UKCBD: The Christian Bookshops Blog (UKCBD stands for “United Kingdom Christian Bookshops Directory”)

New Endowment for Flannery O’Connor’s Church

Sacred Heart Church, Milledgeville, GA

Sacred Heart Church, Milledgeville, GA

The Georgia Bulletin — the weekly newspaper of the Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta — has an interesting article this week about an endowment left to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Milledgeville, GA, by Regina O’Connor, the mother of Flannery O’Connor, one of the most renowned Catholic (and native Georgian) authors of the twentieth century. The endowment will preserve the current sanctuary of the church, even if the parish at some point needs to build a new church building. Read the story here: New Endowment Will Preserve Flannery’s Church.

Also check out Sally Fitzgerald’s eulogy for Regina O’Connor, which also appeared in this week’s Georgia Bulletin: A Bow to Miss Regina.

Thomas Berry 1914-2009

Father Thomas Berry, the author of The Dream of the Earth and “one the 20th-century’s most probing thinkers on the human relationship with the natural world and its implications for religion,” has died. Read National Catholic Reporter’s obituary.

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