| A
Call to Christian Embodiment
by Rev. Jim Dickerson
One of the terrible heresies of not only ages past, but
of this current one as well, is the dis-embodiment of the
Christian faith and it’s richly embodied, comprehensive
and holistic theology, traditions, communal life and spiritual
practices. Like Esau, who allowed Jacob to beat him out of
his father Isaac’s inheritance (Gen. 25:29-34), Christianity
has allowed the larger culture and religio/political forces
and powers from within to con it out of the full measure of
its divinely embodied birth right.
The consequences of Christians and institutional Christianity
exchanging its thoroughly embodied faith and practice for
a largely dis-embodied, overly fragmented, compartmentalized,
highly individualistic, psychological and spiritualized one
has been disastrous to all levels of life be they personal,
social, or ecological, to name but a few. Christianity’s
legacy of dis-embodiment has fragmented and disabled the church,
distorted its doctrine, thwarted its mission, damaged its
people, wreaked havoc on earth and opened the door to more
inequity, injustice, violence, domination and alienation in
society.
Dis-embodiment and fragmentation is not only the case in
the Christian Church, but the North American culture and its
varied and sundry popular spiritualities and religious practices
as well. This includes different forms of yoga be they the
newly emerging Christianized version or the traditional forms
based in Eastern practices that have been imported to North
America for popular capitalistic consumption and adaptation.
To my knowledge, many, if not most, practitioners, teachers,
and types of yoga are content to keep the focus and scope
in the classroom, the studio and on the individual to the
exclusion of the larger social, political, earth bodies as
integral dimensions of their practice and teaching.
But all is not lost, especially for Christianity. As one
Christian theologian put it, “the end of all God’s
work is (and I say, ‘continues to be’)…
embodiment.” All sources of divine revelation and, most
importantly, Jesus, have disclosed that radical embodiment
is God’s nature, work and will in and for all areas
and levels of life. “There is one God and Father of
all, who is above all, through all and in all.” (Eph.
4:6) Jesus once said, “What God has joined together
let no one put asunder.” (Matt.19:6). God will not long
stand for creatures’ attempts to dis-embody what God
intends to be embodied.
This good news of Christianity’s embodied nature is
beginning to be reclaimed, proclaimed, celebrated, practiced
and promoted by some, including Christians who practice yoga,
among others. It’s very good news that, in some Christian
circles, the individual human body, with help from the Holy
Spirit and the human spirits who inhabit it, is making a comeback
and slowly elbowing its way into its rightful place as a more
accepted, valued, integrated, integral and equal part of Christian
spirituality and practice.
So, the great work of reclaiming the body and our thoroughly
embodied, holistic Christian tradition and spiritual practices
has begun, but as the song says, “we’ve only just
begun.” There’s still a lot more inward, outward
and communal work to be done before all parts of our radically
embodied Christian tradition are fully integrated and included
into one, seamless, unified spiritual practice. I refer to
the larger bodily system and systems of life where God also
dwells and to which our individual bodies and personal prayer
practices are intricately and inextricably connected. The
“social/political body”, the “earth body”,
and the “corporate body” which includes the Church---are
still treated as separate dis-embodied members of the One
Body of Life in which the Divine Life is embodied and experienced.
While many practitioners and advocates of a more embodied
Christian spirituality are not opposed and even sympathetic
to including the larger socio/political/earth bodies and systems
in the practice, the fact remains there is little effort being
given to do so in any cohesive, practical, well-integrated
manner. The “Christian Yoga Teacher Training”
courses and curricula I’ve seen thus far do not do it.
Nor do most body-mind-spirit retreats, workshops, classes
etc. Discussions about how to expand and integrate the larger
bodily systems into a much more whole, unified, less individualistic
and dis-embodied spiritual practice, usually gets reduced
to individual acts of mercy, charity and direct social services
which are good and necessary, but fall far short of the full
scope of Christian embodiment. This is yet another symptom
of the highly individualistic and fragmented spirituality
we remain stuck in.
The Kingdom of God in the bible and according to Jesus is
not only an “alternative state of inner and ethical
consciousness” that is to be applied on an individualistic
basis. God’s Kingdom is also an alternative, domination-free
and non-violent social, political, economic and communal reality.
Jesus embodied and taught this alternative order/empire/system
as an integral expression of the spirituality he practiced
and passed on to His followers, inviting them to do the same---“Just
as the Father sent me, so I send you, and he breathed on them
saying, receive the Holy Spirit.” (Jn. 20:21-22). Authentic
Christian spirituality that is centered in Jesus and biblical
tradition, by nature has us incorporating all parts of the
One Body of Life—individual, social/political, earth--
into one embodied spiritual practice. There exist some models
and examples among us of how different folk are doing this
in their own unique lives, work, communities of faith and
settings. What’s lacking is more called and committed
people to do it.
My hope and prayer is that we Christians and our Church
get unstuck from our current debilitating state of individualism
and the terrible legacy of dis-embodiment in our faith and
personal/corporate spirituality. Now that the individual human
body is being more integrated into our prayer practices, our
challenge and call is to take the next natural faith-filled
step toward expanding and fully integrating the political,
social, earth and communal dimensions into Christian spiritual
practice.
Until that happens, our body-mind-spirit spirituality will
continue to be too small, fragmented and not nearly substantial
enough to meet the challenges and heal the wounds we face
today. We need a spiritual practice that is, as Paul says,
stronger and more powerful than what the world considers strong
and powerful (1Cor. 2:18-31). We need the spirituality that
sustained Jesus’ journey to and through the cross. Our
current individualistic focus on yoga and meditation must
expand if we are to be true to our biblical tradition and
practice the spirituality Jesus passed on to us.
God’s call and our times demand an enlarged, robust
form of divine embodiment that clearly and cohesively integrates
and expresses the social, ecological, and cosmic as well as
the individual nature of our mystically embodied union and
communion with God in Christ. Our current practice needs to
become a more comprehensive prayer of embodiment with called,
gifted and committed people of faith, hope and love in Christ
to live and teach it.
May we heed the call of the prophet Isaiah to, “Enlarge
the site of your tent, and let the curtains of your habitations
be stretched out; do not hold back; lengthen your cords and
strengthen your stakes.” (Isaiah 54:2)
About the author: Rev. Jim Dickerson pastors the New
Community Church, a small, highly-active, neighborhood-based
church affiliated with Church of the Saviour in Washington,
D.C. He is founder and chair of Manna, Inc., a nationally
recognized, non-profit, affordable-housing and community development
organization in D.C. |