I had been attending Young Life regularly that school year,
primarily to meet people and for the chance to play Truth or Dare with older
boys. After dinner each night at Camp,
we would have a more intense version of those weekly youth group gatherings
back in St. Louis. The college age
counselors would put on skits and charismatically recount how they converted to
Christianity after hellish experiences with drugs and alcohol. They would tell us about how awesome Jesus
is, how much he loves us. One night
midway through our week, we all assembled together as usual in the fellowship
hall. Sitting cross legged, chatting about our sunburns and full bellies, we
cheerfully awaited the evening’s entertainment. Abruptly, everyone quieted
down. The youth minister had silently
been waiting for us to notice him. He
had a very solemn look on his face. He
told us we were all in very grave danger.
If we did not accept Jesus Christ as king of our hearts, our souls would
go to Hell. He said, “Close your eyes. He paused Imagine a tiny grain of sand
on a vast beach. He paused again Now imagine the worst pain you have ever felt. He
paused a final time If you go to Hell, the pain you feel will be like all
the grains of sand on the beach put together and the worst pain you can imagine
is like that one tiny grain of sand.”
I can not accept that there is only one way to find God. Through researching for this blog, I have
become increasingly aware that all World religions are interconnected. I intuitively believe that they all arise
from the same source. What if important
religious thinkers, leaders, and prophets throughout history are those who have
an especially strong connection to the spiritual realm, including Jesus Christ? I think it is worth consideration by
Christians that, while their religion is right for them, people for whom Christianity does not work, or people
from non-Christian cultures are not wrong.
Religions communities reflect a culture’s values and
philosophy. 21st century
American society puts a lot of emphasis on the individual’s happiness and
personal fulfillment, which our media urges us to seek via consumerism. Even by our fellow western countries standards
we are considered to be incredibly self-centered. The
Europeans point to the uproar over “Obamacare” and the more than a decade long
war over foreign oil as proof of American egocentricism. We come across to other cultures as having an
attitude that we are always right and we know everything. Also, our capitalist economic model depends
on taking far more than our share of the world’s resources and results in a lot
of waste that poorly impacts others.
This is a gross perversion of what God tells Adam in the book of
Genesis: “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have
dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every
living thing that moves upon the earth.”
This gift of the earth came paired with free will. Our self-will pushes us to find enjoyment and
then deceives us into thinking that pursuit of pleasure is the way to find
God. The catch with free will is that we
can make selfish and immoral decisions, but then we have to live with the
consequences. Some non-Americans count
climate change and the global recession as our karma. In this post, I want to explore the
similarities between the Christian mystics of the middle ages and the much
older, Eastern religions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism.
Ironically, the free spirited Christian mystics have been
viewed as self-centered by institutional Christianity according to “Ordinary
Mysticism” a book by Dennis Tamburello.
He defines mysticism as knowledge of God through experience of love: his
love for us, and our love for him and our neighbor in return. Secondly, the Christian mystics assert that
our idea of God is too small and that we must recognize that no image can
enclose the meaning of God. (41) Tamburello
details the lives and works of three important Christian mystics: Bernard
Clairvaux (1090-1153), Meister Eckhart (1260-1327), and Teresa of Avila
(1515-1582) who were French, German, and Spanish respectively. They all maintained that a symbiotic
relationship should exist between the two dimensions of spiritual life. Our prayer life is the contemplative
dimension and our love and service of others is the active dimension. The book concludes:
Mystical union
(with God) has to do with experiencing God’s presence in our livesGod is always present to us, though sometimes we are distracted from our awareness of this by our busy lives. It is important to cultivate a life of prayer – so that his presence will become more apparent to us in our regular daily activities…. It is especially important to recognize the connection between union with God and with one another. (119-120)
All three
mystics discussed in the book stress the importance of finding salvation, which
is equated with a loving relationship with God, through prayer and meditation. While faith communities can help with this
process, they are not required. Bernard
Clairvaux asserts that our salvation originates in God, he makes the first
move, but then we must accept his saving action in our lives. We then grow spiritually when our prayer life
feeds our life of service to others.
Similarly, Teresa stressed that “we do not attain intimacy with God in
isolation from others; rather we must help each other to grow spiritually.”
(94) She described her contemplative
experience as passive, however. According
to her, prayer flowed directly from God to our souls and espoused the prayer of
quiet which begins in God and fosters a sense of great serenity and sweetness
in us. Finally, for Meister Eckhart,
union with God should be enacted in a rich life of service. We should strive to identify our soul with
God. Our success depends entirely on
God’s grace, which is the mystical tradition defines as the presence or
self-communication with God.
