"Language is a kind of spider’s web in which tugging at one side of the web produces vibrations across the whole lattice."
"The relation of the human being to language might be said to be already an opening upon the sacred."
"Love is God. Love is the very heartbeat of the divine, its living essence. In loving the Other as oneself, human beings bring God into the world."
"Evil is nothing but the hesitation, born of fear, to open ourselves in love for the Other."
"The radical equality of all persons is less a matter of the sinfulness of every human being than of the fact that every human incarnates something of the divine. This new assertion of the universal, asserting the sublime unity of the divine and the human alluded to by the mystics, is to be aligned with Lacan’s logic of the feminine. Christ becomes what is 'in me more than me,' a tincture of the divine. Paradoxically, what makes us all human is less a limitation than a kind of constitutive excess. Jesus’s injunction to embrace the enemy as the friend is the perfect embodiment of the feminine logic of the non-all. The force of that injunction faces us with an intrinsically excessive demand, a demand to extend oneself into a zone of surplus, to forgive what is excessive in the Other and in oneself."
"For Lacan, the experience of the sacred echoes what is unknown and uncanny in the Other. But on that view, religion is not a tissue of wishful fantasy that veils the terrifying depths of existence. On the contrary, the door to the religious is opened by an obscure longing for those very depths. The compulsive force of the religious urge emanates from the ecstatic core of the human being, the most primitive ground of subjectivity, which derives from the archaic experience of the Other as a perpetually unsettling enigma."