In Revolution in Psychiatry Ernest...
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In Revolution in Psychiatry Ernest Becker wrote: "If we lack a firm, lived behavioral pattern toward an object, the word meaning is shallow at best."1
Let us paraphrase this into the Scripture for the day. God is saying through Zechariah, "If you lack a way to behave toward me, then the words you mean in fast and festival are shallow, for your gratification alone." Instead, a lived behavioral pattern toward God calls for true judgments, kindness, mercy, right treatment of widows and fatherless, care of the stranger and poor, and to cap it all, no evil devises against brothers and sisters in the heart.
As necessary as formal acts of penitence, prayer, fasting, and celebration may be, they merely bring us to the fringes of God's meaning for us. From that point we must move from the shallows -- me and my good feelings -- to obedience that is a firm, lived behavioral pattern toward the chief object of our intent -- God.
1. Ernest Becker, Revolution in Psychiatry, p. 51.
Let us paraphrase this into the Scripture for the day. God is saying through Zechariah, "If you lack a way to behave toward me, then the words you mean in fast and festival are shallow, for your gratification alone." Instead, a lived behavioral pattern toward God calls for true judgments, kindness, mercy, right treatment of widows and fatherless, care of the stranger and poor, and to cap it all, no evil devises against brothers and sisters in the heart.
As necessary as formal acts of penitence, prayer, fasting, and celebration may be, they merely bring us to the fringes of God's meaning for us. From that point we must move from the shallows -- me and my good feelings -- to obedience that is a firm, lived behavioral pattern toward the chief object of our intent -- God.
1. Ernest Becker, Revolution in Psychiatry, p. 51.
