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English Pages [340] Year 1976
Tte Otter 3fcfe of 3ilence Q.
Gakfe to Christian Atelitation
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PAULIST PRESS
NEW YORK MAHWAH •
i,\
Copyright
O
976 by
1
The Missionary
Society
of St. Paul the Apostle in the State of
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All rights reserved.
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Acknowledgments Roberto Assagioli,
M.D PSYCHOSYNTHESIS: A MANUAL OF PRINCIPLES ,
AND TECHNIQUES. New York, The Viking Press, The T.
Psychosynthesis Research Foundation,
S. Eliot,
"Burnt Norton"
copyright 1971 by vanovich,
New
Louis Evely,
Esme
in
New
York,
1971. Used with the permission of
New
FOUR QUARTETS.
York.
Copyright 1943 by T.
S. Eliot;
Valerie Eliot. Reprinted by permission of Harcourt, Brace, Jo-
York.
THAT MAN IS YOU. Westminster, Maryland, The Newman Press,
1965.
Used with permission.
Edward
"The Journal Edward Fischer.
Fischer,
permission of
as
Worship," from
WORSHIP,
vol.
47, no.
8.
Used with
THE MYSTICAL ELEMENT OF RELIGION AS CATHERINE OF GENOA AND HER FRIENDS, Vol. II.
Baron Friedrich von Heugel,
STUDIED London,
J.
IN SAINT
M. Dent and
William Johnston,
THE
Sons, Ltd., 1927. Used with permission.
STILL POINT: REFLECTIONS
TIAN MYSTICISM. New
York, Harper
&
Row,
ON ZEN AND
Publishers, 1970.
CHRIS-
Used with permis-
THE COLLECTED WORKS OF C. G. JUNG.
Ed. by Gerhard Adler, Michael Fordham, Herbert Read and William McGuire. Trans, by R. F. C. Hull. Bollingen Series XX, Vol. ii, Psychology and Religion: West and East. Copyright 1958 by Bollingen Foundation and O1969 by Princeton University Press. Reprinted by permission of Princeton University Press. London, Routledge and Kegan Paul. Used with permission.
C.G. Jung, ANALYTICAL Copyright Oi 968 by Heirs of
C G. Jung,
a Division of Random House,
Inc.
PSYCHOLOGY:
ITS
all rights
THEORY AND PRACTICE.
reserved.
MEMORIES, DREAMS REFLECTIONS. Translated by Richard and Clara Winston.
Jaffe.
of
Random House,
St.
Inc.,
John of the Cross,
Kelsey,
DARK NIGHT OF THE Press.
New
SOUL.
ENCOUNTER WITH GOD.
Kierkegaard,
Recorded and edited by Aniela
York, Pantheon Books, a Division
Translated by E. Allison Peers.
Used with permission.
and copyright, 1972, Bethany Fellowship, Srfren
Pantheon Books,
1963. Used with permission.
New York, The Newman Morton T.
New York,
Used with permission.
Inc.,
Reprinted by permission. Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
FEAR AND TREMBLING
and
THE SICKNESS UNTO
DEATH.
Translated by Walter Lowrie. Copyright 1941, 1954 by Princeton University Press, Princeton Paperback, 1968. Reprinted by permission of Princeton University Press.
George Maloney,
THE BREATH OF THE MYSTIC.
sion Books, Inc., 1974.
Arthur Miller,
Denville,
New Jersey, Dimen-
Used with permission.
AFTER THE FALL. New York, The Viking Press,
Inc.,
1964. Used with
permission.
THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION: A HISTORY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE, Vol. 2, The Spirit of Eastern Christendom (600-1700).
Jaroslav Pelikan,
Chicago,
The
University of Chicago Press, 1974. Used with permission.
WRITINGS FROM THE PHILOKALIA ON PRAYER OF THE HEART. Kadloubovsky and G. E. H. Palmer. London, Faber
lated by E.
&
Trans-
Faber, Ltd., 1954.
Used with permission.
Jim
Elliott in
an interview with Dr. Ira Progoff on "The Intensive Journal," released in House Associates by Explorations Institute, Berk-
duplicated form in 1971 for Dialogue eley, California.
C.J. Jung,
Used with permission.
MODERN MAN
IN
SEARCH OF A SOUL. New
York, Harcourt, Brace,
Jovanovich, Inc. London, Routledge and Kegan Paul. Used with permission.
T. S.
Eliot,
THE COMPLETE POEMS AND
court, Brace
and World,
Inc.,
1952.
PLAYS:
1909- 1950.
New
York, Har-
To Paisley Brown Roach, faithful co-worker
and friend.
Contents Introduction
Part
A i.
Encountering
2.
Intimacy,
God
Basic Perspective
7
An and Meditation
16
Part
The
4. 5.
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need
6.
To
7.
The
8.
A Word
Whom Do We
Two
Basic Climate for Meditation
The Climate of Meditation The Spiritual World as the
3.
One
Pray?
31
Soul's Soil for
3 3
God
42
57
Power of Love 62 Warning and Encouragement
Creative of
70
Part Three Preparations for the Inward Journey
9.
Time
10.
Silence:
1 1
Aids
83 Discovering the
Way
in the Practice of Silence
Inward 1
93
09
Part Four
The Use of Images 12. 1
3
Silence,
in
Meditation
Mysticism and Religious Experience
Exploring the Nature of the Spiritual World vii
125 1
6
3
Contents
viii
14.
Developing Imagination: Stepping into the Inner World
15.
A
16.
Putting Imagination to
Check
List for the
Venture Inward
Work
192
208 Part Five
Adventures on the Other Side of Silence
17.
Windows Inward
Notes
309
239
1
78
Introduction Many
people seem to
down
to cases spiritually,
some
of finding
meditation
feel that
Christian meditation. In fact
more and more
have turned
to
is
not for everyone, particularly
way
people, seeking a
of getting
Eastern ways of meditating in the hope
Much
discipline that the ordinary individual can follow.
has
been written about these Eastern disciplines. But neither the Western novices
in
Zen or Yoga or Transcendental Meditation nor the more experienced writers about them seem to realize that there
method of meditation available
a powerful and unique Christian
is
This Christian way of meditating can bring reality
and new
common
all
many
fact,
Jesus of Nazareth
new
known.
He
way
is
everyone, particularly people like the publican
whom
chance and those
life
It
God which He
Dante's conception of heaven,
who
for
It
is
for
not think they have a
has beaten down. Simple people and beginners can
have a genuine encounter with God. presence and love of
who do
way
offered a
not just for the in-
or the full-time professionals or the particularly adept.
tellectuals
it.
vision of
was the most democratic and down-
the religious leaders the world has
people to encounter and experience God. His
everyone
wishes to use
people a whole
effectiveness in their living.
As a matter of to-earth of
who
any ordinary person
to
in
is
a matter of learning to respond to the
already offers
us.
It
enters at all also has
some
much
very
is
which each person has a particular basic experience of the
like
place, while
whole of the
heavenly spheres.
This
On
is
quite a different idea from that found in most Eastern meditation.
the one hand, the idea
is
to
expressed in Jesus of Nazareth.
God
respond to the loving concern of
Most
so well
people can learn this response, and the
broken, downtrodden and oppressed of this earth have the easiest access to this
The poor
response. tage.
Our
part
is
in spirit, the
hungry and the seeking have a
Eastern religions, on the other hand, usually
which one detaches oneself from the world,
cipline by
viduality
and merging with the Cosmic Mind
sciousness. reality as a
which one
The
basic difference
Lover
to
whom
one responds, or
seeks to lose identity.
to
between the two
It
made
advan-
us.
the painstaking dis-
stress
losing personhood or indi-
become one with pure conis
whether one
sees ultimate
as a pool of cosmic consciousness in
takes an extraordinary
amount
experience to decide between these deeply different views of
could be
special
mostly to accept the hand already stretched out to
only on the basis of prejudice or naivete. In
life.
this
A
of living
and
snap decision
book
I
am
trying
Introduction
2
Western point of view of ultimate
to present
some
as Lover.
This most basic idea of Christianity
of the evidence for the
today in either religious or secular
We
in the
West
live in
much
not given
is
circles.
an age which has doubts about people's
reach out of the physical and material world and touch anything at
have passed beyond these doubts. But
rate scientists
ability to
The
first-
popular science, usually
is
it
all.
years behind the times, that influences the average individual, and popular
fifty
science
box.
is still
If
caught
any way
sees
box
to get out of the
and
effort to a
And how to
break-out experience.
most Western Christian professionals have forgotten
TM,
so people, to
hungering
Yoga and
for a spiritual
dimension
in
With
that
meditate and they
modern
science.
to Zen.
in the experience, there
experienced.
give
is
turn to the East, to
life,
Since the aim in most varieties of Eastern meditation
sonhood
would
it
who
the tragedy
are caught within a view of the universe no longer accepted by
And
at all,
could be done only by religious professionals
this
their total attention
materialism that confines us to a space-time
in the kind of
modern world
the
probably say that
no personal way
is
to lose one's per-
is
what
to describe
is
sought or
the exception of Transcendental Meditation, which has devel-
oped easier techniques and some quite
which only the adept can ers
reality
consideration
must generally enter
follow, blindly.
specific goals, these are very difficult
open only
to a select
Those on the outside are not drawn
are simply to live on in reflected glory until they
ways
few and which Western-
come
in;
they
more favorable
to a
karma.
There meditation
is
no doubt that the experience described by the advocates of Eastern
is
a real and valid one, and
from both East and West
who have
we can
experienced
learn it.
experiencing the same reality, and they are just as
much by
studying those
But there are other ways of real.
Simple peasants some-
times have equally important experiences in the Eucharist or praying the rosary
or repeating the Jesus prayer.
imagination
Lover
— which
who
is
Still
others find
one way of experiencing
by turning inward through
it
reality
— and meeting the divine
then draws them on to deeper religious experiences.
religiously untutored,
conversed with
The windows
God
have used
in a natural
this
way about even
of ancient Gothic cathedrals
have also been launching pads
for
Many
people,
imaginative method unconsciously as they the trivialities of daily living.
and the
numerous
icons of Eastern
Orthodoxy
individuals to enter this imagina-
tive venture.
Thomas Merton was one that imagination has creative
writer about the
life
of prayer
and constructive uses
in the
who came
conferences he held not long before his fatal journey to the East,
some length
of the need to liberate imagination
to realize
contemplative
and allow
it
life.
Merton spoke
to be
In at
used for the
purpose of discovering relationships between things, creating symbols, and finding special or
new meanings. He noted
that imagination can discover real meanings,
Introduction
3
not just produce distractions and delusions, and he stressed reading the Bible imaginatively, both as a
meaning contained These
way
discussions, taped at his conferences,
mous book, Contemplation and secular
the cloister
were published
posthu-
in his
World of Action. Merton knew both the life of He knew heights and depths of the interior life, and in a
life.
our culture against using imagination.
also the prejudices in er,
of exercising imagination and also to find the full
in the Bible.
he would undoubtedly have had
much more
he had lived long-
If
about
this subject. His ways the importance of my own reasons for writing about imagination and trying to show its place in our prayer life. His ideas open
to say
discussions suggest in various
the
way
to discover
how
fulfilling relationship
imagination can be developed to lead one into a deep and
with God.
we
In the pages to follow
have doubts about the reason.
It
this
Most people who are capable
gifts.
method.
It is
not the only way, and
individuals of certain psychological types.
have shared
have found
it
of the parish church of ences, held here
hope
is
it
falls
it
which
I
into the
hands of
was
still
Some
who
The encounter with God and the Risen by those who turn toward Him,
find
and are then transformed by
find
this experience.
when
lectually
Christianity
was most
is
book: Encounter with God. This
method
is
it
What
creative.
a practical
in
my
confer-
Notre Dame.
I
a present possibility. This
manual
am
I
is
trying to offer
not a
manual
intel-
have written such a
I
for those
of finding the encounter, learning
is
general use in the
in
This
demonstrating the possibility of the encounter.
to try out this
ticing
and
alive
I
new meaning and hope and
an understanding of one neglected method of meditation days
whom
useful.
it
Christ
verified
love,
heard about
classes at the University of
others
not touch
were members
of these people
rector; others
my
in
who
of listening to
may
it
However, many people with
most helpful.
and abroad, or
which such an
in
particularly helpful for those
is
or the value, of meditation for whatever
possibility,
requires no great
dreams can use
their
one simple way
shall consider
encounter can be found. This approach
what
who would
it is
like
like
and prac-
it.
I
am
deeply grateful,
for nineteen years in the
first
of
all,
to the
band of people who met with
Thursday morning prayer group
at St.
me
Luke's Church,
to the Reverend Stuart Fitch who assisted so ably with this group, in which many of the ideas suggested here were tried. I am also much indebted to those who have attended my conferences on meditation and have offered so many sug-
and so
gestions.
Dame
—
I
am
particularly grateful to the students at the University of Notre
graduates,
undergraduates, seminarians, priests and ministers, nuns,
directors of religious education in various
me
in courses
on
feedback and so I
am
religious experience
many
denominations
— who have worked with
and who have given
me
so
much
honest
helpful suggestions.
grateful to those followers of C. G. Jung,
Max
Zeller
and Hilde and
Introduction
4
James Kirsch, who showed me the reality of the spiritual world and how one could reach it, and so opened me to an understanding of what the early Church Fathers were talking about in their discussions and meditative writings. also thankful
beyond words
for the friendship of
I
am
John Sanford who has shared
with me, listening and discussing nearly every aspect of the spiritual world, and to
Leo Froke, a wise
shown me rity,
rather than
down
away from
and
it;
and
to
literature,
who
Richard Payne
who
suggested that
has
matu-
religious experience can lead to I
write
these thoughts.
This book would have been harder
and
and student of
psychiatrist
friend,
so clearly that meditation
to write
and
clarifying editorial attention of Paisley Roach.
to read
My
without the careful
wife and
hours talking over the subject of the book, and she has also spent reading each draft and helping to put
it
I
have spent
many
hours
within the range of nontechnical
readers. I
am
deeply appreciative to the University of Notre
Dame
du Lac
for
providing an atmosphere in which such works are stimulated and encouraged.
I
owe much to discussions with my friends David Burrell, C.S.C, Maurice Amen, C.S.C. and David Verhalen, C.S.C. who have listened and responded to many of the ideas and practices that are presented. I
am
also grateful to
Carmela
the faculty stenographic pool final
form.
Rulli, Shirley Schneck,
who have worked
Beth Gadberry and
hard putting the manuscrpt
in
PART ONE
A Basic Perspective
1
God
Encountering
Can
people's
activity given
God? Can we
be touched by
lives,
new
vitality
by the
reality of
actually find our everyday
God's presence and wisdom?
If this
we do to open ourselves to such experience? What preparation is needed, and how do we go about finding such an encounter? These are the kinds of questions that come up when people meet together is
than what can
possible,
and
to consider
about ways of deepening their religious
talk
God
'always concern about whether
have wrestled with
no good reason
experiences.
problem and
this
assume that one
to
Nor
physical things.
can be reached at I
is
have come
God
Our
purpose
This not
is
my
I
of discovering whether this
pages
is
God and know
of meditation
I
as best
to explore
which we
in
Him
is
and of meditative prayer.
have found inspiration and guidance
use of their methods for to
last
from
in these great leaders,
to St. Teresa, St.
I
my own
religious
I
human
was then able
soul that
to pass the
through the cauldron of
tual practice can
and healing today
made
began
development and
me. Through one branch of depth psychology
standing of the
life
ways
a rela-
John of the Cross, Francis de Fenelon, John Woolman and Douglas Steere. But it was only when I was
who came clear.
to
that relationship with
introduced to certain findings of depth psychology that fullest
reli-
one can
have learned a tremendous amount from them over the
Origen and Gregory of Nyssa Sales,
way
open oneself
to
is
purpose to give a history of the devotional masters and their
methods, although thirty years.
aim
the
for
Himself.
in these
can become open to experiences of
is
I
is
limited only to experiences of measurable,
Starting with this premise, the best
tionship with God.
is
to the conclusion that there
These experiences deserve consideration, and there are grounds
gious belief rests on reality or not
It
There
there any reason to doubt the validity of one's religious
is
believing that they point toward
possible.
lives.
Over many
years
all.
I
to
make
the
to help others
found an under-
the need for religious meditation very
knowledge of these masters of the devotional
my own
experience.
Only by
trying
them out
in ac-
one learn which of the various ways of praying are most for each individual.
real
—
A
8
What
hope
I
Basic Perspective
to provide are simple
and
direct suggestions that can help or-
dinary people to open themselves through meditation and be touched by the re-
My
God.
ality of
others very
purpose
is
essentially practical.
I
we
a theoretical way. Instead
in
little
shall discuss the prayers of
shall be considering
ways
in
which modern Christians can tap the resources that have enlivened the Church
and
people
its
tions. It
to
reality of the Christian
when
showed an
I
words I
with
my
who have
ideas of those
life,
I
thing
more and more
— or even simply
needed
to
clear-
as a Christian
have some experience of what discovered
I
did speak from even the slightest encounter with God, others
I
interest that
seemed
— even
I
who
really should
I
I
have been stimulated by
to get closer to that reality.
my
could read the Scriptures and say
Most
sense of contact, almost no experience.
conscious mind.
But most of the time
to carry over into action.
those
— was trying very hard
found that
little
as a pastor
could not live with myself. And, incidentally,
found that none of us
my
me one
ministry showed
go on speaking
spoke; otherwise
that
my
years of
first
about the I
and the
to test the experiences
us.
wanted
I
mainly practical sugges-
will be
Meditation?
Is
The If
ly.
and these
vital periods,
mostly a waste of time until one has the raw material of an active
is
with which
life
gone before
What
most
its
not that history and theory are wwimportant, but rather that reflecting
is
upon them prayer
in
was reading the Bible
like
prayers and offices
of this activity
came from
a student, voicing the prayers
mostly as thought forms, and more and more the feeling grew of something lacking, of facing a religious experience
dead end. At
this point
I
was important. Experiences
began of
to see that
God were
some kind
of
needed, not just at
conversion or as some specially consecrated breakthrough, but available to people's
ordinary
lives,
my own
regular and sustained
meaning
to
my
I
needed relationship with
And
life.
God
easy enough to say that
understanding
prepare so that
we
in particular.
of
it
was then
God
is
is
to Christianity.
But
can break through to
it is
God
God
as a
like
as available as possible.
a cosmic bellhop.
us.
Meditation
But obviously
What
how cenwe have simply the way
harder to realize that
includes various practices, even quite diverse ones,
ing
Him
found the real
I
seeking us, and even to stress
prepare, setting up the conditions that can help to
ences of
that
of meditation.
