Showing posts with label divine ground. Show all posts
Showing posts with label divine ground. Show all posts

2021/09/08

Perennial Phil Ch 25 SPIRITUAL EXERCISES [12,7032] vs (mindfullness) meditation, mentation

Perennial Phil Ch 25 SPIRITUAL EXERCISES [12,7032]

RITES, sacraments, ceremonies, liturgies—all these belong to public worship. They are devices, by means of which the individual members of a congregation are reminded of the true Nature of Things and of their proper relations to one another, the universe and God. What ritual is to public wor­ship, spiritual exercises are to private devotion. They are devices to be used by the solitary individual when he enters into his closet, shuts the door and prays to his Father which is in secret. Like all other devices, from psalm-singing to Swedish exercises and from logic to internal-combustion engines, spiritual exercises can be used either well or badly.

Some of those who use spiritual exercises make progress in the life of the spirit; others, using the same exercises, make no progress. To believe that their use either constitutes en­lightenment or guarantees it, is mere idolatry and super­stition. To neglect them altogether, to refuse to find out whether and in what way they can help in the achievement of our final end, is nothing but self-opinionatedness and stubborn obscurantism.

St. Francois de Sales used to say, 'I hear of nothing but per­fection on every side, so far as talk goes; but I see very few people who really practise it. Everybody has his own notion of perfection. One man thinks it lies in the cut of his clothes, another in fasting, a third in almsgiving, or in frequenting the Sacraments, in meditation, in some special gift of contemplation, or in extraordinary gifts or graces—hut they are all mistaken, as it seems to me, because they confuse the means, or the results, with the end and cause.

'For my part, the only perfection I know of is a hearty love of God, and to love one's neighbour as oneself. Charity is the aid only virtue which tightly unites us to God and man. Such union is our final aim and end, and all the rest is mere delusion.'
Jean Pierre Camus
315

St. François himself recommended the use of spiritual exercises as a means to the love of God and one's neighbours, and affirmed that such exercises deserved to be greatly cherished; but this affection for the set forms and hours of mental prayer must never, he warned, be allowed to become excessive. To neglect any urgent call to charity or obedience for the sake of practising one's spiritual exercises would be to neglect the end and the proximate means for the sake of means which are not proximate, but at several removes from the ultimate goal.

Spiritual exercises constitute a special class of ascetic prac­tices, whose purpose is, primarily, to prepare the intellect and emotions for those higher forms of prayer in which the soul is essentially passive in relation to divine Reality, and second­arily, by means of this self-exposure to the Light and of the increased self-knowledge and self-loathing resulting from it, to modify character.

In the Orient the systematization of mental prayer was car­ried out at some unknown but certainly very early date. Both in India and China spiritual exercises (accompanied or pre­ceded by more or less elaborate physical exercises, especially breathing exercises) are known to have been used several cen­turies before the birth of Christ. In the West, the monks of the Thebaid spent a good part of each day in meditation as a means to contemplation or the unitive knowledge of God; and at all periods of Christian history, more or less methodical mental prayer has been largely used to supplement the vocal praying of public and private worship. But the systematization of mental prayer into elaborate spiritual exercises was not undertaken, it would seem, until near the end of the Middle Ages, when reformers within the Church popularized this new form of spirituality in an effort to revivify a decaying monasti­cism and to reinforce the religious life of a laity that had been bewildered by the Great Schism and profoundly shocked by 
the corruption of the clergy.
316  Among these early systematizers the most effective and influential were the canons of Windesheim, who were in close touch with the Brethren of the Common Life. During the later sixteenth and early seven­teenth centuries spiritual exercises became, one might almost say, positively fashionable. The early Jesuits had shown what extraordinary transformations of character, what intensities of will and devotion, could be achieved by men systematically trained on the intellectual and imaginative exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola, and as the prestige of the Jesuits stood very high, at this time, in Catholic Europe, the prestige of spiritual exercises also stood high. 

Throughout the first century of the Counter-Reformation numerous systems of mental prayer (many of them, unlike the Ignatian exercises, specifically mystical) were composed, published and eagerly bought. After the Quietist controversy mysticism fell into disrepute and, along with mysticism, many of the once popular systems, which their authors had designed to assist the soul on the path towards contemplation. 
For more detailed information on this interesting and important subject the reader should consult 
  1. Pourrat's Christian Spirituality, 
  2. Bede Frost's The Art of Mental Prayer, 
  3. Edward Leen's Progress through Mental Prayer and 
  4. Aeifrida Tillyard's Spiritual Exercises. 

Here it is only possible to give a few characteristic specimens from the various religious traditions.

1]
Know that when you learn to lose yourself, you will reach the Beloved. There is no other secret to be learnt, and more than this is not known to me.

Ansari of Herat

Six hundred years later, as we have seen, St. François de Sales was saying very much the same thing to young Camus and all the others who came to him in the ingenuous hope that he could reveal some easy and infallible trick for achieving the unitive knowledge of God. But to lose self in the Beloved—there is no other secret. And yet the Sufis, like their Christian counterparts, made ample use of spiritual exercises—not, of course, as ends in themselves, not even as proximate means, but as means to the proximate means of union with God, namely selfless and loving contemplation.317

For twelve years I was the smith of my soul. I put it in the furnace of austerity and burned it in the fire of combat, I laid it on the anvil of reproach and smote it with the hammer of blame until I made of my soul a mirror. Five years I was the mirror of myself and was ever polishing that mirror with divers acts of worship and piety. Then for a year I gazed in contemplation. On my waist I saw a girdle of pride and vanity and self-conceit and reliance on devotion and approbation of my works. I laboured for five years more until that girdle became worn out and I professed Islam anew. I looked and saw that all created things were dead. I pronounced four akbirs over them and returned from the funeral of them all, and without intrusion of creatures, through God's help alone, I attained unto God.

Bayazid of Bistun
Bayazid Bastami - Wikipedia
Bayazid died in 874 CE and is likely buried in Bistam. There is also a shrine in Kirikhan, Turkey in the name of Bayazid Bastami. His corpus of writings is minimal when compared to his influence. His ascetic approach to religious studies emphasizes his sole devotion to the almighty.
Died: 874 CE; Bangladesh, Iran or Turkey
Born: 804 CE; Bistam, Qumis region, Abbasid ...


The simplest and most widely practised form of spiritual exer­cise is 
repetition 
  • of the divine name, 
  • or of some phrase affirm­ing God's existence 
  • and the soul's dependence upon Him.

And therefore, when thou purposest thee to this work (of con­templation), and feelest by grace that thou art called by God, lift up thine heart unto God with a meek stirring of love. And mean God that made thee, and bought thee, and graciously called thee to thy degree, and receive none other thought of God. [?] And yet not all these, except thou desirest; for a naked intent directed unto God, without any other cause than Himself, sufficeth wholly. [?]

