Enclosed in Trinitarian Love

We’ve been doing a lot of heavy theological lifting so far this Lent, as we’ve been spending the season with Julian of Norwich. While her writings are spiritually rich, encouraging, and suffused in love, she also so often challenges us to shift our perspective and to think through difficult aspects of theology. And so today … Continue reading Enclosed in Trinitarian Love

A Mother’s Love

There’s a particular irony within much of contemporary Christianity in that, despite our rightful assertions that God has no gender, and despite the fact that the Scriptures contain many references to God mothering, Christians tend to be very uncomfortable with feminine imagery for God. But Julian of Norwich is one wonderful counter-example to this rule. … Continue reading A Mother’s Love

The Parable of the Servant: An Alternative Myth of the Fall

The story of humanity’s fall into sin and subsequent expulsion from the Garden of Eden has long captured the imagination of Christian thinkers, poets, and artists. We can see the importance of this story from the earliest strands of the tradition; in the passage directly following this past Sunday’s Epistle reading, Paul writes: “Therefore just … Continue reading The Parable of the Servant: An Alternative Myth of the Fall

Created for Love

We’re just over the half-way point in this series on Julian of Norwich, and I hope that if nothing else is clear by now, the one thing that is clear, is that Julian’s Revelations of Divine Love is very well-named. Love permeates her whole experience of God, her theology, and spirituality. Today I’d like to … Continue reading Created for Love

The Soul is Like God in Nature

When I was a kid, I’d watch a lot of home renovation shows on television. And while it was always played up for the camera, I loved the moments when they’d pull back some ugly old carpeting to discover beautiful hardwood floors underneath, or when their concern about rot or termites would be revealed to … Continue reading The Soul is Like God in Nature