My friend Beth over at the Virtual Tea House sent this note to me and asked me to pass it on, which I am happy to do. A writing contest with wildflower seeds as the prize. Gotta love it!
Hi y’all!
Just posted about a writing contest here on the Virtual Tea House, Where’s Home?’
Check it out! Deadline is June 25th. Winning entry (entries) will be posted on the Virtual Tea House by the end of June.
Winners will receive a lovely packet of heirloom wildflower seeds specifically for their climate/locale! But more than that, everyone will get to explore more deeply the sense of ‘home’.
Send entries to beth@virtualteahouse.com
Hope all are having a delicious springtime,
Beth, VTH Host
May 18, 2008 | Categories: Announcements, Writing | Tags: home, Virtual Teahouse, wildflowers, Writing, writing contest | 2 Comments »
Yesterday a monk asked me, “What saints are you going to use in your book?”
I know he was just making conversation, but I bristled at the idea of “using” the saints. Once I got over my linguistic snobbery I appreciated that he was showing an interest in the project, so I replied, “Well, a lot of the mystics I love and will be writing about are not necessarily ‘saints’ in the canonical sense. There’s Julian of Norwich of course, and The Cloud of Unknowing, and Pseudo-DIonysius and Ruusbroec and Merton. Of course, there are some saints in the mix as well, like Francis of Assisi or Teresa of Avila or John of the Cross.”
He said nothing in reply, so I added, “What saints would you recommend I write about?”
He thought for a moment and said, “What about Bernard?” Ah, the mellifluous doctor, the shining light of the first generation of Cistercians (for now we’ll ignore the fact that he was a major supporter of the crusades). I can see why this Trappist monk would consider him a mystic of the first order; still, I wrinkled my nose. “Too mental,” I replied. “I mean, On Loving God is a wonderful philosophical work, but is the ordinary person with a beginner’s interest in mysticism (i.e., my intended readers) really going to be able to relate to his work?”
He replied, “What about the sermons on the Song of Songs?” I admitted that I hadn’t yet read them (that’s one of the more humbling realities of daring to write a book on mysticism: the literature is so vast that I am continually reminded of how little of it I’ve actually read, let alone studied or prayed over). He suggested that it is in these sermons where I’ll find Bernard’s mystical genius. I made a mental note to add them to my “to read sooner rather than later” reading list.
Our conversation meandered on to another topic — an Episcopal priest told me a few months ago that he thought “mysticism” as a category of Christian experience was not particularly useful, and so I asked the monk what he thought of that (he disagreed). But as I sat in silent prayer this morning, that prickly phrase — using the saints — kept popping up in my mind. I think it makes me sneeze because it reminds me too much of the pop-magic world within Neopaganism, where people “use” different mythological gods and goddesses to achieve their thaumaturgical goals. That always bothered me, even before I returned to the church. I have such a personalist view of the spiritual world: the saints, as best I can tell, are both real and alive, and wouldn’t appreciate being “used” any more than you or I might like it. Like any other being, they are happy to help, but would rather be approached with good manners and appropriate humility.
This doesn’t mean I have to pray to Julian of Norwich to ask her permission to quote from her book. But it does mean that, spiritually speaking, I feel like I should quote from her, or any other mystical writer from down the ages, with a spirit of gratitude and respect — and that such an approach of humility and thankfulness will make a difference as I dare to write about their profound wisdom. We who explore the mysteries of contemplation today really do stand on the shoulders of the visionary and God-ecstatic men and women who trod the mystical path over the centuries, sometimes paying for it with their lives (Marguerite Porete) and/or their reputations (Meister Eckhart). I think it’s fascinating that the canon of Christian mystical writings seems to be composed of a mixture of works by saints — people recognized by the church universal as holy and exemplary — and scoundrels (those who have been forgotten, suppressed or marginalized because their work is regarded as heretical or dangerous). In the first camp we find Bernard, Catherine of Siena, Catherine of Genoa, Bonaventure, Augustine, Benedict, Thérèse of Lisieux, Ignatius of Loyola, and of course the two biggies, Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross. In the latter camp joining Meister Eckhart and Marguerite Porete are Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Evagrius Ponticus, John Cassian, Madam Guyon, Margery Kempe, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and, alas, even Thomas Merton. Hmmm… is mysticism the bridge between a narrow, restrictive, hyper-orthodox brand of Christianity, and a larger, more expansive, more “generous” (to use Brian McLaren’s wonderful term) orthodoxy? That’s a thought we could all ponder. Given the enmity that seems to be continually simmering in our day between “emergent” and “conservative” Protestants or between “progressive” and “traditionalist” Catholics, perhaps the mystics as a community of witnesses really do represent a place where the walls separating the liberals from the purists might be deconstructed?
But back to my personalist feelings: the bottom line is that the great tradition of mystics really does represent a “community.” G. K. Chesterton called the communion of the saints the democracy of the dead, suggesting that tradition simply means our ancestors continue to have a voice in shaping how we who are in the flesh today choose to think and believe and behave. So too is it with the mystical path. We do not merely stand on the shoulders of Julian or Teresa. We stand side by side with them, listening to their wisdom and hopefully applying it to their lives. We are fortunate to have such wonderful friends to walk beside us.
May 18, 2008 | Categories: Christianity, Mysticism, spirituality | Tags: Communion of Saints, Mystical Authors, Mystical Tradition, Mysticism | 2 Comments »
Yesterday while working at the Abbey Store I got a surprise: a man came in whom I recognized, but couldn’t quite place. We spoke, and he reminded me who he was. I knew him years ago, when I was active in the Atlanta Neopagan community — and he was a Wiccan elder.
It turns out he’s discovered contemplative Christianity and has fallen in love with it. He spoke enthusiastically about meditating with the monks in the monastery church. I told him that I had become a Catholic in 2005, and he replied, “I still have a foot in both worlds.”
I nodded sympathetically. That’s basically where I was for quite some time before I embraced Catholicism, as I tried to discern how it could be that I was simultaneously making a living as a Pagan author/teacher and falling in love (again) with mystical Christianity. We talked about how a generous spirituality honors and acknowledges love and truth and beauty wherever it is to be found — even when discerned in two wisdom traditions that on the surface are hostile to one another.
Wiccans describe their magical circles as “a world between the worlds.” Sometimes I feel like I’ve taken up permanent residence between the worlds, as a devout and committed contemplative Christian who continues to feel affection and love for the nature-honoring and spiritually compassionate side of Paganism. Hanging out in this neighborhood means I’ll always be misunderstood by those who need clear boundaries and non-negotiable limits in order to feel spiritually safe within their own tradition (whether Christian or Pagan or whatever). But it also means that I get to express the fullness of my love — love for Christ, love for the mystical path, love for the earth and the body, love for community and family and friends and those who are hurting or hungry or in need of healing.
Reduced to its absolute essence, to be a mystic means to be one who loves. I’m hardly a mystic, just like on too many days I’m not very good at loving. But I aspire to be both an initiate into God’s mysteries, and one who loves in harmony with the heart of God. I think the desire for one is basically the same thing as the desire for the other. So I continue to pray that I may love all things the way God does. Even when it means that I’m always sort of hanging out in between the worlds.
May 18, 2008 | Categories: Christianity, interfaith dialogue, Mysticism, Paganism, spirituality | Tags: Add new tag, Christianity, contemplative spirituality, interfaith dialogue, Meditation, monasticism, old friends, Paganism | 4 Comments »