And if thou desirest to have this intent lapped and folden in one word, so that thou mayest have better hold thereupon, take thee but a little word of one syllable, for so it is better than of two; for the shorter the word, the better it accordeth with the work of the spirit. And such a word is this word GOD or this word LOVE. Choose whichever thou wilt, or another; whatever word thou likest best of one syllable. And fasten this word to thy heart that so it may never go thence for anything that befalleth.318

The word shall be thy shield and thy spear, whether thou ridest on peace or on war. With this word thou shalt beat on this cloud and this darkness above thee. With this word thou shalt smite down all manner of thought under the cloud of forgetting. Insomuch that, if any thought press upon thee to ask what thou wouldst have, answer with no more words than with this one word (GOD or LovE). And if he offer of his great learn­ing to expound to thee that word, say to him that thou wilt have it all whole, and not broken nor undone. And if thou wilt hold fast to this purpose, be sure that that thought will no while bide.

The Cloud of Unknowing

Google traslation into Spanish first, then back to English

And therefore, when you propose yourself to this work (of contemplation), and feel by grace that you are called by God, raise your heart to God with a meek impulse of love. And it means God who made you, and bought you, and mercifully called you to your degree, and you receive no other thought from God. And yet not all of these except you wish; because a naked intention addressed to God, without any other cause than Himself, is wholly sufficient. And if you want this intention to be licked and folded into a single word, so that you can grasp it better, take a small word of one syllable, because that is better than two; because the shorter the word, the better it agrees with the work of the spirit. And such a word is this word GOD or this word LOVE. Choose what you want, or other; the word you like the most with one syllable. And fix this word in your heart so that it never goes away for anything that happens. 318 The word will be your shield and your spear, whether you ride in peace or war. With this word you will strike this cloud and this darkness above you. With this word you will cast down all thought under the cloud of oblivion. So, if any thought prompts you to ask what you want, do not answer with more words than with this one word (GOD or LOVE). And if he offers you his great wisdom to expose you to that word, tell him that you want it whole, and not broken or undone. And if you hold on to this resolution, rest assured that this thought will not remain for long.



In another chapter the author of the Cloud suggests that the word symbolizing our final end should sometimes be alter­nated with a word denoting our present position in relation to that end. The words to be repeated in this exercise are SIN and GOD.

Not breaking or expounding these words with curiosity of wit, considering the qualities of these words, as if thou wouldst by that consideration increase thy devotion. I believe it should never be so in this case and in this work. But hold them all whole, these words; and mean by SIN a lump, thou knowest never what, none other thing but thyself. . . . And because ever the whiles thou livest in this wretched life, thou must always feel in some part this foul stinking lump of sin, as it were oned and congealed with the substance of thy being, therefore shalt thou alternately mean these two words—SIN and GOD.

 With this general understanding that, if thou hadst God, then shouldst thou lack sin; and mightest thou lack sin, then shouldst thou have God.


The Cloud of Unknowing

The shaykh took my hand and led me into the convent. I sat down in the portico, and the shaykh picked up a book and began to read. As is the way of scholars, I could not help wondering what the book was. 319
The shaykh perceived my thoughts. 'Abu Sa'id,' he said, 'all the hundred and twenty-four thousand prophets were sent to preach one word. They bade the people say, "Allah," and devote themselves to Him. Those who heard this word by the ear alone let it go out by the other ear; but those who heard it with their souls imprinted it on their souls and repeated it until it pene­trated their hearts and souls, and their whole beings became this word. They were made independent of the pronunciation of the word; they were released from the sound of the letters. Having understood the spiritual meaning of this word, they became so absorbed in it that they were no more conscious of their own non-existence.'

Abu Sa'id

Take a short verse of a psalm, and it shall be shield and buckler to you against all your foes.

Cassian, quoting Abbot Isaac

In India the repetition of the divine name or the mantram (a short devotional or doctrinal affirmation) is called japam and is a favourite spiritual exercise among all the sects of Hinduism and Buddhism. The shortest mantram is OM—a spoken symbol that concentrates within itself the whole Vedanta philo­sophy. To this and other mantram: Hindus attribute a kind of magical power. The repetition of them is a sacramental act, conferring grace ex opere operato. 

A similar efficacity was and indeed still is attributed to sacred words and formulae by Bud­dhists, Moslems, Jews and Christians. And, of course, just as traditional religious rites seem to possess the power to evoke the real presence of existents projected into psychic objectivity by the faith and devotion of generations of worshippers, so too long-hallowed words and phrases may become channels for conveying powers other and greater than those belonging to the individual who happens at the moment to be pronouncing them. 320  

And meanwhile the constant repetition of 'this word GOD or this word LOVE' may, in favourable circumstances, have a profound effect upon the subconscious mind, inducing that selfless one-pointedness of will and thought and feeling, without which the unitive knowledge of God is impossible. Furthermore, it may happen that, if the word is simply re­peated 'all whole, and not broken up or undone' by discursive analysis, the Fact for which the word stands will end by pre­senting itself to the soul in the form of an integral intuition. 
When this happens, 'the doors of the letters of this word are opened' (to use the language of the Sufis) and the soul passes through into Reality. 
But though all this may happen, it need not necessarily happen. For there is no spiritual patent medi­cine, no pleasant and infallible panacea for souls suffering from separateness and the deprivation of God. 
No, there is no guaranteed cure; and, if used improperly, the medicine of spiritual exercises may start a new disease or aggravate the old. 
For example, a mere mechanical repetition of the divine name can result in a kind of numbed stupefaction that is as much below analytical thought as intellectual vision is above it. 
And because the sacred word constitutes a kind of prejudgment of the experience induced by its repetition, this stupefaction, or some other abnormal state, is taken to be the immediate aware­ness of Reality and is idolatrously cultivated and hunted after, with a turning of the will towards what is supposed to be God before there has been a turning of it away from the self.

The dangers which beset the practiser of japam,[?] who is insufficiently mortified and insufficiently recollected and aware, are encountered in the same or different forms by those who make use of more elaborate spiritual exercises.
 Intense con­centration on an image or idea, such as is recommended by many teachers, both Eastern and Western, may be very helpful for certain persons in certain circumstances, very harmful in other cases. 

It is helpful when the concentration results in such mental stillness, such a silence of intellect, will and feeling, that the divine Word can be uttered within the soul. 321 

It is harmful when the image concentrated upon becomes so hallucinatingly real that it is taken for objective Reality and idolatrously worshipped; 
harmful, too, when the exercise of concentration produces unusual psycho-physical results, in which the person experiencing them takes a personal pride, as being special graces and divine communications
Of these unusual psycho-physical occurrences the most ordinary are visions and auditions, foreknowledge, telepathy and other psychic powers, and the curious bodily phenomenon of intense heat. 
Many persons who practise concentration exercises experience this heat occasionally. 
A number of Christian saints, of whom the best known are St. Philip Neri and St. Catherine of Siena, have experienced it continuously. 

In the East techniques have been developed whereby the accession of heat resulting from intense concentration can be regulated, controlled and put to do useful work, such as keeping the con­templative warm in freezing weather. 

In Europe, where the phenomenon is not well understood, many would-be con-templatives have experienced this heat, and have imagined it to be some special divine favour, or even the experience of union, and being insufficiently mortified and humble, have fallen into idolatry and a God-eclipsing spiritual pride.

===

The following passage from one of the great Mahayana scriptures contains a searching criticism of the kind of spiritual exercises prescribed by Hinayanist teachers—concentration on symbolic objects, meditations on transience and decay (to wean the soul away from attachment to earthly things), on the different virtues which must be cultivated, on the fundamental doctrines of Buddhism.

