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4
Feb

Rebuked by the Buddhists

Posted on February 4th, 2014

The front page of Time magazine last week focused on the international interest in the Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) developed by Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn. Based on Buddhist practices, it has proven to help people reduce stress in our frenetic world. I attended a seminar on this years ago and was saddened how few people associated Christians and churches with contentment, joy, and “centeredness” in life.

The tradition of “centering” is rich in our biblical, Christian tradition. Moses spent 40 years in the wilderness in God’s presence. Elijah was a prophet of the desert who learned to hear God in silence. John the Baptist’s ministry flowed from the quietness of the desert. Jesus had rhythms of activity and aloneness. John Cassian wrote extensively on meditating on Scripture in “mindfulness” before the Lord in his Conferences. The desert fathers and monastics, through history, have continued this tradition. The ministry of Contemplative Outreach, founded by Trappist monks in the 1960′s, was an effort to recover this rich Christian tradition and make it accessible to the wider church.

The world is desperate to learn how to be “mindful,” content, and anchored. This tradition belongs to us, not the Buddhists or secularists.

May God use the desperate longing of the world around us to drive us to recover our own biblical truths around solitude, silence and centering ourselves in God each day. What could be more important for us as leaders, and our people, than this?

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