I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being
This book is an invitation to examine the orientation of our lives and consider whether our direction promotes well-being for our world and ourselves. Examinations of various religions and wisdom traditions, some of which believe in gods and others which don’t promote faith in gods, indicate there is “common ground.” Regardless of people’s faith, there is a potential for widespread agreement on the premise that none of us is god. Everyone can observe the personal and global harm caused by selfishness and recognize the damage done by an unwavering need to “get our own way.” As we become more aware of our world, the prevalence of hurting invites us to reflect on whether we contribute to that hurting or promote well-being. A major obstacle to becoming more aware of our world is the assumption of our rightness. This book will examine how religions and ideologies can be placed at the service of our preferences or can lead us to constantly discern how to live rightly. I will look to my own Western, Christian tradition as a case study in the human tendency to subject religion to our preferences and consider how this tendency can lead us to ignore or even cause the suffering of marginalized peoples in our global community. Turning from social to personal, the book will invite the reader to strive for greater self-awareness. Recognizing that we are not god demands that we struggle to see beyond our limited perspective and battle to dis-cover our biases. As we will see, our way of relating to other people can reflect the objectifying tendencies of ego; we will also explore how seeing and valuing other people can be a path toward greater personal and social well-being. This book is built on a belief that we can choose what we become as individuals and as a global community. Our religions and wisdom traditions challenge us to choose to be about something beyond our personal interests; this choice involves a degree of personal struggle. Living our values is at times demanding, but when we let go and trust a path, we operate as though we are not the center of the universe. Perhaps we could all agree that the necessary direction for our world is one that leads us to a more expansive sense of community, rather than an alienating one that leads us to a world divided between us and them.
1126380702
I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being
This book is an invitation to examine the orientation of our lives and consider whether our direction promotes well-being for our world and ourselves. Examinations of various religions and wisdom traditions, some of which believe in gods and others which don’t promote faith in gods, indicate there is “common ground.” Regardless of people’s faith, there is a potential for widespread agreement on the premise that none of us is god. Everyone can observe the personal and global harm caused by selfishness and recognize the damage done by an unwavering need to “get our own way.” As we become more aware of our world, the prevalence of hurting invites us to reflect on whether we contribute to that hurting or promote well-being. A major obstacle to becoming more aware of our world is the assumption of our rightness. This book will examine how religions and ideologies can be placed at the service of our preferences or can lead us to constantly discern how to live rightly. I will look to my own Western, Christian tradition as a case study in the human tendency to subject religion to our preferences and consider how this tendency can lead us to ignore or even cause the suffering of marginalized peoples in our global community. Turning from social to personal, the book will invite the reader to strive for greater self-awareness. Recognizing that we are not god demands that we struggle to see beyond our limited perspective and battle to dis-cover our biases. As we will see, our way of relating to other people can reflect the objectifying tendencies of ego; we will also explore how seeing and valuing other people can be a path toward greater personal and social well-being. This book is built on a belief that we can choose what we become as individuals and as a global community. Our religions and wisdom traditions challenge us to choose to be about something beyond our personal interests; this choice involves a degree of personal struggle. Living our values is at times demanding, but when we let go and trust a path, we operate as though we are not the center of the universe. Perhaps we could all agree that the necessary direction for our world is one that leads us to a more expansive sense of community, rather than an alienating one that leads us to a world divided between us and them.
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I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being

I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being

by David J. LaGuardia
I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being

I Am Not God: Searching for a Path Toward Personal and Global Well-Being

by David J. LaGuardia

eBook

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Overview

This book is an invitation to examine the orientation of our lives and consider whether our direction promotes well-being for our world and ourselves. Examinations of various religions and wisdom traditions, some of which believe in gods and others which don’t promote faith in gods, indicate there is “common ground.” Regardless of people’s faith, there is a potential for widespread agreement on the premise that none of us is god. Everyone can observe the personal and global harm caused by selfishness and recognize the damage done by an unwavering need to “get our own way.” As we become more aware of our world, the prevalence of hurting invites us to reflect on whether we contribute to that hurting or promote well-being. A major obstacle to becoming more aware of our world is the assumption of our rightness. This book will examine how religions and ideologies can be placed at the service of our preferences or can lead us to constantly discern how to live rightly. I will look to my own Western, Christian tradition as a case study in the human tendency to subject religion to our preferences and consider how this tendency can lead us to ignore or even cause the suffering of marginalized peoples in our global community. Turning from social to personal, the book will invite the reader to strive for greater self-awareness. Recognizing that we are not god demands that we struggle to see beyond our limited perspective and battle to dis-cover our biases. As we will see, our way of relating to other people can reflect the objectifying tendencies of ego; we will also explore how seeing and valuing other people can be a path toward greater personal and social well-being. This book is built on a belief that we can choose what we become as individuals and as a global community. Our religions and wisdom traditions challenge us to choose to be about something beyond our personal interests; this choice involves a degree of personal struggle. Living our values is at times demanding, but when we let go and trust a path, we operate as though we are not the center of the universe. Perhaps we could all agree that the necessary direction for our world is one that leads us to a more expansive sense of community, rather than an alienating one that leads us to a world divided between us and them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781483597157
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication date: 03/19/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 194
File size: 740 KB

About the Author

David lives in Ohio with his wonderful wife and three amazing children. He currently teaches Social Justice at Walsh Jesuit High School. During the 16 years he has worked at Walsh, he has also coached soccer, moderated a gay-straight alliance, organized diversity programming, taught students to backpack and rock climb, organized a spiritual reading and dialogue group for adults, and promoted fair trade. David graduated from John Carroll University with a degree in Religious Studies and earned a Masters in Ministry from Ursuline College.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments iv

Introduction 1

Going Forward (A Few Notes) 4

Overview: A Spirituality Everyone Could Agree On 9

1 The Question 11

A Natural Response to a Natural Question 15

The Self Dilemma 19

2 Seeing Our Broken World 21

3 Who or What is Our God? 29

All-Powerful 35

All-Knowing 40

All-Good 50

4 God on Our Side and at Our Service 57

The Empire's God 59

State Religions and Colonialism 61

5 The Almighty Dollar: Self-Serving and Other-Sacrificing 68

The Ideals We Claim and the Values We Live 71

Money Makes Right 74

Their Rights or Our Interests 80

Waiting on the World to Change 88

6 Violence and the Warrior Ideal 94

Honoring the Warrior 95

Dangers in Glorifying the Soldier 103

7 The Warrior's Path: What Makes a Hero? 108

The Battle with Self 111

Everyday Warriors 113

Peaceful Paths 117

A New Measure of Greatness 121

8 The Problem of Being God: Personal Reflections 123

Relationship 124

Anxiety 127

Death and Drugs 131

9 Letting Go: A Very Ungod-like Path to Well-Being 138

Mindfulness 140

Love is the Way 142

Love, Faith, and Well-being 145

Sin, Alienation, and Reconciliation 151

10 If I am Not God, What am I? 156

Nature 159

Self-Centered or Self-Aware 161

Centered and Powerful 165

Mysticism 167

Conclusion 171

Works Cited 177

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