The
Twenty-First Century finds people in great need of spirituality. In the Western world, particularly the United
States, disconnecting and unplugging from our 24/7 news cycles and social media
can be traumatic for many. Millions of
people search for intimacy and relationships, but, sadly, find only
superficiality and further isolation.
What has happened to us? How can we be a nation of such richness
compared to other countries of the world, yet be so poor in things of the
spirit? How can people be in constant
communication, yet feel so isolated and alone? The answers to these questions
are complex, but not impossible to discover.
In this
reflection paper, we will examine a spirituality that can serve people of the Twenty-First
Century and the type of persons who may be attracted to such spirituality. We
will also reflect on the life experiences leading to my developing this
spirituality. I will identify the
threads of a previous theology as distinct from this spirituality. Finally, we will take a look at possible
types of service flowing from this spirituality and a rationale for inviting
others to adopt this proposed spirituality.
From the
earliest evidence of human life, people have needed a sense of belonging. The need to be with others, the need to speak
and be heard is as essential to human life as air and water. One of the most treasured ways of
communicating is storytelling, particularly from one generation to the
next. It is how we discover the world
and find our place in it. It is how we
know who we are and what others have discovered. Storytelling is not only cross generational,
it is also cross cultural. Traditions,
beliefs and whole cultures have been preserved through oral tradition. The same may be said of our faith traditions
as well. Stories are important, stories
are vital. But what happens when parts
of the story, so long accepted, so long believed, are suddenly presented in a
new way? What happens when a recent
scientific finding disproves and makes formerly unquestionable beliefs no
longer “eternal truths?” How do people find meaning and hold on to belief
despite the disproof of things once held so dear?
Jesus of
Nazareth, carpenter, itinerant preacher, and healer, gathered a small group of
believers around him. For nearly three
years, he preached a message that was counter-cultural. His preference for the poor and those
marginalized caused people in power a great deal of uneasiness. Political powers and economically prosperous
people wanted him silenced. Jesus was
arrested, tried, convicted, and crucified.
That was supposed to be the end of him.
But as Christians profess to this day, we believe on the third day he
rose from the dead…and sits at God’s right hand.
This story
of salvation was passed from the apostles and disciples who knew Jesus
personally over two thousand years ago to our present day. That message has been “carried through
history in a diverse community of disciples who have expressed it in vastly
different cultures and climates.”1 What began so long ago in the
apostolic church as a meal celebrating
the teachings of Jesus - mercy, kindness, looking out for the weak and
powerless - remembering his call to
service - has morphed into a rule-keeping, belief -professing,
exclusion of anyone “different,” male-dominated, moribund club. The Catholic
Church of Rome has become something Jesus would hardly recognize should he
return in human form at this time in history. Religion has taken hold and
spirituality has, for many, fallen by the wayside.
That is not
to say that people of faith have been completely taken out of the
equation. Holy women and men have always
been present throughout human history both before Christ and since.
There have
been countless holy ones who have been examples of lives lived in deep
connection to the Divine, the Sacred. It is that connectedness that I believe
people long for today.
Theologian,
Elizabeth Johnson reminds us
…The
good Jesus preached resounds like a drumbeat. . .
wherever
this word is heard and practiced amid the joys
and
hopes, the griefs and anxieties of people of this age. . .
working
creatively for peace amid horrific violence;
struggling
for justice in the face of massive poverty and
military
oppression; advocating ecological wholeness for
the
earth’s life-giving systems and stressed-out species;
educating
the young and the old; healing the sick and
comforting
those in despair; creating beauty; taking joy in
nourishing
children and promoting freedom for captives.2
These are the actions that flow from a spirituality grounded
in a loving God. They reflect a
spirituality that connects people, gives them a voice and brings healing and
wholeness to those who once felt disconnected and alone.
Johnson
goes on to say “the institutional church itself often appears as an obstacle of
faith being mediocre in preaching, numb to pressing spiritual needs and even
sinful in actions taken and disastrously not taken in the face of sexual abuse
of minors, misuse of church monies and other scandals.”3
To be sure,
the human person may feel “decentered from a stable universe and insignificant
in the face of modern science while God has become remote and distant.”4
People
living in the 21st century need a spirituality that can blend the
message God continually offers through Christ, and at the same time realize
that scientific information and archeological finds, particularly as relates to
sacred scripture, are not mutually exclusive.
Marcus J.
