BIRDSONG
I
always caution beginners in the serious spiritual life to avoid any attempt to measure or gauge their own spiritual
growth— since such growth is always
imperceptible to the self and any such measurement will always be deceptive and distorted. But when one has practiced
contemplative prayer for several decades, as have I, it is sometimes possible
to look back and retroactively notice a personal evolution.
Perhaps
the first thing one begins to notice in undertaking a serious effort at
contemplative prayer is the haunting recollection of sins. It is amazing that
soon after one has begun serious meditation or contemplation, the mind begins
to fill with memories of sins—sins one didn’t consider very serious “back
then,” those minor sins one had always intended to make right and never got
around to it, even sins for which one has already been absolved in auricular
Confession but still regrets. This is usually accompanied with a kind of shame—certainly
not at all what I would call a “guilt” nor any sense of culpability per se, but more a sense of dishonor, of
disappointment, a stripping from the ego of all those contrived pretenses at
propriety and sanctity—actually, a recognition of the true self. It is not that
one feels “unforgiven”—only inept, inadequate, and crippled. And this awareness
serves to remove the last shreds of the idea that ascetic practices will
somehow produce sanctity—a pitiful reminder of the utterly fallible nature of
the self.
And
then eventually those memories fade into the unconscious background, and one
begins to be aware of remarkable bonds of mystical commonality—with other
people, with sensate animals, and even with flora and inanimate objects. The absolute
primal unity of existence begins to pervade one’s awareness. It could be said
that one “discovers creation”—one discovers the common origin of all that
exists and one’s mystical links to it. One begins to re-connect with old
friends, turns to mend broken relationships, experiences personally the
distress of abused animals and a mistreated world. One even begins to feel at
one with the inanimate and inorganic domain—a personal consciousness of the devastation
of waste, destruction, and extinction. And one becomes newly-aware of the sheer
unspeakable beauty of a tree, of a rock formation, of a wide prairie, or of a
flight of geese. And the universal commonality seems increasingly self-evident
and ultimately almost overwhelming. One becomes brother to a tree. sister to a
star, and cousin to a deer.
And
then a very long time passes! One is faithful and trusting even, as is usually
the case, when one’s contemplative praying seems futile, vain, and pointless. [Note:
Such lack of “success” is the very best
sign that one is on the right track!] One continues staunchly. And then it
begins—small and humbling new insights begin to rise. And, however much it may
have become a cliché, the mystic William Blake’s “Auguries of Innocence” tells
of it:
To
see a World in a Grain of Sand
And
a Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Hold
Infinity in the palm of your hand
And
Eternity in an hour.
And
the ordinary surface of everything that one has normally perceived in the past begins
to tremble and to crumble. Gradually what was once factual and dogmatic, creedal
and objective, begins to become transparent, evanescent, and evocative. One is
increasingly dissatisfied with the sheer dogmatic, affronted by mediocrity, and
increasingly repelled by certitude. One feels like calling out, “Stop this
baby-talk! The truth is not there on the surface! Can’t you see that what is
deeply real shows itself only in a hint or a whisper at the surface—only a tiny
ripple on the ocean’s expanse?” And then one is driven to seek what lies beneath
that ripple, to discover the dimensions of truth that are hidden under
metaphors and symbols.
An example: What if the
presence of
Christ in the gathered community of
Christians for Eucharist were more
important and more fundamental than
the sacramental presence of Christ in the
bread and wine of Holy Communion?
What if this regular re-forming of that
assembly as the Body of Christ—
of Christians-coming-together-apart-
from-the-world that itself actually brings
Christ back to earth in a kind of mystical
“second coming? What if we ought
to be paying more attention to the way
in which we congregate than to who
says or does what at the altar?
Christ in the gathered community of
Christians for Eucharist were more
important and more fundamental than
the sacramental presence of Christ in the
bread and wine of Holy Communion?
What if this regular re-forming of that
assembly as the Body of Christ—
of Christians-coming-together-apart-
from-the-world that itself actually brings
Christ back to earth in a kind of mystical
“second coming? What if we ought
to be paying more attention to the way
in which we congregate than to who
says or does what at the altar?
That is what this
blog—this twittering of a “lonely sparrow on the housetop”—is about. It will be
a collection of some of these tentative and personal insights of a long-time contemplative.
Above all, I want to eschew infallibility in anything that I post here. Although
I need constantly to resist my inclination to pontificate, my intention here is
merely to suggest the possibility of deeper reflections on matters we may heretofore
have considered settled, resolved, closed, and neatly packed away. I expect it
will be an adventure—an unusual one, surely—but an adventure nonetheless, and
sometimes it may wander from familiar paths and even (all unintentionally) drift
into foolishness or error—for which I ask your forbearance in advance.