It is
tral this
pan
all
this
meditation does
is
make
aimed
at
does not
mean
is
this possible.
It
making experi-
mean summonway for us to
a
unlock the door and come out from the places where most of us have been hiding. It
is
the process of opening ourselves to the realm of nonphysical reality in
which God can touch us kind of prayer in which tion
is
far
we
more
directly
than in the physical world.
It is
that
seek relationship with God, and in this sense medita-
the preparation and foundation for prayer.
Encountering God So
often prayer carries with
it
9
Of course most
the idea of asking for favors.
aware that prayer is broader than this, and that any toward God and relating to Him must be included. But in actual of us are well
and
people, both lay
religious,
make prayer
act of turning
practice most
either a matter of formal repetition
or of asking for changes in the world around them. In meditation, on the other hand, there
one way of meeting and relating
One
to the
and learning what God wants of us become
want
of God. Yet the
receive better than
amazing thing
we would have
a fresh emphasis on prayer as
whom
far
to ask
God
one prays. Meeting
more important than what we
when we pray
that
is
dared
is
to
way, we often
in this
on our own. This
Jesus taught His followers to pray. In the Lord's Prayer
we
is
way
also the
are told to begin by
speaking directly to the Father and hallowing His name, putting the phasis on meeting
We
God and
expressing appreciation for
then direct our attention to His kingdom and His
will,
showing our readi-
His ways and wishes. Only then do we go on
ness to relate to
Later on
selves.
first emwhat we have found.
I
shall say
more about
this
prayer and
its
our-
to ask for
use in meditative
practice.
Most people seem
to feel that
attempted only by the most holy.
with
God
are
much more it
Orders could have any ence.
They
mystics
did
who had gone
men open
was thought real contact
for us.
it
my
available than
counters occur most often as that for a long time
meditation
It is
an
esoteric practice that
we have
way
God through
inner or spiritual experi-
the spiritual masters, the mediators, the
the route of complete
of finding a viable
and
utter
commitment
and valuable experience of God; the
requirement was asceticism and a
essential
goods and
One
to
first
God.
was the
and most
total renunciation of one's
worldly
interests.
of the real discoveries in depth psychology has been the finding by
of the foremost groups in this field that is
true
It is
that only ministers or those in religious
Until quite recently there seemed to be no reason to question that this
only
can be
been led to believe. These en-
themselves to an inner realm.
with
They were
is
experience, however, that encounters
not just the saints.
we
all
have access
to
one
an inner realm.
It
Ordinary people can turn inward and be touched by an ex-
perience of
God and
perience
contact with a level of experience other than that of sense experience
is
and reason, then
all
be transformed and renewed.
of us have this contact
If
the essence of mystical ex-
whether we know
it
or not.
Most
people are aware of dreams, intuitions, visions, hunches and other experiences that give a glimpse of something in addition to the physical world.
But where
does one, with only the ordinary problems of doing the best one can in the outer
world, turn for instruction about these experiences of another realm? Unless are forced to look for psychological help, most of us are
approach
to this
realm where
God and His
left
we
with no real
direction could be found.
There are
very few spiritual directors in the modern Church, Catholic or Protestant. This
is
A
io
one reason
Of
many
so
course,
Basic Perspective
people today are turning to the wisdom of the East. mystical experience
if
understood only as an imageless and
is
available to ordinary people. Probably that experience
That kind
ple.
of prayer
who
Teresa
St.
God
union of the soul with God, then the mystical encounter with
blissful
lived in
was
by leaders
stressed
like St.
meant
not
is
less
is
for all peo-
John of the Cross and
an age that was already occupied too much with the
nonphysical world and the supernatural. Their followers were trying to leave
concern with the material world behind, and
it
was a wise suggestion
all
that they
should not get too caught up in visions and fantasies.* But our world today faces the problems of quite a different outlook on
Today most forget that there is
come
to
is
make much
and
that realm again,
taining and fulfilling experiences of
Unless there
life.
in the outer, material
world that we
Our
a nonmaterial inner or spiritual realm of existence.
is
know
to
caught up
of us are so
some such
Why
sense?
God
if
one
is
one can
it
that give direction to the
how
can be reached,
reality that
pray,
to realize that in
task
find sus-
whole of
can prayer
life.
itself
only calling out blindly into the void?
Yet through meditation and the images that are evoked, one can touch and come to
know
the reality of the
Other who
is
actually there.
The Inner Experience
What
wish
I
an Other with
tered iety,
about meditation are things
to share
For
thirty years of struggle.
whom
me
whom
could share every experience of confusion and anx-
I
burning
reality that
offering specific directions
made
And
brought
at rarer
the whole business of
years of studying
relief
from tension and misery, or again
and guidance that rescued
moments life
this
stands on
defend
I
have come
its
own two
to
Other gave a
worthwhile.
modern thought,
is
them
know through my
feet.**
have
I
that there
experiences of the Other or to attribute
What
The
speak has sometimes been a vague presence and sometimes a
I
wisdom
ble situations.
in
encoun-
I
hope and thanksgiving, of sorrow, joy, discouragement and renewal.
Other of
ing.
have discovered
I
they have been fruitful years in which
also
joy
and
come
at times a
me from
intolera-
fulfillment that
through
to realize,
no good reason
to discount these
to self-deception or wishful think-
relationship with this divine reality
Those who experience
this reality
do not have
to
it.
*In their
own
experience, however, St. Teresa
and
St.
John of the Cross
adequately with visions and fantasies. In their writings their experiences are
dealt very
set
down
in
detail.
**For the reader who ence
is
presented in
neapolis:
some
is
interested, the thinking
detail in the first part of
Bethany Fellowship,
Inc.,
1972).
which supports
my
this
kind of experi-
book Encounter with
God (Min-
Encountering God Even
so,
reasons for
it
my
In pastoral counseling
so.
my own
from
was not only a sharing
same kind
these people tried the
Other that
them
that enabled
gamut
of
I
discovered that
I
of myself, but of something more.
me
and
strength
At the same time
was one
also
of the very factors
to begin dealing
I
— and
was
discovered that there
I
can refer the people
is
still
who want
themselves to an experience of the divine or the Other.
with the
full
— precious
little
how
open
to learn
to
found next to nothing
I
about prayer and meditation that takes into account the discoveries
written
human
about the
made by depth psychology
soul
in
its
seventy-five years of ac-
Freud, Adler, Jung, Maslow, Carl Rogers and Rollo
not have existed for
all
They have each
May
might
as well
the importance they seem to have for writers on prayer.
Yet the masters of the devotional other.
was
life.
published today to which
tivity.
often
found
same presence and
of practice, they found the
own
I
I
Other. As some of
in relating to the
found. Activity like this
to find their
was
it
meditations and methods of praying.
sharing the strength that was given
reality of the
and there are two
takes courage to write about these things,
doing
helpful to share things
that this
i i
and the depth psychologists need each
life
discovered something of the reality of the
human
each discipline has something important to say to the other. There
need for us to see meditation
in this
new
light.
is
soul,
and
a burning
So many modern Christians have
trouble with praying because they do not see
how
it
can make sense in
this
complex modern world. Some psychological thought has made the complexity
more understandable
for us.
The work
farther than that. Their thinking
become aware
their discoveries out,
is
it
cuts off
much
Jung and
When
of a need for prayer today.
these people have as
There
of C. G.
his followers has led
and practice have helped many people
much
to
the discussion of prayer leaves
of the sophisticated reading public
and
right to prayer as anyone.
One
need, of course, on both sides.
even the most religious depth psychologists been tempered with the experience of those
is
of the great weaknesses
among
simply that their findings have not
men and women who have plunged
deepest into their relationship with God. These psychologists have not grasped the range and depth
and richness of that experience, and
ance only part of the
way toward
these experiences are to the ordinary logists
who
They
it.
mistrust the entire experience of prayer
and assurances that the road ahead
On
much
left
cannot grow
sical
realize
how common
just
leads
and
where most
religious meditation,
of us need
some
direc-
somewhere worthwhile.
down to the present day, Some manuals insist upon the idea that we God without developing contempt for our
the other hand, devotional writings, even
have often
emotional
so they can offer guid-
do not
"normal" person. Then there are psycho-
and these psychologists leave a great gap tion
often
in
lives,
Western
to
be desired.
relationship with
our bodies and the physical world
writers have neglected the
in general.
immanence or
Many
of the clas-
ever-present quality of
2
A
1
God and
Him
ways of finding
the
Basic Perspectivf
been practices so
result has often
within this world as well as beyond
ascetic,
they even caused emotional disturbance in
average reader, lay or
clerical, to sift
some
followers.
It
is
even though popular devotional works of the
years have sometimes sug-
last fifty
we
the best of psychological understanding, however,
No
wisdom and
Through
can find balance
our
in
practical directions.
one has yet shown more clearly than Dorothy Phillips and her friends
did thirty years ago
Always Ours, by
set side
one begins
what a
many depth
masters and
are
the
difficult for
the wheat from the chaff in this writing,
gested practices quite foreign to the total message of Jesus of Nazareth.
devotional lives and a return to His
The
it.
one-sided and rejective of the world that
side.
By
listening deeply
own words show
same
that there
of understanding
reality.
anthology,
The Choice
Is
am
tempted
and sometimes translating the language,
Each
is
expressing the
an undeniable agreement or
is
human
with our need to stop and to pray, I
between the great devotional
is
their
master of prayer and the depth psychologist are
to realize that the
and again
In
the writings of these devotional masters and depth psychologists
often speaking of the
two ways
close relation there
psychologists.
beings.
or
Their
truths.
between these
Both of them are deeply concerned
and
to question
who
to ask:
same
affinity
what
am
I
to contemplate.
speaking to and
Yet again
who
is lis-
tening?
Quite recently
I
was
told
by the editor of a large denominational publish-
modern book on meditation which shows how
ing house that he knows of no
valuable the insights of depth psychology are in Christian devotional I
had already been
their titles
told
life.
In fact
by a major Catholic publisher that they had reviewed
and found they had brought out no modern work on the
practice or
practical
methods of meditation. The books on prayer either repeat the same old
formulas
in their
antiquated garb, or else they suggest that the traditional ways
of prayer and meditation are no longer possible.
my
In
travels, lecturing to
learned over and over again
both Protestant and Catholic groups,
how many
religious professionals are
any active practice of daily prayer and meditation. This true
among
strict
with religious practice.
amine and
to
for this failure to integrate psychological
Among
abandon many
At the same time many
Catholics, Vatican
II
religious practices that religious people
wisdom
has given a freedom to ex-
were never before ques-
have been frightened away from
psychology because of the negative attitude toward religion on the part of of the psychological tainly
in
and world-denying prac-
have been so common.
There are good reasons
tioned.
abandoning
almost universally
both religious communities and puritanical religious groups
which the members have been alienated by the tices that
is
have
I
no longer the
community. But
this attitude,
total view. In addition, as
although
it
does persist,
much is
cer-
Karl Rahner has noted, there
is
Encountering God
i
3
the great theological gulf fixed between the mystical or ascetic position and the
more
rational theological tradition.
Thus ical
the practice of prayer and meditation has been doubted on psycholog-
grounds (and some of the practices advocated by leading medieval writers
were extreme), and
much
theology,
of
it
has failed almost entirely to gain the support of rational
which
doubts on the contact of ordinary people with
casts
God. For a long time only authority kept the practice of meditation
intact
throughout the Church, and when that faltered so did the practice. At Notre
Dame, which is unquestionably one of the world's we have awakened to the fact that only one course religious experience,
and
offered in the practice of
When
by a non-Catholic.
this
great Catholic universities, is
were even a few who remarked that such a
cussed, there
a university curriculum because
it
was not an academic
was
the question subject
dis-
had no place
in
subject.
Those who are informed about young people and the counter-culture know
what an emphasis there
on meditation and prayer
is
use of hallucinogenic drugs is
is
in these subcultures.
human
often an attempt to break through the ordinary boundaries of
make meditation
ence and
and
women
easier
and
its
results
many
(and older people as well)
prayer, from
Their
not just a reaction against a square adult society;
more
Among
real.
it
experi-
college
men
are turning to Eastern forms of
Hare Krishna chanting and Zen meditation
to
Transcendental
Meditation, in an effort to find some reality or experience beyond the immediate one.
These are reactions
flannel-suit culture,
to the materialistic
and
rational attitudes of the grey-
and they may even be healthy and encouraging
These individuals are trying
to
fill
the gap in their lives that
signs.
was
left
when
Christian forms of meditation were either forgotten or relegated to the dustbin. It is
no wonder that both young and old turn
to find a
Where that
way
that can bring
them
some place
makes sense
Even that there
so is
I
find that
I
is
am
no doubt that there
is
have had
I
life.
And
about these experiences only because nothing unique
with the Other.
I
I
indeed,
in these experiences of
this relationship necessary
Although
it
would
know
still
rather be for Jesus's
is
to
my
I
possible for
do
me
to write
so for a real purpose.
response and interactions
necessity to relate to
not only for
I
my own
was good reason
years,
was asked
was driven by personal
And people
1
to wrestle with bringing
Other over many
instruction about praying in secret.
is
need.
hesitant in writing about this.
need, and even though
silent than write the pages that are to follow. There
found
Church
dimension of
to us in these last years of the twentieth century?
into relationship with the
There
outside the
does one learn about the art of real prayer and meditation in a language
are incurably religious. There
life
to
into contact with a deeper
my own
life,
God and have
but in the
lives of
others as well. I
write these pages on meditation and prayer as a beginner, even and
A
14
Basic Perspective
especially after thirty years of practice.
As Archbishop Anthony Bloom has
writ-
we are all beginners in relating human beings every encounter is
ten in his excellent manual, Beginning to Pray,
God. Indeed,
to
every real relationship with
in
new and a beginning. Our human moment we assume that we know same
is
certainly true of the
relationships have a tendency to go sour the
and
the depth
direction of another
The
life.
unfathomable Other, or God; every turning
Him
to
we are all beginners. One of the things that have learned in talking with people over thirty years is how open one must be to communicate with any other person in depth. I have also learned that the truths enabling me to relate to people are usually even more significant in my relation to God in my meditation. The more deeply one knows humankind the more open one is to know God. One comes to understand what it means that we are made in His image. Every opening of myself to God in meditation opens a new door with new potential and possibilities. As share some of these personal and intimate experiences, my hope is that is
a beginning, and in our turning I
I
encourage others
this will
lead
them
the ones
into
examining
describe.
I
to turn
We can
that the present generation
we sometimes
turies as
who By
believe that there
we
tice that leads
some
in
some
similar ways,
and then
will
and seeing how these compare with of the devotional classics
and discover
not so different from generations of earlier cen-
is
There are
also the
a place and a need in our
exploring in these ways
with which
also read
think.
is
inward
their experiences
we
can find that there
works
of those psychologists
lives for religious experience. is
a reality beyond ourselves
can communicate and which can transform our
one into deeper relationship with
this reality
is
lives.
Any
prac-
part of the practice
of meditation.
The Material This attempt
something of the experience of meditation will be
to share
divided into several quite different parts. In reality these are inseparable ele-
ments of a living process, but
in
order to understand either the process or
ments they will be taken one part in such a
whole process except
communicated except by the
We
in
at a time.
an
intuitive flash,
greatest of artists,
shall look first of all at the
life
shall
we
go on
in
shall consider
Part
II to
or environment in which
it
how
art
is
ele-
which can almost never be
art
is
certainly not is
my
forte.
involved in
one reveals one's depth. Then
shall discuss the relation of psychological types to the inner
in this section
we
and
its
can hardly take
problem of the intimacy that
meditation, since in speaking of this aspect of
we
The human mind
life,
related to meditation.
and, finally,
From
this basis
lay out one by one the elements of the atmosphere is
possible for Christian meditation to
grow and
de-
velop.
In Part III
we
shall consider several
pare to get into the practice of meditation.
ways
in
which the individual can pre-
We shall discuss setting aside the time
Encountering God for meditation, the purposes of silence,
silent,
and various ways of encouraging
including keeping a record or journal.
In Part first
becoming
15
IV we
shall
go on with the preparations
for meditation, considering
the importance of understanding the experiences that are sought and
know-
ing our point of view in seeking them. This will bring us to the gateway of the
inner world. in
We
shall look at the
nature and use of images, particularly as found
dreams, and then at other ways of awakening imagination. #
review briefly our need for historical tradition and a religious journal, the need for a group with
ritual, the
whom
We
shall
then
purposes of keeping
one can share the experiences
of meditation, and finally the need for spiritual direction.
We stories,
shall then consider
how
go about "doing" meditation, using Biblical
to
dream images, and images from other
negative
moods can be changed
into
sources.
I
shall try to
Christ so that one can be delivered from these moods, and
how
this practice
help one in depression, anxiety, or anger. This will help us to see
can transform and stabilize one's emotional especially actions
toward others and toward
life
we
shall see
how
I
shall offer
and
others,
prayer
it
is
road to the universal language of prayer.
and from
in general.
examples of meditations that have
taneously over the years, concluding with a description of the
can pray the Lord's Prayer. These,
can
meditation
We shall go on to discuss the
this fits naturally into intercessory
In the final section
how
and, with that, one's total outlook,
society.
practice of meditation in healing prayer for both ourselves
there
show how
images and then brought before the Risen
way
in
risen spon-
which we
hoped, will offer some signs along the
Intimacy, Art and
Meditation One tually
one's
Our
we
reason that
because
is
so often discuss prayer only superficially
some ways,
this, in
Speaking about
life.
is
it
in
like laying oneself
open
with another person
is
learns that all love has ple that
it
only after
is
not easy to stand
is
it
Holy should be such a
is
taking someone into the
like its I
the record of one's love
ups and downs.
am
seems
life.
life
with God. Sharing
really trusted that they will
tell
peo-
in listening to
me
of their deepest
and experiences and commitments.
religious feelings, their hopes
This reluctance to speak about religious experience stood out, almost the walls of a building, to talk,
it
it
bedroom scene where one
have discovered
I
it
experience to share.
difficult
intimate aspects of one's love
like telling of the
is
In reality meditation
intellec-
for public examination.
our weakness and fear and exaltation. Perhaps
strange that contact with the this
and
the most personal and intimate aspect of
meditations reveal what matters most to us, and
naked before others
Yet
is
among
Dame. When
students at Notre
would be about some book or
idea. If
then in another hour of listening and talking
I
I
they
passed muster
first
like
came
in
in that situation,
might hear about problems with
parents or a brother, or in the dormitory; their sense of loneliness and isolation
and problems of full
was
identity.
of sexual fears still
and
And
after that test
another level of sharing which
vinced that
would not doubt or
I
I
might then be admitted
tales of sexual peccadillos,
some not
found only
I
when
ridicule or pressure. It
so minor.
to a
room
But there
they were quite con-
was then
that
I
was ad-
mitted to their religious experience, their sense of the presence of God, their
know Him better. way with a friend and
feel-
ing of closeness and desire to serve and It
takes courage to share in this
another person into
this deepest level of
ultimately vulnerable, for
deepest values are and
human
it
Other who
is
And
it
human
requires even
at the heart
counselor. Allowing
experience makes any of us
allows the other person to discover where our
where we can be touched.
being the center from which
real courage.
our
we move
more
We
are exposing to another
or wish to move. This demands
of us to open ourselves in depth to the
and center of 16
reality.
