Glimmerings of What Is Real, What Is True

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We seem to live in a responsive universe. Many, throughout the ages, have noticed a tendency that "what you send out you receive back" (in this life or "the next").  Another way of saying something similar is, what you sow, you shall reap. A version of this idea is repeated many times in both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.  A paraphrase of  verse 11:24 of the Gospel of Mark, puts a slightly different spin on it: "As you ask and feel and believe, you will receive."

 

There is another, more modern, view that we are given what we need, not what we necessarily want in this life.  We are given the stumbling blocks or experiences we need in order to learn the universal lessons about what is real and true.  How both of these perspectives or ideas square with the suffering of the innocent is another matter. And what about all the "bad" folks who seem to "have it good", that is, live lives full of material prosperity and good fortune?

 

Here are some possibilities or glimmerings that have been shown to me.

 

The something More, the Source, the Mystery at the heart of existence which many of us call God, set things in motion, or created the Universe.  Although we think of the universe as a place, it is really more of an event, albeit one that takes place over billions of years.  This Universe is dynamic and reflective of its Creator- but not controlled by that which we call God.  God loves this creation and all that is a part of it.  Indeed every part of it is imbued with divinity. The Breath of Life blows through all things even those that seem to have no life, inanimate objects such as rocks and planets. Some traditions talk of small bits of divine light, as shards of a splintered mirror, imbedded in all beings and all things.

 

Human beings, as part of this event we call the Universe, diverged from the rest of creation when we developed awareness/consciousness/ego.  All the rest of creation knows, beyond thought, that it is a part of the Oneness, so deeply connected that there is never any sense of loneliness or different-ness or sin (actions that separate or create space between the Creator/Created).  An interesting example of this can be found in cats and purring, their unmistakable expression of contentment. Cats purr when they are obviously contented, but also when giving birth and when mortally wounded or dying!

 

Although Creator and created are deeply connected they are not the same.  The Creator loves creation and every little thing in it and of it, but does not (and cannot?) intervene in extraordinary ways.  On the other hand, the Universe is intrinsically responsive to itself- since everything in it is deeply connected.  The Creator made it this way, or since creation is imbued with the essence of its Creator, it mirrors or reflects God, though is not the same as God.

 

All of the suffering in the world is created by two things: 1) The natural forces of the planet we live on, for instance the cycles of hurricanes/tsunamis, of drought and flood, the cyclical changes of our planet's distance from the Sun creating ice ages and its opposite, the evolving, alive planet which includes volcanoes and drifting continents... (Of course all these kinds of things can be and have been aggravated and exacerbated by what we humans have done and are doing in our attempts to control these forces of nature and from the  unconsciously destructive underbelly of development), 2) the enormously powerful downside of our separation (or perceived separation) from the rest of nature/creation and the Creator, because of our awareness/consciousness/ego. This gift is the defining thing about us and is precious- but comes with a price that so far seems to outweigh its usefulness and beauty. As a direct result of this feeling of separateness, often times experienced as agonizing loneliness or fear of annihilation, we humans have created domination systems of governance that cause and legitimize vast suffering of the majority of us, other beings and the planet as a whole.  We have, of course, also created incredible beauty, art, culture, music and inspired each other to amazing acts of altruism and bravery.

 

Just the fact of our awareness/ego has caused us tremendous suffering in and of itself, since along with it has come the illusion of separateness, or the pervasive forgetting of our connectedness to everything else and to God. It seems that this great forgetting which happened at some point in our history/evolution as a species and happens to each of us individually sometime around the time we learn to talk, is inevitable, but not insurmountable. In fact, every great religious founder, leader, saint and prophet has tried to teach a way to know and experience this connection again.  They have told us stories, showed us with their lives and been the recipients of verses and scriptures that hold keys to transforming ourselves, to remembering our deep connections and experiencing the numinous love of the Creator. This has, unfortunately, not stopped us from using and abusing the religions founded upon their lives and teachings to legitimate the domination systems we, in our loneliness and fear, have created.

 

[To be continued...]

 

  

1 Comments

Dear Amy,

Thanks so much for this contribution to my - well, I can't separate my spiritual life from all the rest of it, so let's just say my life. It's not for the first time, either. I don't think I've ever taken the time to thank thee before.

Thee wrote,

The Creator loves creation and every little thing in it and of it, but does not (and cannot?) intervene in extraordinary ways.
I wonder if thee'd accept one editorial change. From my own experience, I'd add a single word at the end: usually.

As for the domination system, I suspect thee's already read Walter Wink's Engaging the Powers, where I first ran across the phrase. He'd agree that

... every great religious founder, leader, saint and prophet has tried to teach a way to know and experience this connection again.

As I read him, though, he sees the domination system as a cultural choice rather than an inevitable effect of consciousness or ego.

I dunno. I'm as much a part of my culture(s) as I am living inside my personal consciousness. It's hard to separate them out. Nature or nurture? Feathers or lead? The difference is worth considering, though.

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Amy was born in 1952 to Quaker parents in Philadelphia, PA. She is the mother of 2 young adults and one teenager. She and her husband, David who is a physician, have been married 27 years. Amy lives, works and writes in West Philadelphia, though a large part of her heart resides in Africa. More about Amy.

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