Here is a distilled summary of what I sense next week's message will address: falling upward. One of the paradoxical truths that all mystics affirm is that we cannot be filled until we are made empty - and NOBODY chooses to be emptied all by themselves. We are too stubborn, too arrogant and too busy for this to happen all by itself. Fr. Richard Rohr puts it like this:
Some
have called this principle of going down to go up a “spirituality of
imperfection” or “the way of the wound.” It has been affirmed in Christianity
by St. Thérèse of Lisieux as
her Little Way, by St. Francis as the way of poverty and by Alcoholics
Anonymous as the necessary First Step. St. Paul taught this unwelcome message
with his enigmatic “It is when I am weak that I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:10).
Of course, in saying that, he was merely building on what he called the “folly”
of the crucifixion of Jesus—a tragic and absurd dying that became resurrection
itself.
You
will not know for sure that this message is true until you are on the “up”
side. You will never imagine it to be true until you have gone through the
“down” yourself and come out on the other side in larger form. You must be
pressured from on high, by fate, circumstance, love or God, because nothing in
you wants to believe it or wants to go through it.
Falling upward is a
secret of the soul, known not by thinking about it or proving it but only by
risking it—at least once. And by allowing yourself to be led—at least once.
Those who have allowed it know it is true, but only after the fact.
This is the humbling truth that we can almost never know just by ourselves. We want to believe we are the exception to the rule. We actually sense that all wounds can be healed. We truly affirm that we are in control. Until, of course, we aren't - and THEN we start to get it. The poet, Scott Carins, puts it like this in an early poem:
The thing to remember is how
tentative all of this really is.
You could wake up dead.
Or the woman you love
could decide you're ugly.
Maybe she'll finally give up
trying to ignore the way
you floss your teeth as you
watch television. All I'm saying
is that there are no sure things here.
I mean, you'll probably wake up alive,
and she'll probably keep putting off
any actual decision about your looks.
Could be she'll be glad y our teeth
are so clean. The morning might be
full of all the love and kindness
you need. Just don't go thinking
you deserve any of it.
Such is the wisdom of the second half of life's journey, yes? Another poet, Shelia Banani, put it like this in "Life's Rainbow."
Beginnings are lacquer red
fired hard in the kiln
of hot hope;
Middles, copper yellow
in the sunshine,
sometimes oxidize green
with tears; but
Endings are always indigo
before we step
on the other shore.
Only in my weakness can I be strong - only in my emptiness can I be filled - only in tender mercies can grace be nourished.
Yes. It isn't easy, but it seems to be necessary that we are prostrated before we finally "get it". But the end result can be beyond our wildest dreams and infinitely more real in the bargain.
ReplyDeleteAmen to that in spades, my man!
ReplyDeleteReality of life!!
ReplyDeleteReally interesting... Specially the quotes used in the blog.
I'm loving this one and that poem is beautiful RJ !! Blessings
ReplyDelete