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Notes on Mysticism
in Today's World
John Farelly
OSB
In
the West there has been a
renewed interest in mysticism in recent decades. For many this comes
from a sense of the encircling darkness where the light of traditional
faiths had been shed, a sense that science does not have all the
answers, and a desire to have an experiential basis for insight beyond
normal everyday and scientific knowledge.
It also comes from greater
awareness of religious traditions of the East and a sense that there are
answers here important to our living the mystery of life. This turning
to the East has been particularly evident in those who are not aware of
the rich mystical tradition of the West, but even many who are aware of
this tradition acknowledge that there is a special need today for
certain religious insights characteristic of Asia.
Not all of this renewed interest
in mysticism has been sound. Some Westerners in their quest for psychic
and mystical experiences have turned to drugs. Some have accepted forms
of Gnosticism - quasi-religious searches for a psychological
sense of wholeness, without being open to the way in which God has
actually been revealed or to the real world around them. And some have
sought mystical experience in ways divorced from genuine religious
belief and moral life (e.g. by meditation techniques of Hinduism or Zen
as though these by themselves could assure mystical experiences.)
We can agree that a restoration of a
genuine mystical tradition is essential in our time of rapid change if
people are to find their way forward (or respond to The Way) and to gain
an adequate meaning in their lives in the midst of events swirling
around and within them.
In the past perhaps people could live simply by
another's discernment, particularly that of their religious tradition;
but in our pluralistic age they must live more by their own discernment.
And so they must develop a capacity for discernment, one that depends on
an inner purification and openness to truth even when this is painful -
elements emphasized by any genuine spiritual or mystical tradition.
What then is mysticism?
That this
is a deceptively simple question is shown by the disagreements rampant
among those who discuss it. In these brief notes on mysticism in today's
world, I write as a Christian, but as one who thinks that mysticism is
not restricted to Christians. I will dwell primarily on some elements of
an interpretation of Christian mysticism, and then ask all too briefly
how Christians can acknowledge and interpret mysticism in other
religious traditions.
An Interpretation of Christian Mysticism
For Christians, mysticism is
understood best through a study of those men and women who are very
widely acknowledged to be Christian mystics. This list certainly
includes saints and others, such as Gregory of Nyssa (d. 395), Augustine
(d. 430), Bernard of Clairvaux (d. 1153), Meister Eckhart (d. 1329),
Ignatius of Loyola (d. 1556), Teresa of Avila (d. 1582), John of the
Cross (d. 1591), and, in our own time, Thomas Merton (d. 1968).
[1]
Not all saints are mystics, nor
are all mystics saints.
Mysticism refers primarily to an experiential
awareness or knowledge of the divine mystery or the sacred. Christian
mysticism is such knowledge based on Christian faith, trust and love,
namely on that surrender of mind and heart to God who has been revealed
to us through Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit. This trust in God's love
for us and response to God and to our neighbors is one that finds its
model in Jesus Christ.
All Christians have access to some experience of
God that comes from the proclamation of the gospel, that witness of the
lives of other Christians, the sacraments and, above all, the inner
witness of the Holy Spirit. St Paul writes to the Christians at Rome:
You received a spirit of adoption, through which we cry,
"Abba! Father!" The Spirit itself bears witness with our spirit that we are
children of God. (Romans 8:15-16).
Mystical experience designates
an experience in prayer that is a further development of the relation to
God that is found in all Christians who genuinely believe and seek to
live in accord with this belief. It is a kind of knowledge of God, but
not that found in an intellectual analysis of what is believed. It is a
kind of experience, but not that which we have access to through our
senses or emotions. It goes further than these.