Borg (1942-2015), American New Testament scholar, theologian and author notes
that “some people resist the impact of the modern world by becoming
fundamentalists.”5 He adds, “Some give up on the notion of God, because
the notion of God begins to seem incredible and incapable of substantiation.”6
Not all is lost, however, because “some seek to take seriously what the
Christian tradition and other religious traditions say about God, or the
sacred. They seek to integrate
Christianity with modern and post-modern perceptions producing a revisioning of
Christianity.”7
It is this
revisioning we shall explore as contributing to a possible spirituality for
people of the 21st century.
The
perception people have of the sacred or divine influences their
spirituality. If, for example, God is
“out there,” or “up there” or far away, a person is less likely to believe God
is close to them. God may be the
all-knowing creator sitting in judgment, watching our every move, waiting to
catch us, waiting to correct and chastise us.
Borg calls this root image of God “supernatural theism.”8
Such a spirituality is about keeping the rules, having correct beliefs, being
good now in order to get to our eternal reward later. This also encourages judging others and
making it one’s business to keep others in line as well. Being different is not
encouraged and can lead to exclusion from the group of believers. This
spirituality does not permit change in understanding the sacred at work in
transforming people and all of creation into something new. It denies Christ’s words: “Look I am making everything new (Rev.21:5).”
Isaiah too, before Christ, foretold,
“Behold, I [YHWH] will do a new thing! (43:19).”
Spirituality
for the Twenty-First Century will need to be a “broad notion encompassing
personal and/or institutionalized relations to the divine, a notion that at
once includes and transcends religion.”9 A useful spirituality for
people today must make “the transition from believing in secondhand religion to
expressing firsthand a relationship with the sacred.”10 How we
conceptualize God affects every aspect of our lives. It affects how we relate to one another, how
we relate to creation and to our planet as part of the universe.”11
If a person believes in and worships a God who is separate from the universe,
who worked six days then stood back, brushed off the dust and said, “I’m done
here,” why would anyone be concerned about one another or our common home? When, instead a person believes in and
worships a God who is Emmanuel (God-with-us) and whose Spirit helps create and
re-shape everyone and everything, we want to be an active participant in
helping make all things new.
Pope
Francis, in his Encyclical Letter Laudato
Si, reminds us that “When human beings place themselves as the center, they
give absolute priority to immediate convenience and all else becomes relative.”12
An authentic spirituality for the Twenty-First Century will have to include
concern for and care of all creation, including in the words of St. Francis of
Assisi, our Sister, Mother Earth.
Sr. Joan
Chittister, in her book, A Spirituality for the 21st Century,
maintains we are a throwaway society whose mantra is progress and whose
character is change.13 She proposes that “part of spirituality is
learning to be aware of what is going on around us and allowing ourselves to
feel its effects . . . and learning to hear what God wants in any given
situation.”14 In the world today, possessions, position and power
seems to be the great goods many people seek.
Contrary to the wishes of the commercial world today, the spiritual
life, the life connected to the divine is “a grace with which we must
cooperate, not a prize to be captured.”15
A theology
to help us cooperate with this grace is “a humble creation theology that
reverences the incomprehensible mystery of God and a faith that loves the
earth.”16 Karl Rahner points out that in every epoch we have
different catchwords for God. One he
uses is “holy mystery.” He notes,
“Rather than being the most distant being, holy mystery is profoundly and
personally engaged with all the realities of the world around us, including
each questioning and yearning person, being concerned especially with the
desperate and the damned.”17 Caring for the earth as we contemplate
the God-creator who is with us, allows us to “gaze upon the beauty, intricacy
and dynamism of the natural world as revelatory of divine Spirit.”18
Christian people, and others connected to the divine are “generating a new,
natural theology quite different from the Enlightenment type based on
philosophical differences.”19
Connecting
with creation is important in any spirituality for the Twenty-First
Century. Caring for our planet “becomes
a matter of intense religious concerns for human beings are rapidly fouling and
even destroying the primary statement of God’s glory.”20 Pope
Francis further reminds us “Neglecting to monitor the harm done to nature and
the environmental impact of our decisions is only the most striking sign of a
disregard for the message contained in the structure of nature itself.”21
In 1963, by
convening Vatican II, Pope John XXIII recognized that the church’s fear of
worldly progress (e.g., condemning
modernism) loomed as a pastoral disaster.”22 Thomas Merton spoke of
our connection to God through creation saying “The world reflects who we are
and what we think we are in relation to God . . . We are not asked to create an
alternate world or to reject this one but to divinize it from within.”23
The people
who may be attracted to a spirituality of connectedness to the divine will be
people who seek relationships. Perhaps
identifying those who will not be attracted to this spirituality may be easier.
It would
seem that people who know the truth and have all the answers about God, Jesus
or the divine would find this spirituality quite incomplete. People who take
the sacred scriptures as a record of historical fact would also have a
difficult time with this spirituality.