 (Many of these exercises are described at length in The Path of Purity, a book which has been trans­lated in full and published by the Pali Text Society. Mahayanist exercises are described in the Surangama Sutra, translated by Dwight Goddard, and in the volume on Tibetan Yoga, edited by Dr. Evans-Wentz.)


In his exercise the Yogin sees (imaginatively) the form of the sun or moon, or something looking like a lotus, or the underworld, or various forms, such as sky, fire and the like. All these appearances lead him in the way of the philosophers; they throw him down into the state of Sravakahood, into the realm of the Prat-yekabuddhas. When all these are put aside and there is a state of imagelessness, then a condition in conformity with Suchness pre­sents itself, and the Buddhas will come together from all their countries and with their shining hands will touch the head of this benefactor.

Lankavatara Sutra
《능가경(楞伽經)》(산스크리트어: लंकावतारसूत्र 랑카바타라 수트라)은 후기 대승불교의 경전이다.

In other words intense concentration on any image (even if the image be a sacred symbol, like the lotus) or on any idea, from the idea of hell to the idea of some desirable virtue or its apotheosis in one of the divine attributes, is always con­centration on something produced by one's own mind. 
Some­times, in mortified and recollected persons, the art of concen­tration merges into the state of openness and alert passivity, in which true contemplation becomes possible. 
But sometimes the fact that the concentration is on a product of the concen­trator's own mind results in some kind of false or incomplete contemplation. 
Suchness, or the divine Ground of all being, reveals itself to those in whom there is no ego-centredness (nor even any alter-ego-centredness) either of will, imagination, feeling or intellect.

I say, then, that introversion must be rejected, because extraver­sion must never be admitted; but one must live continuously in the abyss of the divine Essence and in the nothingness of things; and if at times a man finds himself separated from them (the divine Essence and created nothingness) he must return to them, not by introversion, but by annihilation.

Benet of Canfield

Introversion is the process condemned in the Lankavatara Sutra as the way of the Yogin, the way that leads at worst to idolatry, at best to a partial knowledge of God in the heights within, never to complete knowledge in the fullness without as well as within, 
Annihilation (of which Father Benet distinguishes two kinds, passive and active) is for the Mahayanist the 'state of imagelessness' in contemplation and, in active life, the state of total non-attachment, in which eternity can be appre­hended within time, and samsara is known to be one with nirvana.

And therefore, if thou wilt stand and not fall, cease never in thine intent, but beat evermore on this cloud of unknowing that is betwixt thee and thy God, with a sharp dart of longing love. And loathe to think of aught under God. And go not thence for any­thing that befalleth. For this only is that work that destroyeth the ground and the root of sin.323

Yea, and what more? Weep thou never so much for sorrow of thy sins, or of the passion of Christ, or have thou never so much thought of the joys of heaven, what may it do to thee? Surely much good, much help, much profit, much grace will it get thee. But in comparison of this blind stirring of love, it is but little that it doth, or may do, without this. This by itself is the best part of Mary, without these other. They without it profit but little or nought. It destroyeth not only the ground and the root of sin, as it may be here, but also it getteth virtues. For if it be truly conceived, all virtues shall be subtly and perfectly con­ceived, felt and comprehended in it, without any mingling of thine intent. And have a man never so many virtues without it, all they be mingled with some crooked intent, for the which they be imperfect. For virtue is nought else but an ordered and measured affection, plainly directed unto God for Himself.

The Cloud of Unknowing

If exercises in concentration, repetitions of the divine name, or meditations on God's attributes or on imagined scenes in the life of saint or Avatar help those who make use of them to come to selflessness,, openness and (to use Augustine Baker's phrase) that 'love of the pure divinity,' which makes possible the soul's union with the Godhead, then such spiritual exercises are wholly good and desirable. 
If they have other results—well, the tree is known by its fruits.324  

Benet of Canfield, the English Capuchin who wrote The Rule of Perfection and was the spiritual guide of Mme Acarie and Cardinal Bérulle, hints in his treatise at a method by which concentration on an image may be made to lead up to imageless contemplation, 'blind beholding,' 'love of the pure divinity.'
The period of mental prayer is to begin with intense concentration on a scene of Christ's passion; then the mind is, as it were, to abolish this imagination of the sacred humanity and to pass from it to the formless and attributeless Godhead which that humanity incarnates. 

A strikingly similar exercise is described in the Bardo Thodol or Tibetan Book of the Dead (a work of quite extraordinary profundity and beauty, now fortunately available in translation with a valuable introduction and notes by Dr. Evans-Wentz).

Whosoever thy tutelary deity may be, meditate upon the form for much time as being apparent, yet non-existent in reality, like a form produced by a magician.. . . Then let the visualization of the tutelary deity melt away from the extremities, till nothing at all remaineth visible of it; and put thyself in the state of the Clearness and the Voidness—which thou canst not conceive as something—and abide in that state for a little while. Again medi­tate upon the tutelary deity; again meditate upon the Clear Light; do this alternately. Afterwards allow thine own intellect to melt away gradually, beginning from the extremities.

The Tibetan Book of the Dead

As a final summing up of the whole matter we may cite a sentence of Eckhart's. 'He who seeks God under settled form lays hold of the form, while missing the God concealed in it.' Here, the key word is 'settled.' It is permissible to seek God provisionally under a form which is from the first recognized as merely a symbol of Reality, and a symbol which must sooner or later be discarded in favour of what it stands for. To seek Him under a settled form—settled because regarded as the very shape of Reality—is to commit oneself to illusion and a kind of idolatry. 325

The chief impediments in the way of taking up the practice of some form of mental prayer are ignorance of the Nature of Things (which has never, of course, been more abysmal than in this age of free compulsory education) and the absorption in self-interest, in positive and negative emotions connected with the passions and with what is technically known as a 'good time.' 
And when the practice has been taken up, the chief impediments in the way of advance towards the goal of mental prayer are distractions.

Probably all persons, even the most saintly, suffer to some extent from distractions. But it is obvious that a person who, in the intervals of mental prayer, leads a dispersed, unrecollected, self-centred life will have more and worse distractions to contend with than one who lives one-pointedly, never forgetting who he is and how related to the universe and its divine Ground. 

Some of the most profitable spiritual exercises actually make use of distractions, in such a way that these impediments to self-abandonment, mental silence and passivity in relation to God are transformed into means of progress.

But first, by way of preface to the description of these exer­cises, it should be remarked that all teachers of the art of mental prayer concur in advising their pupils never to use violent efforts of the surface will against the distractions which arise in the mind during periods of recollection. The reason for this has been succinctly stated by Benet of Canfield in his Rule of Perfection

'The more a man operates, the more he is and exists. 
And the more he is and exists, the less of God is and exists within him.' 

Every enhancement of the separate per­sonal self produces a corresponding diminution of that self's awareness of divine Reality. 
But any violent reaction of the surface will against distractions automatically enhances the separate, personal self and therefore reduces the individual's chances of coming to the knowledge and love of God. 

