Tags
Blizzard crossing the threshold, Disintegration, Duty to be holy?, Integration, Integrity, Personhood, The ruined soul, The Soul, What shall it profit a man, Wholeness and Holiness
What does it profit a man to gain the whole earth and forfeit his own soul?
Jesus is speaking more to “a diagnosis than a destination,” commented Dallas Willard. “For the ruined soul, the will, mind, and body are already disintegrated and disconnected from God.”
What does it mean to be Integrated?
“Our world has replaced the word soul with the word self,” John Ortberg writes, “and they are not the same thing.” Psychologist Martin Seligman theorizes that a society that has replaced faith, and community with a tiny little unit (the self) “cannot bear the weight of meaning.” Ortberg concludes, “ironically, the more obsessed we are with our selves, the more we neglect our souls.” If you read “Suicide is Painless,” you get a sense of the soul coming apart in a vacuous outer space – the void of meaninglessness.
We are creatures whose souls seek meaning, connection, and integration. Integrity is a deep “soul word.” The soul seeks to integrate our will and mind and body into being an integral person. “Beyond that, the soul seeks to connect us with other people, with creation, and with God Himself – who made us to be rooted in Him…” Your soul is what integrates your will/intentions, your mind/thoughts/feelings, and your body/body language/actions into a single, integrated whole.

pinterest.com “The blizzard of the soul has crossed the threshold, and it has overturned the soul.” Leonard Cohen
We might say that the whole life is foundational to the holy life – for to be holy is to be integrated into God’s life and will. In contrast, an unhealthy soul is one that is experiencing disintegration. We might call an unholy life one that is disintegrated and disconnected from the Life who is God.
What it means to be Whole ~ What it means to be Holy
In an interview with Mother Teresa, a journalist asked how was it that she was “so holy.” Her response was not to feign false modesty, but to say,
You have to be holy in the position you are in, and I have to be holy in the position that God has placed me. So it is nothing extraordinary to be holy. Holiness is not a luxury of the few. Holiness is a simple duty for you and me. We have been created for that.
This was not the answer the journalist was expecting, and neither was he expecting the interview to turn around on to himself. Mother Teresa’s bold answer revealed how she understood holiness as something for which we have been created – created to be whole – to be integrated into God – and this says more about God than it says about any performance we might manage.
The Bible uses the word soul as a synonym for the word person, and it is my desire to decipher the mystery of our worth as persons to the One who made us for Himself. Now, you know what I’m going to say…
May you find wholeness and integration in Jesus Christ – the lover and redeemer of our souls.
Wonderful post Rusty. Great way to start the day.
Sharing this on FB.
🙂
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Thanks Staci. I appreciate the wider exposure to your world. As I am not on FB myself, I haven’t imagined this sort of writing as that which “fits”. And since I am still learning to write, so to speak – I fear that not all will “get it.” Nevertheless – you do, and I appreciate your encouragement. Grace to you.
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Oh I’m sure not all will get it. My hope is that people will read and that it will encourage them to think and go deeper.
🙂
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This is true. The soul has been replaced with self. Go to any book store and find a title with “soul” in it and you will find a self help book!! I love the quote by mother Theresa. Have you ever heard the hymn, I think it’s called Brighten Your Corner? It talks about how we might be doing something small or insignificant but that’s the corner we get to brighten. It’s a holy calling. Not all of us stand in the lime light or get attention but living a holy life will produce a Godly outcome. God is still using us and I find that amazing.
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Thanks for your word, and for the reference. I found two references to “Brighten Your Corner”. One by Ina Ogden (I think this is the hymn you intended):(http://library.timelesstruths.org/music/Brighten_the_Corner_Where_You_Are/)
– and the other – a poem by Helen Steiner Rice: (http://www.appleseeds.org/Brighten-Corner.htm). Both speak to the idea you noted.
And speaking of “holy calling”, Mother Teresa seemed to have a recovered sense of who she is in Christ. Thus her “daily prayer” is insightful for how she saw people in her sphere of influence (https://rhfoerger.wordpress.com/2015/02/09/jesus-my-patient/).
May we live joyfully in His holiness – and brighten the corner where we are. Grace to you.
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It’s the first one! Yes thank you for finding that. Grace to you as well.
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