Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Rohr on source of evil is ego





1.  PRAYER
 Prayer for Humility and Freedom from Ego 

(Based on concepts from various traditions) 
"O God, I come before You with a humble heart, recognizing my ego as a barrier to Your presence and a root of selfishness and pride. Please grant me a spirit of humility, to share the spotlight and let others take credit. Help me to see myself with Your vision, not with an inflated sense of self-importance, and to willingly submit to Your will first and then to others. 
Replace my arrogance with Your love, my conceit with grace, and my ego-centeredness with the purposes of Your heart. I ask for Your divine grace to burn away my ego and to inflame me with a passion for Your kingdom and for the well-being of others. Let my life reflect Your love and peace, not my own desires. 
I am willing to let go of beliefs in vulnerability, limitation, and guilt. I want to receive Your gifts of peace and joy, which are ever-present. In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, Amen". 
Prayer for Spiritual Growth and Ego Removal through Sacred Heart ...
May 9, 2024 — PRAYER TO THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS. Jesus, take away the arrogance in my ego and give my Your Heart in its place. Take away my ego-centredness and m...
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2.  MEDITATION 

https://youtu.be/y8KSid0WFwY

   




3,  SONG

https://youtu.be/sU8MAQKSbEI




4.  NARRATIVE 

https://chqdaily.com/2020/08/fr-richard-rohr-says-true-evil-in-the-flesh-is-really-rooted-in-the-ego-but-it-can-still-be-killed/


Fr. Richard Rohr says true evil in the flesh is really rooted in the ego, but it can still be killed

Rohr

People sin at an unconscious level, said Fr. Richard Rohr, similar to Buddhism’s concept of delusion. The way that Christianity has centered sin on the flesh is a distraction from identifying these delusions in the dominant understanding.

Rohr gave his lecture on evil in the flesh at 2 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, Aug. 19 — the third in Chautauqua’s Week Eight Interfaith Lecture Series theme of “Reframing Our Journey: A Week with Fr. Richard Rohr, OFM.” First, he said that the writings of Saint Paul have led to immense misunderstandings because of the Greek word “sarx” being mistranslated to “flesh” in Saint Paul’s description of the dichotomy between flesh and spirit.

“We still think of flesh and spirit not just as enemies, but as warring against another,” Rohr said.

Rohr said that “sarx” is better understood as “ego,” a small, self-enclosed, narcissistic, self-protective self that is not maliciously evil, but tricky and untrustworthy.

“If you don’t recognize it, you will be trapped by it,” Rohr said.

As for any organization of people, Rohr said companies are inherently self-protective. They have to protect employees, to a degree, and ensure a future for the company. But they participate and benefit from the systems that people do not often see as inherently malicious, like the military-industrial complex.

Rohr said that religions’ failure now and throughout history is that they have stalled the collective ability to focus on true evil by convincing people that minor sins they commit are the root of all evil. He compared religious institutions to vacuum salesmen who conned people by sprinkling dust on their doors before knocking.

The first thing evil does, Rohr said, is disguise itself as necessary or strategic for the common good of a group.

“The only way we can really attack evil,” Rohr said, “is to see it as it is.”

Jesus also pointed out evil not in individuals, but in entire towns and communities: Jerusalem, Capernaum, the Pharisees.

Jesus called for evil to be named correctly against the wishes of kings and priests misusing power, and Rohr said that currently, journalists have the most freedom in history to broadly cover true evil against the wishes of those in power.

But people panic, Rohr said, when evil is pointed out at an institutional level like the military-industrial complex.

“I’m not talking about an individual soldier, I’m not talking about an individual health care worker, I’m not talking about an individual banker,” Rohr said. “But I am saying the system of health care, the system of banking, the penal system of incarcerating people, is almost always not so good.”

On page 13 of his book, What Do We Do With Evil?: The World, The Flesh, and the Devil, he said that the spiritual journey should focus on expanding people’s freedom to do good, rather than blaming someone who has committed evil.