Mystical experience, then, it
paradoxical. We can show this through recalling the way two saints have
spoken of this experience. St Augustine recounts in his Confessions
an experience that he and his mother, Monica, had as they were speaking
together about God shortly before Monica's death:
Rising as our love flamed upward
towards that Self-same, we passed in review the various levels of
bodily things, up to the heavens themselves, whence sun and moon and
stars shine upon this earth. And higher still we soared, thinking in
our minds and speaking and marvelling at your works. And so we came
to our own souls, and went beyond them to come at last to that
region of richness unending, where You feed Israel forever with the
food of truth; and there life is that Wisdom by which all things are
made ... And while we were thus talking of his Wisdom and
panting for it, with all the effort of our heart we did for one
instant attain to touch it ... (IX, x, 24)
Here, Augustine speaks of an
experience of God through analogy with the sense of touch. This
"touch"
is not by flesh but the human spirit's being touched by God. It is a transient experience,
an experience that is received rather than something we can achieve on
our own, an experience that is a gift, one that is ineffable or that can
be conveyed to others only by suggestion rather than directly, and one
that does convey some mysterious and transforming knowledge of God.
Gregory of Nyssa, a representative
of Greek Christianity, also speaks of a mysterious knowledge of God that
is given to the Christian who has, not by human effort alone but with
the help of the Holy Spirit, responded to God by faith, turned away from
sin and sought to practice virtue. This process is a journey that one
begins through baptism and through being awakened by a dart from God's
love. Its basis is desire for union with God, and it involves a
continuous passage from where one now is.
Gregory describes this process
by the image of the life of Moses, who first knew God in the burning
bush, but later knew God more intimately in the cloud:
What does it mean that Moses
entered the darkness and then saw God in it? What is now recounted
seems somehow to be contradictory to the first theophany, for then
the Divine was beheld in light but now he is seen in darkness ...
When ... Moses grew in knowledge, he declared that he had seen
God in the darkness, that is, that he had then come to know that
what is divine is beyond all knowledge and comprehension, for the
text says, "Moses approached the dark cloud where God was"
(Exodus 20:21). (Dupré and Wiseman 55-56)
This is not an intellectual
knowledge, but one that comes to the soul pierced by the desire of
beauty, goodness and union with God. God can be revealed to such a one
in the darkness 'by the fact that He gives the soul some sense of His
presence, even while he eludes her clear apprehension, concealed as he
is by the invisibility of his nature;' Gregory of Nyssa writes in his
Commentary on the Song of Songs (Dupré and Wiseman 46).
Characteristics of Christian
Mysticism
From these two examples, we may
note several characteristics of Christian mysticism. The paradoxical
experiential knowledge of God proper to it is of God as transcendent and
personal. It is a knowledge that is more the fruit of desire and love
than intellectual study.
Two traditions are represented by Augustine and
Gregory, though this distinction is not absolute, but rather a matter of
emphasis. The former is called "kataphatic" mysticism, while
the latter is called "apophatic." The former describes this
knowledge more in terms of light. The latter describes it more in
terms of darkness and "not-knowing."
Second, mysticism can refer to
the whole way of life in which this knowledge is found. As such, it has
classically been described as having stages.
The first of these was
frequently called the "purgative" way, characterized by
persons turning away from sin in repentance and by active practice of
the virtues and of asceticism. By asceticism here we mean effort to act
counter to the roots of sin in ourselves and thus be more in control of
such passions or inclinations within us that lead to sin.
The second was
called the "illuminative" way, a stage in which a person's practice of the
virtues of the Christian life was more prominent than the turning away
from sin. Their prayer was characterized by a greater simplicity and
affectivity and the beginnings of mystical prayer, and they had
experienced what John of the Cross called "the night of the senses"
- a passive purification of the heart beyond that
which they were able to achieve, under grace, by their active efforts.
The third stage was called the
"unitive"
way and was characterized by passage though profound purification both
internal and external ("the night of the spirit"). This is a
more profound
prayer that was more passive or subject to God's presence, even though
this be in the darkness of faith. The union such mystics experienced was
described at times as a "mystical marriage.".
There is much that we are
not mentioning in this sketch of Christian mysticism, such as the
diverse experiences of God found in mystics and the place of Jesus
Christ in their lives and experience. We should note that many of the
mystics were very active people, and that they generally acknowledged
that the criterion of their lives and prayer was more their charity or
fraternal love and submission to God's will than experience in prayer.
Recent Themes in Mysticism
In recent Christian reflection on
mysticism, several themes emerge. Mystical experience is distinguished
from the extraordinary manifestations (e.g. visions, ecstasy,
levitation) found in some of the saints and with which it has sometimes
been confused. It is mediated by God's initiative and grace and the
human person's return in faith and love to God through transcending,
though perhaps never fully, the self at its superficial and illusionary
levels (including the "shadow" in Jungian terms) and through being in
touch with and accepting a deeper and hidden self open to God.