The same might be true for anyone who is ready to remove the splinter
from another’s eye before recognizing the log in their own. People who believe literally the words of the
creation narrative, that humans are to subdue and control creation would not be
interested in this type of spirituality.
In the 1950’s America, the doctrine of Manifest Destiny - America should
control the continent from sea to shining sea, was held as our divine
right. It was ordered by God that
America deserved all the beauty and bounty of our land. Not much thought was given to people of other
nations and cultures. We were the best,
the brightest, God’s most favored children. There are some people who hold on
to this divine right belief. They most
probably would find off-putting a spirituality of connectedness to the divine
in relation to others and as caretakers of our planet and each other.
And so, the
people who may find this spirituality attractive may be the people who are
asking questions, people searching for more than power or possessions. The people
who love our Earth and want it to be healthy and provide a beautiful and
bountiful place for future generations will require a spirituality of
connectedness. Dreamers, lovers,
peace-makers too will most likely resonate with this kind of spirituality. A spirituality that allows another image of
God (not simply male, authoritarian, unchanging, unapproachable other, distant
from creation) will encourage women, in particular, to claim an equal
partnership with their brothers as spiritual leaders in the Twenty-First
Century. Not only Christians, but all
those who search for the divine can find a place of welcome in this
spirituality contributing to all their individual reflection of the divine.
Being a
cradle Catholic, there was never a time in my life that God was absent. In the 1950’s growing up in a rural Mid-Western
parish, religion rather than spirituality ruled in our home. We had prayers before and after meals,
night-time rosary (draped over the dining room chairs in a modified kneeling
position), and prayers before bed.
Catechism classes were on Saturday mornings and intensified as we
prepared for first penance, first communion and confirmation. We went to confession most Saturday and tried
to “stay perfect” so we could receive communion at mass the next day. We followed the Ten Commandments, prayed to
the Holy Family and learned the Baltimore Catechism. We sang in the choir, performed in the
Christmas pageants and cleaned the church on Saturdays. We were a typical
Catholic family. We didn’t go to other
churches, never attended Vacation Bible School like our friends, read the
Bible, and above all didn’t have non-Catholic boyfriends. Above all, we knew
that God loved Catholics best. Perhaps the only really spiritual experience I
can remember, as a child, was sitting on my maternal grandfather’s knee at
Christmas time when he sang Adeste
Fidelis. It was a holy moment and I always felt Jesus was right in the room
with us.
Life in a
religious community for eighteen years reinforced many of my family’s beliefs
until the early 1970’s. Then the documents of Vatican II began to appear in
English translations. Suddenly things
that had seemed so concrete, permanent, and absolute, were crumbling around our
feet. Fortunately, we had good leaders
in our community who were able to lead us into a renewed connection God, to
creation and to other people. We also
began to practice social justice and take to heart the words of the Gospel in
Jesus’ preference for the poor, the widows and the orphans. We began to pay attention to what was going
on around us, to connect with the people we served and in doing so, connect to
God.
Thomas Merton, Teillard de Chardin, Edward Schillibex, and
Yves Congar were some of the writers to emerge after Vatican II. They offered positive and hopeful ideas about
the church called for by the Council. The concept of the Church being all the
people of God was something new and wonderful.
The using the vernacular as the
language of liturgical celebrations made participation much easier. And having
the celebrant face the congregation had both good aspects and some not quite so
good. Religious men and women in community were encouraged to go back to their
baptismal commitment and draw their religious vows from that first commitment to
Christ. There was also a great hope among many women, religious and lay, that
finally they too might find a place of leadership in the Church. In 1968, Mary
Daly published The Catholic Church and
the Second Sex. Her book explained in detail the ways in which women were
kept as second class participants in the Catholic Church. People came to see
that the Church was a “major participant in the oppression of women, and not as
an accidental historical development, but the major systemic problem was
Catholicism itself.” 25
Consciousness-raising
of women to the practice of exclusion and marginalizing of women in the Church
continues to be an essential mission. Women have been completely excluded from
the sacrament of holy orders. However,
exclusion and marginalizing are not the only actions of the hierarchical
Church. For many women, “the Church’s
pastoral practice discouraged women from seeking divorce from abusive husbands,
forbade the divorced to remarry under any circumstances, counseled women to
accept spouse abuse as God’s will, commanded them to yield to marital rape and
forbade them to use contraceptives to control the results of such abuse or to
have recourse to abortion in cases of rape or incest.”26
Women today
want to be part of the Church as disciples of equals. They wish to be rid of and no longer subject
to the patriarchal system of domination.
