14 Quotes & Sayings By Peter Rollins

Peter Rollins was born in Evanston, Illinois in 1946. He received his B.A. in Physics from Stanford University in 1968 and M.A. in Psychology from California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in 1969 Read more

Author of numerous books on psychology, including The Parable of the Tribes, The End of Certainty, and Blind Faith, Peter is the author of two prize-winning novels: The Gate (winner of the 1986 National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction) and To the End of the Land (winner of a Pulitzer Prize). He is a professor of English at Hamilton College and a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship.

1
A faith that can only exist in the light of victory and certainty is one which really affirms the self while pretending to affirm Christ, for it only follows Jesus in the belief that Jesus has conquered death. Yet a faith that can look at the horror of the cross and still say ‘yes’ is one that says ‘no’ to the self in saying ‘yes’ to Christ. Peter Rollins
That which we cannot speak of is the one thing...
2
That which we cannot speak of is the one thing about whom and to whom we must never stop speaking. Peter Rollins
3
The argument is made that naming God is never really naming God but only naming our understanding of God. To take our ideas of the divine and hold them as if they correspond to the reality of God is thus to construct a conceptual idol built from the materials of our mind. Peter Rollins
4
Orthodoxy as right belief will cost us little; indeed, it will allow us to sit back with our Pharisaic doctrines, guarding the ‘truth’ with the purity of our interpretations. But orthodoxy, as believing in the right way, as bringing love to the world around us and within us … that will cost us everything. For to live by that sword, as we all know, is to die by it. Peter Rollins
5
There is a deep sense in which we are all ghost towns. We are all haunted by the memory of those we love, those with whom we feel we have unfinished business. While they may no longer be with us, a faint aroma of their presence remains, a presence that haunts us until we make our peace with them and let them go. The problem, however, is that we tend to spend a great deal of energy in attempting to avoid the truth. We construct an image of ourselves that seeks to shield us from a confrontation with our ghosts. Hence we often encounter them only late at night, in the corridors of our dreams. Peter Rollins
6
Our real beliefs are generally not to be found at the level of ego. Peter Rollins
7
What we see taking place in the church today is the reduction of God to an idol. Peter Rollins
8
This book is about a salvation that takes place within our unknowing and dissatisfaction, Peter Rollins
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Truly embracing the fragility and tensions of life...brings with it the possibility of true joy. Peter Rollins
10
Here God is not approached as an object that we must love, but as a mystery present in the very act of love itself. Peter Rollins
11
What if the church should be less concerned with creating saints than creating a world where we do not need saints? A world where people like Mother Teresa and MLK would have nothing to do. Peter Rollins
12
In contrast, the a/theistic approach can be seen as a form of disbelieving what one believes, or rather, believing in God while remaining dubious concerning what one believes about God (a distinction that fundamentalism is unable to maintain). Peter Rollins
13
In contrast we let go of existence, meaning, and the sublime as categories to describe the object “God.” Instead these become ways in which we engage with the world. Yet, as we affirm the world in love, we indirectly sense that in letting go of God we have, in fact, found ourselves at the very threshold of God. Peter Rollins