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Welcome! I hope you found this because of your interest in spiritual development. Whether or not you agree that "love" is not a translation of "agape," I want to hear from you, so please contact me at agapeworker@gmail.com.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Maybe Agapé is a verb, like “agapic flow”

A few decades ago an exciting change happened in theology: the “God is a verb” movement. Those were creative days for exploring what had been going wrong in Western Civilization for hundreds of years. Unfortunately, most people didn’t want to start thinking with the model of verbs because our modern world had organized a worldview based on noun thinking.

Okay, so why do figures of speech make good analogies for how to think about the world and spiritual matters? It’s because we communicate with language, whether we like it or not. So nouns become representatives of the whole material existence. Then verbs represent every aspect that is not material. But… does that leave anything for verbs to represent?

If those people, who are stuck in a 18th Century scientific viewpoint, still have a general approach to existence where everything has to be material (expressed by nouns), then what’s left? To them verbs are no more than nouns in action. They even think of electrons as tiny bullets whizzing along. That reduces electricity to something solid — because All is thought of only as solid.

Of course, the advanced 21st Century scientists don’t think that way at all. They like to think using verbs. And they are trying to get everyone to start thinking using verbs — before humans destroy the ability of the surface of this planet to sustain human existence. Such destructive results come from too many centuries of materialistic thinking.

But to use verbs as the basis for putting together a general worldview, that leaves open the way for spiritual thinking. No wonder there is so much doubting going on today about spiritual matters; because, if the major organizing worldview is based on materialistic thinking, where people get reduced to loveless objects of consumerism, then life gets reduced to nothing more than mere material existence.

That brings me back to the reaction when I refer to agapé as a spiritual power, and the question I get is “what is spiritual power?” — followed by a blank stare. I’m beginning to wonder if the problem stems from not being able to think of agapé as a verb. First, that thinking is important because agapé is not some sort ‘thing’ that can be found inside of our body. Of course, it’s inside — but from spiritual understanding, there is no ‘inside.’ So flowing agapic power is as much ‘outside’ as ‘inside’ (and the Source of agapé is not merely ‘inside’ of human beings).

Secondly, being fully aware of the flowing agapic power permeating our present situation is an action awareness — so of course we need to understand this by using verb as the analogy. That’s what I mean by agapé being a verb, not a noun. As I said in my book, “agapé is the spirituality of action.”

So then what happens when we begin to think of all spiritual concerns in terms of verbs — with no aspects as some sort of material forms. Then spirituality becomes fluid — and motivational. It’s action that spurs us into more action. Ultimately, we are able to organize a general viewpoint of life that considers the Source of our true spiritual identity in terms of verbs. Then we can have our awareness opened up by agapic power drawing us into intimate relationship with the Source, and we can understand being sent out to spread the power of agapé wherever we go.


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