“That paralyzes a person even deeper in the flesh,” Rohr said. “It doesn’t liberate them from the flesh.”

While Rohr sees this in the teachings of Jesus and Paul, he doesn’t see it necessarily reflected in Christianity.

“Our notion of religion has been a set of requirements, and clergy were made into  policemen — and they were men in almost all of history. Our job was to enforce the requirements, not to entice into liberation,” Rohr said. “In fact, (liberation) is mistrusted. You’re called dangerous or a heretic if you offer people new levels of freedom, because they might make mistakes.”

But mistakes based in the flesh can also bring people closer to God. Rohr said that he believes religions are stuck in a state of unconsciousness, in the first stage of development as defined by Ken Wilbur. Part of that unconsciousness is denying that a person benefits from systems of evil.

“I have enjoyed the fruits of evil,” Rohr said. “The military-industrial complex has kept me free my whole life.”

The understanding of sin that Rohr found in the Book of Paul is that sin is unconscious. Paul’s intuition in his writings was built on Jesus, Rohr said, even though Paul never knew Jesus, and the four gospels placed in front of his in the Bible had not yet been written. Rohr said this is because Paul was dealing in basic truths that came from what Rohr calls a Universal Christ. Rohr has written about this concept in a separate book called The Universal Christ: How a Forgotten Reality Can Change Everything We See, Hope For, and Believe.

“To think that we can totally resist and avoid all evil is only to persist in it in a new form,” Rohr wrote.

Operating unconsciously comes from the lowest part of the brain stem, the section that controls the fight-or-flight-response. In the Old Testament, the Bible’s protagonists react with a fight response, convinced that they can eliminate evil by exposing and killing it. But Rohr sees the flight response engaged in today’s brand of unconsciousness —people deny where true evil exists.

St. Martha

Reflecting on Catholic art in his last trip to Europe, Rohr observed that the archangel Michael is depicted front and center in churches and cathedrals with a sword, slaying the dragon of evil. But a friend brought him to a side altar of a church in Nuremberg, Germany, to show him Saint Martha petting the dragon and smiling

“Whatever we call evil, it’s something we have to deal with, learn from, integrate … not eliminate,” Rohr said.

Jesus did also teach this feminine side of spirituality, Rohr said, but it is not what Christianity as an institution has historically valued. The way out of true evil is found in this path Jesus took, through nonviolent resistance against a system’s lies. But this isn’t easy, Rohr said, since the majority, the crowd, can never see past the illusion of evil.

The style of vengeful justice as portrayed by the archangel Michael is often misplaced when directed at the flesh, which most world languages don’t connote as the ego, or hidden internal badness, and instead define it too literally as sex.

“Religion after religion has localized the heart of evil in sex,” Rohr said. 

For evil in the flesh specifically, Rohr said that the death of the ego is where the Saint Martha-like treatment of evil happens. Rohr said this can be done over time through prayer and contemplation in order to kill the ego that each human clings to.

“We gave the false impression that Christianity is not about dying, but it is,” Rohr said.

At 2 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 20, Rohr will explain the devil as a source of evil — evil in its most mysterious form.

This program is made possible by the Eileen and Warren Martin Lectureship for Emerging Studies in Bible and Theology & The Strnad Family Fund.

TAGS : AND THE DEVILFR. RICHARD ROHRINTERFAITH LECTURE RECAPREFRAMING OUR JOURNEY: A WEEK WITH FR. RICHARD ROHRRELIGIONTHE FLESHWHAT DO WE DO WITH EVIL?: THE WORLD

5.  MEDITATION 

https://youtu.be/BD8bPl2T3CE


6.  SHARING 


7. INTENTIONS AND PRAYER

PRAYER TO THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS. 

Jesus, take away the arrogance in my ego and give my Your Heart in its place. Take away my ego-centredness and make Your Heart and its purposes the centre of my life. 