Most
of us are afraid to try
Intimacy,
we have
because
We that
hard to believe anything
our heads,
try, in
to accept
we
ality in the universe,
among
retribution
among our else.
that reality
We
so
and
7
and judgment and the wrath of God our nerves and
what Jesus Christ
it
Even when we
cells.
reveals to us about the ultimate re-
are not truly convinced.
It is
and
so easy to find anger
and
lack of acceptance even
and family, that we keep on projecting upon God
closest friends
And
justice
else in
people, to learn about criticism
what we have known from thing
i
not been able to take the Christian revelation really seriously.
have heard so much about
is
it
Art and Meditation
people.
There seems
to be little reason to expect
any-
requires real courage to turn to the center of things, to face
what
find out
is
there.
are not really sure that Jesus
knew what He was
when He
described
God
peering into the desert waiting for a
wayward
child to
story of the prodigal son,
talking about in the
who
as that father
come home
stands
so that
He
can pour out upon the child the incredible richness of His love and concern.
This If
is
we
and
our
love, then
lives,
God
could be like
Then,
God
about
religion,
too,
many
way
threatens our whole
it
of
life.
to turn
to act
on that
away from
would be
for being,
takes a genuine act of will,
it
and then
this,
we have
and reasons
of our motives
No wonder
turned upside down. that
At the same time
too good to be true.
should turn to the center of reality and actually find that kind of concern
to believe
first
belief.
the idea of popular sentimentality
being loving. Freud was certainly right in criticizing that kind of
which he described
what
consideration of
life
womb.
as a longing to return to the
is
expresses a
It
by an indulgent parent without conscious
superficial desire to be taken care of
come out of a genuine when they love in the children and make them depen-
about. But this does not
confrontation with God, with "Love." Even parents, deepest and wisest way, try not to indulge their
As long
dent.
as
dependency
is
needed, they offer
courage the child to step out toward maturity.
God? Those who have
it,
but their real desire
How
the courage to face the reality
can
we
is
expect any
to enless
of
and be confronted by that
Love are refined and transformed by the experience. They do not
fall
back into
childishness very easily.
Being confronted by love means responding, giving back Other. for
And what
His love?
St.
can
unworthy
means stepping
possibly give to
God
—
that
Catherine of Siena was once asked
that the only thing ple as
we
of
we it
can offer
as
we
God
of value to
Him
is
this, is
freely to
ours to give
the
in return
and she wrote back
to give
are of His love. Really meeting the
willingly into the refining fire to be slowly
—
our love to peo-
God who
is
love
remade and changed
one has confronted. Some even turn away from human demand upon them. They realize how powerful that experi-
into the kind of love that
love to escape this
ence can be, and they
resist
being opened up to forces outside themselves which
might loosen their ego control of ful experience;
life
one can be caught by
and change them. Love it
and forced
to
is
indeed a power-
change, which
is
painful for
8
A
1
most
human
Basic Perspective
And the touch of a human love affair.
beings.
gerous than that of a
God
loving
no
is
less
powerful and dan-
The Ways of Relationship Sometimes we conceal our
God
relation with
we
afraid that others are closer than
But once we have turned and are actually seeking
we
need for someone
will almost certainly find a
with love demands sharing of
we
are
to confront the Other, then
to talk with.
And
this experience.
prayer because
in
someone may be further ahead.
are, that
sharing
in
Real confrontation
we
realize that all
of us, even the best, are babes in the woods.
So much growth and transformation are
God
who
that those
possible in one's relationship with
are trying are like the laborers in the vineyard.
1
There
is lit-
who has labored all day and the one who has been at work for only an hour. The first and the last are not far apart. And each of us, the best and the least alike, needs other human beings with whom we can difference between the
tle
one
share our deepest experiences and safeguard against deceiving ourselves.
whom we
each need some person with level of experience,
— with
and we
whom we
also
We
can talk about any of these things, any
need a group
— which of course can be only two
can pray. Although a real confrontation with the
God
revealed in Jesus Christ often comes alone and apart, in the desert or on the
soli-
people
tary mountain top,
and
The
practice of prayer
being, our ideas
and meditation reality of the
and thoughts, our plans
We
life
to the Other.
for
more than human
When
God.
disclose love,
our
is
as
a natural
fails to
happen,
we
for the day, for the
fears,
as
human
bring every part of our
our hopes, our
week, for our entire
human
love,
our
thirst
our anger and vengeance, our depression, sorrow important to
lostness, the values that are
and meditation incomplete, and that
know
it
is
complex and varied
Other,
us,
our adoration and joy and
thanksgiving. Leaving out any part of the spectrum of
to
beings. This
wrong.
is
As we confront the
itself.
and
draws us toward other human
integral part of the experience of meeting
something
life
it
is
like
human
meeting a person
better, only to find that the relationship
life
makes prayer
whom
one hopes
cannot grow because the other
person dares to share only a small part of himself/herself.
What
true of
is
human
our best
in relating.
It is
not very hard to
At those times we want
including the darkness and shadow, so that ual better.
If
Christianity ty,
one
is
loves,
that
and
relationships at their deepest
true of the relationship with God.
to
know
to
know
is
even more are at
about the other person,
we can love or And the
one can bear everything.
God wants
all
best
know when we
care for that individincredible mystery of
us in that way, in total depth and reali-
the darkness as well as the light, the anger as well as the love. Indeed our
Intimacy,
human
desire to
Art and Meditation
19
know and love some other person in depth springs out of the God Himself. This is perhaps the most essential way made in the image and likeness of God, this way of needing to
very nature and reality of in
which we are
and
love
have had one particularly good friend
I
He
be loved.
to
once shared the very depths of
by alcoholism and sexual friend
kept
came
it.
week
together.
his
began
he stopped
AA
He
years.
But when he came back and we
had happened between time came
to
He
lived there, creatively
We
us.
talked,
it
discussed
And
this.
He
got a job.
got married
and then went
and independently,
was apparent
to
for three
that something
it
just evaporate.
keeping a part of himself from
me and
tionship from being real.
were
my He
Gradually
life.
life.
this.
did not really seem to communicate.
weakness that of course did not
each needed to
with
about
indeed broken
life
Then a came out that my friend had felt that bother me with any more of his shadowy darkness, any of the
when we
he did not want
me much
and through a vow renewed each
his drinking.
in
city.
taught
with me, a
to be able to deal
work
another
life
fear, failure in school, failure in
He
Jointly through the support of
at the altar rail,
who
broken
know
a
Once
it
was
We
both realized that he was
that this actually prevented the rela-
clear that
whole person and not
we were
both
we we
losers, that
a mask or portion, then
just
friends again.
Almost the same God. As long
as
we
story could be told over
feel
that there
out and share with God, then
some
we
is
and over of our relationship with
some part
cheat
Him
we
of ourselves that fully as
much
inscrutable reason, something hidden deep in His nature,
meet the
totality of us,
cannot lay
For
as ourselves.
He
good, bad and indifferent, in the greatest depth.
wants
And
to
only
then can His love touch every part of us and transform or change the whole.
For
many
this
reason the meditative process
different sides of meditation
Other, as there are sides of bring to the Other, like to
it
is
human
is
a many-faceted jewel. There are as
and prayer, of meeting and confronting the life.
If
there are parts of us that
like letting part of the
gem go
all
the other aspects of his
life,
when
life.
If
we want
the transformation that can come,
we
Sometimes the very things
ashamed can become the most
brilliant part of
talking about gold; they
not
life
in-
to volcanic
to each of these sides of
need to bring
ourselves before the Presence.
by that Presence
one's prayer
from one's anguish and despair
and explosive anger. There are prayer forms appropriate
we do
So many people
as prayer of thanks-
emphasize certain forms of prayer or meditation such
giving or adoration. But these are completed only volves
uncut.
of
all
parts of
which we are most
our being when they are touched
and changed. This was the change that the alchemists were
when
they hoped that the base metal might be transformed into
were speaking more of the base metal of
the metal in the furnace.
their
human
nature than of
A
20
Some
Basic Perspective
years ago Louis Evely
down
set
these thoughts about sharing
and
love:
Love must express and communicate
itself.
That's
its
When
people begin to love one another,
nature.
they start telling everything that's happened to them,
every detail of their daily
life;
they "reveal" themselves to each other,
unbosom themselves and exchange
God
confidences.
hasn't ceased being Revelation
any more than He's ceased being Love.
He
enjoys expressing Himself.
Since He's Love,
He
must give Himself, share His secrets,
communicate with
us
and reveal Himself
who wants
to
to listen.
anyone 2
These words speak a very profound to allow others to really
bring
all
know
much between God and
perhaps even more. For
and anguish, that
we
to
truth.
this
is
all
we
begin
we
it
we
of our disappointments, our joys,
and communication.
the nature of love
reason
as
It
applies
does between person and person, and
shall say quite a bit
about prayer in fear
anger and sorrow, since modern piety mostly seems to assume
in
cannot find
go wrong.
Love can begin only
can begin to love and be loved only as
a person as
God through
and comfort children,
to love
We
of ourselves to the other person,
our angers and hopes. This as
us.
God
is
to help
them
pick
certainly not less than a
Communication
is
any good parent expects
these experiences. Yet,
up the
human
pieces
when
things seem
parent.
a growing process. As one comes to trust more and
more, one reveals more and more. Sometimes these will be things which looked so black that
we
buried them deep in the unconscious.
We
could not bear to
keep remembering them. As trust and concern and love begin to grow, even these things can be brought out of the darkness.
And
until then
few of us can
ever become free of the nagging fear, hidden in the heart of nearly every person, that no one could really stand us being.
I
recall
was able did, the
one young
to reveal the things
change
It is
man
in
if
with
we
actually
whom
I
let
worked
them
see the totality of
for over
our
two years before he
he disliked most about himself.
When
he finally
him was miraculous.
not easy for us to realize that the
One who
is
love does care for us.
We
Art and Meditation
Intimacy,
have
more
to bring the
secret parts of ourselves
2
up slowly and
let
the reality of
the
One who is love be tested. This takes courage, patience, time. In fact one of reasons why I believe in a life after death is the way communication with
the
Other develops. Even
the
at the
end of that
cation with the
Other early
to
communicate with
of
them and
in
our
us,
and
life,
lives
On
it.
One who
the contrary, every
beginning
realize all along that this
Other
we
now and
another of us which strongly suggests that
trying
is
all
the parts
is
no good
all
the care
There
begins this process, and offers us
grow
to
communi-
experience of
are just not long enough to bring
are able to take, then will end the process just as
ence
just
is
this
of our actions into accord with the Other.
all
reason to believe that the
we
in the best of lives this reality
Even when we have known
life.
are beginning to experi-
then an experience comes to one or
on
this process goes
our physical
after
death.
Human
Types and Meditation
If this is true,
then quite possibly there
meaning
is
suggested that meditation can be as varied as
unique, each one
may
is
is
real
we
forget that
leaves are identical.
tinguishing imprint,
to
is
her
own way
be helpful, but only one's
When is
it
to
thinking of
no two of them are
some
rule of
thumb
no wonder that our
that
understand each other
human
beings as sociological
any more than any
identical,
even our fingers and toes and voices leave a
would make
better.
One
some order
to find
in this varia-
easier for different types of people
it
of these theories
the understanding of
is
personality types developed by Dr. C. G. Jung. This theory, which
most important contributions
The
test
she developed
one of
is
his
been tested experi-
to psychological thought, has
mentally by Isabel Briggs Myers. difficult to use.
dis-
many
personalities also differ in
unique ways. There have been several attempts tion,
totality of his or
and meaningful.
have become so accustomed
abstracts that
two
Since each person
uniquely individual and personal, will offer a relationship with the
Other that
We
we have
in the fact that
itself.
have an individual way of relating the
will
being to God. Other people's ideas
which
life
very helpful and not
is
J
Jung's theory suggests that there are sixteen basically different types of individuals,
al
and that each type has
and organizing
tion
may
well
it.
Many
be understood
its
own
characteristic
as
different
ways
individuals prefer to relate to religious realities.
we
try to
expect
He ator this
is
understand and relate to that person
him/her far
who
to be a
made
us
world. Apparently
in
and given us
He
of taking in informa-
at
different
wants each of us
which
When we
just as
carbon copy of ourselves.
more understanding than we are has
ways
of our fundamental divisions over prayer
our
ways
My
he/she
is,
After
all,
of responding
to seek
Him
in
ritu-
of
types
love another person
and we do not
experience of
best.
and
different
God
He
is
is
that
the cre-
and relating
whatever way
is
to
the
A
22
task
vidual, by
first
is
each of us to find the
for
how one
learning
relationships to the course,
honors each personality and does not try to
any particular pattern or mold
force us into
Our
He
and
best for us individually,
Basic Perspective
Other
in that
order to relate to
in
way
that
functions best,
is
Him.
and then developing one's own
way. There are certain universal
which must be followed. Beyond
that, in
relationship with the Divine, one needs to
an indi-
best for oneself as
principles, of
order to find the deepest kind of
know
and the strengths one
oneself
has been given so that they can be used in seeking and responding to God. Later
on there one's
a time to try other approaches and methods. But until one has tested
is
own way,
it
is
not wise to adopt another person's meditational practice
without knowing whether
will lead as far as
it
one might go by following one's
own way. It is
so easy for a religious leader to
ingful for
many
presented a real problem in in all.
assume that the way which
him or her must be equally meaningful
for
everyone
denominations, and also
else.
mean-
is
This has
in religious
Orders
which the actual devotional practice of one leader could be made the
rule for
For about
many
sixty years
Catholic Orders followed a meditational practice
who
based almost exclusively on the approach of Adolphe Tanquerey,
adopted
the ideas of St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross. This method holds that the use of images
is
an
way
inferior
whole emphasis on mental communion
in
and
of meditating
seeks to place the
an imageless void.
It
has value, par-
The
ticularly for certain individuals, but certainly not as
an exclusive
needs of various types of individuals could be met
other approaches, like the
very different practice of Still,
if
Ignatius of Loyola, were available.
St.
there are two sides to this matter of the individual's personality type
and his/her way of
relating to
God. God expects those of us
keep on growing, learning to use our personalities more able to
know and
relate to
even more important to of us
is
practice.
Him more
know
one's
who
seek
fully so that
Him
we
and more completely. This goal makes
own
strengths
and weaknesses
and sharing someone
way
else's
both for the leader and for the follower. This
is
of meditating
it
so that each
prepared both to share with others and also to learn from them. At
point, trying out
to
will be
is
this
important,
one way that each of us can find
hidden parts of ourselves and bring them to the meeting with God. With
mind, let us take a look at our differences in personality structure
this in
and how they
relate to devotional practice.
There introvert,
is
first
of
all
the very basic difference between the extravert and the
between one whose
and tangible
things,
interest lies in the outer
and one who
is
ward. Since extraverts find meaning
among
will probably be geared to service
prayer
life
to find
God more
world of people,
affairs
comfortable being alone and turning inpeople and
in
doing things, their
with and to others. They are
likely
often present in the outer physical world than through inner
Intimacy,
Art and Meditation
23
experiences of quiet. Yet extraverts also need time for quiet and reflection; other-
wise they have no chance to integrate what they have experienced
and
find
its
significance for their
own growth and
among
others
their deeper relationship with
God. Introverts,
on the other hand, already find the inner world fascinating and
They
easy to deal with.
are very likely to have no trouble finding an inner expe-
and then look down on those persons who
rience of God's presence,
meaning
largely in the outer world. Since they enjoy quiet,
them
for
time
to find
humans and
is
find their
relatively easy
meditate and seek a personal relationship with the
to
Other. Their need, then, other
it
be called back to the outer world in service to
to
is
to society,
which
is
but necessary for them. Unless
difficult
they will get out and deal with the realities of the outer world, both beautiful
and
sordid, their devotional
tainly
it
would seem
find the deepest
life
tends to
that the introvert
and most
fulfilling
Instead, this difference
become
unrealistic
and detached. Cer-
and extravert need each other
devotional
if
each
is
to
life.
between two types of personality has probably been
and schism
Church. In
tremendously impor-
one
real cause of discord
tant
book Psychological Types, Jung has suggested that type structure may have
been a basic factor
and
in the great theological split of the
revelation, the natural
clash
that
his
Middle Ages when reason
and the supernatural began
to
pan company.
In this
between nominalism and realism, the nominalists were basically interested
in the outer
ture.
in the
came
The
world.
This seemed to the
to
realists
them
to
were caught up by the inner world and
be the ultimate
mind was more
real
its
struc-
For them the image or idea
reality.
than the outer physical thing which was
mediated by sense experience. Because of
this personality difference, neither side
could see the possibility of getting along with the other, and so the conflict was
brought
to a head.
Besides such differing attitudes toward the outer world as a whole, most of us develop at least
we
encounter.
one of four functions that
Two
we
use in dealing with the realities
of these are functions of perception,
information about the world, usually about parts of
The
other two relate to judging, deciding about
it
how
in
which involve taking which one
to organize
is
in
interested.
and use
this in-
formation.
A
mature individual generally develops one of these functions highly, an-
other to a lesser degree, and then leaves at least one buried in the unconscious
and seldom consciously used. function, but this
is
easy for us to use.
We
can sometimes learn to work with
usually not wise until
By experimenting
we have
in the
weakest area before working cons-
ciously to find the strengths that can be used, in all areas. After
we have
this fourth
developed the ones that are
one usually ends up undeveloped
learned to function well in our favorite area and can
use an auxiliary or secondary one, and after finding a nodding acquaintance
A
24 with our third function,
do
we
Basic Perspective
can then investigate what our inferior function can
for us.*
The
first
pair of functions, by which one receives information, are the per-
and the
ceptive ones that are called the sensing
who
intuitive functions.
Those persons
prefer to use their senses, the sensing type, are interested in individual de-
Generally they
tails.
live
"get-it-done" persons, doers. Action
They
rest of life.
prayer
in is
the
They
their response to prayer
and
also to the
toward structured and familiar prayers, some often-used
their meditation into social action
more
In contrast, the intuitive persons are data, in perceptions that are received in
The
in a
are usually
are likely to be conservative in their meditational practices.
