ablerism
ablerism

new forms: ablerism.micro.blog

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jabel
jabel

@ablerism I do know that my time in atheism was a necessary acid bath. The last twenty-five years of my spiritual life have been rather circuitous and I don’t know where I’ll end up. But I absolutely needed to be stripped of my ideas about God, who by that time had just become a piece of mental furniture. Only after that was I able to re-engage with Christianity in friendly openness. I even came to appreciate what I was given in my bonkers fundamentalist childhood!

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ablerism
ablerism

@jabel I really, really get it. In adulthood, I was just wandering around in a kind of agnostic humanism for a long while, one decade out and one back in church, before a…conversion-on-a-long-timeline? Still figuring out what happened. But I see now the gift of it all (even with a lot of pain).

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ReaderJohn
ReaderJohn

@ablerism @jabel I once had a fairly logical explanation for leaving Calvinism for Orthodoxy. Now I’m less sure that’s actually how it happened.

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jabel
jabel

@ReaderJohn @ablerism I understand the “figuring out what happened” thing. I’ve looked back at times on the blog post I wrote shortly after leaving the Holiness churches for the LCMS and think “What a tidy story you’ve created there. Now whether or not it’s true….”

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tinyroofnail
tinyroofnail

@ablerism Erin Plunkett’s essay “Walking Homeward I found to be a wonderful example of exactly this quote from Weil. As someone who has no idea how to offer my kids even a fraction of what I’ve felt very lucky to find and experience, I’m very grateful to see these public conversations. These things are, in my experience, utterly nonexistent in the daily trenches

@jabel @ReaderJohn

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In reply to
ablerism
ablerism

@tinyroofnail That was great; thank you!

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ChrisJWilson
ChrisJWilson

@ablerism Really interesting to think through. I like how Nijay Gupta and A.J. Swobodo talk about doubt as a core part of faith. After all, if you don’t doubt, then you don’t exercise faith (although not doubting at all and giving up straight away would also be not exercising faith). I find it interesting considering how often “backsliding” or “Walking away” is seen as this real negative and how (unfortunately) many abandon friends when they do as they “Aren’t good influences” or something like that.

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dwalbert
dwalbert

@ablerism Like woodland fire that clears away the dead brush and makes way for new growth.

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ablerism
ablerism

@ChrisJWilson Right, and I have to say that the evangelical reliance on “deconstructing” has always sounded so strange to my ear. Like, I think you just mean…continuing to think through difficult issues that have plagued the modern believer for centuries? Weathering the maturation process?

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ablerism
ablerism

@dwalbert Yes indeed.

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ablerism
ablerism

@jabel Yeah. I’m realizing over adulthood that our whole story can get recast by time and experience. I frequently ask myself: Can I let my story shift in the face of new data, new perspective?

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tinyroofnail
tinyroofnail

@ablerism @ChrisJWilson Daniel Taylor’s Skeptical Believers is a book I’ve recommended many times. It’s got depth but with an almost kid-like simplicity throughout. Also, “disentangling” is an good alternative word to “deconstructing” I’ve taken from Kate Boyd

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