Spring/Summer 2001 Newsletter
The Theological Foundations
of Contemplative Outreach
A Commentary by Thomas Keating
(Part One of a Two-Part Series)
1. Contemplative Outreach is a spiritual network of
individuals and small faith communities committed to living the contemplative
dimension of the Gospel in everyday life through the practice of Centering
Prayer.
Contemplative Outreach is a spiritual
network and a living organism. Like any living organism it needs nurturing and
guidance. At each level of its growth an appropriate response is called for. The
resources that people need will shift as they grow because their needs will be
different. It is the responsibility of the leadership to listen to these needs,
and then find creative solutions for what people say that they need. Thus, the
mutual listening throughout the whole spiritual network is one of the
fundamental principles to which we are committed.
In the words of the Vision Statement, we
are "a network of individuals and small faith communities committed to
living the contemplative dimension of the Gospel in everyday life." One of
the chief concerns of most people who begin the practice of Centering Prayer is
how to live the contemplative life in their everyday world. They want to know
how to work contemplative prayer and action into the realities of a society that
is moving at an ever faster clip, with more and more noise, busyness and less
and less respect for periods of solitude and silence. There is a lack of
spaciousness in our culture. Western society is characterized by the increasing
speed of communication. We don't have time to sit down and read a letter quietly
because the writer wants an email in return. It is because of this sort of
pressure that many people ask themselves, how can we possibly make a commitment
to the Centering Prayer practice in daily life? Where can we find twenty minutes
twice a day? How can we take a day of retreat when all our family, relatives,
and friends want us to do something else? How can we pursue the spiritual
journey if our spouse or other members of the family are jealous of the time we
give to God? All these are practical problems that need to be addressed. The
small faith community is a place where those who are committed to the Centering
Prayer practice can find support and encouragement.
2. The contemplative dimension of the Gospel manifests
itself in an ever-deepening union with the living Christ and the practical
caring for others that flows from that relationship.
"The contemplative dimension of the
Gospel" refers to the spiritual meaning and significance of sacred
scripture. From this perspective, enlightened by the inspirations of the Holy
Spirit, we do not read the text like a newspaper, book, even a sacred book, but
as an interaction with the word of God present not only as the source of the
text, but also present in us. Centering Prayer awakens us to the Eternal Word of
God dwelling within us. The external word of scripture reinforces our conviction
of the presence of the Word of God within us. We begin to read scripture with
the perspective and inspiration of the ones who wrote it. Under the influence of
the Spirit we penetrate the meaning of the text and the significance of the
symbols of the Old and New Testament, especially the meaning of the wisdom
sayings of Jesus, his example, and the wonderful richness of the stories taken
from John's Gospel which are paradigms of God's grace in our own spiritual
journeys.
Scripture, from the contemplative
perspective, is the penetration of the meaning of the sacred text as an
expression of our own experience of grace. We perceive that the same grace that
was offered to the people in the Gospel is the source of our own experience of
prayer and of daily life. We confidently identify with Peter, James, John, Mary
of Bethany, Martha, and Lazarus. As we perceive our interior life described in
those stories, we begin to relate to Christ in a new way. The Spirit inspires us
to listen as the Spirit inspired the sacred writer to write. Scripture is so
profound that everybody's private life is laid out there. The awareness that the
Spirit is within us inviting us to live in imitation of Christ, empowers us to
be Christ in the world, to become a kind of fifth gospel, manifesting the
goodness and tenderness of God in our daily lives. We become the word of God
through the contemplative dimension of scripture.
As we penetrate the scripture through
contemplative prayer, we awaken to the Spirit's movements within us more and
more. This awareness leads to an ever-deepening union with Christ, living our
lives with us and sometimes for us, extending the message of the Gospel to the
people in our particular circle of loved ones, friends, and the people we work
with.