The continued use of such a model is “no longer a ‘woman’s issue’ but is
a human issue intimately linked to the struggle of people of color, children,
the mentally and physically disable, the laity, immigrants,, the poor and all
those in society who are, for some reason, ‘other’ to the hegemonic group of
white, western, affluent males.”27
But, as we reflect on
the fifty years since the Council, we see how several Popes have tried to “walk
back” the suggested implementation and inclusiveness for which so many people
hoped. The male-dominated, closed
membership and exclusivity of the institutional Church today is as bad as
ever. Recently Pope Francis made his
first trip to the United States. He came
to Washington, DC, New York City and Philadelphia. In each city he met with all kinds of people. He truly welcomed the poor, the marginalized,
prisoners, children, families, religious men and women. But in each city, he made time to meet with
his bishops, archbishops and cardinals.
The princes of the church surrounded him on every side. Liturgical celebrations with hundreds of male
priests, deacons, altar servers were visible in each city. Women sang during the liturgy, participated
in the choirs, and stood on the sidelines. “Women minister by permission of men
on male terms, only in the spheres permitted to them by men.”28
Earlier in
September, just two weeks before Pope Francis was to come to Philadelphia to
meet with families, over 500 women and men gathered for a conference sponsored
by Women’s Ordination Worldwide. We
learned recently that a diocesan priest from California has been censured and
removed from his parish ministry because he attended that conference and
participated in it. In America, we have
the First Amendment that gives citizens the right to speak, to assemble, to
form an opinion. Evidently, such a
luxury is not afforded members of the Roman Catholic Church. Many, many people
have been shut out, excluded shunned and scandalized at some of the actions of
bishops and priests of the Church.
Divorced Catholics are denied a place at the sacramental table, people
who identify as gay, lesbian, transgender, bisexual are not welcomed either,
just to name a few. And yet, people
hunger to be connected, to belong, to connect to one another as well as to the
divine. They search for meaning in their
lives and they hunger and thirst for justice.
They hear the cry of the poor. Jesus promised the kin-dom of heaven
would be here among us. He made sure
that the rich and powerful got the message that they would not be first in the
eyes of Abba God. People long for
spirituality in this Twenty-First Century.
Scientific
discovery and advances in archeology, technology and medicine do not conflict
with spirituality. For centuries the Roman Church fought science as the enemy
of religion. Teillard de Chardin taught us it is not an “either/or”. It is instead a “both/and.”
With a spirituality
that includes working for peace, struggling for justice, advocating for the
poor, caring for the earth, creating beauty and joy, people will have
opportunities for service in all areas of life. People will need to be
practical in works of mercy. They will
need for their prayers and spirituality to be inclusive and world-wide, not
just local.
Reaching
out to others, helping those in need, helping the stranger, the widow, and the
orphan will have to become part of the daily living and the ordinariness of our
lives. Letting go of our need for power,
position and stuff will have to be a regular part of living too. Having the latest, the greatest, the
priciest, and the best can no longer be the way we use the gifts of the
Earth. Taking a stand, writing letters,
contributing time or resources to a cause that will protect people, the
environment or our globe will become our second nature. Encouraging one another in good works can be
the light which sparks someone else to good works as well. One person, one community, one state, and one
nation at a time, it can happen. In the
words of Pope Francis, “God calls us to generous commitment, offers light and
strength to continue on our way . . . does not abandon us or leave us alone and
has united to our earth gifting us with love to find new ways forward.
What, may
we ask should be our rationale for wanting to participate in such spirituality?
St. Augustine, Fourth Century bishop of Hippo once wrote, “Our hearts are
restless until they rest in [God].” It is the divine spark of God resting in
each of us that longs to be complete and whole. Just as the cosmos and creation
is in evolution, so too are humans. A spirituality that calls us to take care
of our earth, to share its resources fairly and justly makes us participants in
the evolution. Pollution of air, water
and land can only destroy. Once a
species is obliterated from the earth, there is no way to bring it back into
existence. It is gone, forever. Some of the practices of manufacturing,
farming, and mining the earth’s treasures kill off many forms of life. There is a reason the World Wildlife
Federation keeps a list of endangered species.
It is a way to remind people that the earth is here for us to share with
all creatures. Being willing to throw
away things instead of reusing, recycling and reducing our need of things is
another way a person can take part in looking out for our Sister, Mother
Earth. Teaching our children, first by
example and secondly by practice, can ensure the value of ecology and care for
our land, air and water is handed to another generation.
The
individual is not the only one who needs to be involved in this type of
spirituality. Nations and their leaders
too need to set priorities and legislation that will ensure our earth is cared
for. Countries are dependent on one
another to help preserve and protect the peace.