I willingly enter the fire of Your Heart and let Your Heart burn away my ego and inflame me with enthusiasm for the conversion of the world to the desires of Your Heart. 

I feel passionate longing of Your Heart for all humanity and I ask to be an apostle of Your love. 

I want to be Your friend as You are mine.

I want to make friends with the world and bring Your friendship to the world. 

I ask to share this faith in Your abiding presence with those who do not yet know You.

May I always remain loyal to those who are still lost in the ever darkening sunset of hate, greed and delusion. 

I consecrate my life to joining You in letting the light through.

8. SONG

https://youtu.be/cNffSR_r8us


 

Monday, September 22, 2025

Moral Theology

 1.  PRAYER

Dear God...

We pray for a compassionate heart. Help us to be more understanding and empathetic towards others. Let us see the world through the eyes of those who are suffering and be moved to action. May our compassion lead us to help and support those in need. 

Thank you for your compassion towards us. Help us to reflect that same compassion in our interactions with others. May we learn to listen deeply and to respond with kindness and care to those who are hurting. Guide us to be patient and non-judgmental, recognizing the struggles and challenges that others face. Help us to extend compassion to ourselves, understanding that we too are deserving of care and kindness. 

We pray for a world where compassion is the norm, where people look out for one another and support each other in times of need. Thank you for the opportunities to practice compassion. Help us to seize those moments and to make a positive difference in the lives of others. 

Amen.


2.  MEDITATION 


https://youtu.be/ZToicYcHIOU



3. SONG

https://youtu.be/yG-Y9bWlCw8






4. NARRATIVE

https://cac.org/daily-meditations/bigger-than-personal-moral-failure-2020-01-14/


Bigger Than Personal Moral Failure

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Bigger Than Personal Moral Failure
Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Contemplation helps us discern what is truly important in the largest, most spacious frame of reality and to know what is ours to do in the face of “evil” and injustice. As a confessor, I know for a fact that many people beat their breasts about trivial things while not spotting the real evils that are likely poisoning their hearts and minds and countries. I have often said that hearing most (though not all!) Catholic confessions is like being stoned to death with marshmallows. We trained people to feel guilty about certain “sins” but allowed them to neglect the evils that are all around us and ignored.

Early Catholic moral theology taught that there were three major sources of evil: the world, the flesh, and the devil. My moral theology professor always added emphatically: “In that order!” Yet, up to now, most Christians have placed almost all of our attention on the secondary “flesh” level. We have had little education in or recognition of what Paul meant by “the principalities of the world” and even less understanding of what he meant by “the ruler who dominates the very air” (Ephesians 6:12). The world and the devil basically got off scot-free for most of Christian history while individual humans carried the majority of the blame. Just look at poor Eve! The implications have been massively destructive, both for the individual and for society, leading to many twentieth-century catastrophes that often took place in Christian countries.

When we are made to feel individually responsible for “the sin of the world” (John 1:29), we become overwhelmed by too-muchness, which will paralyze us and keep us from working to improve things that we can improve, further increasing our shame. It is a vicious cycle, one that most of us are probably familiar with. I believe contemplation is one of the only things that can free us from it. Contemplation draws us deeper into the mystery that we are a part of the problem, but not all of it, and that our actions are essential to solving it, though they may not seem to be doing anything at all. Perhaps this is what it means to “act in good faith!”

Both Jesus and Paul passed on to their disciples a collective and historical understanding of the nature of sin and evil, against which individuals still had to resist but in which they were usually complicit. Jesus and the prophets judged the city, nation, or group of people first, then the individual. This is no longer the starting point for many people, which leaves us morally impotent. We do not reproach our towns, our own religion, or our nation, though Jesus did so regularly (Matthew 11:20-24; Luke 10:10-16).

My hope is that this recognition of Jesus’ and Paul’s emphasis on the collective nature of evil will increase both personal responsibility and human solidarity, instead of wasting time on feeling bad about ourselves, which helps nobody.