Such transcendence has been
studied by the pioneering theologians Karl Rahner and Bernard Lonergan,
and is now being clarified by studies of human transcendence that come
from developmental psychologists and Carl Jung.
Mysticism is currently
being related to the process of human life as a whole. This return to
God is one that must include rather than bypass love for our neighbors
and efforts to transform a world marked by serious injustices. It must
also make time and space for God, for silence, aloneness, spiritual
reading and varied forms of prayer in our hyperactive and cluttered
lives. There is an ordinary mystical way to which many are called in the
midst of the world, where the apparent naturalness of life itself offers
that purifying darkness of which John of the Cross spoke and mediates
God in this darkness.
Abbot John Chapman in Spiritual
Letters, notes an experience characteristic of religious people of
our time:
In the seventeenth-eighteenth
centuries most pious souls seem to have gone through a period in
which they felt sure that God had reprobated them ... This
doesn't seem to happen nowadays. But the corresponding trial of our
contemporaries seems to be the feeling of not having any faith; not
temptation against any particular article (usually), but a mere
feeling that religion is not true ... The only remedy is to despise
the whole thing, and pay no attention to it - except (of course) to
assure our Lord that one is ready to suffer from it as long as he
wishes, which seems an absurd paradox to say to a person one doesn't
believe in! But then, that is the trial. Faith is really
particularly strong all the time. (139)
Finally, it is recognized that some
of the classical mystics were influenced by the Greek philosophical
tradition in ways that shifted the priorities of scripture.
In the
quotation from Augustine given above, we see that his mystical
experience reflects a return to God through the stages of being that had
come from God's creation and through the Word made flesh who makes this
return possible. This is at times called the "exitus-reditus" model and
is influenced by the philosopher Plotinus's understanding of the stages
of creation emanating from God and our return to God by, as it were,
going back through these stages to God, to complete this 'circle.'
However, the early Christians viewed their return to God not primarily
on the model of creation but on the model of redemption. That is, they
expected to return to God through responding to the way in which God was
offering them salvation. And God was offering this through the second
coming of Jesus at the end of history, to which they looked forward. The
first meaning of salvation was what Jesus would do when he came again (Romans
5.9; 1 Corinthians 15.22-23). He would come as Son of
Man who would save his followers from death, Satan and judgment and
unite them with God and with one another in the Kingdom of God.
Thus they understood their return
to God as centered on God's coming to them from the future fulfillment
and liberation of history that Jesus has already won and would bring
definitively when he came again. Jesus has already gone into the
fullness of his kingdom through his death, resurrection and exaltation.
And he is already exercising in part that saving action that he will
pre-eminently exercise when he comes again. For example, he has sent his
Holy Spirit as the energy of the age to come to his disciples to be in
them as a community and as individuals. And through the Eucharist he
shares with us even now a foretaste of the messianic banquet. The
exalted Lord speaks with the Church through his disciples' proclamation
of the gospel, and he is in the midst of his people. He calls us to
share his passion so that we may share its fruitfulness both now and
hereafter.
The Father's presence to
Christians is mediated not primarily through creation but through the
crucified, risen and exalted Jesus who is to return at the end of
history and who already offers us - as from the future kingdom - that
salvation that will be fully ours only then. God's presence is also
mediated through the Spirit who is sent even now to abide in us and lead
us to the fullness of Christ-like love.
Thus, as opposed to
interpretations of Christians relation to God in ways that diminish
their commitment to history, a completely Christian spirituality and
mysticism accepts history and its tasks. In accord with a theme
dramatically underlined by liberation theologians, Christian mystics
resolutely face the future rather than revert to a primordial past. They
seek to instill in the present the values of the Kingdom or the world to come
- values that already in part liberate and fulfill our past and our
present. We will have further opportunity below to recall some elements
of the Trinity's relating to us in this context.