They have real need to go out from rect what needs correcting.
ence.
"now" timewise and
often find religious pictures, crucifixes, icons helpful. Their
will tend
life
meditation.
more comfortable
repeatable situations and are
like
well-known environment. They
unconscious
is
their ballpark,
and cor-
often interested in unconscious
some way other than by sense
and they enjoy
it,
They
fluence in the outer world or directly in the inner one.
experi-
either observing
its
in-
are likely to be in-
novative religious leaders, interested in renewal in the Church. Their time sense is
in the future
and they are "thinker-uppers." They seldom can handle the de-
what they think up, however. The inner
tails
of
and
since they use images
bold in trying
new ways
and understand
of meditating.
their
They
life is
very meaningful to them,
meaning, they
will
find themselves at
probably be
home
in
imagi-
native praying.
In religion
it
is
important that the conservative, stick-by-the-rule leader
does not quench the enthusiasm of the intuitive person, and also that the intudoes not expect the impossible of sensing individuals, but allows their
itive
prayer to lead them into doing something about what they perceive. At the same time, each has a great deal to learn from the other.
The
intuitive
must learn that
there are bounds beyond which one cannot step without danger, and that one's
own
value has
roots in tradition, while the sensing person needs to realize
its
something of the vast openness and freedom of the imaginative,
and
its I
came
intuitive
world
possibilities.
recall
to
me
one clear-cut example of
When
the sensing function.
*The undeveloped
I
this.
I
was working with a
whose personality seemed
in real depression,
to
woman who
be limited only to
suggested looking within and finding an image
function, being in the depth of oneself, can often give a person
and using the inferior function is sometimes a way of one most dramatically. Marie-Louise von Franz and 4 James Hillman have written wisely on the importance of the inferior function. The great mystic Jakob Boehme demonstrated its importance by developing his understanding for years around the experience of a ray of light striking a shiny pan. His inferior sensing access to the depth of one's being,
allowing the powers of
function opened the
God
way
to
to reach
him and he worked
for years to integrate
it.
Art and Meditation
Intimacy, that
would help her express her
feelings of difficulty, she protested that she sim-
There was nothing
ply could not use creative imagination.
would come. Yet, when a change
when
she realized that she had
25
finally
felt
began
bound and
no images
there;
to take place in her,
it
happened
had made her depressed.
that this
Suddenly she imagined that the bonds were dropping away from her body, and
was an experience of
there
release
which had a remarkable
effect
on her whole
life.
The
other pair of functions have to do with two essentially opposite ways of
organizing the data that one receives. These are the rational or judging functions
how we
that determine
known
deal with the experiences that
come
and feeling. The person of thinking type
as thinking
to us,
and they are and
likes to classify
arrange things according to logical or intellectual values, while the feeling individual prefers to base decisions and actions
The
first
term
is
upon human
easy for us to understand.
ly interested in logical relationships
scheme of meaning. Time
The
values.
thinking person
and how the world
fits
is
essential-
together into a total
for these individuals runs in a straight line
from past
to
present to future, so that they see things in historical perspective. Their concern is
with ideas and relationships between them, and they
cerned about
how
just aren't
much
con-
other people are affected or whether others are upset by their
understanding of things.
The
description of a "feeling type," however,
is
harder for most people to
understand. This term has nothing to do with feeling in the ordinary sense of ther emotion or physical sensation. Instead, basis of
vidual
how
is
things affect people.
What
is
it
ei-
means making evaluations on the
important to the "feeling type" indi-
the personal value or the value for others of the act or thing or person
or idea. People are important to "feeling type" individuals, and they organize their actions
and thoughts around human
moving from present
to past to present.
experiences that are meaningful to
been meaningful ues.
the
They
in
values.
They
them
Their sense of time
is
rotary,
arrive at their values by matching
in the present
with those that have
the past, and they organize their lives according to these val-
are generally quick to grasp and understand the values of others and
meaning
of
what
is
happening
to
them, while ideas and logical connections
are seldom important to them.
The
thinking types usually build their meditational
life
through connections
with ideas and theology. They find philosophy important and value the
understand
God
effort to
within a framework of ideas and in the historical process.
To
them God can be apprehended by the mind as well as through experience. Their devotional life might seem cold and detached to the feeling person, and they need the correction and support of human values and close personal relationships.
Feeling individuals, on the other hand, find the greatest religious value and
meaning
in personal service
and intimacy. The intimate Eucharist, where there
A
26
Basic Perspective
are horizontal relations between people,
is
often very important to
them and
probably more significant for them than a majestic liturgy or a finely constructed sermon.
Much
But
at the
others.
tion, first
place in a others the In
of their meditational
same
life is
expressed in loving action toward
time, they also need help to
awaken
their thinking func-
simply to evaluate the results of their actions, and then to see their
more
framework
total
meaning they
so that they will be able to
communicate
to
find.
The Kingdom Within, John Sanford has suggested that Jesus expressed what human beings ought to be by combining these various types
the ultimate of
of personality in perfect balance.
inner world. being.
He
He was
cared about people, and yet
He
in intellectual battles.
He
He was
able to turn inward and relate to the
also able to deal with the outer
He
had the most comprehensive
framework.
intellectual
perceived the beauty and meaning of the outer world and at the
was uniquely open
to the intuitive
depth of humankind. Since
we can
are nowhere nearly as balanced as He,
human
world as no other
could defeat the scribes and Pharisees
same time
we human
beings
use only two, or at the most
But as we do learn to use them, we can put them to own growth. And a part of this is learning to be tolerant and accepting of those who have other ways of responding to the divine. It is important to realize that each type of person has to take his/her own avenue to find and explore his/her relationship with God. God is found in many different ways. The important thing for me as an individual is to find a way that can begin to grow. For teachwill get me there, into that relationship, so that ers of the religious way the important thing is to learn how to encourage different ways of responding, to discover how they differ from their own, and how others can develop their own relationship. They also need to study the language three, of these capacities.
meditational use for our
I
and the expressions of
others.
Most
written by introverted intuitives (as they
would care about writing them) and by other
would usually be the only ones who
so they
must be translated
Whether we
are directing our
own
as life
another period of our
lives.
Real
lives
or others'
it is
at
life is
one time
fluid
just
us.
will not be as
Thus, prac-
important
and ever changing, and
people, particularly in their relationship with the center
When we
wise to realize that
changes within and around
which may be very meaningful
suffer
understood
to be
types.
our type structures can change tices
manuals were probably
of the devotional
and core of
are "stuck in cement" and cannot change our meditational like
our relationships with other
human
beings.
experiences and
new
people,
and
also to
reality.
lives,
Creative
beings keep changing and adjusting to the complexities and varieties of
new
at
so are real
they
human life,
to
God.
Meditation and Art
As we write about our
relationship with the Other,
we
cannot avoid get-
Art and Meditation
Intimacy,
27
we are expressing the deepest and most powerful Some people scorn art because they confuse it with wrote to me: "By making us aware of alternatives, art
ting close to poetry or art, for
emotions that
we
entertainment.
A
can have. friend
more
allows us to participate
fully in
most part not art but entertainment. our
to dull
purpose
what
of is
is
rather to
called art
make
pain rather than tools to use in curing the
There
is
mind and
for the
illness
for the
is
us less aware,
senses, to confuse us, to give a false feeling of security
These forms of entertainment are drugs
creatively."
Most
life.
Its
and
success.
drugs to ease our
soul,
or at least letting us live with
a place for relaxation and entertainment, but this
is
it
seldom
a major part of our relation with God. If
there
with the
of
Him
totality of
and
tions
who
indeed an Other
is
aware
are not
life.
and do not
and who wishes
seeks us
Him, we
relate to
Perhaps the greatest expressions of
art are those medita-
God and which
imagination which express our relations with
flights of
and we
to love us,
are certainly not dealing
enable other people to see the possible alternative ways of finding the reality of
One who
really cares for
times
which merely shows us the
art,
them and
will direct
them
of
futility
in their total being.
us on to the alternative, but the great expressions of art
which show us the that Dante,
is
of us
and
the Bible
becomes the
The
Other and expresses dimension.
The
to that
this in
any way
is
art
which
here
It is
greatest
mas-
gospel narratives.
encounter either us
futility
out.
allow ourselves to be open to the reality
Each of
reason for the tragedy and
lost this
we
lives.
stone or in the fabric of our to the
in particular the
artist as
Other and give expression
of the
religion are those
Goethe and Shakespeare are masters indeed, but the
terpiece of art
Each
and
and meaninglessness and then the way
futility
Some-
without the Other, can drive
life
an
in
come
has
words or paint or
know and
to
relate
artist in spite of himself/herself.
much
of so
reflects
who
modern
of
life is
only the barrenness of
that
it
has
shares in
life
the meaninglessness and absurdity. In the deepest sense religion, in which the individual has not been touched by the center of which feeling.
does not
It
know
touched the same center, either
is
bravado
fullest
speak,
is
cold
and un-
in the darkness, despair, or debases
entertainment. In the final analysis meditation
self into its
we
the fire and expression of art. Art, which has not
and deepest. Genuine
manner. The experience of
religion
and
art are
and give expression
credible meeting with reality
this reality
demands
is
the art of living
two names
same
for the
to that experience in
expression. This
is
it-
life in
in-
some
part of the
Those who have been badly hurt or disappointed by churches can perhaps recover something of the reality by seeing the process of meditation and
experience.
prayer as the a
final
and sublime
art
form and the most creative way of
living out
life.
It
is
seriously fear
only dangerous to view meditation as art
and
so refuse to see that real art
and trembling.
When
art
is
is
when we do
not take art
working one's salvation out with
seen merely as one's attempt to reach aesthetic
AB ASIC PERSPECTIVE
28 perfection, then
it
But
this
tual
world and so
is
loses
seriousness
its
only possible
in
and becomes a plaything and not a
a world which does not
sees art
human
merely as a
know
reality.
the reality of the spiri-
product and not a revelation of
more than human harmony and meaning. Jung warns against viewing
one's record of inner experiences as art, either
One must
written descriptions of fantasies or paintings of the inner moods.
careful not to view these as "art" because then they lose their seriousness their
power
to bring us into
a transformation within
world
is
us.
simply to view
touch with another realm of reality and to produce
One
this as
of the
mere
ways
art or
of cutting us off from the spiritual
mere
with power of the reality of art with a capital Surrealist written in 1938. This kind of Art
One
critic
who saw
is
aesthetics.
"A"
Henry Miller
in his
Open
The same
speaks
Letter to the
very close to meditation.
the opening performance of T. S. Eliot's
Party on Broadway remarked that he beating his breast.
be
and
felt like
The Cocktail
leaving the theatre on his knees
would probably not have been touched by the
critic
ordinary religious service. Yet he caught the utter seriousness about salvation
and the
reality of the spiritual
world which
is
found
in so
poetry, in the children's stories of C. S. Lewis, particularly
and
the
Wardrobe, and
in the novels of
many The
Charles Williams.
quality in even greater measure in Dante's Divine
places in Eliot's
Lion, the Witch,
We
find the
Comedy, Goethe's
same
Faust, and
more hidden way in some of Shakespeare's plays like Measure for Measure, The Tempest, Lear, Hamlet and Macbeth. Only a cheap, disillusioned or frivo-
in a
lous art
is
antagonistic to religious experience
Where
the
Church
whether they happen said,
"Morton, there
to is
fails in its task,
be
artists
and meditation.
God
uses
or psychiatrists.
a place for religion in the
whatever channels are open,
One
psychiatrist friend
Church
once
as well as in the psy-
chiatrist's office."
Humankind stands as a bridge between two worlds. Our greatest moments when we have met, nakedly and face to face, the reality that saves and transforms, and then express this as part of our assimilating the experience. Our records of such experiences give us a further step on the road. They also give are
others light to find the path they
brings
more
light
must
and consciousness
darkness to be beaten back.
follow. Everyone's encounter
into this
and record
world and allows the
forces of
PART TWO The
Basic Climate for
Meditation
3
The Climate of Meditation Living things need an appropriate climate If
order to grow and bear
in
fruit.
they are to develop to completion, they require an environment that allows
their potential to be realized.
feed
draw
light to
it,
it
The seed warmth
will not
grow
unless there
is
soil
that can
nurture and moisture that unlocks
to
forth,
its
Time is also required for its growth to unfold. Those who have lived near the desert know the miracle of a rainy year when suddenly a whole mountainside turns orange under a blanket of poppies, or a valley becomes a fairyland of color. The seeds have been there. The soil and the sun and the warmth have been there. Only one thing was lacking, and when vitality.
was
that last climatic need
Meditation
which
fulfilled, life
was profuse beyond imagination.
the attempt to provide the soul with a proper environment in
grow and become. In the lives of people Genoa one gets a glimpse of what the soul
to
erine of is
is
like St. is
Francis or St. Cath-
able to become. Often this
seen as the result of heroic action lying beyond the possibility of ordinary peo-
ple.
The
flowering of the
human
however,
soul,
more a matter
is
psychological and spiritual environment than of particular
How
heroism.
we wonder at the growth random on the littered floor
seldom
gifts
of the proper
or disposition or
redwood from a
of the great
From one seed is grown enough wood to frame several hundred houses. The human soul has seed potential like this if it has the right environment. Remember that only in a few tiny seed
dropped
at
mountain valleys were the conditions redwood,
in
growth
all,
which
spiritual world.
ture that
provide the right environment?
which are equivalent
the seed? First of
and
we
then, do
for the soul
react
Sequoia gigantea, the mighty
grow.
to
How,
right for the
of a forest.
it
Then
can grow and mature. This it
Until
then there
and bring us
to
itself.
are the conditions
soil
and warmth
is
is
it
for
can
the reality of contact with a
must be prodded from within by human need, the moisswell
we
and burst
realize
its
we
that
own
the reality of love
limits
and
so start
upon the
need something beyond our
humanness, neither prayer nor meditation become a
And
What
sun and rain, the
the soul requires a spiritual environment with which
makes the seed
process.
to the
which
own
reality.
seeks out
and
This unique Christian understanding of
desires to touch us
God
is
the light of
the sun which draws us forth. Christians have been entrusted with the knowl-
3
1
The
32
God
edge that die for
is
Basic Climate for Meditation
if
But
credible love.
it
this
means allowing
still
requires one
cared enough to
had been the only one. This under-
that person
standing gives us the assurance that there confrontation. Instead,
who
caring Jesus of Nazareth
like the loving,
any individual, even
nothing to fear
is
the ultimate
in
oneself to be open to this almost in-
more condition
for the reality of
con-
tinued meditation. It
this final step of
is
allowing our
The
expression can take innumerable forms.
by attempting
to
change a rotten
of one's concern
neighbor with a cup of
encourage the seed person
may
It
grow.
to
express that love
warps and deforms human
more
loves, letting
can be expressed by visiting a crotchety old
warm soup, or on a battlefield by lifting some And these things are not only the highest good
water to
them-
in
they also keep our feet on the ground, guarding us from the danger of
selves;
becoming
it
cultivation.
The same
take place.
Growth can seldom be
tree or a
human
It is
may
desire to
respect
fit
we
some
need
seed growing
forced in nature.
growth slowly,
its
We
seem
or fertilizer or
growth
its
Whether
In both cases
at the seed to see
much water
beings to understand that
the world around us
enough
it
is
to realize
two
our
things.
tree.
as
it is.
own
ideas.
Meditation
is
At the same time
to
silently.
have an insatiable
While there
Where
seek out the right climate.
is
we
It is dif-
no harm
it
in
try to force
meditation
is
simple and natural,
conlike
a
requires the right condi-
not provided by the secular world today.
we must
starts to
producing a
more than one condi-
understand them, too often
to
rigid pattern of
and becoming a
tions, conditions reality,
poke
things simple, to reduce every complexity to one cause.
trying to simplify things
cerned,
human
to
for the soul as
be needed to realize some possibility.
ficult for us to adjust to
reality to
along with too
must be shown
personality, nature unfolds
so difficult for
make
our humanness and our
soul, these things all take time.
need for patience. Most of us know enough not sprouting, or try to hurry
if it is
lose
reality.
For both the seed and the is
we
so involved in spiritual things that
touch with outer
touch
One
be expressions of that love in
social structure that
become apparent.
the lips of a dying man.
there
to
another by making love more real to those one already
souls,
tion
lives to
warmth needed
outer action that provides the
If
meditation
is
to
4
The
World
Spiritual
as the Soul's Soil
Most
religions believe that
humanity
touch with a nonphysical or
in
is
We are in touch with a physical world of rocks tribespeople. We are also in touch with a spiritual world
quasi-physical realm of reality.
and
trees
and enemy
inhabited by the spirits of the dead, by demonic and angelic powers. Religious
prayer and meditation were once ways that people used to deal with
ritual,
and being able
spiritual reality,
to deal
how life went with them. The early Christians believed
with that realm
made
a
lot
this
of difference
about
and that Jesus by decisive victory
them morally
disease, they
and
touch with such a world,
powers of
evil in
A
it.
and gained control over mental
in sin, psychologically in
evil forces.
illness,
Since
evil
and physically
in
gained power over these things. There was nothing more important
than keeping
for the early Christians ry,
in
had been won, and the Christian with the Eucharist and medita-
tion shared the victory of Christ afflicted
were
that they
rising again gained victory over the
ritual
in close
touch with the source of that victo-
and prayer were what kept them
of ritual and prayer in this
in
touch with
it.
The importance
framework can hardly be overemphasized. They
enabled Christians to face a hostile world with love, and even to face death with joy.
Some comprehension but related
to,
no such realm, meditation on stupidity and alistic
way
of the reality of the spiritual world, as separate from,
the physical world, at best
nowhere. This
is
madness.
It is
very
difficult to
If
there
it
is
verges
open materi-
to the reality of the spiritual world.
There
is
no
by trying something which they have been taught
one of the reasons
get secular persons to try
view of meditation.
only talking to oneself, and at worst
illusion or outright
Western people's eyes
to find this reality except
leads
crucial to this
is is
why
opening themselves
it
so often requires desperation to
to this reality
which
is
new
to
them. It
was easy
to people in that
below them peak.
It
in
medieval times to believe in the spiritual world.
age
like
in the earth,
stretched
away
It
appeared
an extension of the physical world. Hell was
and heaven
in ten
started just
straight
beyond the top of the highest
ascending layers represented by the planets and
33
The
34
up
stars,
where God reigned
to the highest level
White
Celestial
A
cance.
Basic Climate for Meditation
They
Rose.
wholeness of the
in the perfect
did not lack pictures of the soul's place and signifi-
person was the center of the universe, immersed
in
the world to which
the soul belonged as well as in the bodily one, himself/herself the of the creator God.
