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Rev. Dr. Nathan Albert

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Blog

How Little We Know

July 30, 2020 Nathan Albert
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In the last few years, I have been immersed in interfaith conversations and partnerships.

It has been SO good for my soul, my faith, and my life’s work.

I’ve regularly attended interfaith clergy gatherings, which are a start of a good joke: A rabbi, an imam, a priest, and a pastor are having lunch together…

Working with students coming from a wide range of religious traditions, listening to podcasts, reading authors from other faiths, and networking other university chaplains from across the country as they minister to students in our pluralistic landscape have greatly impacted every area of my life.

Recently I attended a beautiful webinar, hosted by a religiously diverse group of chaplains, where we looked at contemplative breathing and prayer exercises from different faith traditions. It was beautiful. Afterward, I tweeted:

It humbles me how much Jews, Muslims, Humanists, Buddhists, and Agnostics know about Christianity.

It disappoints me how little Christians know about Judaism, Islam, Humanism, Buddhism, and Agnosticism.

My Christian faith has become deep and expansive the more I have come to understand other traditions. My prayer life has expanded as I have come to learn prayers of other traditions. My spiritual practices have evolved and transformed as I have discovered the ancient practices of other religions.

Through it all, it has brought me a greater respect and appreciation for all religions. It has also encouraged me to hold tight to the beauty of my own religious tradition and live as, I’ve stated elsewhere, a Contemplative Ecumenical.

We Christians know so little and we have much to learn. And, when we do, our faith will thrive, our relationships will grow, and our connection with the Divine will increase.

Tags interfaith, rabbi, priest, pastor, imam, ecumenical, contemplative ecumenical

The Need to Be Replanted

May 20, 2020 Nathan Albert

I shared in a former post that I’ve been doing a lot of yard work and how uprooting weeds became an apt metaphor for the uprooting of racism that white people need to do. In this post, I want to share some thoughts on gardening and the evolution of our faith. Who would have thought amateur gardening and yard work can give you so much blog content.

Now, I have absolutely no experience gardening. I’m not the type who really likes to have dirt under his fingernails. So, that makes a small conflict of interest for me.

All I have done is put little seeds into a seed pod, which is basically a mesh of dehydrated dirt that expands as water is added. Once it’s fully expanded, you drop in a couple of seeds and wait until they grow.

We’ve had the best luck with green beans. Those things sprout within hours and after a couple of days, they are quite tall.

Yet one thing I noticed is that some seeds, barely growing above the surface, had roots extending out of the meshed dirt. A couple of inches long, these roots were searching for water and nutrients. The thing is, the roots weren’t in the soil anymore. They were in our little plastic tray, searching for sustenance, but unable to find anything but plastic.

As I was staring at these little seedlings, I realized our faith and church experience can be similar to this.

There will be times in our faith journey when our roots will push through the mesh. They are out searching for water and nutrients, but only found an empty plastic tray. There is little to sustain and supplement our faith and experience with the Divine. As if our soul is longing and desiring something greater of the faith tradition but unable to find it in our spot in the seed pod.

We get to the point where we have outgrown our soil.

Just like these plants, we need to be replanted, in a new pot, with more soil, so our roots can deepen, expand, and grow so that we will have the strength to grow towards the light.

I think this is true for many of us. Perhaps you’ve found yourself in a religious meshed pod and your roots are expanding. Perhaps you find this pod to be incredibly constrictive rather than giving you the space to ask questions, doubt, expand, or grow.

Maybe you have been breaking through the mesh in search of a deeper and richer experience of God. Maybe you’ve been searching for a place where your roots can thrive. It might feel as if no one is tending to your roots, or the nutrients your faith craves are nowhere to be found, or that you are being outcasted or deemed heretical for your expanding faith, or maybe you are being viewed as a weed or a plant that doesn’t belong in the garden in the first place.

Be encouraged. You simply need to be replanted in deeper soil within a bigger and diverse garden.

It means you may need to try a new church, experience new spiritual rhythms, question particular theological interpretations, listen to new voices and teachers, and trust that through it all the Divine is as close to you as your very breath.

In my own faith journey, I have discovered the depth and richness of the Christian Tradition, not simply my one tradition (or pod). It’s one of the reasons I’ve begun to identify as a Contemplative Ecumenical instead of an Evangelical. It’s why I spent over two years part of a cohort program exploring ancient and contemplative spiritual practices. And, it’s why my faith is fuller and richer than it ever has been.

I have found that it can be a garden that allows all people to flourish, growing, and evolving at our own pace, as we all continue to grow closer to the Light.

Tags ecumenical, contemplative ecumenical, gardening, roots, growing, faith, seeds, transforming center, the transforming community

Podcast Episode Ten: Contemplative Ecumenical

May 4, 2020 Nathan Albert

SEASON TWO - EPISODE TEN: CONTEMPLATIVE ECUMENICAL

In episode ten of The Why Behind the What, I seek to introduce you to a new language that, for a long time, I did not have words for. Much of this episode is based on a three-part blog series I wrote a little over a year ago entitled, On Being an Ecumenical.

My spiritual journey, which has led me to practice the contemplative and the ancient, has led me to discover and develop a new identity:

I am a Contemplative Ecumenical.

I see more and more people who once identified as Evangelical, Protestant, Catholic, or Christian, seeking and longing for something new. So, I think it’s time we find a new term and form a new type of community. And, lucky for you, this is what I’m trying to do with turning Ecumenical into a noun and claim it as our identity. 

I think Contemplative Ecumenical might be a great term that embodies the ancient spiritual practices we’ve been talking about and what the Jesus tradition is all about.

As an adjective, ecumenical means promoting unity and oneness among the world’s Christian churches. It seeks cooperation and better understanding among different Christian traditions. It values the beauty of diversity, names and embraces our differences, sees everyone as members of the same community, all the while not letting these things bring division. A lofty goal, for sure.

I think being an Ecumenical means viewing the Christian Tradition as a diamond. We acknowledge and appreciate every facet of the diamond, rather than thinking the unpolished parts need to be removed or only one facet gets to glean the brightest. 

What I want to do is hold this diamond in my hand, move it around, look at each facet, and be in awe of the facets that catch my eye, reflect the beauty of God’s Light, and impact my soul.

I don’t know how this sounds to you, but being a Contemplative Ecumenical it gives me a little more hope, speaks deeply to my soul, and I’m all in. I think it could be so cool to see a movement of Contemplative Ecumenicals who are living an ancient faith and experiencing glimpses of the Divine and being transformed by this God today.

Maybe you’ve come to the point where you can no longer identify as Protestant, Evangelical, or Catholic. Maybe there’s something better for all of us. Maybe, we’re all Contemplative Ecumenicals reading to join this mysterious, contemplative, and transformational way of life.

A few resources I reference are The Pocket Meister Eckhart and The Pocket Thomas Merton as well as my blog series, On Being an Ecumenical. Also, please leave a review of the podcast here.

As you live as Contemplative Ecumenicals, as you practice an ancient spirituality, and as you see glimpses of the Divine all around you, may you have peace, may you have calm, and may you have happiness.

SUBSCRIBE AND LISTEN TO THE PODCAST ON APPLE PODCASTS, PODBEAN, SPOTIFY, STITCHER, OVERCAST, GOOGLE PLAY, PODCAST REPUBLIC, OR WHEREVER YOU LISTEN TO PODCASTS.

In Podcast Tags contemplation, ancient contemplative spirituality, ecumenical, contemplative ecumenical, thomas merton, meister eckhart, podcast, evangelical, the why behind the what, Christian tradition, Christianity
 
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