Reference:
Adapted from Richard Rohr, What Do We Do with Evil? (CAC Publishing: December 2019) 18, 21, 22-23.

5. MEDITATION 

https://youtu.be/V94IREHp6kc


6. SHARING

7. PRAYER AND INTENTIONS 

A Prayer to See the Overlooked

Compassionate God,
You are the One who sees what others miss—
the weary heart behind the smile,
the lonely soul in the crowded room,
the one sitting quietly on the edge, waiting to be noticed.

Forgive us, Lord,
for the times we’ve rushed past the hurting,
too busy or too distracted to see them.
Forgive us for turning away when the needs felt inconvenient,
for choosing comfort over compassion.

Open our eyes, Lord.
Help us to see as You see.
Make our hearts attentive to the silent struggles,
the unspoken needs,
the people who feel invisible.

Give us the courage to stop, to listen,
to show kindness where it’s needed most.
Teach us to look beyond appearances
and to love without hesitation or judgment.

Make us people who notice.
Noticers of pain.
Noticers of beauty.
Noticers of people made in Your image
who are longing to be seen, known, and loved.

Use us to remind them that You see them—
and that in You, no one is forgotten.

In the name of Jesus, who stopped for the blind man,
who dined with the outcast,
and who always sees us—
we pray,
Amen.

8.  SONG

https://youtu.be/fLzLJXETn0A





Saturday, September 13, 2025

Mercy and truth

 1. PRAYER 

Pope Francis' Jubilee Year of Mercy Prayer

Lord Jesus Christ,
you have taught us to be merciful like the heavenly Father,
and have told us that whoever sees you sees Him.

Show us your face and we will be saved.

Your loving gaze freed Zacchaeus and Matthew from being enslaved by money;
the adulteress and Magdalene from seeking happiness only in created things;
made Peter weep after his betrayal,
and assured Paradise to the repentant thief.

Let us hear, as if addressed to each one of us, the words that you spoke to the Samaritan woman:

"If you knew the gift of God!"

You are the visible face of the invisible Father,
of the God who manifests his power above all by forgiveness and mercy:
let the Church be your visible face in the world, its Lord risen and glorified.

You willed that your ministers would also be clothed in weakness
in order that they may feel compassion for those in ignorance and error:
let everyone who approaches them feel sought after, loved, and forgiven by God.

Send your Spirit and consecrate every one of us with its anointing,
so that the Jubilee of Mercy may be a year of grace from the Lord,
and your Church, with renewed enthusiasm, may bring good news to the poor,
proclaim liberty to captives and the oppressed,
and restore sight to the blind.

We ask this through the intercession of Mary, Mother of Mercy,
you who live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit for ever and ever.

Amen.

- Pope Francis

2.  MEDITATION 

https://youtu.be/O-6f5wQXSu8





3. SONG

https://youtu.be/HVKVMVohs4U




4.  NARRATIVE 

One can read the following meditation by Rohr 

https://cac.org/daily-meditations/truth-hierarchy-truths-2015-03-03/

Or you can read what AI says what Rohr says about mercy and truth  An overview.  