A Christian Evaluation of Mysticism in Other Religious Traditions
If one accepts the view of
mysticism indicated above, how can one evaluate mystical experiences
found in other religious traditions? Many Christian theologians in our
time recognize that it is in accord with Christian tradition to
recognize both the reality and the God-given or graced character of some
mystical experiences in other religious traditions.
In "Declaration on the
Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions" the Second
Vatican Council itself asserted that the Church has a high regard for the manner
of life and conduct, the precepts and doctrines [of non-Christian
religious traditions] which, although differing in many ways from her
own teaching, nevertheless often reflect a ray of that truth which
enlightens all men (paragraph 2).
I will here simply borrow for our own purposes the largely concurring major findings
of two eminent Western professors of comparative religion who have
studied this question, the late R C Zaehner in Concordant Discord, and
Raimundo Panikkar in The Trinity and the Religious Experience of
Mankind.
Zaehner and Panikkar find that
there are at least three major forms of spiritualities and mystical
experiences that cannot be identified with one another. One of these
Zaehner calls "cosmic consciousness" (what Panikkar calls the way of
immanence). Tis is found pre-eminently in India, but elsewhere too in early Taoism in China, Shintoism in Japan and varied forms of
animism.
This is exemplified in a poem on the origin of all things in
the primitive religious document in India, the Rig Veda. This poem
asserts that there is a primordial energy that gives rise even to the
gods:
Then neither Being nor Not-being
was ...
That One breathed, windless, by its own energy:
Naught else existed then ...
In the beginning this [One] evolved,
Became desire, first seed of mind ...
By the emanation of this the gods
Only later [came to be]. (Zaehner 68-69)
This poem suggests that mystery
surrounds the origin of this emanation and that
Only he who is its
overseer in highest heaven knows.
[He only knows,] or perhaps he does
not know.
What is primary in this sense of the Sacred is this
energy immanent in the world from which all or virtually all arises,
though there may be an "overseer in highest heaven."
A fuller treatment and evaluation
of Panikkar and Zaehner can be found in James Williamson's Christianity
and Other Religions: The Approaches of Raimundo Panikkar and Robert C.
Zaehner. Williamson notes similarities between Panikkar's forms of
spirituality and Zaehner's forms of mysticism, but unfortunately he uses
only works of Zaehner that are earlier than Concordant Discord,
and so for him these similarities are not as marked as they appear to
me.
In the Buddhist Upanishads, this mysterious
One also seems central. Brahman, that initially signified the sacrifice,
came to signify the power immanent in the sacrifice and then the power
immanent in the world as the pre-eminent principle. There are
quite diverse interpretations of ultimate reality and religious
experience in India - some dualistic, some non-dualistic, and some a
qualified dualism. But Panikkar suggests that
... the central message of the
Upanishads interpreted in their fullness ... is advaita,
i.e., non-dual character of the Real, the impossibility of adding
God to the world or vice versa ... For the Upanishads, therefore,
the Absolute is not only transcendent but both transcendent and
immanent all in one. (36)
The point of religion was for one to
come to realize this, to come to a living awareness that Atman
(the deepest self in the individual) is Brahman, somewhat
... as rivers flowing [downwards] find their home/ In the ocean,
leaving name and form behind. (Zaehner 85)
The mystical awareness
to which religious practices were to lead was this consciousness of
union with an Absolute that is immanent, and a consciousness in which
there is a sense of the dissolving of the individual self into this
ultimate Absolute or Self. It is not a sense of personal union
in which both the individual self and the Absolute retain their own
identities. Some similar consciousness seems to be present in early
Taoism (Zaehner 215 ff) and elsewhere, though we do not have space here
to examine this.
Kinship Between Eastern
and Christian Spiritualities
Both Zaehner and Panikkar find
that there is a certain kinship between this spirituality and a
Christian spirituality based on the Holy Spirit, the Third Person of the
Triune God.
These non-Christian spiritualities speak of this Absolute
through realities of creation that Christian theologians have noted as
having a certain appropriateness to what is distinctive of the Holy
Spirit. We note that in the Judeo-Christian scripture, there are many
symbols of the Holy Spirit that are drawn from natural or immanent and
dynamic phenomena, such as wind, flowing waters, the hovering of a bird,
and movement interior to the human heart toward union with God and the
human community.
