Archive for religion

Endigar 1060

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 14, 2025 by endigar

From Courage to Change of Oct 11:

When I was a beginner in Al-Anon, it was suggested that I learn about the disease of alcoholism, and I became a voracious reader on the subject. As I read, I began to analyze everything: Was Al-Anon a philosophy or a philosophical system? What would be the logical outcome of believing in a Power greater than myself? And just when was the alcoholic going to have a spiritual awakening?

These questions and others like them kept my mind busy but did not help me to get better. Fortunately, I continued to go to Al-Anon meetings and I read, reread, and rehearsed the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions. Gradually I began to catch on. When I stopped trying to analyze and explain everything and started living the principles, actually using them in my everyday situations, the Al-Anon program suddenly made sense — and I started to change.

Today’s Reminder

Does analyzing my situation provide any useful insights, or is it an attempt to control the uncontrollable? Am I taking inventory or avoiding work that needs to be done by keeping my mind occupied? I have heard that knowledge is power. But sometimes my thirst for knowledge can be an attempt to exercise power where I am powerless. Instead, I can take the First Step.

“Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.” ~ Soren Kierkegaard

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NOTE: Søren Aabye Kierkegaard (1813–1855) was a Danish philosopher, theologian, poet, and social critic — often called the father of existentialism. His writing bridged the worlds of theology, philosophy, psychology, and literature, and it continues to shape how modern thinkers approach faith, meaning, and the individual’s relationship to existence itself.

Here’s a clear, layered summary of who he was and why he mattered:


1. The Individual vs. the Crowd

Kierkegaard believed that truth is subjective — not in the sense that “anything goes,” but that truth becomes real only when it is lived and experienced personally.
He rejected the idea that religion or ethics could be reduced to universal systems or dogmas.

“The crowd is untruth,” he wrote, meaning that genuine faith and authenticity cannot be found in conformity or public opinion.

He saw the individual before God as the ultimate moral and spiritual condition — a solitary struggle to live authentically rather than hide in social approval.


2. His War with Christendom

Kierkegaard was a lifelong Christian — but a radical critic of the institutional Church.
He accused the Danish state church of turning Christianity into comfortable, hollow routine — a “religion of Sundays,” stripped of the terror, passion, and paradox of genuine faith.

For him, true Christianity wasn’t about belief in doctrines, but about becoming a follower of Christ — a decision that demands anguish, risk, and personal sacrifice.
He called this leap the “leap of faith.”

“Faith begins precisely where thinking leaves off.”


3. Key Themes in His Thought

ThemeExplanation
Existential anxiety (Angst)The dizzying freedom humans feel when confronted with infinite possibilities — the “vertigo of freedom.”
DespairThe sickness of the soul that arises when a person refuses to become who they truly are in relation to God.
Stages on Life’s WayThree levels of existence: the aesthetic (pleasure and beauty), the ethical (duty and morality), and the religious (faith and paradox).
The Leap of FaithRationality can never fully grasp divine truth; faith requires a subjective, passionate commitment that defies reason.
Paradox of FaithExemplified by Abraham in Fear and Trembling, who was willing to sacrifice Isaac — a contradiction between ethics and obedience to God.

4. Major Works

  • Either/Or (1843) — contrasts aesthetic vs. ethical life; sets up his existential framework.
  • Fear and Trembling (1843) — explores faith, paradox, and the story of Abraham and Isaac.
  • The Concept of Anxiety (1844) — a proto-psychological analysis of freedom and sin.
  • The Sickness Unto Death (1849) — a study of despair and the human self before God.
  • Attack upon Christendom (1854–55) — his final polemic against the Danish church’s corruption of Christianity.

5. His Life

  • Born in Copenhagen, son of a devout, melancholic father whose sense of guilt deeply marked Søren’s outlook.
  • Engaged to Regine Olsen, but broke off the engagement — an event that haunted him and symbolized the tension between human love and divine calling in much of his writing.
  • Lived largely in isolation, publishing under multiple pseudonyms to express conflicting philosophical voices.
  • Died at 42, largely unrecognized, after collapsing in the street. His influence exploded only decades later.