In the process of trying forcibly to abolish our God-eclipsing day­dreams, we merely deepen the darkness of our native ignorance. 326 This being so, we must give up the attempt to fight distractions and find ways either of circumventing them, or of some­how making use of them. For example, if we have already achieved a certain degree of alert passivity in relation to Reality and distractions intervene, we can simply 'look over the shoulder' of the malicious and concupiscent imbecile who stands between us and the object of our 'simple regard.'

 The distractions now appear in the foreground of consciousness; we take notice of their presence, then, lightly and gently, without any straining of the will, we shift the focus of atten­tion to Reality which we glimpse, or divine, or (by past experience or an act of faith) merely know about, in the back­ground. In many cases, this effortless shift of attention will cause the distractions to lose their obsessive 'thereness' and, for a time at least, to disappear.

If the heart wanders or is distracted, bring it back to the point quite gently and replace it tenderly in its Master's presence. And even if you did nothing during the whole of your hour but bring your heart back and place it again in Our Lord's presence, though it went away every time you brought it back, your hour would be very well employed.

St Fraaçois de Sales

In this case the circumvention of distractions constitutes a valuable lesson in patience and perseverance. Another and more direct method of making use of the monkey in our heart is described in The Cloud of Unknowing.

When thou feelest that thou mayest in no wise put them (dis­tractions) dawn, cower then down under them as a caitiff and a coward overcome in battle, and think it is but folly to strive any longer with them, and therefore thou yieldest thyself to God ill the hands of thine enemies.. . . And surely, I think, if this device be truly conceived, it is nought else but a true knowing and a feel­ing of thyself as thou art, a wretch and a filthy thing, far worse than nought; the which knowing and feeling is meekness (humil­ity). And this meekness meriteth to have God mightily descending to venge thee on thine enemies, so as to take thee up and cherishingly dry thy ghostly eyes, as the father doth to the child that is at the point to perish under the mouths of wild swine and mad biting bears.327

The Cloud of Unknowing

Finally, there is the exercise, much employed in India, which consists in dispassionately examining the distractions as they arise and in tracing them back, through the memory of par­ticular thoughts, feelings and actions, to their origins in temperament and character, constitution and acquired habit. 
This procedure reveals to the soul the true reasons for its separation from the divine Ground of its being
It comes to realize that its spiritual ignorance is due to the inert recal­citrance or positive rebelliousness of its selfhood, and it dis­covers, specifically, the points where that eclipsing selfhood congeals, as it were, into the hardest, densest clots.

 Then, having made the resolution to do what it can, in the course of daily living, to rid itself of these impediments to Light, it quietly puts aside the thought of them and, empty, purged and silent, passively exposes itself to whatever it may be that lies beyond and within.

'Noverim me, noverim Te,' St. Francis of Assisi used to repeat. 
"I should know, I should know you!"

Self-knowledge, leading to self-hatred and humility, is the condition of the love and knowledge of God. 
Spiritual exercises that make use of distractions have this great merit, that they increase self-knowledge. 
Every soul that approaches God must be aware of who and what it is. 
To practise a form of mental or vocal prayer that is, so to speak, above one's moral station is to act a lie: and the consequences of such lying are wrong notions about God, idolatrous worship of private and unrealistic phantasies and (for lack of the humility of self-knowledge) spiritual pride.

It is hardly necessary to add that this method has, like every other, its dangers as well as its advantages. 
For those who employ it there is a standing temptation to forget the end in the all too squalidly personal means—to become absorbed in a whitewashing or remorseful essay in autobiography to the exclusion of the pure Divinity, before whom the 'angry ape' played all the fantastic tricks which he now so relishingly remembers.328 

We come now to what may be called the spiritual exercises of daily life. 
The problem, here, is simple enough—how to keep oneself reminded, during the hours of work and recrea­tion, that there is a good deal more to the universe than that which meets the eye of one absorbed in business or pleasure
There is no single solution to this problem. Some kinds of work and recreation are so simple and unexactive that they permit of continuous repetition of sacred name or phrase, un­broken thought about divine Reality, or, what is still better, uninterrupted mental silence and alert passivity. 

Such occupa­tions as were the daily task of Brother Lawrence (whose 'prac­tice of the presence of God' has enjoyed a kind of celebrity in circles otherwise completely uninterested in mental prayer or spiritual exercises) were almost all of this simple and unexact­ing kind. 
But there are other tasks too complex to admit of this constant recollectedness.

 Thus, to quote Eckhart, 'a celebrant of the mass who is over-intent on recollection is liable to make mistakes. 묵상
The best way is to try to concentrate the mind before and afterwards, but, when saying it, to do so quite straightforwardly.' This advice applies to any occupa­tion demanding undivided attention. 
But undivided attention is seldom demanded and is with difficulty sustained for long periods at a stretch. There are always intervals of relaxation
Everyone is free to choose whether these intervals shall be filled with day-dreaming or with something better.

Whoever has God in mind, simply and solely God, in all things, such a man carries God with him into all his works and into all places, and God alone does all his works. He seeks nothing but God, nothing seems good to him but God. He becomes one with God in every thought. Just as no multiplicity can dissipate God, so nothing can dissipate this man or make him multiple.

Eckhart

329

I do not mean that we ought voluntarily to put ourselves in the way of dissipating influences; God forbid! That would be tempting God and seeking danger. But such distractions as come in any way providentially, if met with due precaution and carefully guarded hours of prayer and reading, will turn to good. Often those things which make you sigh for solitude are more profitable to your humiliation and self-denial than the most utter solitude itself would be. . . . Sometimes a stimulating book of devotion, a fervent meditation, a striking conversation, may flatter your tastes and make you feel self-satisfied and complacent, imagining yourself far advanced towards perfection; and by fill­ing you with unreal notions, be all the time swelling your pride and making you come from your religious exercises less tolerant of whatever crosses your will. I would have you hold fast to this simple rule: seek nothing dissipating, but bear quietly with what­ever God sends without your seeking it, whether of dissipation or interruption. It is a great delusion to seek God afar off in matters perhaps quite unattainable, ignoring that He is beside us in our daily annoyances, so long as we bear humbly and bravely all those which arise from the manifold imperfections of our neighbours and ourselves.

Fénelon

Consider that your life is a perpetual perishing, and lift up your mind to God above all whenever the clock strikes, saying, 'God, I adore your eternal being; I am happy that my being should perish every moment, so that at every moment it may render homage to your eternity.'

J. J. Olier

When you are walking alone, or elsewhere, glance at the general will of God, by which He wills all the works of his mercy and justice in heaven, on earth, under the earth, and approve, praise and then love that sovereign will, all holy, all just, all beautiful. Glance next at the special will of God, by which He loves his own, and works in them in divers ways, by consolation and tribu­lation. And then you should ponder a little, considering the variety of consolations, but especially of tribulations, that the good suffer; and then with great humility approve, praise and love all this will. Consider that will in your own person, in all the good or ill that happens to you and may happen to you, except sin; then approve, praise and love all that, protesting that you will ever cherish, honour and adore that sovereign will, and sub­mitting to God's pleasure and giving Him all who are yours, amongst whom am I. End in a great confidence in that will, that it will work all good for us and our happiness. I add that, when you have performed this exercise two or three times in this way, you can shorten it, vary it and arrange it, as you find best, for it should often be thrust into your heart as an aspiration.330 

Sr. François de Sales

Dwelling in the light, there is no occasion at all for stumbling, for all things are discovered in the light. When thou art walking abroad it is present with thee in thy bosom, thou needest not to say, Lo here, or Lo there; and as thou lyest in thy bed, it is present to teach thee and judge thy wandering mind, which wanders abroad, and thy high thoughts and imaginations, and makes them subject. For following thy thoughts, thou art quickly lost. By dwelling in this light, it will discover to thee the body of sin and thy corruptions and fallen estate, where thou art. In that light which shows thee all this, stand; go neither to the right nor to the left.

