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Reading For An Evolutionary Age: An Omega Lectio Divina

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin

The Omega Center engages new ideas on bridging science and religion primarily through the lens of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin but through other thinkers as well. Teilhard spent years in the deserts of China where there were few distractions keeping him from pondering the deep questions of faith and life. I imagine Teilhard spending long hours by the campfire contemplating the questions of human life, evolution, and the profound mystery of God. He worked through his ideas carefully by pondering them over and over again. One can see traces of this in his writings where themes are repeated in different texts but never in the same way. As Teilhard thought deeply about a question, he wrote down his insights and in this way began to build a new system of thought.

How do we come to new insights in our own age? We have become “speed readers” and efficient organizers. But the type of thinking that leads to new insights requires slowed time, silence, and ponderous brooding over new ideas. How do we read Teilhard and creative thinkers in a meaningful way?  Many of the ideas in the Omega blogs stem from long periods of deep theological and philosophical reflection; hence they cannot be skimmed over lightly.  So, how best to engage this material?

One way is to practice a type of lectio divina when reading this material. Literally translated from Latin as “divine reading,” lectio divina is the ancient monastic method of prayerfully reading the Scriptures.  The process begins with a slow, careful reading of the text  [lectio], followed by meditation or pondering the specific words of phrases which speak directly to the heart [meditatio] which in turn leads the heart to prayer [oratio] and the deepening of prayer which is contemplation [contemplatio].

In a similar way we can approach the Omega Center texts in a slow, prayerful manner. I would suggest the following method:

Conclusion

At the end of the day, review the new thoughts or ideas that you gained from reading the blog material. Give thanks to God for these insights. Realize that it is the Spirit of God within you who is struggling for new birth (Rom 8:22). Realize that insight is the midwife of new life. Know yourself to be a thinker and thus a participant in the motherhood of God.

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