Christians believe that while the Spirit is personal
and infinitely transcendent - in essence or perfection, rather than
spatially - to all things created, this same Spirit is given to dwell
immanently in human beings and lead them to God. Panikkar points out
that pantheism is a danger for the spirituality of the immanent in India
and elsewhere, but that a profound teaching about the Holy Spirit could
affirm much not all - in this spirituality, and save it from the
distortions to which it is susceptible.
We in the West are helped by these
insights of Hinduism and other non-Christian religions to recover riches
of Christianity that have not been given the prominence they deserve. In
the Church we have depended for unity perhaps too much on the Word
preached and represented by the official teachers in the church. Now we
are more aware that we must depend much more on the Holy Spirit present
in all believers for such unity, without neglecting the Word.
In our
ecologically conscious age, it is important for us to recover an
awareness of the immanence of the sacred as well as its transcendence.
And in our age, more aware of how much the West has undervalued women
and their distinctive contributions, a greater awareness of the Spirit's
dynamism and immanence helps us to restore a virtually lost balance. [2]
But, analogously, in our future-oriented age, much of the East has to
learn to integrate its emphasis on the immanence of the Absolute more
with the future than with a primordial past. The Christian belief that
the Holy Spirit is sent to us from Christ gone into the fullness of his
Kingdom helps here.
Other Forms of Mysticism
Another form of mysticism or
spirituality is identified by Zaehner as the "mysticism of
isolation",
and by Panikkar as "apophatism or silence." They find this primarily in
Gautama Buddha. Zaehner notes that between the time of the Rig Veda and
the Upanishads, the belief in the transmigration of souls had taken root
in India. Through belief in karma, it was thought that what survived was
one's works.
Associated with this was the possibility of an endless
series of deaths, rebirths, and deaths again. This appalled many people,
Gautama among them, and he sought release. He rejected mystical
consciousness as described in the Upanishads, because this depended on
contact with the outside world.
This must be ruthlessly
suppressed, for salvation does not consist in cosmic consciousness, but
in excluding the cosmos and all its works from consciousness.
It is Nirvana, the "blowing out" of the flame of desire;
disgust with the world; total detachment, the cessation of becoming, the
stilling of passion, wisdom, an awakening to an abiding reality, seeing
things as they really are. (Zaehner 86-87)
Gautama was skeptical about the
Upanishads' metaphysical reflections on the Absolute and the self, and
abstained from these questions, simply offering his followers the Four
Noble Truths: life is suffering; desire is the source of
suffering; the extirpation of desire is the way to liberation; and the
Noble Eight-fold Path is essential for this. After his own
enlightenment, Gautama's temptation was to leave all the rest of human
beings to their own ignorance.But through compassion he overcame this
temptation and taught others the way to deliverance.
Later forms of Buddhism diverged
among themselves. Many of these forms were contextualized by myth,
devotion and folk religion, and so there is a kind of personal sense of
transcendence here. But much of the meditation of the Buddhist monks
seems apophatic. A form of Buddhism that emerged in China and later in
Japan as Zen Buddhism, was deeply influenced by Taoism, so much so that in contradistinction to Gautama, its "Absolute" became
identified with the "Buddha-nature" in each person and thus
immanent in the world. The meditation that characterized the mysticism
of both original Buddhism and Zen was entered into by satori or
enlightenment (to which different forms of Buddhism offer different
paths) and seems centered on impersonal 'Being'. Though at times it is
called 'Non-Being', this designation is more existential than
metaphysical, one that seeks to deny that it is any specific thing. Eastern
Mysticism and Trinitarian
Spirituality
Raimundo Panikkar associates this
with a spirituality of the Father, the First Person in the Trinity,
because it is associated with a "wordlessness" or silence. The
way to enlightenment is through a rejection of reasoning or
"logos". I
would suggest that it is associated by a kind of appropriation with the
ways the First Person is both the "ground of being" and the source of
the Holy Spirit. This latter relationship is one that is unnamed (unless
one calls it 'spiration') and one that has analogies with the way the
good gives rise to desire or love. Buddhists seem to center
apophatically on the Absolute both as the ground of being and Nirvana,
as nameless source and nameless goal.
