(View entire post here)
I came back to religion - to taking it seriously in my own life, and finally to spending my days thinking and speaking with others about it - after a decade as a non-religious person. I spent most of my 20s, in the 1980s, in divided Berlin. It was fun for me to recall and make new sense of that in the process of writing the book. I found myself in amazing circumstances at a young age, living and working with people who were literally running the world and driving the most important issues of the age: the division of the world into Communism and Capitalism, the Wall in Berlin, the nuclear arms race.
But ultimately I saw that if you drill down to the heart of the grandest geopolitical crises, you are left with that same conundrum we grapple with in the most basic aspects of our daily lives - the complexity, frailty and promise of the human condition. I turned away from politics, and towards immersion in religious and spiritual traditions, because they analyze that. They are rich repositories for enduring questions and wisdom and practices to engage it. I love Reinhold Niebuhr's succinct, perfect line: "Man is his own most vexing problem." And more recently I discovered mystical, intriguing counterpart to it in the writing of Irish poet and philosopher John O'Donohue: "It's strange to be here. The mystery never leaves you."















Recent comments
3 days 1 hour ago
3 days 16 hours ago
4 days 21 hours ago
6 days 14 hours ago
6 days 21 hours ago
1 week 3 days ago
1 week 4 days ago
2 weeks 3 days ago
2 weeks 3 days ago
2 weeks 3 days ago