Best 10 quotes of Marcus J. Borg on MyQuotes

Marcus J. Borg

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    Christianity's goal is not escape from this world. It loves this world and seeks to change it for the better.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    God wills our liberation, our exodus from Egypt. God wills our reconciliation, our return from exile. God wills our enlightenment, our seeing. God wills our forgiveness, our release from sin and guilt. God wills that we see ourselves as God’s beloved. God wills our resurrection, our passage from death to life. God wills for us food and drink that satisfy our hunger and thirst. God wills, comprehensively, our well-being—not just my well-being as an individual but the well-being of all of us and of the whole of creation. In short, God wills our salvation, our healing, here on earth. The Christian life is about participating in the salvation of God.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    In a number of workshops, I have asked people whether they have had one or more experiences that they would identify as an experience of God and, if so, to share them in small groups. On average, 80 percent of the participants identify one or more and are eager to talk about them. They also frequently report that they had never before been asked that question in a church setting or given an opportunity to talk about it.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    One must die to an old way of being in order to enter a new way of being... salvation is resurrection to a new way of being here and now.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    Our central problem is not sin and guilt, as it is within the monarchical model. For the Spirit model, our central problem is “estrangement,” whose specific meaning of “separated from that to which one belongs” is most appropriate. ... For the monarchical model, sin is primarily disloyalty to the king, seen especially as disobedience to his laws. The metaphors used to express the Spirit model suggest something else. For the metaphor of God as lover, sin is unfaithfulness—that is, sin is going after other lovers.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    ... rather than God being "out there" in the heights, God is known in the depths of personal experience.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    Resurrection" does not mean resumption of previous existence but entry into a different kind of existence.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    The political vision of the religious right is for the most part an individualistic politics of righteousness, not a communal politics of compassion.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    The relationship among faith, knowledge, and belief is suggested by a story involving the famous depth psychologist Carl Jung. In the last year of his life, he was interviewed for a BBC television documentary. The interviewer asked him, "Dr. Jung, do you believe in God?" Jung said, "Believe? I do not believe in God - I know." The point: the more one knows God, the less faith as belief is involved. But faith as belief still has a role: it can provide a basis for responding even when one does not know for sure, and it can also get one through periods of time in which firsthand experiences of God are lacking.

  • By Anonym
    Marcus J. Borg

    The spoken word has come to dominate many Protestant forms of worship: the words of prayers, responsive readings, Scripture, the sermon, and so forth. Yet the spoken word is perhaps the least effective way of reaching the heart; one must constantly pay attention with one’s mind. The spoken word tends to go to our heads, not our hearts.