Contemplation

Love and indifference

In my occupation as an industrial maintenance technician, I often have days of nothing to do. Today is one. I will utilize the time to expand upon my thoughts on love as opposed to indifference. First, I would like to stress how I view myself. I am not a theologian, nor a scholar. I base my blogging efforts upon a friend requesting I undertake the task. I do view myself as a writer, although this is in regards to my extensive reading background, mostly fiction, storytelling—film cherished. I feel I possess a unique insight, sentimentality and empathy, into my characters. That insight is based absolutely upon love. I love my characters, desiring to bring them to life and expression. The reason I feel qualified to write about the contemplative life, I am not as confident about. I am not an academic expert, or even the best read on the doctors of the Church. I even thought of changing the blog title or ceasing my effort. Once I did determine to focus the title of my page on Faith, Hope, and Charity, the contemplative life as a layperson, I came across the blog ‘Contemplative in the Mud’. The young man putting the blog together, I sensed is much better read and more intelligent than myself. I feel God guided me to the blog, a proper humbling. Yet I was not discouraged. I prayed over matters, feeling confident to precede, authentic in motivation. I will note that the fore mentioned blog, I read daily. It has become, and will be, a part of my daily religious practice. My friary days, my short lived postulancy as a Franciscan friar, established my confidence in God blessing me with an exceptional prayer life. All glory goes to God. I am most secure, joyous, and confident during mass, and then during pray before the Eucharist. The Rosary and Meditation are sheer delights. Our daily life in the friary intensely combined an introverted and extroverted spirituality.

I will take a side note and comment on an injustice I perceive. Jungian thought on introversion and extroversion is immaturely perverted by the majority of people using the terms. It is not an either or situation. I am not either an introvert, or an extrovert. Both the active and contemplative approach to life are a part of every person’s personality. It was presented to me that a good example of proper balancing of both approaches to life is John Paull II. John Paul, an introvert, accomplished phenomenal things as an extrovert. To even go above and beyond John Paul, Our Lord and Savior demonstrates the ultimate embracing of introversion and extroversion. Within a crowd, Our Lord was open and present for every individual. Supernaturally aware and tuned to hearts, He healed, taught, cajoled, and shared with the entirety of His being. Yet Our Lord mastered introversion on a level none can ever comprehend. Receiving the Holy Spirit through John the Baptist, Our Lord immediately went off to the desert for forty days of intense fasting, prayer, and meditation. Throughout his ministry, Our Lord found it necessary to recede from the crowd in order to communicate with His Father. Preparing for his ultimate test in the Garden of Gethsemane, His prayer efforts were so intense He sweat blood, providing for all the mightiest of wisdom: ‘Thy will be done’.

Back to friary days. As friars, we evangelized to the extreme, knocking on neighborhood doors, visiting elementary, high schools and colleges speaking, holding court with the Knight of Columbus and other groups, mingling at dinner parties, watching the Super Bowl with benefactors in their home. There were prayer excursions to abortion clinics, homeless missions—all in all, a total effort of socializing. It was why I left. I could not take it. Recovering from alcoholism, I was not that psychologically sound in crowds, fear still dominating amongst others. In regards to the contemplative life, I prospered, flourishing during the two holy hours conducted daily and the communal Rosary before night prayers: Compline. The Holy Hours were conducted in the morning before mass, and one before evening prayers: Vespers. It was interesting to take note of the friars during the Holy Hours. The ones who grew excited during the evangelizing, playing in the musical band, well versed with people, skilled and loving with men, women, and children, struggled mightily during the Holy Hour, or read and/or wrote throughout the sacred time. The worst was a jovial chubby Philippine young man who played guitar, sang with delight, and was adored by all. There was no one who could say a bad thing about the brother. He was a blessed soul. Yet I would chuckle when I watched him walking apprehensively into the Holy Hour. He did not like them. He had such a difficult time sitting still, squirming all the time, just having a terrible time sitting still for such a long period of time. I say all that lovingly. That coincides with my idea that within the vastness of the Church we find our individual way—St Paul’s elaborations on the body of the Church. Back to the Holy Hour, I realized that was my time of strength. There was another brother who also shared my prayer tendency. The academic type read voraciously during the Holy Hour, others prayed the Rosary. There were only two of us who went into meditation. I would do nothing, concentrating upon my breath, mentally focusing upon the Eucharist. The priest in charge disdained the writing of Basil Pennington, Thomas Merton, and Thomas Keating, while loving John of the Cross and Teresa of Avila. To him, the idea of emptying ourselves was absurd. We filled with the Eucharist during the Holy Hour. Through practice, I was able to go deep during the hours. It is difficult to explain. We would end the sessions with the ringing of a bell. Often when the bell rang, I felt as if I was being ripped back to a false life. During my best sessions, it was a struggle to cease the meditation. I did not want to return. I felt exhausted opening my eyes. That leads perfectly into the idea of indifference. That is the proper indifference. Being absorbed into the Eucharist through stillness and a holy environment the presence of God became an enveloping reality. It usurped all else, forcing indifference and abandonment into consciousness. However the key is that the Theological virtues: faith, hope, and charity expanded through the effort. I relate it to my love for my family. During these intense times of prayer, a profound love for my family developed. They were centered in my heart, their salvation and worldly concerns vital to my life. I tried to explain this amidst my family only to have my sister-in-law comment that absence makes the heart grow fonder. In my normal manner of clamming up when a know-it-all who does not know-it-all takes command of a conversation, I thought strongly ‘NO that is not it. It is not about them being distant. They were in truth closer to me the deeper my prayer advanced’. Back to proper indifference, I state that if infused virtues are not made greater through my religious efforts, than the indifference to worldly things is false, an error in effort, most likely, for whatever reason, an inability to love. I want to go back to a quote from the other day, where oddly enough, I touched upon the idea of indifference. The soul therefore, requires at least indifference of judgment and of will. Then, penetrated with the conviction that God is all and the creature nothing, one will desire to see and embrace in all things only the God whom one loves and yearns for and his holy will which alone can conduct one to one’s end. Happy the person, if one has also acquired what may be called indifference of taste, so that the world and its pleasures, the goods and honors of earth, everything, in short, that might estrange one from God, now inspires one with disgust, and on the contrary, whatsoever brings one closer to him, even suffering, delights one. So has it been with the saints who hungered and thirsted after God. Oh, how such indifference facilitates the practice of holy abandonment! Within the paragraph indifference is stressed, yet it is toward the things that take us away from God. If the bold text is not grasped the indifference becomes useless, 1 Corinthians 13 the obvious reference. The things that bring us closer to God must not be met with indifference, in regards to creatures they must be met with love, a sign of serous spiritual advancement would expand this to blissful love. We must love or we know nothing about God.