When male dominated hierarchy is tempered by feminist vision,”
competition and its ultimate escalation into war must give way to cooperation
and sharing of resources as the basis of a just and last peace.”29 War
and the destruction of ethnicities, races and entire populations cannot be
acceptable. The military power available
to many nations can destroy our entire planet.
Sharing resources, education and altruism need to become descriptors of
the way one country engages with another. “Inclusion must replace exclusion as
the way to maximize power. Humans must
begin to see themselves as participants, in rather than lords over, the fragile
ecosystem that is our earth.”30 Our world is not used to the idea of
collaboration over oppressive power structures making the rules with everyone
else just going along; all of us need more practical opportunities to practice
this “new way.” One thing is certain, “hierarchy
in religious institutions and governments is the root of sinful structures that
must be eradicated and replaced with an egalitarian vision and praxis if the
human family and the earth are to survive and flourish is non-negotiable.”31
In
conclusion, spirituality is important. Sandra Schneiders’ definition of
spirituality is so clear: “It is the experience of consciously striving to
integrate one’s life in terms not of isolation and self-absorption, but of
self-transcendence toward the ultimate value one perceives.”32 It is
a reality that helps people become self-less and concerned about others. It connects us to the divine and to one
another. We cannot hold on to worn out
religious piety that no longer appeals to people. Our planet is in trouble and
it is up to each of us to do what we can in our own way, day in and day out to
make things better. Now is the acceptable
time, the work is at hand.
Endnotes
1Johnson, Elizabeth, Abounding in
Kindness, Writings for the People of God,
c. 2015, Orbis Books, Maryknoll, NY, Kindle
edition, Loc. 158.
2Johnson, Loc. 134.
3Johnson, Loc. 168.
4Delio, Ilia, The Unbearable
Wholeness of Being: God, Evolution, and the Power of Love, c. 2013Orbis Books, Maryknoll, NY, Kindle
edition, Loc. 121
.
5Borg, Marcus J., The God We Never Knew, c. 1997,
Harper One, NY, p. 6.
6Loc. Cit.
7Loc. Cit.
8Borg, p. 19.
9Sorin, Claire and Laurence
Lux-Sturritt, “Women and Spirituality in 20th Century Writing: an Exploration into the Fiction of
Virginia Woolf, Michele Roberts, Sara
Maitland, Gail Godwin, and Toni Morrison,” c. 2011, http://era.revues.org/1732;
DOI:10.4000/erea.1732.
10Borg, p. 10.
11Borg, p. 11.
12Pope Francis, Laudato
Si, On Care for our Common Home, c. 2015, Our Sunday Visitor, Huntington, IN, par. 122.
13Chittister, Joan, O.S.B., A Spirituality for the 21st
Century, c. 1992, Crossroad, NY, p. ix.
14Chittester, pp. 4-5.
15Chittister, p. 7.
16Johnson, Loc. 191.
17Rahner, Karl, cited in Johnson, Loc. 577.
18Johnson, Loc. 692.
19Johnson, Loc. 707.
20Johnson, Loc. 857.
21Pope Francis, par. 117.
22Delio, Loc. 2147.
23Delio, Loc. 2165.
24Pope Francis, par. 246.
25Schneiders, Sandra M., Beyond Patching, c. 2004, Paulist Press, NY, p. 31.
26Schneiders, pp. 32-33.
27Schneiders, p. ix.
28Schneiders, p. 33.
29Schneiders, p. 25.
30Loc.
Cit.
31Schneiders, p.26-27.
32Schneiders, p. 72.
Bibliography
Borg, Marcus J., The God We Never Knew, c. 1997,
Harper One, NY.
Chittister,
Joan, O.S.B., A Spirituality for the
21st Century, c. 1992,
Crossroad, NY.
Delio,
Ilia, The Unbearable Wholeness of Being, God, Evolution and the Power of Love, c. 2013, Orbis Books, NY.
Johnson,
Elizabeth, Abounding in Kindness,
Writings for the People of God, c. 2015,
Orbis Books, Maryknoll, NY, Kindle edition,
Pope
Francis, Laudato Si, On
Care for our Common Home, c. 2015, Our Sunday Visitor, Huntington, IN.
Schneiders, Sandra M., Beyond
Patching, c. 2004, Paulist Press, NY.
Sorin,
Claire and Laurence Lux-Sturritt, “Women and Spirituality in 20th
Century Writing: an Exploration into
the Fiction of Virginia Woolf, Michele Roberts, Sara Maitland, Gail Godwin, and Toni Morrison,” c. 2011, http://era.revues.org/1732; DOI:10.4000/erea.1732.
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