For
The
was
person's spirit
main concern
the only thing that really mattered.
reason the great mystics and spiritual writers of the late Middle Ages
this
could indulge in ascetic practices that today seem almost abnormal. Neither Teresa,
St.
John of the Cross, nor
dealing with the spiritual world.
much its
in their imaginations.
Catherine of Genoa speak
St. It
St.
much about
was almost too much around them, too
They hardly
took the physical body,
its
values and
needs seriously.
the
Then began mover ent of
the study of the patterns cf physical matter. Beginning with the stars and planets, step by step to the laws that govern the
atom, they showed that humankind was
tiniest
the universe.
around a
The human
from being
far
down
being was pinned
to a bit of
at the center of
matter revolving
edge of unimaginable reaches of space.
lesser star at the
sophers of the Enlightenment
came
The
philo-
doubt that humans could reach anything
to
human ever touched them. And human evolution, the modern human being has any soul at all. A human
beyond themselves, or that anything more than
with Darwin's impersonal principle of
finally,
world began
doubt whether a
to
being might well be just a
set of
more material
conditioned responses, or one
thing in a material universe that can be studied and picked apart and which will
be discarded in the end. It is
next to impossible to maintain a meaningful practice of religious medi-
tation within a belief pattern like that.
Only
the most resolute or the most un-
conscious are likely to keep on reaching out to something beyond themselves this
is
what they
really believe
about the universe
see meditation as a kind of inner dialogue that results,
but will
aesthetes
this
draw many people
and a few strange
has become
cults will
is
it
which they
live.
if
They may
sometimes produces interesting
pursue
keep at
what there
difficult to see
to
in
it
faithfully?
Perhaps a few
seriously, but for
of universal
many
of us
and urgent value
it
in the
practice.
Frankly, with the breakdown of scholastic thinking in the Catholic Church
and the
rise
of liberal
and
existential thinking in
most Protestant Churches, few
people see any place for the soul as an independent, irreducible reality with a probability of persisting.
ronment, a
soil,
By
the
same token
neither
is
there a place for an envi-
with which the soul can interact. Yet our very real souls are
what we are trying
to
work with
activity in the nonphysical
in meditative practice,
environment
in addition to
its
just
and the soul needs
its
very real involvement
in the material world.
Please note that I
am
not suggesting that the soul can act and react only in
the spiritual environment, only with the reality that
is
of the same stuff as
itself
The
What
I
am
quite an
saying
amazing
usually realize
them its
that there are
is
reality
— can
—
move
to realize
if it is
World
Spiritual
two
the Soul's Soil
two realms of redwood
like the
in
as
And
reality.
and must move
different worlds,
has
it
the soul, which
is
more amazing than we
seed, far
potential. Like the tree,
its
35
both of
in
and
roots in the earth
its
branches in the air and must have both to survive. In several other books,
show
that there
1
particularly in
no good reason
is
doubt the
to
much
psychoid* world with which the soul has
can interact
As
directly.
for
"knowing"
spiritual substantiality to the soul,
a negative proposition, which that
no
spiritual reality exists,
about the world, or
is
no
spiritual
upon the doubter
to
tried to
or
spiritual
with which
it
world nor any
prove
To
this.
This
is
demonstrate
one must show that either one knows everything
knows the very essence
else
common and
the most difficult kind to prove.
is
have
I
reality of the
in
that there
rests
it
Encounter with God,
of things.
And
both of these as-
kind of knowledge that few thoughtful people of today would claim to
sert a
have. Especially in this case
many
in
ages
all
it
would be hard
have maintained
that,
made anything
touched a reality which
sound convincing, when so
to
when
conditions were right, they
within this physical world seem pale by
comparison.
There can be
question about the
little
way
ferent worlds. This
is
Jesus of Nazareth believed.
we
expressed quite clearly His understanding that
seen in one after another of the parables
used some description of the physical world to illustrate what
about another realm of
realm and
reality. It
is
Mount
of Transfiguration.
While Jesus
preciation of the outer material world in
ed
men
to
know
their relation to
teachings about prayer, which strange
how
view. Yet,
thing to
seriously
if
tell
we
Jesus really
all
often
the world of
make
His own experience
also in
showed a thorough ap-
certainly
that
He
said
spirit.
and
This
is
did,
He
assumed
also
want-
in all
sense only within such a framework.
His It
is
take Jesus's moral ideas and then ignore His world-
was
the incarnation of God,
us about philosophy as well as morals.
The world-view
He
revealing
His understanding
evil one, as well as in
and healing of the one possessed by the demon, and on the
where
He was
seen in His various references to the angelic
His teachings about the
in
He
are in contact with two dif-
of Jesus has
more
in
He
probably has some-
2
common
with the ideas of late Judaic
and Greek thought than with early Hebrew thought.
It
may
well be that
God
waited until the climate was right to bring His son into the world. This hap-
pened when humanity was ready could
awaken
conditions are right.
it
It is
not that
God
God's
love,
when
it
can be touched whenever the
has to wait for us to
make
the conditions,
the psyche or soul. This is the world which we know through the unhas been called the collective unconscious or the objective psyche by Jung.
* Resembling
conscious and
to experience the reality of
to the realization that this reality
The
36
He
but rather that
open
to
Basic Climate for Meditation
has to give us time to adjust, to recognize our need and be
His love which
always ready
is
At the time that Christ came with
God
realm through which
this
could do.
It
was
come
to
for people to deal
could be experienced directly. This, anyone
and did not require extreme asceticism
their natural birthright
kingdom
or esoteric knowledge. Instead the
in.
was not extraordinary
it
heaven was right
of
hand, ready
at
to be entered.
The most
vivid
For these
Christ.
down
to setting
experience of the early Church was that of the Risen
earliest Christians the
when
it
came
Church from the Risen Christ with those that Jesus The reality was so close to them that they did
teachings received by the
had given
experience was so real that
the record about Jesus Himself, they sometimes confused the
to the original disciples.
not even realize they were creating a problem.
Yet
come
it
realize that
New
has taken generations of historical criticism of the
to a real picture of the historical Jesus.
He
was known
both ways,
in
We
5
New
by the
first
Testament
have begun only recently
Testament writers
to to in
the historical record, and then for centuries by the apologists and Doctors of the
Church
how
as a spiritual reality.
close the spiritual
world
This was possible because they were to
is
humankind and how they
Greek Orthodox Church has not varied from in the
can touch their
The
become
it
difficult for
Church who gave
two worlds. They saw humanity with one
world of matter, and the other immersed
What
us our Trinitarian
humankind
as a bridge
side joined to the physical
nonmaterial but even more real
in the
and the human soul or psyche
cation between the two.
dominate
the here and now.
lives in
great Fathers and Doctors of the
world-of-spirit,
to
people to realize that spiritual reali-
Christianity continued to express their knowledge of linking
Indeed the
view of the world. Only
West, when the thinking of Aristotle and scholasticism came
Western theology, did ties
this basic
aware of
still
interact.
as the instrument of
communi-
they were expressing might be pictured in a
diagram. (See facing page.)
The
space on each side of the central line represents the two realms in
which the human soul or psyche (represented by the need diagrams to realize the
world (the area on the
many
right),
and
which
forces
so
we
ellipse) exists.
affect
humanity
detail only the lesser
that touch humanity from the nonmaterial world on the
left.
We
do not
in the physical
known
realities
Consciousness and
rationality are represented by the portion of the psyche extending over the divid-
ing line into the area of space and time. into the
world of
spiritual realities.
As
is
The
larger portion of
shown, two of these
times be encountered in the world of matter, but the their
most
effective
What
it
extends deep
realities
human
can some-
psyche provides
meeting ground.
this sketch suggests
is
that
we have
tionality reveals, that in this depth there
is
greater depth than conscious ra-
a reservoir of memories and unin-
The
Spiritual
World
the Soul's Soil
as
THE NONMATERIAL OR SPIRITUAL WORLD
3
7
THE PHYSICAL WORLD Sense Experience; Experiences of Causality and
The
Space and Time
Risen Christ
Holy
or
Spirit
Memories
Consciousness
JtiMfiBk
Angelic and
Demonic
Forces
and
tegrated instincts tact
fears,
with the separate
and
through which
also a deeper level
realities of the spiritual
world.
A
aware
of
it
we
as
can so that
we
are not
moved
We
is
know whether one
usually a difficult task, to
within one's ego or possessed by an element from beyond pelling reason for trying to find out, trying to this depth. evil, as
people
need to become
willy-nilly by either a frag-
mented part of ourselves or some unknown element of the This
find con-
person needs to be in
touch with this depth to have a "single eye," to be wnole. 4 as
we
become
spiritual world.
moved by something But there is a com-
is it.
as conscious as possible of
One's being can be touched and even penetrated by the powers of is often called the Holy Spirit. Most war going on within them between the powers force of light which the early Church knew as the
well as by the creative force that
who
turn inward find a
of destructiveness
and the
Risen Christ. 5 This
is
a struggle which one cannot win by one's
own power,
but
Him
win
only by being open to the reality of the Risen Christ and allowing
to
the victory.
Meditation
is
the practice, the
one's rational consciousness
an
of letting
down
from the depth of one's
the barrier that separates
soul. In Christian
meditation
—
The
38
one
trying to
is
come
whole being
one's
Basic Climate for Meditation
The purpose
Risen Christ.
is
which
evil
unconsciously. In this
new
that
and
and freed from giving find a
to stay as conscious
But
we
we
is
make
way we
the
grant
like that described
full reality to
what
is
world, and then ask
Have we,
as
many
cant than
is
found
this
I
We
is
if
one
full
some
try not to fool our-
have suggested, then few things
Only
lives.
if
in this
way
we
are
able
our sonship through Christ. this
true, or
is
does one find out
if
can expose ourselves
what we have found
tallies
is
such a
is
a realm essentially
is
know
I
way
of only one
to
the scientists have used to
the
way
of repeated experi-
experiences of this other
to
with the descriptions of others.
more
others have stated, found something in the purely physical
there actually
there
if
same method
to try the
true about the physical world. This
ment and experience.
whether
How is
more nearly
sense only within
and
as possible
by Jesus and the early Church?
an answer, and that
deliver
and operating
can make us whole and bring us to maturity.
then, does one find out
realm of spiritual reality?
learn
same time
beyond ourselves, we would
like this
can do are more important for our
How,
find
power
and rational
to reach out to the reality that
This
center, or the
in to destructive impulses.
prayer and meditation are what
if
open
that will
brought together and given the single eye
is
In reality, Christian prayer and meditation
that
at the
seeks to keep the person fragmented
way one
such framework. Unless
selves.
way
a
center of being which allows a person to operate at
potential, creatively
do better
in
and integrating
to allow the Christ to bring the split-off, conflicting
parts of one's being into fruitful relationship,
from destructive
world
into touch with the spiritual
to the reality of this creative
and
lasting
signifi-
realm? Only experience can decide
true or not.
In this sense meditation
is
the laboratory of the soul. Like the physicist
studying the atom, or a biologist working with the
or the psychologist trying
cell,
to understand a complex, the person who turns inward learns about the realities that are found there, their patterns and how to relate to them. While this comes
by experience,
would
one does not
still
from
start
time an experiment
is
performed.
The
any more than a
scratch,
blithely forget everything in textbooks
and
scientist
try to reconstruct
and the explorer
world both need the accumulated wisdom of the
past,
even
scientist all
it
every
in the spiritual
when
has to be
it
questioned and sometimes brought up to date.
But one great
we have
forgotten
difficulty in learning
how
to use
much
about the spiritual world today
of the
wisdom
often seems that the only place to go for guidance
which,
it is
true,
can
tell
us
much about our
that is
is
is
that
available to us.
It
to the Eastern religions
inner world. But
when
it
comes
to
the practical effect of meditation on the things that are important in Western life,
Eastern thought leaves a real gap.
choice.
We
We
are then faced with an Undesirable
can accept the Eastern idea that the outer
or illusory and of no great value, or
we
reality of life
is
transitory
can turn back to the standard values of
The our
World
Spiritual
own world and go on
as
the Soul's Soil
39
leaving spiritual realities out of our calculations about
What we in the West generally fail to we have another choice, although a difficult one, and that our task what our own tradition says about this question and then go ahead
the world that matters to us right now. realize is
that
is
to learn
and
try
it
out.
There are a few the outset. First of
person
ego
To
a strong ego, a strong consciousness
to find relation to the spiritual
is
not bad.
is
things, however, that all of us probably need to realize at
all,
go upon
It
this
has to give up the ego or
established in the outer world
Him
Risen Christ and allow roots this
and
is
a
we
Our
person
who
has never
to turn resolutely to the
obligation
first
is
to sink
are able to stay on course and take
kind of direction.
Much
nonsense has been written about the spiritual world by people
open themselves
to
to this
without realizing that they were courting is
the psychotic
mental
illness that
any barrier
who
anyone
disaster.
The most extreme example
encounters the spiritual realm. Psychosis
back the
else, just as
tides
The
evil.
The
is
it,
of
a kind of
psychotic lacks
from the depths of the soul and veers with
psychotic has just as great religious experiences
valid ones, but the
anything about them except
who
realm before they were ready for
can result from failure to develop an ego.
to hold
every current, good or as
if
and one cannot very
self,
The
no position
in
to take direction.
view so that
find our point of
were trying
this
indispensable
having a strong and stable center of one's personality.
refers to
way one
well give up something that one does not have.
become
is
world through meditation. Having an
talk,
problem
having no
life
is
that he/she
of his/her
own
is
not able to do
which such
into
experiences could be integrated.
One
reason that
many
that they see
is
no understanding of the
it
people are leery of taking the inner world seriously
merely as a world of
is
people sooner or later to view
Yet
this
illusion
and
psychosis. In fact
reality of the spiritual world, the
thinking does not
fit
all religious
the
facts, as
where there
tendency
is
for
most
experience as some kind of illusion. the philosopher
Henri Bergson has
The Two Sources of Morality and Religion. For one thing, our world simply does not produce any finer or more effective people than the men shown
and
so well in
women who
are dealing maturely with this inner reality.
In taking this inner
way
6
of meditation, however, even the person with the
strongest ego needs to realize that there are dangers, that one faces a vast
of contrasting
and
often conflicting realities.
One might
are higher, the oceans deeper, the colors even
more
vivid than in the physical
world. Certainly the forces of light and darkness stand out far
we
are accustomed
to.
And
in the spiritual
world
world
say that the mountains
we
more
clearly than
find not only greater
beauty and creativity than in the physical one, but also the reality of destructiveness
and
One
ugliness, of evil
itself.
of the saddest misconceptions of the
modern world
is
the notion that
The
40 something which
Basic Climate for Meditation
spiritual
is
must necessarily be good. In
through and through only when
be truly
evil
spiritual
world that such
evil takes
when
shape,
evil.
And
there such evil
so that
the devil. For our fight
is
not against
human
and potentates of
against the authorities
and becomes unmiti-
encountered, naked and direct, as the author of
when he wrote about putting "on all the armour you may be able to stand firm against the devices of
Ephesians described clearly
which God provides,
is
usually in the
is
a subordinate or partial good
takes over, pretends to be the central or the essential good,
gated
something can
reality
spiritual. It
is
it
foes,
this
but against cosmic powers,
dark world, against the super-
human forces of evil in the heavens" (New English Bible, 6:i if.). The inner way, the way of meditation is dangerous. Any mighty
into the middle of a
tering
upon
ego), for
way, and that
this
is
blind target.
your own
and
way
You
you
not entering
it
(assuming you have a developed
forces free play. If
and bloody
you do not
get into
you become a
Whomever
of meditation,
cruelty,
colors or classes of persons,
way becomes
the darkness seizes in this
sometimes even sucking a whole nation
acts.
way
of no
them upon other
project
an instrument of destruction and
way
enter this arena for curiosity or diver-
allow the forces of destructiveness to enter and eat away at
soul, or else
know
puts us
only one thing more dangerous than en-
try to stay in touch with the forces of light,
other races or other nations.
I
is
you then allow the destructive
the battle yourself
into cruel
To
struggle.
sion can be disastrous. Indeed there
which
practice
brings us into contact with forces from the spiritual world in this
that this danger can be
and
this
met and overcome except by the
not child's play. But then neither
is
life
is
itself.
Most people are beset by difficulty and danger both from without and within. Most times when we do not see the grim reality in the lives of others, it is because
we
we have
will first try the inner
God, we see,
closed our eyes to
will find help
way
it.
But the message of Christianity
— dangerous
as
it
is
— and
provides solutions, hope, and victory, and the
we
Good News
is
that
kingdom
seek the
on the road ahead. The way of Christianity,
outer world and the one
is
as
we
if
of
shall
for both the
can find within.
And how does one come to believe in such a world of spirit? Is it by faith? The spiritual world can be discovered and experienced by anyone who really wants to find it. One acquires this knowledge by making the same Heavens, no.
hypothesis that others have made, and then experimenting with
the other hand,
is
given;
it is
a
gift
the forces of darkness in that world, but will find
powers of the Risen Christ. Faith
and learn about the tation to
is
what
to
it.
This
is
the
way one
tests
not by saying what he thinks or believes about
know
them already
in flight
one the confidence
gives
reality of that world, to use the practice of
open oneself
life.
Faith,
on
of trust that one does not stand alone against
it.
to
from the go ahead
prayer and medi-
any hypothesis— by
action,
Discovering and coming to
spiritual reality requires the action of meditation. In fact, the
time one
The
Spiritual
spends in quiet and openness,
in
dence of one's actual belief about reveals just
This a
how much one
is
stood
to the
wondering what
as
the Soul's Soil
this
and wants
me
stretched across the abyss.
to
far better eviIt
know.
recently by one friend
do next, he was amazed
And
is
world than any theological declaration.
who
edge of an abyss which he could not to
41
imagination and introversion,
believes
like the story, told
man who came
World
to
is
a priest, about
cross.
As
the
man
discover a tightrope
slowly, surely, across the rope
pushing before him a wheelbarrow with another performer
in
came an acrobat it.
nally reached the safety of solid ground, the acrobat smiled at the
When
they
fi-
man's amaze-
ment. "Don't you think I can do it again?" he asked. And the man replied, "Why, yes. I certainly believe you can." The performer put his question again, and when the answer was the same, he pointed to the wheelbarrow and said, "Good! Then get in and I will take you across." What did the traveler do? This is just the question we have to ask ourselves about the spiritual world. Do we state our belief in it in no uncertain terms, even in finely articulated creeds, and then refuse to get into the wheelbar-
row? What we do about think
we
think.
that there really will not be very
it
is
Are we willing is
a better indication of our belief than to take the
time and
The
practice of meditation
and no amount
of thinking or reason-
a spiritual world available to us?
meaningful unless
we
ing can take the place of experience.
do,
what we
effort to test the hypothesis
5 Cracking the Husk:
Man's Need It
hard
is
for
God modern men and women
for self-reliant
to ask for help
beyond themselves. All through modern history there have been voices
them
to rely
on themselves, that they need nothing
volume has stepped up among Western
Most people have become convinced
other idea.
do-it-yourself proposition.