The contemplative dimension of the
Gospel changes the way we live daily life. This is what is meant by the phrase
"the practical caring for others" which is the complementary side of
the contemplative dimension of the Gospel. Caring for others in this sense is
sharing the Fruits of the Spirit: charity, joy, peace, meekness, faithfulness,
goodness, patience, self-control, and gentleness, through which the Spirit
manifests the mind of Christ in our lives. The Beatitudes are even more profound
assimilations of Christ's teaching and example flowing from the Seven Gifts of
the Holy Spirit - reverence, fortitude, piety, counsel, knowledge,
understanding, and wisdom. The Fruits of the Spirit and the Beatitudes are the
signs that Christ is actually living in us. They continue to grow and manifest
themselves in various ways. One of these ways is the purification of the
unconscious and the consequent liberation from our false selves. Every time we
move to a new relationship with Christ, every other relationship goes through a
paradigm shift so that we relate in a new way and at new depths to God,
ourselves, other people, the cosmos, and to the events in daily life.
3. Centering Prayer consists of responding to the call of
the Holy Spirit to consent to God's presence and action within. It furthers
the development of contemplative prayer by preparing our faculties to
cooperate with this gift.
This principle distinguishes the
practice of Centering Prayer from the gift of infused contemplation. The
question might be asked: How do we know when Centering Prayer becomes infused
contemplation in the strict sense of the word? We don't necessarily know. And it
is not the best question to ask because it focuses our attention on ourselves.
Certainly this much is true; Centering Prayer cannot be judged on the basis of
the psychological content of a particular period of the prayer. Centering Prayer
is rather a discipline to prepare us for the kind of silence that leads to the
experience of the presence of God at ever-deepening levels through the deep rest
conveyed by the practice. Centering Prayer will hasten the Night of Sense,
which, according to St. John of the Cross, is the beginning of infused
contemplation. The length of the Night of Sense cannot be predicted because it
is different in every person. God decides how much time it will take depending
on one's vocation and preparation. It is a spiritual rite of passage that moves
us away from an over-dependence on our psychological experience and lets go of
our desire for sensible consolation in prayer that comes from the false self and
its constant search for satisfaction. The Night of Sense over time lays that
desire to rest. Our experience may then open out in one of two directions. One
is an exuberant mysticism in which consolations of a spiritual kind tend to
multiply. Or we may encounter what St. John of the Cross calls the "hidden
ladder" or the "hidden staircase," which is perhaps a quicker
path to divine union than the other, but which is in a rather bare, boring and
sometimes dry-as-dust experience. It takes a lot of determination to wait it
out.
Both of these experiences move into
another interior rite of passage that is called the Night of the Spirit in which
the Holy Spirit searches the deepest recesses of our unconscious and heals the
psychological wounds of a lifetime. The Spirit also awakens the spiritual
capacities that are hidden in the unconscious. These are the Fruits and Gifts of
the Spirit and, above all, the presence of our Creator and Redeemer who is the
source of our being at every level and whose presence is manifested in varying
degrees according to the purifying and liberating process of the dark nights.
Centering Prayer is primarily for beginners. Beginnings may take a long time for
many of us because we can't give it our full attention or because there is a
significant amount of psychological disturbance due to our false selves. This is
a time when we need to be faithful to the basic practice and to experience its
effects in daily life. These are often quite subtle or even hidden from us. The
Fruit of the Spirit called patience enables us to get used to the experience of
waiting upon God and to grow in ever-increasing confidence in God. A subtle
peace arises in the Night of Sense that is not so much a consolation as a
growing attraction for solitude and silence even in the midst of activities that
may be very demanding.
4. The source of Centering Prayer, as in all methods
leading to Christian contemplative prayer, is the indwelling Trinity: Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit. Its focus is the deepening of our relationship with the
living Christ. Its fruits are ecclesial: it builds communities of faith and
bonds the members together in charity.
