Unless scapegoating can be consciously seen and named through concrete rituals, owned mistakes, shadow work, or repentance, the pattern will usually remain unconscious and unchallenged. -- Fr Richard Rohr, "Daily Meditation," March 29, 2026
Ah. scapegoating. Back in the day (when I was way younger), scapegoating was my thing; but, face it, to young peeps, scapegoating was the smart way to be. Blame was the name of the game. Find someone to blame for our own...um, let's call them errors in judgment...especially if the one we're blaming is not present. Remember?
Moving into today's world, how free from scapegoating are we in our own mind...in our free-floating thoughts?
I used to jokingly say that finding someone to blame was perfect peace. I did not consciously find peace in blaming; it was finding the point/place/person of origin where my peace began. Often, I did not even realize it...it was after spiritual growth came into my consciousness that I began to earn peace by owning, not blaming, my problem.
My peace of mind came by sharing the ownership of any upset with God. Forgiveness then enwrapped me...no fault attaches made a home in me. Best part...I learned to train that belief on whomever I was resenting. I'm talking freedom.
Truth be told, there is no cheap freedom...letting go of a prized resentment requires that we release it before it becomes prized. Hug it and kiss it and let it go...God's will, God's way.
Thank you.
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