...for in Him we live and move and have our being Acts 17:28

Background and How-to Essentials
by Fr. Tom Ryan, CSP

This is a concise summary of the theology, spirituality, and methodology largely followed by the first two schools of practice mentioned in the previous article.

MEDITATION AS A UNIVERSAL PATH

Meditation is the way most commonly employed by seekers of God throughout history in their quest to penetrate surface appearances and come to grips with the Real. Meditation is not intellectual effort to master certain ideas about God. Its purpose is not to acquire or to deepen our speculative knowledge of God or of revelation. Rather than seeking to know about God through words, thoughts, and images, the meditator is seeking to experience God directly with the awareness of loving faith.

CHRISTIAN FAITH IN GOD’S INDWELLING PRESENCE

In the Gospel of John in the New Testament, Jesus affirms God’s indwelling presence. “I will ask the Father and He will give you another Helper to be with you forever, the spirit of truth (whom) you know because he abides with you and will be in you" (14:17). And again: "If any loves me, they will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our abode with them" (14:23). Jesus’ invitation is to abide in him; his promise is that he will abide in us (15:4). Paul’s letters refer to the "mystery of Christ, hidden throughout the ages, which is Christ in you"(Col. 1:27).

ACCESSING THE DIVINE PRESENCE WITHIN

The form of prayer referred to here by the term "meditation" is based upon the conviction that, in addition to the mind and imagination with which we ordinarily communicate with God, we are endowed with what the Christian tradition calls a "mystical heart", a faculty which makes it possible for us to be aware of the Presence within, to grasp and intuit God’s presence and being, though in a dark manner, apart from all images and concepts which necessarily distort God’s reality. In most of us, this heart lies dormant and undeveloped. If it were to be awakened, it would be constantly straining toward God.

DISCERNING GOD’S REVELATION IN EVERYTHING

The Christian monastic tradition developed a progressive way of awakening this mystical heart and coming to an experiential awareness of God. This process of unfolding encompasses the four kinds of prayer: oral, mental, affective, contemplative. In this process we see where contemplative prayer enters into the Christian experience of God. We generally learn how to pray with memorized prayers or hymns said or sung aloud (oral prayer). Then as our capacity to reason develops, we engage our minds more fully in prayer through analysis or reflection, such as in reading and reflecting on a passage of scripture (mental prayer). Our thoughts by and large stir the heart with emergent feelings of gratitude, fear, sorrow or joy which we express to God (affective prayer). When the heart has poured itself out, silence grows between the words, and we simply sit in the silence, resting in God’s presence and open to God’s love (contemplative prayer).

CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER

In this “resting in God”, there is an awareness that God is not only close or present, but is intimately present within us as the source of our being. Faith is the free consent to God in me. The life of faith is a conscious communion with that Presence. The core experience of the Christian life is a heart to heart relationship with the person of Christ and the indwelling Trinity who have come to make their home in us. In the words of twentieth century spiritual writer Thomas Merton, contemplation is not so much a way to find God as a way of resting in the One whom we have found. Coming to this awareness of the indwelling Divine Presence is the birthright of all Christians, the natural development of the grace of baptism. It is that communion with the Divine which is the longing of our hearts.

THE METHOD OF CHRISTIAN MEDITATION

Contemplative awareness is regarded as a gift of the Holy Spirit. When we speak of “Christian meditation”, we are referring to a way of opening ourselves to receive this gift which we believe God most wants to give. Meditation is a preparation for contemplation. It is a way of reducing the hyperactivity of our lives and bringing us to a state of quiet, open receptivity wherein we are ready to receive the grace of contemplation. Today, Christian meditation represents a recovery and renewal of the fifth century teachings of John Cassian, the Eastern Christian practice of the "Jesus prayer", the fourteenth century classic The Cloud of Unknowing, and other sources. In the 1970’s, leading monastics such as John Main, Basil Pennington and Thomas Keating put order in the scattered elements of the tradition with an eye toward our contemporary inclination for simple, clear, "how-to" instructions.