6. Legacy and Influence

Kierkegaard’s ideas laid the groundwork for existentialism, influencing:

  • Friedrich Nietzsche (though Nietzsche reversed many of his religious conclusions)
  • Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir (atheistic existentialists)
  • Martin Heidegger, Karl Jaspers, and Gabriel Marcel
  • Paul Tillich, Karl Barth, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer (modern Christian theology)

He also anticipated depth psychology — his discussions of despair and anxiety prefigure Freud and Jung.


Essence of His Philosophy

“The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly one you can never have.”
— Søren Kierkegaard

He wanted each human being to wake up from the anesthesia of conformity — to face the terror and beauty of freedom, to live authentically before God, and to embrace subjective truth as a lived experience, not an abstract theory.

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When the newcomer first encounters the Twelve Steps, it’s natural to seek comprehension through intellect. We read, question, and dissect the language, hoping to pin it down like a specimen under glass. Yet this can quickly become a subtle form of control — the mind’s last stronghold against surrender. We want to understand everything before trusting anything. Analysis can masquerade as progress, but often it’s simply anxiety in disguise — the frightened self trying to stay in charge.

Knowledge feels like power, especially to those of us who have lived in chaos. To know is to feel safe — or so we believe. But in the spiritual economy of recovery, that kind of safety is counterfeit. “Knowledge” can become a way to manage our powerlessness rather than to face it. We study instead of surrender; we define instead of experience. The First Step asks us to do something far more humbling: to lay down the sword of intellect and admit that our minds cannot save us.

The transformation begins when understanding yields to embodiment. Reading about humility is not the same as practicing it in conflict. Contemplating forgiveness differs from making amends. The program only “makes sense” when it is lived — when knowledge becomes muscle, when ideas take on flesh in the small, daily acts of kindness, restraint, and honesty.

Knowledge is power, but sometimes the thirst for knowledge is a bid for control. True power in recovery is not in mastery of ideas but in the willingness to be mastered by principle — to allow truth to guide, not to dominate it.

When we let go of our need to understand everything, serenity seeps in through the cracks left by surrender.

Endigar 1047

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 28, 2025 by endigar

From Courage to Change of Sep 28:

I received a powerful lesson about letting go one night at an Al-Anon business meeting. It took lots of courage for me to suggest that my home group include the entire Serenity Prayer as part of the meeting opening. Another member suggested that we read the Traditions more regularly.

The group conscience approved the motion about the Traditions, while my pet project, the Serenity Prayer, was shot down. I sat there feeling swollen with offended pride, but something I had learned in Al-Anon kept pounding in my head: “…to place principles above personalities.” Suddenly it didn’t matter that my suggestion had been defeated. We were all together in fellowship, and that was all that mattered.

Within the safety of my Al-Anon group I learn to let go of needing to have my way. With practice, I am able to apply this lesson to all of my relationships.

Today’s Reminder

It is important to express my ideas. It is also important to accept the outcome. I can acknowledge myself for taking the risk to speak out, knowing that the results of my actions are out of my hands. Today I choose to trust those results to my Higher Power.

“Your proper concern is alone the action of duty, not the fruits of the action. Cast then away all desire and fear for the fruits, and perform your duty.” ~ The Bhagavad Gita

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NOTE: The Bhagavad Gita is not a person but a sacred text.

It is a 700-verse section of the Indian epic Mahabharata, written in Sanskrit. The title means “Song of God.” It takes the form of a dialogue between Prince Arjuna and Lord Krishna, who serves as his charioteer.

  • Context: The conversation happens on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, just before a great war. Arjuna is filled with doubt and despair about fighting his own kin, teachers, and friends.
  • Content: Krishna counsels him, teaching about duty (dharma), devotion (bhakti), selfless action (karma yoga), meditation (dhyana), and knowledge (jnana).
  • Significance: It has become one of the central texts of Hindu philosophy, but its teachings have also influenced people worldwide, including thinkers like Gandhi, Emerson, and Tolstoy.

