Morningstar- Sensuous Encounter
[Reflections from Sensuous Encounter piece]
The idea of pain in sacrafice is a unique idea that Dr. Redick brings to light in his piece Sensuous Encounter when quoting from Chuck Palahniuk’s novel Fight Club, "Tyler Durden sprinkles lye over the narrator’s moistened hand. The solution will heat to a temperature of over two hundred degrees...The narrator tries to escape the pain through mental techniques...The pain drives him from the center, shatters his significance. Tyler breaks the escape, “come back to the pain.”“This is the greatest moment of your life . .. and you’re off somewhere missing it.” Dr. Redick discusses the profound idea that no growth is made without sacrifice. He encourages that you need to embrace the pain, embrace the suffering, to grow into the person you were created to be. He goes on to further reference Christ death on the Cross-a sacrifice, one that does not beg God to save him from the situation but one that takes the pain and acknowledges that God's will is better than his.
Christ was the all sufficient sacrifice. He died the ultimate death so we could be free. But a life dedicated to and for Christ does not mean there will not be suffering and pain. The Christian life through growth and sanctification embodies pain and suffering for the cause of Christ. We see this in our everyday fight against the temptations of the evil one, and one large scale missionary work.
Source: Redick, Kip. 2016. Sensuous Encounter where Journey and Festival Meet: A Phenomenology of Pilgrimage. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
The idea of pain in sacrafice is a unique idea that Dr. Redick brings to light in his piece Sensuous Encounter when quoting from Chuck Palahniuk’s novel Fight Club, "Tyler Durden sprinkles lye over the narrator’s moistened hand. The solution will heat to a temperature of over two hundred degrees...The narrator tries to escape the pain through mental techniques...The pain drives him from the center, shatters his significance. Tyler breaks the escape, “come back to the pain.”“This is the greatest moment of your life . .. and you’re off somewhere missing it.” Dr. Redick discusses the profound idea that no growth is made without sacrifice. He encourages that you need to embrace the pain, embrace the suffering, to grow into the person you were created to be. He goes on to further reference Christ death on the Cross-a sacrifice, one that does not beg God to save him from the situation but one that takes the pain and acknowledges that God's will is better than his.
Christ was the all sufficient sacrifice. He died the ultimate death so we could be free. But a life dedicated to and for Christ does not mean there will not be suffering and pain. The Christian life through growth and sanctification embodies pain and suffering for the cause of Christ. We see this in our everyday fight against the temptations of the evil one, and one large scale missionary work.
Source: Redick, Kip. 2016. Sensuous Encounter where Journey and Festival Meet: A Phenomenology of Pilgrimage. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
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