THE ESSENTIAL TEACHING

  1. Seek a quiet place

  2. Sit in a comfortable, upright position, relaxed but alert with your eyes lightly closed. Remain as still as possible.

  3. Silently, interiorly, begin to say a single word or short phrase, e.g. Jesus, Abba; or: Maranatha. Say it with faith and love. Some people find it helpful to say the word in equally stressed syllables in conjunction with their calm and regular breathing, e.g. Je-sus, Ab-ba, or: Ma-ra-na-tha.

  4. Do not think or imagine anything, spiritual or otherwise. When thoughts and images come and your attention strays, gently return to your word.

Meditate each morning and evening for twenty to thirty minutes.

COMMENTARY OF THE ESSENTIAL TEACHING

  1. A Quiet Place. Choose a quiet corner of your room. A space which you use only for meditation and which is free from other associations is ideal. Decorate it with an icon, a candle, or an open Bible. If there is no quiet place in your home, look for one along the way of your daily route, e.g. a church.

  2. Posture. Find a posture in which you can be settled, still, and alert. Be comfortable so that for the duration of the meditation period the mind will not need to tend to the body. A quiet body inclines a quiet mind. An erect but not rigid spine facilitates easeful breathing and alert wakefulness. Examples: sitting in a straight-backed chair; sitting with one’s seat on a prayer bench and one’s knees on the floor; sitting cross-legged on the floor with the buttocks slightly elevated by a cushion.

  3. The Prayer Word. Take a word from the context of faith; it will serve as a “pointer” for the mind. For example, "Maranatha" is Aramaic (Jesus’ own language) and means "Come Lord!" It is probably the most ancient Christian prayer. St. Paul ends his first letter to the Corinthians with it, and St. John ends the Book of Revelation with it. Because it is a foreign word, people generally do not have a lot of thoughts and images attached to it, which is an advantage since meditation is a way of prayer that goes beyond thoughts and images.

    Another four-syllable mantra that easily accords with the breath is “Jesus, Abba.” Praying the holy name of Jesus has a long and rich tradition, and “Abba” evokes his own intimate communication with God. The breath on which the mantra rides is the Spirit, the bond of love uniting “Jesus” and “Abba”. Other prayer words or phrases are possible and the tradition has many of them. Whatever your sacred word, by saying it with faith and with love, you generate the flow of faith and love in your own heart. Prayer’s first effect is in us. Once you have chosen your prayer word, stay with it and do not change it so that it becomes rooted in your consciousness.

    Faithful repetition of the word is significant both in terms of attention and intention. The nature of the mind is to produce thoughts. One cannot expect the mind to all of a sudden come to a screeching halt just because it’s time to meditate. So the mind is given something to occupy it: a single word, which "thins out" the flow of thoughts in the mind and holds one’s attention on the Presence within. The word also carries one’s intention, one’s consent, to the work of God in us.

  4. Thoughts, Images, Feelings, Memories, Sense Perceptions that Engage the Mind. All of these are a normal experience in meditation. Expect a constant flow of them. To try to suppress all thoughts and feelings is both impossible and unhealthy. It is a question of not entering into dialogue with them, of not investing any energy by reacting, resisting, or retaining them. Just let them go. Their surfacing and passing up and out is part of the healing process of emptying, purification, and liberation that makes meditation a divine therapy. Each time you become aware that you have been "hooked" into dialogue with thought, gently return to your word, allowing it to repeatedly express your intention to be before the One Who Is, in full, loving attention.

  5. Time and Frequency. The traditional times of meditation in all the world religions are early morning and late afternoon/early evening, before meals if at all possible. The recommendation of twenty to thirty minutes is made with an eye to two things: one, the minimal amount of time generally considered necessary to establish inner silence; and two, the maximum amount of time most contemporary people can realistically afford. The end of the prayer period can be indicated by a timer provided it does not have a loud tick or make a startling sound when it goes off. At the end of meditation, some make a gradual transition back into cognitive activity by slowly, interiorly reciting a prayer which expresses the attitude of openness and surrender which they have embodied during their time of prayer.

FINDING SUPPORT FOR YOUR PRACTICE

The "how-to" of meditation is simple. What is difficult is faithfulness to the discipline, holding that priority in place, interrupting what you are doing in order to pray. A support group praying and sharing together once a week helps maintain one’s commitment to the prayer and provides an opportunity for further input on a regular basis through talks, tapes and discussion.

 
designed by Supercreative