George Fox

The extract which follows is taken from the translation by Waitao and Goddard of the Chinese text of The Awakening of Faith, by Ashvaghosha—a work originally composed in San­skrit during the first century of our era, but of which the original has been lost. Ashvaghosha devotes a section of his treatise to the 'expedient means,' as they are called in Bud­dhist terminology, whereby unitive knowledge of Thusness may be achieved. 

The list of these indispensable means in­cludes 
  • charity and compassion towards all sentient beings, 
  • sub-human as well as human, 
  • self-naughting or mortification,331  
  • personal devotion to the incarnations of the Absolute Buddha-nature, and 
  • spiritual exercises designed to free the mind from its infatuating desires for separateness and 
  • independent self­hood and so make it capable of realizing the identity of its own essence with the universal Essence of Mind. 

Of these various 'expedient means' I will cite only the last two—the Way of Tranquillity, and the Way of Wisdom.


The Way of Tranquillity.

The purpose of this discipline is two­fold:
  • to bring to a standstill all disturbing thoughts (and all dis­criminating thoughts are disturbing),
  • to quiet all engrossing moods and emotions, 
so that it will be possible to concentrate the mind for the purpose of meditation and realization.

Secondly, when the mind is tranquilized by stopping all discursive think­ing, to practise 'reflection' or meditation, not in a discriminating, analytical way, but in a more intellectual way (cp. the scholastic distinction between reason and intellect), by realizing the mean­ing and significances of one's thoughts and experiences. 

By this twofold practice of 'stopping and realizing' one's faith, which has already been awakened, will be developed, and gradually the two aspects of this practice will merge into one another—the mind perfectly tranquil, but most active in realization. In the past one naturally had confidence in one's faculty of discrimination (analytical thinking), but this is now to be eradicated and ended.


Those who are practising 'stopping' should retire to some quiet place and there, sitting erect, earnestly seek to tranquillize and concentrate the mind. While one may at first think of one's breathing, it is not wise to continue this practice very long, nor to let the mind rest on any particular appearances, or sights, or conceptions, arising from the senses, such as the primal elements of earth, water, fire and ether (objects on which Hinayanists were wont to concentrate at one stage of their spiritual training), nor to let it rest on any of the mind's perceptions, particularizations, discriminations, moods or emotions. All kinds of ideation are to be discarded as fast as they arise; even the notions of controlling and discarding are to be got rid of. One's mind should become like a mirror, reflecting things, but not judging them or retaining them.
332

Conceptions of themselves have no substance; let them arise and pass away unheeded. 
Conceptions arising from the senses and lower mind will not take form of themselves, unless they are grasped by the attention; if they are ignored, there will be no appearing and no disappearing.
 The same is true of con­ditions outside the mind; they should not be allowed to engross one's attention and so to hinder one's practice. 
The mind cannot be absolutely vacant, and as the thoughts arising from the senses and the lower mind are discarded and ignored, one must supply their place by right mentation. 
The question then arises: what is right mentation? 
The reply is: right mentation is the realiza­tion of mind itself, of its pure undifferentiated Essence. 
When the mind is fixed on its pure Essence, there should be no lingering notions of the self, even of the self in the act of realizing, nor of realization as a phenomenon.

The Way of Wisdom.

The purpose of this discipline is to bring a man into the habit of applying the insight that has come to him as the result of the preceding disciplines. 
When one is rising, standing, walking, doing something, stopping, one should constantly concentrate one's mind on the act and the doing of it, not on one's relation to the act, or its character or value. 

One should think: there is walking, there is stopping, there is real­izing; not, I am walking, I am doing this, it is a good thing, it is disagreeable, I am gaining merit, it is I who am realizing how wonderful it is. 

Thence come vagrant thoughts, feelings of ela­tion or of failure and unhappiness. Instead of all this, one should simply practise concentration of the mind on the act itself, under­standing it to be an expedient means for attaining tranquillity of mind, realization, insight and Wisdom; and one should follow the practice in faith, willingness and gladness. 

After long prac­tice the bondage of old habits becomes weakened and disappears, and in its place appear confidence, satisfaction, awareness and tranquillity. 333

What is this Way of Wisdom designed to accomplish? 

There are three classes of conditions that hinder one from advancing along the path to Enlightenment. 

First, there are the allurements arising from the senses, from external conditions and from the discriminating mind. 
Second, there are the internal conditions of the mind, its thoughts, desires and mood. All these the earlier practices (ethical and mortificatory) are designed to eliminate.
 In the third class of impediments are placed the individual's instinc­tive and fundamental (and therefore most insidious and persistent) urges—the will to live and to enjoy, the will to cherish one's personality, the will to propagate, which give rise to greed and lust, fear and anger, infatuation, pride and egotism. 

The prac­tice of the Wisdom Paramita is designed to control and eliminate these fundamental and instinctive hindrances. 

By means of it the mind gradually grows clearer, more luminous, more peaceful.
 Insight becomes more penetrating, faith deepens and broadens, until they merge into the inconceivable Samadhi of the Mind's Pure Essence. 
As one continues the practice of the Way of Wisdom, one yields less and less to thoughts of comfort or desolation; faith becomes surer, more pervasive, beneficent and joyous; and fear of retrogression vanishes. 
But do not think that the consummation is to be attained easily or quickly; many rebirths may be necessary, many aeons may have to elapse. 
So long as doubts, unbelief, slanders, evil conduct, hindrances of karma, weakness of faith, pride, sloth and mental agitation per­sist, so long as even their shadows linger, there can be no attain­ment of the Samadhi of the Buddhas. 
But he who has attained to the radiance of highest Samadhi, or unitive Knowledge, will be able to realize, with all the Buddhas, the perfect unity of all sentient beings with Buddhahood's Dharmakaya.
In the pure Dharmakaya there is no dualism, neither shadow of differen­tiation. All sentient beings, if only they were able to realize it, are already in Nirvana. 
The Mind's pure Essence is Highest Samadhi, is Anuttara-samyak-sambodki, is Prajna Paramita, is Highest Perfect Wisdom.

AskYagllosha

Perennial Phil Ch 24 RITUAL, SYMBOL, SACRAMENT [8,4420]

Perennial Phil Ch 24 RITUAL, SYMBOL, SACRAMENT [8,4420]
의식, 상징, 성찬식 - 영원으로 통하는 문인가, 속박의 도구인가


ASWALA: Yajnavalkya, since everything connected with the sacrifice is pervaded by death and is subject to death, by what means can the sacrificer overcome death?