Zaehner finds analogies between
such mysticism and certain experiences that Christian mystics describe - experiences that are gained through detachment and that seem centered
on Being or the depths of the soul and that relate one to eternity and
give one an inner peace and imperturbability.
The Buddhist tradition can
bring forcefully home to people of the West the need of accepting a
dialectical moment in our pilgrimage of desire. That is a moment in which we
face the fact that nothing of this world can fulfill the infinite
longing of the human heart. Of course, this is also emphasized by
Christian mystics, and in a special way by John of the Cross. Such an
experience is a way-station for most Christian mystics. It is not one in
which one should settle down as the ultimate point of arrival, though it
is a temptation for some to do so.
What is dominant in Christianity is a
Trinitarian mysticism or spirituality of personal union of love,
described at times by spousal metaphors. In accord with the early
Christian belief that the Father sends the Holy Spirit from the fullness
of the future kingdom into which Christ has entered, the Father's call
through the good which God is and offers us, is one that integrates
history rather than dissociates us from it. This context has much to
offer Buddhists in our age of historical consciousness to enable them to
relate their deep centering on the Absolute as Nirvana to the tasks of
history.
[3]
A "personal union" spirituality or
mysticism, the third type both Zaehner and Panikkar identify, is
characteristically of Christianity (and, in their own ways, in the more
emphatically prophetic religions of Judaism and Islam), but it is not
found exclusively there.
For example, Zaehner notes that in early
Confucianism and "particularly in the Book of Songs, the existence
of a personal God who is the Lord of Heaven is taken for granted,"
though in Neo-Confucianism God ceases to be personal at all and becomes
rather "the principle of rationality that informs all nature"
(252).
It is particularly in the Bhagavad-Gita that one finds a
spirituality of personal union. In this very important document, there
is a religious consciousness that goes beyond the immanentism of much of
Hinduism and the apophatism of Buddhism, because there is a sense
(whether this is a psychological or ontological sense is another
question) of Deity (Vishnu) taking on a human form in Krishna and
expressing God's personal love for human beings and an invitation to a
union with God that is personal. In Christianity, of course, this
personal union spirituality is specifically Trinitarian.
In conclusion, we can see the
appropriateness of the title of Zaehner's study of the mysticism of
world religions: Concordant Discord. One cannot reduce these
varied mysticism to one form; they are diverse. However, there is a
relation between them, so that they are not simply absolutely disparate.
In fact, Panikkar argues that they can be interrelated appropriately
only in a Trinitarian spirituality that acknowledges and integrates
these differences.
Our Christian spirituality must move from being
excessively Christo-centric and personalist to embrace dimensions of a
Trinitarian spirituality our Western culture has on the whole obscured.
We all need those forms of spirituality that have not been
characteristic of our culture. Perhaps, as we have noted, Asia has to
discover a religious sensibility or mysticism that orients us, as
Christian mysticism does, more to the future than to a primordial past,
and more to Deity as both transcendent and personal than as simply
immanent and/or impersonal.
Notes
- For a recent anthology of
Christian mysticism, see Louis Dupré and James Wiseman, OSB, eds. Light
from Light: An Anthology of Christian Mysticism (New York:
Paulist Press, 1988). Also see Harvey Egan, SJ What are They
Saying about Mysticism? (New York: Paulist Press, 1982) and
William Johnston, SJ Christian Mysticism Today (San
Francisco: Harper & Row, 1984).
- I have reflected on this in
"Feminine Symbols and the Holy Spirit," in John Farrelly, God's
Work in a Changing World (Lanham, MD: University Press of
America, 1985), 49-76.
- An interesting perspective on
this can be found in Hans Küng "God's Self-Renunciation and
Buddhist Emptiness: A Christian Response to Masao Abe" in Buddhist
Emptiness and Christian Trinity: Essays and Explorations, eds.
Roger Corless and Paul Knitter. (New York: Paulist Press, 1990).
Works cited
Chapman, Abbot John. Spiritual Letters. London: Sheed and Ward,
1959.
From "Spirituality Today"
Summer 1991, Vol.43 No. 2, pp. 104-118
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