Our Mission
We are a center for experiential education, rooted in the Gospels, encouraging the transformation of human consciousness through contemplation, and equipping people to be instruments of peaceful change in the world.
August 9, 2011

Jesus with Mary and Martha (detail), Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, c. 1650
Jesus As Liberator
What does Jesus liberate us from? This won’t sound too different from what we now call the ego, which was not the term Jesus used. His phrase, and we all know it, was “unless you lose yourself, you cannot find yourself” (John 12:25). Jesus did not have access to psychological language. He did not need it. He spoke in a straightforward way that his contemporaries could understand. But the interesting thing is, although his teaching is clearly about freedom from the false self, both Catholic and Protestant scholars, trapped inside the same European worldview, arrived at the same conclusions: liberation from the body self, not the false self.
I think this happened because the body carried shame. The body carried guilt. When one had too much to drink, too much to eat, or had been involved in superficial or dishonest sex, the body knew it. We knew that this was not what we were about, so we naturally felt shame and guilt in regard to mistakes we made with our body. It was easy to capture this. But do you know what? Mistakes we made with our ego, like pride and ambition, did not cause us to feel shame. We actually felt them as an empowerment. This is the ego we have to free ourselves from.
Adapted from Jesus as Liberator/Paul as Liberator (CD, DVD, MP3)
![]()
![]()
Starter Prayer:
O God, stretch my heart
so I can reach the height and depth
of Jesus.
If you are inspired by Fr. Richard's Daily Meditations,
please consider receiving both
Radical Grace, the publication of the CAC
and visiting the CAC Mustard Seed Resource Center!
![]()