We
and
else,
thinkers until
in recent times the
almost drowns out any
it
human
that
from
telling
essentially a
life is
reach our goals by carefully planned social condi-
tioning and by working hand-in-glove with matter and the process of develop-
ment
that
is
Is
turning to rectly? In
full potential, their full
possible for
it
Few
seen to occur inevitably in matter.
they can achieve their
men and women
people stop to ask whether
growth, without run their
to
lives
first
finding God.
adequately without
God and becoming open to the realm where God is many ways we human beings are like seeds that wait
found most for
di-
moisture to
break open their husks so that they can sink roots and begin to grow and develop,
and
this raises a real question. If
do
gested,
we
we
sink roots in the spiritual world
and
should our souls be exposed to
realm? At the outset
the answer
Most
is
this
find direct contact it
must be admitted that
not a simple and easy one.
of us
would rather
This process of allowing new
human
way we have sugwe can with God? In fact,
are like seeds in the
need to have the husks of our souls cracked open so that
beings.
One
to nourish a living,
gives
up
growing
stay put life
life
to
than seek such an experience of growth.
open up
to find a
plant.
is
While
death and resurrection for
like
new way,
like the seed that gives itself
the seed seems to have no choice, the
person must choose to experience dying in order to
live,
and
this
is
of us will knowingly expose ourselves to such an experience unless
vinced that If
one
it
leads to
believes,
growth too valuable
way. As the story
at the
all
growth
end of the
last
as
we
to cross
it
Few
are con-
a natural result of defoolish to test the soul
realities,
is
a dan-
and we should not
at-
we sense an actual need for the direct experience. As long that we can stay on this side and find all the fulfillment that
unless
are quite sure
is
it is
chapter suggests, there
gerous abyss between the experience of these two
tempt
we
to avoid.
on the other hand, that
veloping and experiencing in the physical world, then in this
painful.
42
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God life offers,
we
probably have tasks enough for one
ever, the prospect of death to turn
toward
certainly
allowed ourselves to be
we have already seen this opened up to God and the world of
We
are almost
ultimate need and
if
spirit
before the ul-
us. life.
We this
now
reality, often
turn to the questions this raises about a person's outer
without their understanding or even recognizing
people are opened to the need to search for
dangers involved
whether there
is
in
it.
Finally,
trying to open another person's
we no
we
it,
and how other
shall
is
examine the
and the question of
life,
need for everyone to go the inner way. First of
about the claim that humanity has come of age, which
Man
how-
later,
of the most confident persons
then consider the kind of cracks that open the souls of some people to
Let us
that
Sooner or
lifetime.
some
forces
other reality whether they are ready or not.
this
ahead of the game
timate need catches up with
shall
sometimes
43
all let
us ask
Bonhoeffer's view, and
longer need direction from beyond our immediate world.
Come-of-Age
human problems could be neatly packaged and sent to the low bidwe would learn at least one thing. The biggest bundle would certainly be the one labeled "Problems of Self-reliance and Maturity." To become mature, adult men and women have to learn to stand on their own feet, tackle their own needs and work with whatever powers they are given. It takes us human beings most of a lifetime to try to become mature and independent. This is known as developing a strong ego which is essential if one is ever to go the inner way. And even then, most of us never quite get over the wish to be babied and taken care of by other people. It is no wonder we often confuse human maturity with becoming independent of God. Religion itself can be used as a crutch. The worst abuses of power have probably occurred because people wanted to rely on God as a defense for their If
our
der for solution,
action or inaction. Religious people have often looked for reward in
a future
and
life
fullness of living in this present one.
was meant
change what
On
is
be and that
men and women
are foolish to think they can
what do we have
to
show
in the opposite direction? In the past
"coming of age" and trying
"know-how" and
skill
in
to
make
it
for the
abrupt swing
in the
century
we have had
a taste
on our own. Yet with
all
our technical
reasoning and diplomacy our world seems to race
toward overpopulation and pollution and
self-destructive conflict. Millions die of
hunger and over half the world's children go paration for
their
that something like slav-
considered the "divine order" of things.
the other hand,
modern world of
to
fulfillment
and renewal
At times they have even concealed
quo by convincing themselves
desire to keep the status
ery
and
instead of doing the best they could to bring justice
war absorbs an enormous share
to
bed hungry most nights. Pre-
of our energy,
and over the
hundred years we have fought the bloodiest and most damaging wars of
last
one
all his-
The
44 tory.
"man come
seems ironic that the phrase
It
man who was
popular usage by a
camp.
Basic Climate for Meditation
about
was brought
of age"
hanged
to be
into
a Nazi concentration
in
1
In spite of the tremendous increase in medical knowledge, physicians often
and psychological
find that they are baffled by the mental
of our problems and despair in living at the present
pa-
difficulties of their
Almost everything that we moderns write or produce imaginatively
tients.
We
moment.
face with the ultimate prospect of a meaningless void without
come
hope of a
tells
face to
life
after
death. Fifty years of
many
Marxist experiments
over the world have apparently
all
people in those countries with the same feeling of despair.
simply more honest than our present Christian culture. that
we
no God
is
most religious
but this
Marxism
individuals
and
We
their
our
have done our
own
own
ability
house and world
level best
ability
we
(which
II,
which there
life in
still
to
good order
It
muster
seem unable is
everyone
trich
direction.
ask
We
humbly
is
way.
longer needed
no need
for religion or
creative,
and no one seems
to
we can. But once we do), we still need someas
need
our best
to give
and guidance.
for help
effort
Many
life in
to
I
is
There
is
worry about
God
believed that we were ready God and would worship Him
the lives of people
communal
God. People's wants are
He
panionship and fellowship. This true to
our intelligence and
all
B. F. Skinner, for instance, describes a Utopian is
Bonhoeffer also denied our need for
idealistic
to be
meaning beyond the
not a matter of choosing between
perfect balance by proper conditioning or training. ty;
by meditation
thinkers, however, reject this understanding completely.
Walden
In
world and
and in as
often
and divine power and
to this present-day
modern
to
rational
this
in the historical process.
thing more. Both efforts are needed.
human
According
Marxism, a person's need
there any possibility of
is
involvement
need to use our
to put
Of
need something beyond our-
to reach dialectical materialism
to a drill press. In
not recognized nor
is
in history.
working out of
we
recognizes that
Trying pray
like trying to
self-reliant
power
working
to the
will.
replaced by the al-
is
seen only as an impersonal principle that grinds on without
is
possibility of changing.
would be
dilemma by conscious
or solve our
is
makes no pretense
It
but the ultimate reality
to,
must give themselves
(dialectical) process. selves,
turn
to
belief in the materialistic process
belief a people
this
own world
can create our
course there
left
Marxism
life
come
hostili-
after death.
in a different but to
filled in
no anger or
Die-
even more
we no we want com-
of age so that
only because
a beautiful idea but one that
I
have not found
have known.
Apparently both Bonhoeffer and Skinner had doubts they did not express. Skinner speaks of feeling a certain aimless boredom
wonder
if
written of
he
is
how
convinced by
he carried
his
own
Utopia.
A
bottles of sleeping pills
in
life,
which makes one
close friend of Bonhoeffer's has
and tranquilizers
to give people
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God
He
in times of stress.
45
evidently thought people needed something but didn't ex-
pect religion to give
was ultimately
Indeed, the suffering that
it.
on
inflicted
Bonhoeffer by the Nazis suggests that people are not quite ready to take over
and run things without God; nor for
my
in
opinion are
pills
a very good substitute
God. People
still
find a need for
something beyond themselves
best they
can and then look honestly into the depth of their
nore
with a
this
mature
truly
stiff
upper
lip
our need
to
making up
usually
some
religious institution.
human
which
abilities
not enough,
is
God,
who
by
comfortable parish
was
life
life
as in lecturing
who
insist
wants us
and powerful,
has been a deep need
total
our
and when
kinds of people,
all
I
I
have found
have
common
lot
of
all
in a
true in the
it
from one end of the country
as well as those that
felt
on
to use all of
human
every group, young or old, wealthy or poor, people whose full
is
to keep people dependent
and without need. This was true
other and in Europe. Insecurity seems to be the
and
struggle
more.
suburban Los Angeles, and
in
human
in the first place
ministering to
totally secure
academic community, as well
Among
God
God Himself gives something
found no one whose
wisdom and under-
our
plug- for total self-reliance are
believe,
I
are, after all, given
In over thirty years of parish
rich
for further
lack in themselves, while those
on a repressive
that
God
to
basis for the idea that
on God. People
to rely
for
no
is
and dependence on God are generally trying
reliance
to ig-
as they first develop all the capacities they have, recognizing both
standing and power. There
opposed
Trying
them become mature. They become
does not help
and weaknesses, and then turn
failures
do the
after they
lives.
to the
beings.
seemed
lives
were empty or oppressed, there
which the individuals normally found
difficult
to
express to others.
Most
of the time people are able to keep
often feel confident
reward
this
and
only by
life.
up a good
Our
society
kind of self-sufficiency. But behind the
and hurt which make life
with
satisfied
it
front
seems
that a loving
God
is
to
human mask
possible to experience real confidence
KNOWING
and appear and
there.
I
and
demand and
are often pain satisfaction in
have found some people
who
reach this reality through the Church and the rituals that express
tion,
and others who have come
of these ways, however, lost
is
to
easily available to
the reality of the belief system.
would wish
for
any of
but in
us,
found no alternative for those verse.
all
The
my
many
individuals today,
experience of recovering
Neurosis:
to
who come
Morbus Sacer
Many
people, in
become
—
fact,
the
in ac-
is
who have not one I
I
have
face to face with a meaningless uni-
like the seed
Holy
it
reading and personal experience
You can then keep your guard up and perhaps
you must allow yourself
it
through the practice of meditation. Neither
it
risk
going to pieces, or
and be opened up
to
new
else
life.
Sickness
have already had the husk of their souls cracked
The
46
Basic Climate for Meditation
open, although they ordinarily will not admit
prime
sufficiency a
They
virtue.
My
not see any place to turn.
world that considers
to a
it
encounter with the pain and need that
every crack in our social facade was in the parish of which
twenty years.
had been forced
I
admit that
to
I,
my own
willing to speak to a few people of
too,
need,
People came to the church with their problems wives in trouble, parents out,
from sexual
times even the threat of neurosis,
and physical
At times
who had
and
fears
sixteen
scarcely put
my
came
I
was
it
One
on the
dam
like a
side,
I
was
bursting.
and husbands and
by one their
came
stories
alcoholism and some-
from meaninglessness and inner hurt
like
to depression,
ministering to a parade. In the twenty years
hundred families came
many know most
because they needed help, and shorter periods.
almost
rector for
illness.
was almost
it
was there more than
fill
was
I
needed help, and once
— children
been rejected.
rigidity to affairs
jail;
self-
are suffering, mostly in silence, because they do
finger
to
stayed to
most of them
become members
for longer or
of them, sometimes in depth,
on one whose
life
I
to the church,
was complete and
and
satisfying,
could
I
with no
we offered these individuals God who cares. They kept coming,
need for God. As a rule the most important help
was
in finding a
because fect
and
in
way
of relationship with a
other places they found mostly the idea that Christians are to be per-
must be a symbol of that perfection, not a gateway
that ministers
the problems of the
human
tumble out and make an opening
soul
for
to let
God
to get
in.
People are not
much
different in other places. Recently
New York
mission at Trinity Church on Wall Street in
was
the church
filled
I
City.
gave a healing
For three nights
with people seeking healing, and the most
common
need
they expressed was to find meaning, some meaning that would help them bear
Too
the inner pain they suffer. to stay
often,
them and keep up a brave show ed advice like
where most In
however,
all
busy and get their problems solved, or
fact,
is
that
it
like
other people.
leaves the pain
often nothing can touch
is
advice about
how
they are advised to forget
The
trouble with well-intend-
and agony locked up
inside the soul
it.
the deepest dread and pain, which existential writers reveal so well,
seldom comes
which keeps
this
they find
else
to the surface until people are relieved of the struggle for existence
them busy
all
of the time.
So long
by the problems of getting enough food and
as they are completely absorbed
fuel just to stay alive, they
have to face the despair of meaninglessness. Working with people at our society has brought home
to
me how
seldom
all levels
often the greatest misery
of
and pain
occur along with great wealth. These people have no outer problems important
enough
to
keep their attention diverted from the emptiness of their
own
being.
With no outer problems, they are exposed to the reality of the inner or spiritual world. They feel as though they are naked and alone and are usually guided only by fear of what might be found if they looked within for meaning. This is
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God one reason
making almost a
for
busy enough
Anyone who
and agony. Like
own
blackness.
there
when
often find
one
is
forced to look inward usually faces
depth of our whatever meaning we have known disintegrating;
few people
so
If
solitary confinement, this exposes us to the
fear of finding only a void, fear of death
is
time
this
way and
stripped in this
is
fear
We
bridge clubs and bingo parties.
fetish of
necessary to look within.
isn't
it
47
see
any place
and an
for
dissolution (particularly in
after
life),
and the threat of
condemnation. These are elements of the confrontation that are described over
and over by writers from Paul
The Courage To Be caught forever
in
Tillich to Jean-Paul Sartre.
God beyond
writes of finding the
Although
Tillich in
god, other people see
man
They are
a blind nothingness that most people try to escape.
Waiting for Godot or Sartre's
afraid of finding only the pointlessness of Beckett's
Nausea.
This terror of looking directly into the blackness and finding only experiences that seem meaningless and devouring
blackness
and
ness
is
there; the
find
need
is
not to escape
meaning on the other
the darkness than the words of St.
side.
worse than any
is
sickness.
There
no better description of
still
is
John of the Cross
in
Dark Night of the
The
idea sometimes heard today that darkness can be avoided and
find
God
only in joy and celebration, in peace and comfort,
that perhaps reveals our present lack of experience.
way
this
in
some darkness and depression or
along the way. Celebration bration
is
often hollow
and
is
fine
false
and comes
and
else
We
and we are then thrown
Soul.
should
a grave delusion
is
be caught up by
it
somewhere
Beforehand, cele-
na'i've.
way
to the inner
When
into this inner world.
of ego defenses are shattered in one
we
are apt either to begin
after deliverance.
Often the opening from the outer conscious realm us,
Yet the
but to go through the inner dark-
it,
this
is
made
for
happens our husks
known an
or another. Perhaps one has
— some— or perhaps
experience of love, or the breakthrough of a searing religious experience times about as pleasant as Paul's encounter on the
one
struck by neurosis:
is
open
often
us,
through our
all
three of these
own
need, to
illusion,
men and women
to
profession of psychiatry,
need
Of course
work, and religious experience can
unmask and which
is
It
often forces
seek help.
dedicated to relieving the in-
creasing anxiety and agony of people today, has begun to sons'
experiences can
reality.
but one cannot ignore the pain of neurosis.
comfortable modern
The new
common human
another dimension of
love can be dismissed as merely the gonads at
be seen as
Damascus road
awaken
to these per-
As Jung originally noted, behind every neurosis lies one's reality of which all living religion speaks. There is a grow-
for religion.
separation from that
ing awareness of the importance of this understanding and of the point
made
that he
human
reality
had never seen a neurosis healed had been
more than one way.
reestablished.
My
own
until contact with
Jung more than
experience has borne this out in
The
48
Basic Climate for Meditation
working with college
In
students, particularly over the past six years,
have found that their neurotic problems spring
more
far
from a
often
deal with religious reality than from ordinary pathology. For often the "sacred illness" that forces
them neurosis
Few
meaning.
to seek
of
from being cut
off,
them are aware enough
for
one reason or another, from their religious
Some
of
them
it
roots.
result
Many
of
and they are usually perceptive
of their need for meaning,
to realize that they will not find
reality.
is
them have
any other trauma than comfortableness. Their pain and suffering
suffered
inner
them
I
refusal to
until they
encounter a
new
level of
are willing to take the time and effort for the inner
way, rather than merely shopping around
an easier behavioral answer to
for
their problem.
Depression edge. This
common
is
cold of
common
modern
medical profession scribing a
another experience of which
such a
is
mood
One
psychiatry.
their effort to
in
elevator
have some first-hand knowl-
I
expression of need today that
— which
is
is
it
often called the
should have real sympathy for the
do something for depression besides pre-
about as
effective as aspirin
in getting at the
is
cause of a cold.
my own
or the Church, but as a result of being plunged
into the black depths of myself in depression
need affected
real need; the
became an
much about
are sick in this way,
introduction to the realities that are the substance of religion
come through seminary
did not
self
who
have no reservations about the need of people
I
because
me
intolerable burden.
the depths of the
and
At the time
anxiety.
I
human
who seemed
could find no priest
and was willing
soul
how
have met
I
to deal
In an I
had
with
it.
in
dozens of people since then
I
knew
own
of her
Ours. Through her
I
to offer others a
Max
who
Zeller, a
was learning through him
Here
in these
the early
pages
— from
that
One
soul
forgotten
did not have myself,
I
reason
a
man who had
believed that there
is
I
me
to
is
Always
escaped from a Nazi
who
not only started
me
read the gospels again. In the light of what
I
read and reread the
I
began
Church knew
my
turned to her was
a reality that can touch and
Jewish follower of Jung
New
I
have suggested ways of providing
Guidelines for Counselors (Pecos, N. Mex.,
woke up to the fact reality. The Church,
this
Dove
I
Testament.
to find the reality of the loving, saving
so well.
mythology that could be discarded, but a
*I
know
human
Church had
work on the profound anthology, The Choice
toward healing but taught
whom
meaning
discoveries with me.
found help
concentration camp, and
This was
in it-
There were no Christian shamans* or medicine men!
agony of trying
need and shared her
save.
— the
to
have help or be destroyed. At that point Dorothy Phillips realized
to
because
was
to enter those depths
with me. Although the problem was a religious one of healing the
— one
I
physically as well as psychically so that living
that this I
found, had gone
help in a booklet, Finding Publications, 1974).
God
was not
Meaning:
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God on touching people
right
at this
ry of Jesus Christ over the
with what
opened
deep
vistas of reality to
me
that
evil.
my
had learned through
I
level as
powers of
these insights could be shared.
