Embodiment & the Bible by A.C. Seiple预览

In our fast-paced lives, it’s easy to live disconnected from our bodies, shuffling through our days on autopilot, trying to tune out the noise inside. And I don’t know about you, but for me, for years, this often meant feeling frustrated with my body when it was difficult to turn the volume down.
Days or seasons when I was stressed, it was hard to ignore an unsettledness in my gut, flutters in my chest, and tightness in my shoulders and neck. And because feeling stressed isn’t the most pleasant experience, I started to associate feeling things in my body as feeling bad or negative things.
I’m curious if you can resonate with this at all: associating feedback from your body as annoyances or problems. Maybe you also know what it’s like to be frustrated when you have a day or week you need to push through, but it feels like your body is working against you. Or maybe your body seems to give you feedback at all the worst moments–right before a presentation at work or just when you have time to slow down and relax.
Whatever the feedback, we live in a culture that rarely teaches us how to tune in with what’s happening in our bodies, let alone that the feedback our bodies gives us can be helpful and worth listening to. Couple that with how normal it is to live in chronic stress, and we’re likely to be left stuck in a place of disconnect from our bodies.
Now, while I’m the first to admit that feeling stress doesn’t feel good, because of how familiar we tend to be with feeling stress, we’re going to spend time with more Psalms that give voice to how we can experience stress in our bodies. As we do this, we can help our bodies and brains map out how we experience stress, which can also help us navigate what happens when we are either pushed further into stress, all the way into a place of shutdown, or, what happens when we find relief from stress, sinking instead into a sense of safety in our bodies.
As you read through today’s Psalms, I invite you to be curious about how these ancient cries might give voice to ways you’ve experienced stress in your bodies. How might these Scriptures be a roadmap to connect with what happens inside your own body? Is there anything else your body might want to say, joining in with these ancient cries?
读经计划介绍

Connecting with our body can feel complex, especially in the context of our faith. So many of us have received confusing and harmful messages about our bodies, leaving us feeling disconnected from the whole person God created in us. In this reading plan, explore how Scripture speaks to our embodiment, along with how this might transform our faith to connect with God and others in more wholehearted, and whole-bodied, ways.
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