YAJNAVALKYA: By the knowledge of the identity between the sacrificer, the fire and the ritual word. For the ritual word is indeed the sacrificer, and the ritual word is the fire, and the fire, which is one with Brahman, is the sacrificer. This knowledge leads to liberation. This knowledge leads one beyond death.

Brihad Aranyaka Upanishad

IN other words, rites, sacraments, and ceremonials are valu­able to the extent that they remind those who take part in them of the true Nature of Things, remind them of what ought to be and (if only they would be docile to the immanent and transcendent Spirit) of what actually might be their own rela­tion to the world and its divine Ground. 

Theoretically any ritual or sacrament is as good as any other ritual or sacrament, provided always that the object symbolized be in fact some aspect of divine Reality and that the relation between symbol and fact be clearly defined and constant. 
1] In the same way, one language is theoretically as good as another.

 Human experi­ence can be thought about as effectively in Chinese as in English or French. But in practice Chinese is the best lan­guage for those brought up in China, English for those brought up in England and French for those brought up in France. It is, of course, much easier to learn the order of a rite and to understand its doctrinal significance than to master the intri­cacies of a foreign language.

1'] Nevertheless what has been said of language is true, in large measure, of religious ritual. For persons who have been brought up to think of God by means of one set of symbols, it is very hard to think of Him in terms of other and, in their eyes, unhallowed sets of words, cere­monies and images.   301  302 

The Lord Buddha then warned Subhuti, saying, 'Subhuti, do not think that the Tathagata ever considers in his own mind: I ought to enunciate a system of teaching for the elucidation of the Dharma. You should never cherish such a thought. And why? Because if any disciple harboured such a thought he would not only be misunderstanding the Tathagata's teaching, but he would be slandering him as well. Moreover, the expression "a system of teaching" has no meaning; for Truth (in the sense of Reality) cannot be cut up into pieces and arranged into a system. The words can only be used as a figure of speech.'

Diamond Sutra

But for all their inadequacy and their radical unlikeness to the facts to which they refer, words remain the most reliable and accurate of our symbols. 
Whenever we want to have a precise report of facts or ideas, we must resort to words. 
2] A ceremony, a carved or painted image, may convey more meanings and overtones of meaning in a smaller compass and with greater vividness than can a verbal formula; but it is liable to convey them in a form that is much more vague and indefinite. 
2'] One often meets, in modern literature, with the notion that medi­aeval churches were the architectural, sculptural and pictorial equivalents of a theological summa, and that mediaeval wor­shippers who admired the works of art around them were thereby enlightened on the subject of doctrine. 
This view was evidently not shared by the more earnest churchmen of the Middle Ages. Coulton cites the utterances of preachers who complained that congregations were getting entirely false ideas of Catholicism by looking at the pictures in the churches instead of listening to sermons. 
(Similarly, in our own day the Catholic Indians of Central America have evolved the wildest heresies by brooding on the carved and painted symbols with which the Conquistadors filled their churches.) 

St. Bernard's objection to the richness of Cluniac architecture, sculpture and ceremonial was motivated by intellectual as well as strictly moral considerations. 303 So great and marvellous a variety of divers forms meets the eye that one is tempted to read in the marbles rather than in the books, to pass the whole day looking at these carvings one after another rather than in meditating on the law of God.' 
Cluniac Reforms - Wikipediahttps://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cluniac_Reforms
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3] It is in imageless contemplation that the soul comes to the unitive knowledge of Reality; consequently, for those who, like St. Bernard and his Cistercians, are really concerned to achieve man's final end, the fewer distracting symbols the better.

Most men worship the gods because they want success in their worldly undertakings. This kind of material success can be gained very quickly (by such worship), here on earth.

Bagagavad-Gita

Among those who are purified by their good deeds there are four kinds of men who worship Me:

      •  1] the world-weary,
      •  2] the seeker for knowledge,
      •  3] the seeker for happiness and
      •  4] the man of spiritual discrimination.

feeling or indicating feelings of weariness, boredom, or cynicism as a result of long experience of life.  "a tired and slightly world-weary voice"

The man of discrimination is the highest of these. He is continually united with Me. He devotes himself to Me always, and to no other. For I am very dear to that man, and he to Me.

Certainly, all these are noble;
But the man of discrimination
I see as my very Self. 
For he alone loves Me 
Because I am Myself, 
The last and only goal 
Of his devoted heart.

Through many a long life 
His discrimination ripens; 
He makes Me his refuge, 
Knows that Brahman is all. 
How rare are such great ones!

Men whose discrimination has been blunted by worldly desires,
establish this or that ritual or cult and resort to various deities,
according to the impulse of their inborn nature.
But no matter what deity a devotee chooses to worship, if he has faith, 1 make his faith unwavering. Endowed with the faith I give him, he worships that deity and gets from it everything he prays for. In reality, I alone am the giver.

But these men of small understanding pray only for what is transient and perishable. The worshippers of the devas will go to the devas. Those who worship Me will come to Me.

Bkagavad-Gita
304 
If sacramental rites are constantly repeated in a spirit of faith and devotion, a more or less enduring effect is produced in the psychic medium, in which individual minds bathe and from which they have, so to speak, been crystallized out into per­sonalities more or less fully developed, 
according to the more or less perfect development of the bodies with which they are associated. 

(Of this psychic medium an eminent contempo­rary philosopher, Dr. C. D. Broad, has written, in an essay on telepathy contributed to the Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, as follows: 
'We must therefore consider seriously the possibility that a person's experience initiates more or less permanent modifications of structure or process in something which is neither his mind nor his brain. There is no reason to suppose that this substratum would be any­thing to which possessive adjectives, such as "mine" and "yours" and "his," could properly be applied, as they can be to minds and animated bodies.... 
Modifications which have been produced in the substratum by certain of M's past experi­ences are activated by N's present experiences or interests, and they become cause factors in producing or modifying N's later experiences.')  305  


Within this psychic medium or non-personal substratum of individual minds, something which we may think of metaphorically as a vortex persists as an independent exist­ence, possessing its own derived and secondary objectivity, so that, wherever the rites are performed, those whose faith and  devotion are sufficiently intense actually discover something out there,' as distinct from the subjective something in their own imaginations. 
And so long as this projected psychic entity is nourished by the faith and love of its worshippers, it will possess, not merely objectivity, but power to get people's prayers answered. 

Ultimately, of course, 'I alone am the giver,' in the sense that 
all this happens in accordance with the divine laws governing the universe in its psychic and spiritual, no less than in its material, aspects. 
Nevertheless, the devas (those imperfect forms under which, because of their own voluntary ignorance, men worship the divine Ground) may be thought of as relatively independent powers. 

The primitive notion that the gods feed on the sacrifices made to them is simply the crude expression of a profound truth. When their worship falls off, when faith and devotion lose their intensity, the devas sicken and finally die. 

Europe is full of old shrines, whose saints and Virgins and relics have lost the power and the second-hand psychic objectivity which they once possessed. Thus, when Chaucer lived and wrote, the deva called Thomas Becket was giving to any Canterbury pilgrim, who had suffi­cient faith, all the boons he could ask for. 

This once-powerful deity is now stone-dead; but there are still certain churches in the West, certain mosques and temples in the East, where even the most irreligious and un-psychic tourist cannot fail to be aware of some intensely 'numinous' presence. 