spacer

Musing after a morning Latin mass

God speaks not so subtly at times. Attending an early morning Latin mass dedicated to Our Holy Mother, upon request of new acquaintances in a new city, my preparatory prayers were met with a blissful invocation sung from a violin. A violin again. The blessing of sound experienced Sunday night at Victoria’s recital and my posting of a violin player with respect to a commonality with prayer soothed on into my day opening greeting of God. Silence I held. Rapture I encountered. Doctors of the Church have identified various levels of rapture experienced during prayer, yet I subscribe to the experiential. What is experienced is not experienced because one has read about it. It is not attained knowledge manifested into experience, rather what is infused by God is confirmed and clarified by teachings of the Church. The sound of a violin for the second time in three days carried my soul aloft. I never turned to see if it was the young Victoria, a visitor studying from a distant state, a young lady reposing into the Church as she enters adulthood and the vocation of classical musician. Being in the moment, aligned with the will of God, grateful for a bit of rapture, a sadness overcame as mass preceded. A wonderful family, four children and handsome parents, sat in front of me, the children holding their vigil candles with eagerness to light. The well behaved children brought deeper meaning to a mass dedicated to Our Holy Mother. An elegantly dressed business gentleman seated next to me, himself alone, passed the flame of fire to my vigil candle. All attending held upright our illuminating candles. After receiving communion, the sadness ensued. The family rearranged their positioning. Mother and father knelt directly in front of me. One of their children rested between them, mind wandering, eyes drifting, while locking arms with both her mother and father. Eyes closed, focused, and intent, the parents prayed while supporting one of their children. I watched the couple, clearing my mind of all thoughts, allowing the Eucharist to work upon me. The consequence resulted in sadness, love longing. Despair never played a part, as I determinedly held firm to hope. I thought about a friend who hints, I am not sure about exactitude, that indifference is truly a higher state of love. I feel it is a serious error of interpretation to perceive the dark night of the spirit as a passing above and beyond love and the ability to connect to one’s brothers and sisters. Charity must always be a foundation we spiritually build upon. I think of the highest contemplative Our Holy Mother with the passing of the feast day of the Immaculate Conception. Mary born free from sin, while endowed with self-will. She could sin, tarnishing the vessel God intended to birth His Son. Wonderfully, a credit to her parents Joachim and Anna, Mary kept herself free from sin throughout her young life. Hidden and devout, the first woman presented in the Temple—a startling feat in comprehension, Mary demonstrates the path of highest contemplation. Mary understands only love, harvesting intense meaning from every living soul, loving on a divine level, truly the Queen of Heaven.

spacer

Immaculate Conception

immaculateconception

“As for Our Lady, the most holy Virgin, she was conceived in the usual way of generation. But since in His plan God had predestined her from all eternity to be His Mother, He kept her pure and free from all stain, although by her nature she could have sinned. There is no doubt about that, as far as actual sin is concerned.  –St Francis De Sales

St Francis De Sales on the presentation of Mary at the Temple, the first woman to receive such an honor.  Mary being, protected from original sin–born in the state of Adam and Eve before corruption, enjoying free will–the choice to sin, is brought to the Temple by her parents Joachim and Anna

“Similarly, never was “so much perfume” and ointment offered to God in His Temple as the most holy Virgin brought with her on this day. Never until then had the Divine Majesty received so excellent and pleasing a gift as the offering He received from the blessed St. Joachim and St. Anne. They went to Jerusalem to fulfill the vow they had made to God to dedicate their glorious child to Him in the Temple, where young maidens were brought up for the service of the Divine Majesty.”