Jung,
we
open
to
tried to
make
it
With
believed in the victo-
it still
There was nothing
inconsistent here
psychologist friends. Instead, they
were not only
For the next eighteen years we
tian.
long as
49
tried to
had
religious but specifically Chris-
make our
where
parish a place
the help of the thought and practice of Dr.
a place where people could bring their needs,
become
them, and learn to use the most basic Christian ways of dealing with
them. Physical Illness
For many of the people
was
to get
Even when things seemed
made
who
found their
over some kind of physical
illness,
way
to
my
church, the
need
first
very often psychosomatic in nature.
we always
to point only to psychological distress,
sure that the person had a thorough checkup by a good physician before
counseling could begin. Specifically physical problems can be masked (as well as
aggravated or even triggered) by psychological
from neurosis
to purely physical ailments
and psychosomatic disorders
— can
Sickness of any kind,
distress.
— including organic
diseases, infections
be an expression of a person's unconscious
need.
Indeed, sickness in
need shows up
in
all
forms
is
common ways
one of the most
our society today. With
the
all
improvements
ment, a larger percentage of people require care for
illness
in
unconscious
medical treat-
than ever before. 2 Re-
pressed fear and anxiety can interfere with our resistance to bacteria or to cancer cells
and can
literally destroy
our bodies
dozens of ways. Medicine has
in
come
to recognize the deadly potential of this kind of stress.
There and
is
no more
to help deal
effective
way
for Christians to realize their
with the needs of others than by sharing
the
in
work
own
needs
of healing.
They can do this, first by knowing their own fears and anxieties and helping others to become aware that they have these emotions, and then by helping to reveal
and share the base of
real
meaning which
courage to deal with fear rather than letting In the process,
it
gives people the security
up
build
in
some healing miracles do happen, and sometimes
gives an individual gradual healing.
As people
face
and
unconscious tensions. this process also
and handle
their problems,
they often find complete health of body, mind and soul. By using prayer and meditation much as the early Church did to bring hope and healing to people,
we open
both ourselves and others to the healing reality of the loving God.
shall be ever grateful to
Agnes Sanford
for
opening
me
to this ministry
books, her down-to-earth lectures, and her personal friendship.
Our
I
by her
need for
healing can start the soul's growth toward health and wholeness. In addition, the medical profession
is
tury of separating physical healing from
suffering today its
spiritual
from more than a cen-
and emotional
base.
As a
The
$o
Basic Climate for Meditation
show more problems with drugs and
doctors themselves
profession,
alcohol,
neurosis and divorce, as well as a higher suicide rate, than any other profession. I
worked
sity
for four years
with groups of senior premedical students at the Univer-
Dame who
of Notre
because they had discovered these ing,
which they could exam-
originally asked for a course in
and death.
ine the problems of suffering, dying
statistics
and they were alarmed. They
They
asked for this course
about the profession they were enter-
much the same conclusion: The when a doctor must deal conand fear of death. The patient is not
came
all
5
to
detached medical attitude does not work very well
human
stantly with
misery and suffering
and the doctor develops unconscious
satisfied
physicians
who
belief in a
pervading meaning
meaning when nothing
to
does
else
it
—
all
On
guilt.
the other hand, the
empathy and understanding need some some experience of the Other who gives
relate to patients with
—
they are to deal with these things day after
if
day and not go under themselves. If
our need
meaning
for
meaning, however,
first
of
all
is
it
to
open us up
Whether one
to
human
beings for an approach to the realities of
acknowledge that one has
this leaves a great deal to
tried to
It is all
one
World
too easy for most of us,
stays put,
what
just
on
the
human
first
step
is
these
simply
resources and that
— the Reality of Evil immersed
in the
basic needs exist outside of our
making
life,
this
a doctor or
be desired.
Reflecting on the Needs of the
zation, to forget
depend
is
who depends on
a theologian, lawyer or politician, or simply a layperson
other
can give
to the reality that
has to be recognized.
the regular rounds of business
can stay shielded from the
difficulties of
comforts of Western
charmed and
circle.
friends
and
civili-
As long gossip,
as
one
people even in the next block. For ex-
ample, the people in Palm Beach seldom stop to think about the conditions of the migratory workers hardly ten miles away. Yet anyone to look at
the why,
what and how
Some concerns.
who
takes the trouble
the surrounding world will find more than enough need of
it
and search
for
to question
some ultimate meaning.
people, of course, are insensitive to anything beyond their immediate
They bury
their heads in the sands of comfort with
no
interest in find-
ing the Christ by going out to the hungry and thirsty, the prisoners and the
Others are sensitive
in the extreme, so sensitive that they
are afraid of
it
life
as
and
is,
often they try to escape through alcohol or drugs.
Gertrude Behanna,
who
marked
was what made
it
that wealth
kept her
self
wrapped
sick.
dread being hurt. They
told her story in her book, it
The Late
Liz, once re-
possible for her to go the alcoholic route;
in cotton batting so that she did not
have
to face either her-
or the world.
But most of us are
in
as well as physically,
and
to struggle just for a
little
picture our
own
between.
this
makes
to eat
We it
live in relative
difficult for us to
and a place
comfort psychologically
imagine what
to lay one's head.
We
it
means
can hardly
children crying with hunger each night, perhaps with not
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God even enough clothing to keep out the
how
most of the world
helpless
and
flood
pestilence, or for that
is
wind, nor do
chill
we
51
really
comprehend famine and
in the face of natural disasters like
when
matter
faced by injustice
and cruelty from
higher up. Certainly there has been enough
war and
tion in this century. In every part of the globe
on
battlefields or in devastated cities
on the
become
every city where
streets of
The same
violent.
The
— between
racial
human wants
If
punishment on
do not occur
forces are usually
groups and
in
fam-
fester until those affected
found
in
wherever one person or group has taken responsibility inflicting
casualties
and concentration camps. They occur
wherever there are tensions between people ilies,
can find the victims of human-
aggression and ability to hate.
ity's senseless cruelty,
just
violence and organized destruc-
we
our system of
for enforcing the
justice,
law and
others.
people were more aware of their kinship, they would be deeply sensitive
to the suffering that
Vietnam or
in a
caused
is
in
such basic ways wherever
European concentration camp,
in
whether
in
Bangladesh or Chad or
in
it
exists,
own country. Their hearts and souls would be so flooded by the sense of human need that there would be little problem about turning to God. Every effort to alleviate that need would make them more open to the presence and action of the Other in their lives. Few of us, however, are this open to human our
needs, even our
own.
We
often respond magnificently to a
awareness peters out, and whatever into the concerns of
Often
it
suffers deeply,
We
easily
is is
our
own
we found from beyond
crisis,
but then the
ourselves
is
absorbed
personal "normal" living.
easy to see that the person on the receiving end, the one
what people can give on
forced to seek help beyond
admit that there are no
of the concentration
camp
atheists in foxholes,
their
who own.
and even the experience
has forced some to search for God. In the pages of the
book, Night, Elie Wiesel lays bare his
own
experience of despair, of watching
every hope die in the hell of the concentration camps, Auschwitz and Buchen-
wald.
Then
in other
value brought him,
works he goes on
first,
to give
show how the
to
loss of
everything of
up hope of finding any ultimate meaning, and
then to search within himself until an ultimate meaning was revealed to him
from beyond himself. This
is
one kind of need that Christians
in
particular
should understand, for at the center of the Christian experience stands man's to man, the God-man on a cross. The teachings of Jesus suggest, however, that we know all about suffering to find our need. We need
inhumanity
should not wait until to be delivered
we
from the
He told us first of all to pray, "Deways He showed that the task is to various Then in from the evil one." the trouble and whether we are nurswhat causing is within and to know
source of our inhumanity, Jesus taught, and liver us
look
ing anger or harmful desires in our hearts.
happen agony
in the outer it
causes.
world and then try
Our to
job
is
not just to wait for evil to
do something about the pain and
Instead, Christians are to recognize the source of evil within
The
52
Basic Climate for Meditation
themselves so that they can seek help
One way
one looks honestly
As Jung
happened,
at the things that
and Nazi concentration camps and
superhuman
order to stand outwardly against
in
certainly to reflect on the need
is
for instance, in the
down from
someone with a warped
claim that the death ovens of
it.
suffering in the world. If
Communist
Laos and Vietnam, there appears to be a
in
force in the universe dragging us
suggested, only
and
Dachau
sense of
we
the goals
humor
express.
could honestly
represented only an "accidental lack of
perfection" or an absence of good. In our
own
we
time
have seen a cruelty over-
take otherwise normal and civilized persons which one might call bestial, except that this maligns the instincts of the animal world. It is
often easy to identify this force within oneself. This force
wish which attacks a person people find it,
when
this force
way
of us escapes
The
idea that
dealing with
evil,
would be funny
way
Either
effects of tension.
in other places.
the effect
if it
fact,
We
battlefield.
that the poor in spirit, the
is
is
I
have
to turn to
it
human
ones,
to
is
more
recent
We evil,
and that these
some
real intelligence
tonomous
force with a
pear to be at
all
that
to affect
of
said
was
it
by themselves.
their lives
more
destructive
spiritual forces of evil are those that
They
are
more powerful
we
evil
fail to
one would
realities,
many
of the
suggest.
see the depth
failure to
human
comprehend
life is
and power of
his life
powers of
evil as
an au-
a kind of unconsciousness
As Berdyaev remarked, the powers
least as intelligent as the
all
why Jesus
the to-do about something that should require only
power
was looking back over
world wars,
life
evil,
perhaps
understand
force of the universe, than
and reason. This
that can lead to disaster.
as he
some other
can be so protected by
for help in
as cosmic
a spiritual or psychoid world as well as a
ways of thinking about Satan or the
and we wonder why
God
blessed, but
manage
they can't
the individual cannot deal with on one's own. like the force of gravity or
also written at
on turning our homes and our
hard
physical one, that person learns that there are forces of evil
than the simply
it
uncreative and
no such thing
meek and sorrowing are
realizes that there
people
tragic lack of understanding. This force
will keep
sometimes find
who know
because they are the ones
Once a person
it
need
that there
show such a
did not
Some
Lewis and Charles Wil-
S.
all its ugliness.
we have outgrown our
or the idea, in
him/her down
4
has to be faced and dealt with or
world into a
struggles against
while others bottle up the lousy feelings
and growth. The novels of both C.
it
death
many
destructive drag entirely.
liams portray the primal force of evil in
some length about
like a
rage, as
is
and
how much one
matter
its
to outbursts easily,
arouses and suffer the hostile to love
fear
there ready to tear the person apart and drag
None
into icy isolation.
simply give
No
they turn inward.
is still
and anxiety,
in depression
light.
of evil certainly ap-
He made
these remarks
with the communist revolution and the two
which he had survived.
remember a conversation I once had with a brilliant and creative theologian who was denying the reality of evil as an autonomous force. We reflected a I
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God together and realized that he
little
which was a protected one indeed.
knew
He
little
53
community,
outside of the college
had never known
real tragedy or violence
or inner agony personally, and in dealing only with rational concepts, he had no
need to postulate the
from
He
it.
reality of evil
had about
much
as
and look
power
for a
him
that could save
idea of the danger of evil as most of us had of
the danger of radioactivity before Hiroshima.
When we door
is
opened
This breaking of the husk
prayer and meditation.
the second condition for the practice of
fulfills
takes great courage, however, to enter this door or to
It
seek for this moisture unless
way
and
spiritual poverty
the moisture that breaks open the
is
life
has already done
your soul has been penetrated, you have religious
helplessness, then the second
inward way. The realization of our
our need for help from beyond ourselves seed.
own
do awaken and realize our to the
little
it
for us.
like a search for rare treasure, or else
Once
the depth of
you follow the
either
choice;
you must turn back
to the
ordinary world with resolute detachment and probably despair. At times one wishes one could back up and start over, but consciousness was apparently designed without a reverse gear.
Need Universal?
Is the
Today, however, we
find
a rash of methods for cracking people open
without counting the cost or looking
thon groups a person ple
have found
thr ;n
is
renewing and
not ready or capable of facing the
may
way
fatigue
ahead. In encounter and mara-
and group
restoring, but these
They
high percentage of casualties.
at the
down by
broken
offer little protection for the
full
were
abandoned. The person
finally
was opened up whether ready
for
it
without a continuing support group
who
this
is
person
work in
or not, and then that a seed with no
as expected
and
such a group often
same person was which
left
to sink
its
Drugs are used indiscriminately by people who have no business trying
to
and with no help provided
roots
like
soil in
to find this soil.
enter another world with no one to guide
them and not even the preparation of
getting along adequately in their natural world.
Andrew Weil
about the dangers of using drugs apart from religious ritual*
*
My
own view
open up the
offer the safer
soul.
ways
is
that
it is
Many people to
best to leave drugs alone entirely.
try the
open up one's
life
has written wisein his perceptive
There are
to them. Passing laws is
and trying
to experience
to enforce
them
a good chance that offering the inward
drug culture could bring about that
result.
better
drug route only because the Church has
ways
failed to
and growth. People need more than
the physical world offers, and they will turn to drugs as long as no other
there
peo-
then go to pieces. Even the modified form of encounter group used by the
those "T-groups"
to
Many
person
depth of inner darkness, and
Episcopal Church for training religious educators did not
ly
pressure.
groups have also had a
way
is
available
will not eliminate the use of drugs.
way
But
of meditation to those attracted to the
The
54
Basic Climate for Meditation
The Natural Mind. Methods
book,
some
inner world they are dealing with. impossible to close
is
or using a ouija board open up
like seances
individuals to real trouble because they do not realize the dynamics of the
it.
We
It is
like
Pandora's box; once
more about
shall say
it is
opened,
these dangers of the inner
it
way
later on.
make
Eastern religions try to specific
way
to follow
culture aside
same opening and then
the
without considering the
and discard
it.
You may
and
thing.
condemned
turned to
method.
this
sonality so that
Many
The
The
much
religion of fear does
open and then submits one If
one deviates, one
to
the
inner
will either be os-
kind of training are so destruc-
effects of this
It
defeats love entirely by walling off parts of every per-
one cannot even know the whole person,
people have been scarred for
damaged by healing
its
individual
to hell.
own
one wonders how a religion supposedly concerned with love could have
tive that
so
the
go a certain route.
social pressure to
tracized or
son.
cracks
It
give the person a
one cannot lay one's
accept the Eastern approach, but you are
forced to leave a part of yourself behind.
same
fact that
this
effect
life
alone love that per-
let
by the use of
this
method. They are
kind of religion that they never learn the meaning of love or
on the personality. While a certain amount of fear
healthy for some individuals,
it
is
may
be
almost always destructive to apply any such
religious idea wholesale, without considering individual differences.
There are to be cracked
also individuals in
open and proceed
some groups who decide
that everyone needs
put pressure on everyone around them. Often
to
they have enough power to keep the heat on until people submit, and this
much
like the police tactic of
is
brainwashing, which has been developed to a fine
some communist countries. As both Jerome Frank in his book Persuasion and Healing and William Sargant in his Battle for the Mind show, the forces
art in
at
work
in this type of religion
and
in
communist brainwashing are the same. In
one case they are applied consciously and preparation for a primitive initiation
can be thoroughly demonic.
We
deliberately; in the other
rite in
are simply
a
tribe.
it
is
like the
Either one of these methods
more aware
of
how
detestable the
conscious and deliberate practices are than the unconscious religious ones.
At one time the survival of Christianity depended upon a fellowship who knew what it was all about. As long as the early Church faced the threat of being wiped out by a hostile empire, every Christian was given three years basic training before being baptized and received into full fellowship. The inner husk of old attitudes and old images was broken down and penetrated by a new reality so that every Christian knew both the need for God and the need for community. All Christians had to have a faith that prepared them to meet death, if
necessary.
Today, however, the pressures seem
For one thing, there well for tices that
son
who
many
people.
is
They
to be of a different type.
accept and use the rituals,
express Christianity in the fullest possible is
embedded
still
works very
dogmas and
daily prac-
a collective Christian attitude that
in this attitude
may need
way
for
them, and the per-
nothing more. Religion then acts
Cracking the Husk: Man's Need for God as a buffer
between religious
and the individual.
realities
reducer that brings the 1,000 volts of direct contact that
any of us can
use.
Catholic Church, in the
wisdom
logical
full catholic
lost
its
They
meaning
look for
put their
them
a deep psycho-
is
a person's
life is
is
con-
alive
and
simply not necessary and
them, and they are threatened by pressures from within.
meaning and
try to find
the
Church
some source
of
power or
opened up further
way
of the energy to
these people often feel only
be something different from what they are. There
to try the inner
beyond
When
people, however, find that ordinary religious practice has
for
lives in order. In
to act or to
electrical
disaster.
many
great
an
10-volt current
1
framework and the Church symbols are
meaningful to the individual, the inward journey
A
like
is
doctrine and practice, there
that can keep men's lives in order.
even lead to
It
to the
As Jung commented more than once, within the Roman
tained within that religious
may
down
55
They have
of meditation.
is
more pressure
good reason
to fear
less
for
from being
to the darkness within as they are already seeking
something
it.
Then
there
is
who have
a group
little
tolerance for any kind of religious
way, inner or outer. These people often project their darkness onto others, arousing the hatred and anger that lead to
no approach
to reality except
A
the delusions of psychosis.
who had
such patient
man came asked
in to
thank
"You
other violence.
psychiatrist friend recently told
me
They have
slip easily into
the story of one
suddenly stopped seeing him. After several months the
my
what had happened
patient asked.
war and
through the outer world, and they
friend for curing him.
that led to being cured.
me
told
the streets clean or fighting
to find a cause
communism.
I
The
doctor was curious, and
"Don't you remember?" the
and get busy on ecology or keeping
went
to
work on the communists, and
I've been fine ever since." In those few months he had started a hate group and
brought nearly inner
way
five
thousand
of meditation
attempt to do
in the
may
citizens of the area into
be
less
dangerous
it.
for others
For these people the than the things they
outer world.
In addition, there
is
one group who, without exception, require
ence of direct contact with spiritual
reality,
this experi-
both destructive and creative. These
who undertake to mediate the realities of religion who have lost faith in what the religious institution are leaders who know the experiences for themselves, it
are the religious professionals, to others, often to people
stands for. Unless there
becomes
like
the blind leading the blind.*
religious Orders use some practice to bring novices into contact with and give them a way of dealing with what they find, these practices break down when no one believes that there is any spiritual reality with which to deal. I know of at least one attempt, however, to rebuild a novitiate program by using the understanding of C. G. Jung. It is described by Fr. John Welch, O. Carm., in his unpublished doctoral dissertation on the "Implications of Jungian Theory for the Education of Can* While
many
spiritual reality
didates for the Catholic Priesthood."
The
56
The
Basic Climate for Meditation
pressures on people today seem to be directed
greater consciousness.
