Richard Rohr on Spiritual Discernment

The spiritual gift of discernment (1 Corinthians 12:10) is when seemingly good things can be recognized as sometimes bad things, and seemingly bad things can also be seen to bear some good fruit. Darn it! Discernment has largely been undeveloped among ordinary Christians, except among those good Jesuits! It invites people into “yes/and” thinking, rather than simplistic “either/or” thinking. This is the difference between merely having correct information and the true spiritual gift of wisdom (1 Corinthians 12:8). Both knowledge and wisdom are good, but wisdom is much better. It demands the maturity of discernment, which is what it takes to develop a truly consistent ethic of life. I admit the vast majority of people are not there yet.

Once we have learned to discern the real and disguised nature of both good and evil we recognize that everything is broken and fallen, weak and poor—while still being the dwelling place of God—you and me, your country, your children, your marriage, and even your church and mosque and synagogue. That is not a put-down of anybody or anything, but actually creates the freedom to love imperfect things! As Jesus told the rich young man, “God alone is good!” (Mark 10:18).

In this, you may have been given the greatest recipe for happiness for the rest of your life. You cannot wait for things to be totally perfect to fall in love with them or you will never love anything. Now, instead, you can love everything!

Adapted from Spiral of Violence: The World, the Flesh, and the Devil
(CD, MP3)

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Author: DanutM

Anglican theologian. Former Director for Faith and Development Middle East and Eastern Europe Region of World Vision International

One thought on “Richard Rohr on Spiritual Discernment”

  1. ” A male-dominated world is an imbalanced world “…(p.106)…Fear is largely responsible for the unhealthy dynamics that arise in families and church cultures.When wew are confronted with people who scare us, fear makes difficult for us to remember that they are worthy of love. But Jesus, who never let fear overpower Him, constantly showed us who was worthy – enemies, children, sinners, women, exorters, prostitutes, soldiers, politicians, the sick and diseased, high class, low class, religious, non religious. Everyone. He didn,t just declare this value, He honored it by loving all of us .” (page 29 “POWERFUL AND FREE ” BY Danny Silk)

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