“Do you not see that our glorious Lady was longing to see the day when her parents would offer to God, for it is true that she had the use of reason from the time of her Conception?…Moreover, the holy Virgin and her glorious Son, Our Lord, had the use of reason from their mother’s wombs and were, consequently, endowed with much knowledge. Nevertheless, they concealed it under the law of profound silence.”

 

spacer

Discernment through conviction to God

The soul therefore, requires at least indifference of judgement and of will.  Then, penetrated with the conviction that God is all and the creature nothing, one will desire to see and embrace in all things only the God whom one loves and yearns for and his holy will which alone can conduct one to one’s end.  Happy the person, if one has also acquired what may be called indifference of taste, so that the world and its pleasures, the goods and honors of earth, everything, in short, that might estrange one from God, now inspires one with disgust, and on the contrary, whatsoever brings one closer to him, even suffering, delights one.  So has it been with the saints who hungered and thirsted after God.  Oh, how such indifference facilitates the practice of holy abandonment!  — –Abbot Vital Lehodey, O.C.R. ‘The Way That Leads To God’.

I must be able to discern all matters through the love of God.  Is a matter drawing me deeper into God, or even on the most subtle level attaching me to worldly pleasure?  Regarding suffering, internal and external conditions, am I able to stay focused, remaining, at least indifferent to pain.  The levels of practitioner are relevant.  “The beginner, influenced by fear, endures with patience the Cross of Christ. The proficient, animated by hope, bears it willingly. He that is perfect in charity embraces it with the ardor of love.  The process is intense and difficult, demanding prayer, the sacraments, and counsel of others.  The difficulties of life must not sweep me into despair.  Hope reigning supreme.

Yet in one way suffering may be easier.  In regards to discernment, suffering’s challenges are apparent.  More difficult to recognize is pleasure luring one away from God.  Addicting, pleasure soothes the senses into comfort, allowing attachment to develop deeply emotionally and habitually. Relationships with others can be complicated.  Relationships, dynamic–shifting through time, present a myriad of emotions, aspirations, and experiences  A relationship with someone leading deeper into the spiritual life can evolve into a dangerous emotionally confusing imbroglio.  Based upon opposing discernment or brokenness on either part, the relationship can grind into conflicting expectations.  Avoiding the need for conquest, superiority, or defensiveness (over-sensitivity) can I stay focused upon the will of God, not imposing my will in a manner that leads me or the other away from God.  Turning matters over to God, trusting in my Lord, I must be able to forego concentration upon reputation or impression, accepting the role of fool or inferior, in order to love God greater.  Loving God does not involve defeating my brothers and sisters.  God must always remain my ultimate goal,  Personal advancement amongst friends, acquaintances, and coworkers must mean nothing.  In religious services and gatherings, I must seek no attention or undo recognition.  Accolades are unnecessary.  I must not satisfy the need to be recognized as a knowledgeable man of God, a teacher who is not a teacher.  Socially, I repose into listening, saying as little as possible, while not becoming conspicuous in silence.  I do not fear appearing stupid, or remaining unnoticed.  If a topic is broached that I am knowledgeable about, I do not need to demonstrate my acumen.  Self-seeking and self-consciousness are usurped by faith, hope, and charity.

An interesting experience I recall that I feel relates to the subject at hand.  I remember a social Church gathering, eating dinner at a table filled by strangers and acquaintances.  During festivities, a widow was being encouraged to attend older singles dances.  The encourager, a lifetime single in her fifties, attractive, carefree and casual, bubbly and bright in a crowd, intent upon making an impression, a frequenter of singles dances, elaborated how it was all for fun. Simple light-hearted dancing and conversation between men and women.  The widow insisted she had absolutely no desire to seek a mate.  The encourager, never wed–describing herself to close friends as a bride of Christ (a consecrated single the term she fashioned) pushed further, stressing it was all about happy-go-lucky flirty fun.  The widow became pensive, thinking deeply, responding, “no that is not the case.  I could never bear the idea I might be leading someone on.  That I could possibly break someone’s heart. My husband was the only man I ever dated. Since I was a teenage girl, I feared breaking a man’s heart. I could not abide by that.”  I marveled at the woman’s response, the maturity, the insight to understand the complexities of human interactions.  She would easily forego personal pleasure if seeking that pleasure presented the opportunity of harming another.  That was a woman remaining focused upon God.

spacer

St Clare words

“Gaze upon Him, consider Him, contemplate Him, as you desire to imitate Him”.

“Place your mind before the mirror of eternity! Place your soul in the brilliance of glory! And transform your entire being into the image of the Godhead Itself through contemplation.”

spacer
spacer

Succinct

Expressing gratitude
Absent words
Through
With
In
My Lord
Adoring
A gaze

Adoration II

Inspired by Contemplative in the Mud. An authentic approach shared by an admirable individual.

spacer