It would, of course, be a mistake to imagine that this presence is the presence of that God who is a Spirit and must be worshipped in spirit; it is rather the psychic presence of men's thoughts and feelings about the particular, limited form of God, to which they have resorted 'according to the impulse of their inborn nature'—thoughts and feelings projected into objectivity and haunting the sacred place in the same way as thoughts and feelings of another kind, but of equal intensity, haunt the scenes of some past suffering or crime. 
The presence in these consecrated buildings, the presence evoked by the performance of tradi­tional rites, the presence inherent in a sacramental object, name or formula—all these are real presences
but real presences, not of God or the Avatar, 
but of something which, though it may reflect the divine Reality, 
is yet less and other than it. 3o6 


Dukis Jesu memoria 
dan.s vera cordi gaudia 
sed super mel et omnia 
ejus dulcis praesentia.

'Sweet is the memory of Jesus
giving true joys to the heart; 
but sweeter beyond honey 
and all else is his presence.' 

This opening stanza of the famous twelfth-century hymn sum­marizes in fifteen words the relations subsisting between ritual and real presence and the character of the worshipper's reaction to each. 

Systematically cultivated memoria (a thing in itself full of sweetness) 
first contributes to the evocation, then results, for certain souls, in the immediate apprehension of praeseistia, which brings with it joys of a totally different and higher kind. 
This presence (whose projected objectivity is occasionally so complete as to be apprehensible not merely by the devout worshipper, but by more or less indifferent outsiders) is always that of the divine being who has been previously remembered, Jesus here, Krishna or Amitabha Buddha there.

The value of this practice (repetition of the name of Amitabha Buddha) is this.
So long as one person practises his method (of spirituality) and another practises a different method, they coun­terbalance one another and their meeting is just the same as their not meeting.
Whereas if two persons practise the same method, their mindfulness tends to become deeper and deeper, and they tend to remember each other and to develop affinities for each other, life after life.
Moreover, whoever recites the name of Amitabha Buddha, whether in the present time or in future time, will surely see the Buddha Amitabha and never become separated from him. By reason of that association, just as -one associating with a maker of perfumes becomes permeated with the same per­fumes, so he will become perfumed by Amitabha's compassion, and will become enlightened without resort to any other ex­pedient means.

Surangama Sutra
307
We see then that intense faith and devotion, coupled with perseverance by many persons in the same forms of worship or spiritual exercise, have a tendency to objectify the idea or memory which is their content and so to create, in some sort, a numinous real presence, which worshippers actually find 'out there' no less, and in quite another way, than 'in here.' 

In so far as this is the case, the ritualist is perfectly correct in attributing to his hallowed acts and words a power which, in another context, would be called magical. The mantram works, the sacrifice really does something, the sacrament confers grace ex opere operato: these are, or rather may be, matters of direct experience, facts which anyone who chooses to fulfil the neces­sary conditions can verify empirically for himself. But the grace conferred ex opere operato is not always spiritual grace and the hallowed acts and formulae have a power which is not necessarily from God. Worshippers can, and very often do, get grace and power from one another and from the faith and devotion of their predecessors, projected into independent psychic existences that are hauntingly associated with certain places, words and acts. 
A great deal of ritualistic religion is not spirituality, but occultism, a refined and well-meaning kind of white magic. Now, just as there is no harm in art, say, or science, but a great deal of good, provided always that these activities are not regarded as ends, but simply as means to the final end of all life, so too there is no harm in white magic
but the possibilities of much good, so long as it is treated, not as true religion, but as one of the roads to true religion—an effective way of reminding people with a certain kind of psycho-physical make-up that there is a God, 'in knowledge of whom standeth their eternal life.'    308   

 If ritualistic white magic is regarded as being in itself true religion; if the real presences it evokes are taken to be God in Himself and not the projec­tions of human thoughts and feelings about God or even about something less than God; and if the sacramental rites are per­formed and attended for the sake of the 'spiritual sweetness' experienced and the powers and advantages conferred—then there is idolatry. This idolatry is, at its best, a very lofty and, in many ways, beneficent kind of religion. But the conse­quences of worshipping God as anything but Spirit and in any way except in spirit and in truth are necessarily undesirable in this sense—that they lead only to a partial salvation and delay the soul's ultimate reunion with the eternal Ground.

That very large numbers of men and women have an in­eradicable desire for rites and ceremonies is clearly demon­strated by the history of religion. Almost all the Hebrew prophets were opposed to ritualism. 'Rend your hearts and not your garments.' 'I desire mercy and not sacrifice.' 'I hate, I despise your feasts; I take no delight in your solemn assemblies.' 
And yet, in spite of the fact that what the prophets wrote was regarded as divinely inspired, the Temple at Jerusalem continued to be, for hundreds of years after their time, the centre of a religion of rites, ceremonials and blood sacrifice. 

(It may be remarked in passing that the shed­ding of blood, one's own or that of animals or other human beings, seems to be a peculiarly efficacious way of constrain­ing the 'occult' or psychic world to answer petitions and con­fer supernormal powers. If this is a fact, as from the anthropo­logical and antiquarian evidence it appears to be, it would supply yet another cogent reason for avoiding animal sacri­fices, savage bodily austerities and even, since thought is a form of action, that imaginative gloating over spilled blood which is so common in certain Christian circles.) 

What the Jews did in spite of their prophets, Christians have done in spite of Christ. The Christ of the Gospels is a preacher and not a dispenser of sacraments or performer of rites; he speaks against vain repetitions; he insists on the supreme importance of private worship; he has no use for sacrifices and not much use for the Temple. But this did not prevent historic Chris­tianity from going its own, all too human, way. 
A precisely similar development took place in Buddhism.  For the Buddha  of the Pall scriptures, ritual was one of the fetters holding back the soul from enlightenment and liberation. Nevertheless, the religion he founded has made full use of ceremonies, vain repetitions and sacramental rites.  309 

There would seem to be two main reasons for the observed developments of the historical religions. 

  • First, most people do not want spirituality or deliverance, but rather a religion that gives them emotional satisfactions, answers to prayer, super­normal powers and partial salvation in some sort of posthu­mous heaven. 
  • Second, some of those few who do desire spirit­uality and deliverance find that, for them, the most effective means to those ends are ceremonies, 'vain repetitions' and sacramental rites
It is by participating in these acts and utter­ing these formulae 
that they are most powerfully reminded of the eternal Ground of all being; 
it is by immersing themselves in the symbols that they can most easily come through to that which is symbolized. 

Every thing, event or thought is a point of intersection between creature and Creator, between a more or less distant manifestation of God and a ray, so to speak, of the unmanifest Godhead
every thing, event or thought can therefore be made the doorway through which a soul may pass out of time into eternity. That is why ritualistic and sacra­mental religion can lead to deliverance. 
But at the same time every human being loves power and self-enhancement, and every hallowed ceremony, form of words or sacramental rite is a channel through which power can flow out of the fascinating psychic universe into the universe of embodied selves. That is why ritualistic and sacramental religion can also lead away from deliverance.