I am struck by the parallels between the basic tenets of mysticism and
the three eastern religions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism. Hinduism is the world’s oldest religion,
dating back possibly as far as 10,000 BC.
The first written Vedas (from Sanskrit root meaning knowledge) date to
3,000 BC. The most significant Veda
asserts that Reality is One or Absolute and equated with God or Brahman. The ordinary world is an illusion. It is only through meditation that we can
experience our true self in a state of nirvana or total union with
Brahman. The Buddha or Siddhartha
Gautama was born the son of a wealthy Hindu in 563 BC. He ran away at 29 to seek enlightenment and
after many years of meditative practice achieved it at the age of 35 sitting
under a Bodhi tree. Buddha comes from
the Sanskrit root for “to awaken” “to be enlightened” or “to comprehend.” Buddhism teaches that we suffer because of
our desire for earthly goods. We find
liberation through meditation and training our mind in the laws of karma, or
cause and effect. When we engage in right
actions, good things come to us. Along
with Buddhism, Taoism is the other great religion of ancient China. It was adopted as the state religion in 440
BC and its founder Lao Tzu was honored as a deity until 1911 when China became
a Republic and dynastic rule ended. Tao means
“the way” and in Taoism the Way is the spiritual force that flows through all
life, connecting it to all things in the Universe. A happy life is one in harmony with the Tao
and this principle is well illustrated by the Yin Yang. In the West, the Yin Yang concept is of
complementary duality. While the idea of
harmony is consistent with Taoist thought, the two separate parts is not. The curved
lines of the symbol as well as the dark and light spots of light are meant to
show that the two opposites are intertwined and bound together in a continuous
ebb and flow. Thus, all is One and
interconnected.
On
the final day of my Young Life summer Camp experience, we gathered one last
time in the Fellowship Hall before boarding our busses for the ride home. The Youth Minister asked us all if we had
accepted Jesus as our Lord and Saviour.
He called for everyone to raise their hands if they had, one from almost
every of the several hundred sets of hands shot into the air. He then asked those of us who were not yet
sure to raise our hands. There were five
of us. We were asked to go down to the
boat house with 2 of counselors, while everybody else remained where they were
seated. When we got there, the counsellors
asked us if we had any questions. We
asked things like, “Will our Jewish friends go to Hell?” “What about people in remote parts of other
Continents, who had never even heard of Jesus Christ, what would happen to
them?” Each of our questions was met
with a shrug and a sigh and a, “Well, the Bible says….” What I heard was, “We are right and they are
wrong.” My doubt arose back then because
of a thought I feel confidant about today.
We are all right. The important
thing is to make the individual effort to know God and then to follow as you
are guided in your spiritual journey, wherever and to whomever it may lead you.
A friend of mine said (when we were teenaers) that each person makes a scribbled sketch of God in his or her head, based on what he knows personally or sees as culturally valid. Each 4- year-old in an art class would produce a radically different image when asked to make a drawing of the same object, according to their perception and ability. Our views of God can be compared to those preschool scribbles; different, incomplete images of the same object.
ReplyDeleteI think that Europeans are simply amazed at Americans” ability to stick their heads in the sand. They just do not understand the degree to which we are able to avoid information and escape via consumerism and nuclear family cocooning. I just saw a very disturbing statistic; only 41% of Americans ”believe in” global warming. It is so much easier to be totally vested in your own tiny world, (eg “We are right and they are wrong” ) without guilt if you totally avoid thinking about the ramifications of that belief. One would think that the Information Age would change that, but it just creates new echo chambers. sigh . The heartening thing is that there is a movement among young Christians to make their faith work to help others. My niece has been working to raise awareness of human trafficking. Maybe a shift is coming!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your awesome comments, Shalay! At the heart of every religion you find two main components: 1) an inner prayer life to establish a personal relationship with God; and 2)an outward life where the individual tries to share the "grace" s/he's gained from God with others through service and kindness. Jesus was a visionary who urged people to connect with God in order to then create a more just society. The United States is a country founded on self-professed "Christian Values." So I don't understand why there is such an outcry against Social Justice in the form of affordable and preventive healthcare for everyone. It would cost less in the long run to give everyone access to care before big, expensive problems arise. Jesus taught us that when we work together, to help one another, we all fare better in the final analysis. It just seems very hypocritical to me.
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