So, when someone asks “Who is The Bhagavad Gita?” the clearest answer is:
It is a dialogue between Krishna (God’s voice) and Arjuna (the struggling human soul), preserved as scripture rather than as a person.

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Sometimes there is a clash between my hunger to be heard and the protection of the Program, that requires principles are exalted above personalities. If my idea is cut down, should I allow my ego to swell like a boil, to nurture protective pride so that it twists itself into righteous sulking? No, I remain inside the guardrails of the Traditions, where I find not comfort but containment. The compass points away from self-importance toward survival of the fellowship. My project is nothing. The journey is everything.

Rejection is not death. It is raw fuel. To speak is courage. To accept silence without begging is power. The paradox of Recovery sharpens its edge: I am strong enough to assert My voice, and I am strong enough to walk away when it is ignored. I refuse the begging bowl. I take instead the freedom of acceptance to protect my mind.

I am responsible to perform duty, and to choke the hunger for results. Work is mine. Product is God’s.  This is not surrender in chains — this is the weapon of detachment.  My worth is not in whether others approve. My worth is in the action I alone command.

Speak My truth. Accept the result. Release the fruit.
This is not silence, nor self-erasure. This is Intelligent Spirituality. This is Iconoclasm turned inward — smashing the false idol of my own wounded ego.

Endigar 971

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on June 6, 2025 by endigar

From Courage to Change of Jul 29:

Al-Anon is a spiritual program based on no particular religion, and no religious belief is required. To those of us who have had less than wonderful experiences with religion in the past, this freedom is important. Spirituality doesn’t have to imply a particular philosophy or moral code; it simply means that there is a Power greater than ourselves upon which we can come to rely. Whether we call this a Higher Power, God, good orderly direction, Allah, the universe, or another name, it is vital to our recovery that we come to believe in a Power greater than ourselves (Step Two). Until we do, the rest of the Steps will not make much sense.

This Higher Power might be likened to the electricity that operates the lights and machinery of our recovery. It’s not necessary to understand what electricity actually is to enjoy its use – all we need to do is turn on the switch!

Today’s Reminder

I may be seeking a more loving God in who I can place my trust, or facing a challenge that puts my long-established beliefs to a test, or struggling with the very idea of a Higher Power. Whatever I believe, I can pray for greater faith today. Just that little act of willingness can work miracles.

“When I have at last realized that my problems are too big to solve by myself . . . I need not be alone with them if I am willing to accept help from a Higher Power.” ~ Al-Anon’s Twelve Steps & Twelve Traditions

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When I first walked into the recovery rooms, the mention of a “Higher Power” stirred something unsettled inside me. The wounds I carried from past religious experiences were still fresh in many places, and I didn’t want to trade one dogma for another. But the 12 Step program didn’t ask me to convert, confess, or conform. It asked only that I be willing.

Willing to believe that maybe—just maybe—I wasn’t the highest authority in my life.

The idea that I didn’t have to define my Higher Power in religious terms gave me permission to breathe again. In my darkest moments, I had already exhausted the power of self. I had been trying to fix what was broken using the very mind and habits that were shaped by the chaos. And when that stopped working—when control gave out and my answers failed me—there was space for something else.

Today, I don’t have to understand my Higher Power. I only need to use the switch—to ask, to pause, to listen, to reach beyond myself. My recovery doesn’t require theological precision. It requires honesty, openness, and a flicker of willingness.

Sometimes, I don’t even know what I’m praying to. I just know that the act of reaching outward and upward does something. It opens my clenched fists. It interrupts my spirals. It softens my self-reliance.

And maybe that’s the miracle.

Recovery has taught me that spirituality is not about arriving at certainty. It’s about showing up with humility, again and again, asking for help. And when I do that—even when my faith is the size of a mustard seed—I am not alone. That’s enough for today.