These are results for rohr on mercy and truth
Search instead for rohr on mercy vs truth
AI Overview
Richard Rohr's teachings on mercy and truth emphasize that true spirituality and healing require a shift from a "retributive justice" worldview to an "economy of grace"
. Rather than seeing mercy and truth as opposing forces, he argues that authentic spiritual growth happens when we lead with unconditional mercy, which then makes genuine truth and transformation possible. 
The problem with a "meritocracy" worldview
For many, the world operates as a "meritocracy" or a system of retributive justice where good deeds are rewarded and bad deeds are punished. This creates a conditional framework for love and acceptance. According to Rohr: 
  • A transactional relationship with God: This mindset projects a toxic image onto God, seeing God as a punishing tyrant or a benevolent figure who must be appeased with good behavior.
  • The pursuit of being "right": In this system, people are more concerned with being "right" and performing flawlessly. But since perfection is impossible, this approach inevitably leads to disappointment and resentment.
  • Divisive dualism: A dualistic approach separates people into categories of "good" and "bad," creating an "us vs. them" mentality that makes reconciliation nearly impossible. 
The path of grace and restorative justice
Rohr teaches that the gospel offers an alternative path rooted in God's unconditional love and generosity, which he calls the "economy of grace". 
  • Experiencing undeserved mercy: Rohr states, "The great and merciful surprise is that we come to God not by doing it right, but by doing it wrong!". It is only by experiencing deep, unearned mercy that we are freed from the cycle of deserving and deserving punishment. This experience breaks our merit-based thinking and opens us to genuine transformation.
  • Healing truth follows mercy: In this view, mercy does not bypass truth but creates the safe space for it. True healing requires accountability and honesty about past harms. As with Jesus' ministry, the path is not condemnation but the restoration of relationship. A person can move toward a truthful reckoning only after experiencing undeserved mercy.
  • Truth in a non-dualistic way: Rather than a rigid, legalistic truth, Rohr presents a more mystical and contemplative view. For him, a deeper "Truth" is revealed through experience, paradox, and the integration of opposites, not by settling every question with a simple "yes" or "no".
  • Embracing disorder and the "tragic gap": Rohr acknowledges that life is a messy process of "order, disorder, and reorder". In this process, a deeper self emerges that can remain patient and vigilant in what he calls the "tragic gap," holding both good and evil without rushing to judgment. This is a key contemplative practice for living in mercy. 
The result of merging mercy and truth
When mercy and truth are properly ordered—with mercy leading the way—they create a pathway for true spiritual healing and growth.
  • A "riverbed of mercy": Rohr describes the "God-in-us" as a "riverbed of mercy that underlies all the flotsam and jetsam" of life, patiently receiving and releasing. This contemplative patience is what allows for transformation rather than just punishment.
  • A call for collective forgiveness: This framework applies not just to individuals but to all of humanity. Rohr argues that mutual apology, healing, and forgiveness are the only sustainable future for humanity, breaking cycles of bitterness, grudges, and violence.
  • True justice is restorative: Rather than demanding retribution, divine justice is restorative. It seeks the healing and reconciliation of all parties involved, including the person causing harm, the person harmed, and the community. 
  • 5.  MEDITATION 


6.  SHARING 

7.  PRAYER AND INTENTIONS 

A Prayer to be a Vessel of Mercy

Heavenly Father, thank You that by Your Holy Spirit You have bestowed on each of Your children different spiritual gifts, (or just one special gift..) that by Your grace is to be used for the encouragement and edification of the whole body of Christ. Thank You Lord for the way that You have gifted each of us in a very special and precious way, enabling us..by Your grace, to make a unique contribution, to the furtherance of Your plans and purposes in the body of Christ - that HE is all in all. Father, You have given me a special heart of love toward my brothers and sisters in Christ.. and although I am not gifted to teach, or to carry out some of the more overt gifts of the Spirit, I do wonder if You are developing in me the precious gift of encouragement, mercy and love towards my brothers and sisters in Christ.

Lord I pray that if You are taking me down this route, that You would use me as a sanctified vessel, that not only to pour out mercy and love without measure on other people, but that You would use me to encourage others to show the same mercy and forgiveness to their brothers and sisters in the body of Christ - and in the wider world beyond. Lord I know that in and of myself I have nothing that commends me for this special ministry of mercy and edification, for I know that without Christ I can do nothing - but praise God that in Christ I can do all things - for He gives me the strength. May I be pliable clay in the Potter's hand and permit You to shape me into the person that You would have me be and use me in Your way and in Your time to Your praise and glory, in Jesus name I pray,

Amen

- Author Unknown


8.  SONG