Not exact matches
It is because there is a reason and purpose for the division
of human
nature into male and female in God's plan, which gives men and women
different and complementary, but equally valuable, roles in the
Mystery of Salvation.
Jainism holds that because
of the indeterminate
nature of Reality,
different viewpoints are possible and that none can claim final knowledge
of the truth — which brings us back to the pervading sense
of Mystery.
But most
of all diving offers a glimpse
of something entirely
different; a complex and beautiful world to which we can only be the most transient
of visitors, but where the visit leaves one in wrapt contemplation
of the
mysteries of nature.
They really have a strong reluctance to mingle with other particles, which makes them antisocial and difficult to pin down, but they are connected to such a wide range
of phenomenon from the subatomic to the cosmic that they could tell us a lot about many
different things, many
different mysteries about the
nature of matter, about what triggers exploding stars, to what's going on in the heart
of the sun, to what the universe might have been like, the conditions within seconds after the big bang.
Parenthood in my 30s led me to take up my spiritual journey, and after several decades
of being active in Unitarian Universalism, in my 60s I have also come to think
of myself as a progressive Christian as well as a UU — a return to the faith I grew up in, but on a
different level, taking scripture seriously but not literally (and for me, serious literature can be scripture too, especially poetry, and scriptures
of other faiths...) I am content to say God is a
mystery, a word we use to point to all that is good and beautiful and healing, a creative energy at work that we can experience through our loving relationships, through art and music, through the pursuit
of science, and in the «church»
of nature.