Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel was a Polish-born American rabbi and one of the leading Jewish theologians and Jewish philosophers of the 20th century. Heschel, a professor of Jewish mysticism at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, authored a number of widely read books on Jewish philosophy and was active in the American Civil Rights movement.
SEED QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION: What does radical amazement mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you felt radical amazement? What helps you keep your sense of wonder alive?
The complete cycle of creation & destruction ,birth & death is radical amazement.What we do between this gap of life & death is human.Relaxing in the garden sit out witnessing the plants flowering right from the exotic heliconias, orchids to simple bougainvillea & so on........Same with fruit trees-- sweet guavas,juicy mangoes........so on is demystifying the divine. The rimzim rains,the sun and then the colourful rainbow is understanding the heavens.Livng positively in the present to manifest the qualities of the soul- love,compassion,friendship,forgiveness......helps remain alive to the wonder.
Gosh!!... Radical Amazement! There is so much to share! For me, it is the silence of nature with its unpolluting sounds, the flow of natural life-the songs of birds, the buzzing of bees, the smell of the wet earth, the changing seasons, the laughter of a child, the gurgling of a brook, the mighty mountains, the endless universe, the curiosity and courage of mankind, the beauty and diversity of birds, animals, insects, rocks, landscapes, cultures, people, the traveling clouds, the blowing breeze, the whistling brooks, magnificent trees, the feeling and rapture of being in love, my own breath and awareness... I am perennially and radically amazed!!
Jesus said, "Come as a little child." Children are brimming over with irrepressible wonder and radical amazement. To me, this is the essence of prayer and worship, of being fully present, of living in the Now. Gratitude and blessings to all mothers. Namaste.
I just turned 58 and like the wonderment of a child, I still get excited to get on a plane and fly. I have to sit by the window always and am still in such awe trying to comprehend how this big heavy plane can be up in the air! And that there's only a few feet of metal and whatnot between me and the space below. Sunrises and sunsets still amaze me as do spider webs, birds feeding their young, lightning, and the destruction of wind and rain and other natural occurrences. I give thanks often from the heart. Being grateful for just being alive (even during the times it sucks) is something I am daily.
As Rumi said " Sell your cleverness and purchase bewilderment"
Do we need the notion of 'he' to wonder? Anytime I lookup i am in a state of radical amazement, how is that tiny little me can look up and find our about the trillion stars and billion galaxies out there, wondering and wandering has been lost in our times but we don't need 'he' gods or goddesses anymore, just look up at the sky
When the capacity of my mind is overloaded with the wonder of conceptual awareness of the Cosmos and its vastness, and mindful vipasana has allowed acceptance of this wonder, I keep my earthly sense of wonder alive through sensory experience of nature walks, wild flowers, and other life humming around in nature. Watching wonder in the eyes young children also nourishes the wonder of discovering life playing its creative dance of curiosity.
There is this space where radical amazement, wondering and 'flow' happen in tandem....it is like an edge which is so easy to slip off, like a zone of sorts....
In this zone the Universe is winking, coincidences are happening and there is a feeling of even more "Wow"s.....
This radical amazement for me comes from a complete acceptance of NOW, or not 'minding' anything....time and again I slip out of it....and yet is something I love experiencing :)
Wishing you all loads of radical amazement
Radical amazement is a very basic sense of astonishment, wonder, and awe about all existence. Very unfortunately, we as a people have lost awareness that all that is is sacred. We separated the sacred from life and nature, and then seem to have forgotten the sacred. We don't live in an awareness that all that is is an incomprehensible mystery and miracle. I feel radical amazement when I slow down, be still, open my eyes and see the wonder that we live in. Some times of feeling radical amazement have been during reflection and meditation and when I take the time to see and appreciate nature and in close connection with another. Reminding myself frequently that all that is is one and sacred helps me keep my sense of wonder alive.