Centering Prayer, like all methods
leading to contemplative prayer, has its source in the divine indwelling of the
Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. That is the fundamental principle on
which contemplative prayer is based. Faith in the divine indwelling changes our
whole perspective. Instead of beginning the spiritual life with ourselves and
reflecting unduly on our sins or false selves and all the things we need to do
to try to establish peace in our psyche, it starts out with the fact that God is
already here. We have everything we need in order to begin, continue, and
complete the spiritual journey. The New Testament celebrates a right
relationship with God. The realization grows that the divine presence is within
us and the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are living their own interior life
within us. At the deepest level we are more God than ourselves. The divine
indwelling also needs to be recognized and affirmed in various ways that are
helpful in daily life. The promise of Jesus to those who believe in him is that
the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit will come and make their permanent abode in
them. Actually, God is already present to us as the source of our being before
the issue of grace arises. When we sit in Centering Prayer we are sitting with
our life's companion who is always available to us. Unfortunately, we are not
always available to God. The goal of the journey is to manifest God both in the
deep rest of contemplative prayer and in activity: to experience his presence in
prayer, and then to move into activity without losing the sense of the Source of
all that is. As the contemplative dimension of our prayer increases, we perceive
the presence of God in everything and everything in God. The divine indwelling
becomes a living relationship within and evident in everyone else who also
enjoys the divine indwelling.
The focus of Centering Prayer is the
deepening of our relationship with the living Christ, that is, the glorified
Christ risen in our hearts and abiding forever in the Christian community. We
enter into Christ's passion, death, resurrection, and ascension by consenting to
God's affirming and purifying action within us. As we sit in Centering Prayer,
we identify with Christ on the cross and are healed of our emotional wounds. The
final point of this theological principle is the fruits of Centering Prayer,
which we say are ecclesial. This is an important dimension of Centering Prayer.
One cannot have a deep contemplative life without its being social at the same
time. The way that we express this relationship to others, this interdependence
with others, will differ according to our state in life. The tendency of the
prayer is to bond with others who practice it. The community is not just people
gathered together visibly.
What is a Christian community? It is a
place where we find like-minded people joined together to help each other grow
into divine union. A contemplative community is focused on the essence of what
church really is, that is, a community of people called together by God to
experience the fullness of the divine life as a community and not just
privately. Hence, the need to celebrate it together through various forms of
ritual and worship as well as in periods of silence.
5. A commitment to the regular practice of Centering
Prayer is the primary expression of belonging to the spiritual network.
Everybody who practices Centering Prayer
regularly is part of the spiritual network of Contemplative Outreach. Among all
the things we may do by way of service, the greatest is to practice the prayer.
Service does not take the place of the two daily periods of Centering Prayer.
The greatest service we give each other is actually being faithful to our
commitment because in doing it we are invisibly reinforcing it and putting the
vibrant energy of contemplative prayer into the community. That is more valuable
than any other service, however generous it might be. Without that, you will
find that service will begin to diminish in its effectiveness. It needs to be
said over and over again that the first expression of belonging to the spiritual
network is to be available to God on a daily basis. St. John of the Cross used
to say, "If you find you are too busy to give time to a daily period of
prayer, double it!" If you do it regularly, you will find that you actually
have more leisure time and you see that there are a lot of things that you don't
have to do that you used to think were necessary. Busyness diminishes because of
a new perception of what is important. By our daily fidelity to the prayer, life
begins to change of itself.
There are also practices to bring the
effects of Centering Prayer into daily life. Contemplative prayer is allowing
God to become the center of our lives rather than maintaining the false self and
ourselves as the center of the universe. At some point there is a paradigm shift
in everything we do. Sometimes we did things for ourselves or simply because
they had to be done. Take daily work for instance. Nobody is saying to stop
doing that. What I am saying is to start doing it for a different reason,
namely, as a manifestation of our experience of Christ and not just as a way of
earning a living. Centering Prayer is a way of bringing Christ and our
experience of divine wisdom into everyday life, family, professional career,
business, or whatever we are doing. That is why we call service in the
Contemplative Outreach milieu, "contemplative service". The motive and
inspiration of our activity comes from the insights we are receiving in
Centering Prayer and our service to others is thus gradually being reinforced by
its regular practice.
(to be continued)

Other Spring/Summer 2001 News Articles
Fr. Keating's Commentary | President's
Letter | Spanish Corner
| A Poem | Book
Reviews | Updates