The Call Os Guinness Pdf

The Ultimate Why
  1. See full list on scribd.com.
  2. Finding and Fulfilling the Central Purpose of Your Life Os Guinness. Word, 1998, 249 pp. God’s Call impacts all areas of life and society. This is not a superficial book. It covers a broad scope and includes many gems of wisdom.
  3. Guinness can help you discover answers to these questions and more through a corresponding workbook perfect for individual or group study. With tens of thousands of readers to date, The Call is for all who desire a purposeful, intentional life of faith. The Call (376) by Os Guinness.

The Call, written by Os Guinness, explores the nature of God’s call. The Call it has impacted my thinking greatly. I had a brief knowledge of God’s call before this book, however it has enlightened my thinking and broadened my understanding of the depth of God’s call. Throughout the book, Os, describes two main types of calls.

Summary
This chapter adresses the need for a why in life, the idea is that the vast majority of the persuits in our life do not actually adress the 'why' of life. The idea is that in order to ground our lives in a solid 'why' only the call of God is strong enough. Os sums it up like this: '

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calling is the truth that God calls us to himself so decisively that everything we are, everything we do, and everything we have is invested with a special devotion and dynamism lived out as a response to his summons and service.' (pg 4) Os seems to be of the mind that life can only find true meaning when it is lived as a response to something from outside of itself. The ultimate source to respond to is God, and he is most certainly outside the scope of our direct physical and temporal life. 'That is why calling provides the Archimedean point by which faith moves the world' (pg. 7)
Freedom
The first intersting in this chapter is the re-opening of the discussion on freedom that was started in the introduction on pg viii. Os here uses Dostoevsky's BookThe Brothers Karamazov to make a metaphor to the emptiness of life when there is no purpose. In my opinion it is perhaps a misleading metaphor. I was reading a quote by H.L. Mencken and thought of TBK's Inquisitor.'[The average man] is not actually happy when free; he is uncomfortable, a bit alarmed, and intolerably lonely. Liberty is not a thing for the great masses of men. It is the exclusive possession of a small and disreputable minority, like knowledge, courage and honor.' It echos the same concept that in general people do not actually want to be free. Just as te Inquisitor says 'For the secret of man's being is not only to live... but to live from something definite' so we find it mirrored in Menchen's words.
This is important because we need to remain aware what Os thoughts are on the issue of freedom. Remeber that in the introduction all three ways of purpose (answers) adress freedom in some way. The eastern says it is the freedom from individuality, the secularist says it is the freedom to choose it for yourself, and the Christian say it is the freedom to answer the call.
Personally I feel that freedom is something that is very misunderstood and is a much more daunting concept that it is often portrayed to be. To be free is to be totally responsible for oneself and to have to affirm life. The notion that mankind is not up to the task is not hard to believe. Our entire society and culture is securely focused on defering our responsibility to another so that we may give up our freedom and loose our individuality in the masses. The idea that freedom is an inalienable right places freedom in a passive position. But freedom demands action and is not passive at all, that is why the words of Nietzsche, the Inquisitor, and Mencken seem to ring more true. Only a select few, the strong, actually have the fortitude required to embody and embrace freedom and through it life.
Kierkegaard
On page 3 Os quotes Soren Kierkegaard: '

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The thing is to understand myself, to see what Gad really wants me to do; the thing is to find a truth which is true for me, to find the idea for which I can live and die.' Now the thing about Kierkegaard is that he a true subjectavist, and that for him all of life is in the moment and needs to be experienced. He abhored the idea of trying to objectively look at life, to try to evaluate life on some impersonal level. Os seems to let this understanding slide as it conflicts directly with his idea of the Archimedean point on page 7. Kierkegaard wants to find what is true for him because that is the only turth that is actually important, truth as defined or understood by some other standard is worthless. Only a truth that is derived directly from the personal experience and living life of Soren is valuable to Soren. If anything Kierkegaard would argue with Tocqueville and say that to posit the importance of life beyond it is a horrible act indeed, for it devalues life lived to the point of mearly and opening act... Nietzsche would agree.
The Call Os Guinness PdfScience
The critique of science in this chapter along with the other things mentioned on page 4 is not so much that any of these things are bad, but are just not capable of providing meaning to life. It allows us to explore life and its intricacies but is hard pressed to give us the answer to the why question. The fear though here is to throw the baby out with the bathwater, philosophy, science, politics, and religion are important for the very fact that they allow us to add flesh to the framework of life.

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Archimedes
I feel the need to comment on this again, Os says that 'calling is the Archimedian point by which faith moves the world'. Guinness

The Call By Os Guinness Pdf

What does that mean though? is he saying that calling allows us to view life from a totally objective position? is he suggesting that calling allows us to clearly see life for what it is, and our purpose within it? The problem with this concept though is the very ideal that makes it appealing for science. In the world of science to view something without ones viewing effecting the results is always the goal. Some studys of subatomic particles suggest that even viewing events such as the movement of electrons has an effect on them. But to apply this to life seems counterintuitive, why would we strive to remove ourselves from our own life? I like Nietzsche's idea of the affirmation of life and the importance of our time here, regardless of what the future holds to make light of our life by placing more importance on something beyond seems not only silly but horribly degrading to our lives.