If
more and more toward
the constant drive toward growth
and consciousness
does express our greatest need and wholeness, then certainly not everyone should
be exposed to
experience whether needful of
this
ting along with their task of
growth
growth quite well
by examining their
is
are. After this
be sure one
inner world that one
is
is
The
a need for
sis this is
ods.
It
is
a
it
way
for
possible to legislate basis
people
important
to
fertile soil, to
a
way
who have
some map is
and with the greatest
of life for people
who
actually
been unable to find meaning by other meth-
for all people
care.
of the
not a weekend
their need. In the final analy-
break open the ego to deeper reality but
one way
seek direc-
already gone this way,
inner meditative journey It is
to start
and expectations
their desires
who have
and who have become conscious of
people are get-
and the place
following a serious goal and has
entering.
excursion to a land of sun and happiness. feel
and what
and encouragement from those to
all,
lives
Many
or not.
decided there comes the need to find a
is
tion, fellowship
and, above
own
it
as they are,
and one can only do
it
it
is
nearly im-
on an individual
6
Whom Do We Pray?
To
The way
that
you pray, the form and
you think
your meditations
direction
depends largely upon the way you view the world
in
which you
take,
find yourself. If
you are pan of a purely physical universe, you may understand
that
meditation as a method of controlling the brain waves in order to improve your
and emotional condition.
physiological itation,
you
will say
your mantra
If
you then turn
faithfully for
Transcendental
to
Med-
twenty minutes twice a day, and
probably you will find what you expect.
Or,
pended
if
you
toward release from the sider
it
a
ence the
way
illusion
will try to
mature relationship with the universe. This
Zen and other
tation found in
Christian meditation in ther of these.
It is
disciplines derived
most developed form
its
the
way
of medi-
quite different from ei-
is
realm and
in the
nonmaterial or spiritual realm. In
meditation one expects to meet someone, and the encounter
this practice of
usually experienced as a relationship with a person.
must generally
is
from Buddhism.
based on a view of the world that finds each individual impor-
tant, both in the material
resort to images.
vivid inner images. This
many
into the effortless, sus-
make your meditation another step and burdens and pains of this life. You will con-
you
of entering a state of imageless enlightenment in order to experiof
bliss
merging
really envision all life ultimately
of Nirvana, then
bliss
is
Even
Sometimes the encounter
we
something
shall take
up
to talk
itself is
about
it
is
one
experienced in
in detail later
on since
Christian groups in recent years have frowned upon allowing images to
enter into meditation and prayer. Yet one of the most helpful methods that historical Christianity has offered to reach this
Outer course there
TM it
is
is
and actions may
why
no reason
is
by using images. to the encounter,
and of
Christians should not use the techniques of
Zen or
is
one
aware
in Christian meditation, an addition that makes
Christian meditation
something
we
undertake
means stepping out
ality of the loving
not a
is
tionship with a person, an this
encounter
also help to bring
or Yoga. These are valuable so long as one
element tice.
aids
in
that there
is
another
quite another prac-
of escaping from one's condition. Rather
order to bring the totality of our being into rela-
Other
in trust,
way
it
to
whom we
can
relate.
experimenting to see
Father or the Risen Christ.
57
if
Before anything else
one does
find such a re-
The
58 It
is
Basic Climate for Meditation
not likely that any of us will find out whether there
met
forgiving Father waiting to be
one
we do
try to turn to
will not even consider the idea that such a reality
of finding out are slim indeed. strike
meditating
exist,
as
one's chances
many
people
mounGod. Through
gold to be found deep in the
is
The same thing is true of know more and more
valuable.
is
it
we
might
a loving and
is
Him. So long
a vein of gold; not
like finding
It is
rich until they believe that there
it
and that
tains
is
until
explore in order to
finding of
God. But before
He
discovered, a person only believes; through experiencing a relationship one
comes
know. Believing
to
main conditions
the
are seeking. This tianity;
same
it
is
is
a stage on the
way
for effective meditation
found
asserts that
God
is
knowing. Consequently one of
to
to gain
in the Christian story.
some
It is
like Jesus, that at the heart
is
loving, forgiving concern expressed in the
life
we
idea of the reality
Good News
the
and core of
of Chris-
reality
is
the
and teachings of Jesus and
in
His story of the prodigal. can almost hear an audible protest:
I
Isn't this
wishful thinking or merely
projecting humankind's fondest hope into the heavens, refusing to admit
God
the kind of
demands Most of us
have
Jesus
real relationship and, as
us.
are quite willing to be cared
it
takes great courage for
relationship
Much
is
of the time
what
passes for love
upon the other person and
because
I
difficult for
even to each other. Real
is
merely projection, which can ac-
actually is
do not
We
project a part of our-
see that person.
which seem
be genuinely accepted.
Then
excuses are swept away.
real love
not easy.
How
get angry with
This situation allows individuals to look
totally unacceptable. It
there
One
is
away from me temporarily or
try to be accepting.
parts of themselves
When
accepted by the other person no matter
revealed about that individual, and this kind of love
is
is
be coddled and protected, but
from knowing other persons.
often in counseling, people turn
me
tried to suggest, this
for, to
men and women to relate, among human beings.
does occur one finds that an individual
what
I
not often found
tually keep individuals selves
what
we stop to reflect, however, it is harder to say that this is God men and women really wish for. The reality of love revealed by
actually like? If
is
is
no reason not
is
at
a very painful thing to
to look at oneself. All of one's this
because you
and relationship develop between human
beings, they
cannot say, "I can't talk about
won't understand."
Whenever themselves. tionship,
growth This
is
real love
demanding
face the
God
task of
offers
us a far
to
terms with the
more accepting
and we actually shy away from
it
requires, both of
difficult
it
less
pleasant elements of
love than any
human
rela-
because of the deepening honesty and
which involve shedding one's
skin time after time.
and demanding.
Yet Jesus of Nazareth
"Abba." This tice.
coming
is
tells
us to approach
one of His unique contributions
God by
addressing
to religious
Him
as
thought and prac-
Christians are told to turn to the very force that moves the sun and other
To and speak
stars
knowing
small children
like
who
Pray ?
59
need their father and
that they will be answered. In other religions,
"Christians," there
Most tate
Whom Do We
is
call
out
"Daddy!"
and even among many
a very different idea of God.
of the world pictures the ruler of the universe like an Oriental poten-
who must
questioned.
He
be approached almost crawling on one's is
feared, because
He
is
His
belly.
administers the justice with a heavy hand. Often
He
appears very
is
not
and
He
justice
infinitely distant, infinitely just,
much
an
like
almighty steamroller whose majestic will and wrath and judgment must be accepted with resignation, without hope. There are even people to pears to be an unreasonable tyrant
comforts and heals the next.
who
No wonder
people have
little
whom God
ap-
one moment and
strikes out angrily
desire to relate to such
God and prefer to leave prayer to the professionals. Those who hold such ideas of God deep within themselves cannot help but pray very differently from Christians who find the love of a father for a child at the heart of their most central a
experiences.
The Prodigal Father According spelled
it
to Jesus of Nazareth,
God
called the parable of the prodigal father.
back without a word of criticism
much
is
already
— but
Not only does the
— knowing
that the son
father receive his son
is
judging himself too
he brings out the best that he has. Instead of ordinary
clothes he brings the best robes, instead of a
meagre meal they
and instead of recrimination he places
on
righteous elder brother, he
is
rings
his fingers.
the fatted
calf,
Even toward the
self-
kill
open and caring. Instead of chiding him
interested only in justice, the father practices reconciliation
come
He
a prodigal, spendthrift love.
out in His great story of the father and son, which should probably be
to the party
the kind of
and
God men
nection to the
life
join in their rejoicing. This, as Jesus
find
when
they turn to
Him
for being
and begs him
Himself revealed,
to is
for relationship, for a re-con-
that they need.
is not made in the human image. This kind of caring is simply among men and women naturally. It results only when they catch a picture of this infinitely loving God and are raised above the human condition. Although in rare instances we do dream of such a world and such relationships, usually we are afraid to believe that either we or God could be this way. We do not dare to reach out toward God courageously, risking the hope that He may be like that. Until we are willing to take that risk and venture on this path, we actually limit the fullness of relationship that God wishes to give. It is difficult for a human father to relate with affection and warmth when he is mistrusted,
Such a God
not found
rejected or held at arm's length.
He
cannot give
response to robs
Him
Him.
If
one
sees
all
he longs to
give. It
is
no
dif-
who is far more sensitive to our actual inner God as a vicious tyrant or Oriental potentate one
ferent with the heavenly Father
of the opportunity to give us love.
The
60 Taking such a
way
ing in this
step
that
structiveness,
safe.
is
it
human
can break out of the
life
and
same
the
He
one. In the
ago
One
this risk oneself.
might be exactly
up
as Jesus described
They
we
Chris-
has never oc-
It
Him
words and
in
is
simply that
God
are not only alike but the
had on
battles the theologians
same way
many
reason that
at all times.
point of the doctrine of the Trinity
in Palestine,
ative energy
takes a lot of meditating before one
it
simply that they are afraid of God.
is
as Jesus of Nazareth.
How many
being.
Even then
so they keep their defenses
The main tially
of us are able to contemplate act-
pattern of revenge and anger, retribution and de-
and consider taking
tians find this so difficult
curred to them that
Few
radical action.
is
another person has demonstrated such action toward us
until
and reassures us
Basic Climate for Meditation
this issue.
It is
essen-
is
same
in
an important
that people turned to Jesus of Nazareth twenty centuries
Him
can turn to
which made
we
really believe in the Trinity,
and
as the Risen Christ
and
this universe
will let
it
show
in
our
same
find the
pulsates through
still
lives.
And
it.
cre-
if
we
This does not
ability to explain the intricacies of this mystery or how well we know the history of its being understood. Real belief in the Trinity is determined by how we act toward God, how we meditate, how we pray, and especially how we treat our fellow human beings. As I have said before, and probably will say again, our actions tell more about what we really believe than all our intellec-
depend upon our
tual formulations of doctrine.
one turns
If
God
to
expressed by the Trinity,
some expectation
then, with
what
will
one look
for
God
to
of finding the reality
be like? Certainly
does unite the qualities of Jesus of Nazareth and the prodigal father,
human
than any
father. First of all,
and agonies of human
sions
ther by selfishness or by
Jesus of Nazareth, and
He
is
like
Asian
gives free forgiveness
humankind
that
and
Him.
He
cares about us
it
was
as
moment we
far-fetched offer.
we
also gives us freedom.
is
There
is
else
but relationship with
Him
that only love given in freedom is
One
pick ourselves
asks only that
and only
not to pin us
He
and
so
He
relationships founded
down
we
treat
waits.
way God wants
is
He
on freedom
but to see us grow and develop
offers us healing
of the great joys of childhood
parent. In a similar
He
up and
confidence that in the end
will satisfy us,
our potential and our opportunities will permit. In order
achieve our greatest potential,
ei-
being in
nothing that can really prevent us from
nothing
are real. His desire for us
human
are treated.
away from Him or mocking Him. He has
just as far as
be a
swept away
the only major religion of
God
turning
knows
plight, the ten-
to being
like to
better
Witch and the Wardrobe.
the
Incidentally, Christianity
way
human
God
if
is
no matter what we have been or done.
The Lion,
receives us back the
makes such a
other people the same
understands the
He knew what
evil.
He
He
and how prone we are
C. S. Lewis's
in
stan back toward
life
He
to help us
and transformation.
sharing in some creative action with a
us to join with
Him
in expressing
His crea-
Whom Do We
To and
tivity
like
love.
when we
and we can expect
it
early
Church
Risen Christ
ty of the
Him
turn to
and
what we are able
believed in such a Father in their midst.
tionship, love, concern,
to
we can expect guidance human father, for He has
become.
and they experienced the
Him
They knew
as
one
who
wisdom, power, healing and transformation.
they could have had this experience without the revelation of
to a
new
relationship to
level of experience of
God one
ing venture of seeking a fulfilling in
Of where hell
evil
we
a
way
course,
all
God who
of the universe
comes from.
How
so often encounter? If
we
is
is
can a
we do
God
as
its
I
only
know
who
not follow Jesus of Nazareth and the early
stands ready to receive us.
Him
is
How
This takes some doing, because
who
it
power and helps
us stay
possible.
open
of being. Finding this kind of to be.
lose?
It
is
a wild
gamble
to
in the
Here human
away from I
the
do not know.
have known
Him
best
love.
makes demands upon our capacity
we
can locate
deep within us and begin to open passageways of belief
He makes
possible?
is it
meeting unbounded, overwhelming
respond and to love. Through meditation
the experiences
abroad
source and recoil in horror.
that those in the Christian tradition
agree that meeting
We wonder
and loving God permit the agony and
attempts to find a reason and to avoid any dualism often turn us loving Father
the dar-
of.
see the reality of a powerful force of evil
are likely to see
if
Jesus
we have and
not one garden of joy and love. just
doubt
and opened
upon
start
loving beyond any experience
dreamed
I
to reach the deepest levels of
work and
has to put imagination to
that few of us have even
Church Fathers and world,
God. In order
reali-
gave rela-
God which
presented. This conviction shaped their meditation, their sacraments,
them
not
ask,
even more than from a
the knowledge and the vision of
The
is
rather a potential in which our greatest effectiveness and
is
joy are realized. Finally, help,
6
Each of us has a place within His plan, a destiny which
a straitjacket but
and
Pray ?
Meditation
is
this precious vein
in this kind of
to
buried
God and
one way that brings us
to this
we are capable God enables us to grow into what we were meant look for a God like this, but what do we have to to
it
so that
we
can become what
7
The Creative Power of Love Often the elements
no
no
life,
We see
been discussing are
no connection between our prayer
outwardly,
lives
what we do
make a
relationships with other
human
care for others,
is
as
much
and turning inward.
but unless
human
it
and
it
actions.
fabric.
yet
we
find
from morality.
The
two, howev-
What we do
with our
a part of meditation as
In fact, Christian meditation
difference in the quality of one's outer
flare for a while,
that cause
we
well
in the quietness
that does not
may
how
separate
and our
life
present,
all
we
cannot be separated for they are of the same
er,
It
we have
meditation simply because
vitality in
life is
results in finding richer
short-circuited.
and more loving
beings or in changing conditions in the world
suffering, the chances are that
an individual's prayer
activity
will fizzle out.
Loving actions provide yet another condition that
They provide
develop through meaningful meditation. that the sprout of
One
new
life
is
needed for the soul to
warmth
the necessary
so
can break through the surface and continue to grow.
of the great contributions of the
Hebrew
prophets was their understanding
of the direct interplay between people's everyday living and their approach to
God through
God was
While the He,
too,
and prayer. They believed that the only sure
ritual
ing to the just
show
justice in one's
own
to us.
basis for relat-
actions.
revelation of Jesus of Nazareth goes a long step
showed the absolute
which are revealed
we want
to
beyond
justice,
necessity of revealing to others the qualities of
Giving some of the same love
our prayer and meditation
to
is
God
a prime condition
be worthwhile. In our
own
time,
if
Martin
Luther King exemplified the connection between prayer and loving action as few
have done
in
any
age.
His prophetic words are written
in his book,
Strength to
Love.
Meditation and the inner
way
are like a spiral staircase.
bring us to a realization of the nature of the selves.
Then
if
we
new
trying to act
we
whom we
requires putting
what we have learned
level of caring for others or of action in the
The
steps
first
are opening our-
are given
and again with new
new understanding 62
com-
into action,
world.
Once we
upon the meaning we have found, we are ready again
level of meditation;
Christ,
to
are serious about going on and not just pretending or hypo-
critical, this realization
ing to a
God
for a
are
new
insights into the reality of the Risen
of
what our
actions ought to be
and a
The Creative Power
of Love
63
new basis for directing them. At one level we may become open to many different relationships, or at another to the sorrow and suffering for
sympathy with untold numbers of people and
level of experience
is
their condition in
the joy of that
make
As each
life.
we
actualized in our relationships with other people,
find
new levels of community with God. This seems to be an unlimited process. In this way real social action grows from an experience of God. In Friedrich von Hugel's study of the life of St. Catherine of Genoa one can follow this process at work in a life that is certainly one of the most attracagain and again
tive
examples of medieval
many
1
piety.
Catherine
St.
easier to identify with than
is
was
of the cloistered saints, and step-by-step the effect of her search
reflect-
Her initial illumination arose out of discouragement with a meaningless life. The experience made it possible for her to continue in her marriage, living with her wealth until much of it was lost and giving the best of her love to ed in action.
her husband. After his death she protected his mistress and illegitimate daughter.
She moved
and
to a hospital to care for the sick
destitute there so long as her
physical health remained. In each act of giving she richness of her
communion with Love
left
a record of
show her humanness, leaving her precious
In her will she continued to
how
the
God) grew and developed.
(as she called
objects to
favorite relatives.
How
does one go about shaping one's
giving of oneself even
when
one's
own
not a simple matter, and elsewhere
Here
is
it
have
I
life
so that
it
will manifest this love,
needs cry out to be met? Certainly this
approach
tried to
in
it
some
in
touch with the reality that
the door open both ways.
It is
is
found there requires keeping
so easy for us to forget that accepting
nearly always
means passing
that activity
only listening and sharing oneself with others.
is
First of all, such love
is
it
on by doing something active
not created by one's
own
pour out through
it.
life
in action. Since this
not our
is
effort. It
first
to
than relying on our
work through
own
efforts.
us takes
Unless
gives love, our attempts to imitate
it
we
some doing, but first
God
even
if
happens when a ritual, to
and foremost human
does take effort to cooperate with this creative reality
Allowing love
from
for others,
person allows the love discovered inwardly, through meditation and
it
2
necessary to sketch these ideas only briefly to remind us that looking
inward and staying
reaction,
is
detail.
it is
when one finds more certain
far
find the reality of the
are often self-seeking, shallow
Other who
and egocen-
The trouble comes not so much from our intentions, but from the fact that many well-intentioned people force love. They go out in caring for others and
tric.
so
make
valiant efforts to love without
reality they are trying to express
to
first
discovering the difference between the
and unrecognized
self-seeking.
Because they try
go ahead without seeking experience of God, they often spoil what should be
a transforming contact with the reality of love, at best reducing
human
it
simply to a
level.
Probably the best way
to describe
what
I
mean
is
by another diagram,
this
The
64
Basic Climate for Meditation
one representing two individuals facing each other. The nates one it
who
is
flow out to another person. Each
SPIRITUAL
on the
ellipse
trying to be open to love through the religious
WORLD
is
desig-
left
way and
then
let
surrounded by the physical realm and the
PHYSICAL
WORLD
SPIRITUAL
WORLD
Love, or
Love, or
The Loving God
The Loving God
III
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