There is another disadvantage inherent in any system of organized sacramentalism, and that is that it gives to the priestly caste a power which it is all too natural for them to abuse. In a society which has been taught that salvation is exclusively or mainly through certain sacraments, and that these sacraments can be administered effectively only by a pro­fessional priesthood, that professional priesthood will possess an enormous coercive power. 
310 

The possession of such power is a standing temptation to use it for individual satisfaction and corporate aggrandizement. To a temptation of this kind, if repeated often enough, most human beings who are not saints almost inevitably succumb. That is why Christ taught his disciples to pray that they should not be led into temptation
This is, or should be, the guiding principle of all social reform —to organize the economic, political and social relationships between human beings in such a way that there shall be, for any given individual or group within the society, a minimum of temptations to covetousness, pride, cruelty and lust for power. 

Men and women being what they are, it is only by reducing the number and intensity of temptations that human societies can be, in some measure at least, delivered from evil. Now, the sort of temptations to which a priestly caste is exposed in a society that accepts a predominantly sacramental religion are such that none but the most saintly persons can be expected consistently to resist them. 

What happens when ministers of religion are led into these temptations is clearly illustrated by the history of the Roman Church. 
Because Catholic Chris­tianity taught a version of the Perennial Philosophy, it produced a succession of great saints. But because the Perennial Philo­sophy was overlaid with an excessive amount of sacramentalism and with an idolatrous preoccupation with things in time, the less saintly members of its hierarchy were exposed to enormous and quite unnecessary temptations and, duly suc­cumbing to them, launched out into persecution, simony, power politics, secret diplomacy, high finance and collabora­tion with despots.

I very much doubt whether, since the Lord by his grace brought me into the faith of his dear Son, I have ever broken bread or drunk wine, even in the ordinary course of life, without remem­brance of, and some devout feeling regarding, the broken body and the blood-shedding of my dear Lord and Saviour.

Stephen Grellet

We have seen that, 
when they are promoted to be the central core of organized religious worship, ritualism and sacramentalism are by no means unmixed blessings. 311 

But that the whole of a man's workaday life should be transformed by him into 
a kind of continuous ritual, 
  • that every object in the world around him should be regarded as a symbol of the world's eternal Ground, 
  • that all his actions should be performed sacramentally —this would seem to be wholly desirable. 

All the masters of the spiritual life
from the authors of the Upanishads to Socrates, from Buddha to St. Bernard, 
are agreed 
  • that without self-knowledge there cannot be adequate knowledge of God,
  • that without a constant recollectedness there can be no complete deliverance. 

The man who has learnt to regard 
  • things as symbols, 
  • persons as temples of the Holy Spirit and 
  • actions as sacraments
is a man who has learned constantly to remind himself 
  • who he is
  • where he stands in relation to the universe and its Ground
  • how he should behave towards his fellows and 
  • what he must do to come to his final end.

'Because of this indwelling of the Logos,' writes Mr. Kenneth Saunders in his valuable study of the Fourth Gospel, the Gita and the Lotus Sutra

'all things have a reality. They are sacra­ments, not illusions like the phenomenal word of the Vedanta.' 
That the Logos is in things, lives and conscious minds, and 
they in the Logos, 
was taught much more emphatically and explicitly by the Vedantists than by the author of the Fourth Gospel; and 
the same idea is, of course, basic in the theology of Taoism

But though all things in fact exist 
at the inter­section between a divine manifestation and a ray of the unmanifest Godhead, it by no means follows that everyone always knows that this is so. 

On the contrary, the vast majority of human beings believe that their own selfness and the objects around them possess a reality in themselves, wholly independ­ent of the Logos
This belief leads them to identify their being with their sensations, cravings and private notions, and in its turn this self-identification with what they are not effectively walls them off from divine influence and the very possibility of deliverance. To most of us on most occasions 
things are not symbols and actions are not sacramental; and 
we have to teach ourselves, consciously and deliberately, to remember that they are.  312 

The world is imprisoned in its own activity, except when actions are performed as worship of God. Therefore you must perform every action sacramentally (as if it were yajncz, the sacrifice that, in its divine Logos-essence, is identical with the Godhead to whom it is offered), and be free from all attachment to results.

Bhagavad-Gita

Precisely similar teachings are found in Christian writers, who recommend 
  • that persons and even things should be regarded as temples of the Holy Ghost
  •  and that everything done or suffered should be constantly 'offered to God.'

It is hardly necessary to add that this process of conscious sacramentalization can be applied only to such actions as are not intrinsically evil. 
Somewhat unfortunately, the Gita was not originally published as an independent work, but as a theo­logical digression within an epic poem; and since, like most epics, the Mahabharata is largely concerned with the exploits of warriors, it is primarily in relation to warfare that the Gita's advice to act with non-attachment and for God's sake only is given. 
Now, war is accompanied and followed, among other things, by a widespread dissemination of anger and hatred, pride, cruelty and fear. But, it may be asked, is it possible (the Nature of Things being what it is) to sacramentalize actions whose psychological by-products are so completely God-eclipsing as are these passions?

 The Buddha of the Pali scrip­tures would certainly have answered this question in the nega­tive. So would the Lao Tzu of the Tao Teh King. So would the Christ of the Synoptic Gospels. The Krishna of the Gita (who is also, by a kind of literary accident, the Krishna of the Mahabharata) gives an affirmative answer. 
But this affirma­tive answer, it should be remembered, is hedged around with limiting conditions. Non-attached slaughter is recommended only to those who are warriors by caste, and to whom warfare is a duty and vocation.313 

But what is duty or dharma for the Kshatriya is adharma and forbidden to the Brahman; nor is it any part of the normal vocation or caste duty of the mercantile and labouring classes. 
Any confusion of castes, any assump­tion by one man of another man's vocation and duties of state, is always, say the Hindus, a moral evil and a menace to social stability. Thus, it is the business of the Brahmans to fit them­selves to be seers, so that they may be able to explain to their fellow-men the nature of the universe, of man's last end and of the way to liberation. 
When soldiers or administrators, or usurers, or manufacturers or workers usurp the functions of the Brahmans and formulate a philosophy of life in accordance with their variously distorted notions of the universe, then society is thrown into confusion. 
Similarly, confusion reigns when the Brahman, the man of non-coercive spiritual author­ity, assumes the coercive power of the Kshatriya, or when the Kshatriya's job of ruling is usurped by bankers and stock­jobbers, or finally when the warrior caste's dizarma of fighting is imposed, by conscription, on Brahman, Vaisya and Sudra alike. 

The history of Europe during the later Middle Ages and Renaissance is largely a history of the social confusions that arise when large numbers of those who should be seers aban­don spiritual authority in favour of money and political power. 

And contemporary history is the hideous record of what happens when political bosses, business men or class-conscious proletarians assume the Brahman's function of formulating a philosophy of life; 
when usurers dictate policy and debate the issues of war and peace; and 
when the warrior's caste duty is imposed on-all and sundry, regardless of psycho-physical make­up and vocation.
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'numinous'   ˈn(y)o͞omənəs

Adjective
1
having a strong religious or spiritual quality; indicating or suggesting the presence of a divinity.
the strange, numinous beauty of this ancient landmark
Synonyms:
spiritual religious divine holy sacred mysterious otherworldly unearthly awe-inspiring transcendent
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