Monday, September 12, 2011

Many Paths to Wholeness

In my realm, the metaphysical, wholeness refers to the totality of reality, whatever that might include and whatever name we might give it. The whole enchilada – God - Infinite, Compassionate Intelligence – Allah; it is bigger than all of our labels put together.
My handy pocket dictionary defines wholeness as an organic unity. That feels right to me.
How do religions reveal wholeness in ways that people can relate to and practice? We feel like observers of life so much of the time, separate from others and from this huge, magnificent universe we live in. 
The Science of Mind philosophy benefits from being a synthesis of several, powerful world wisdom traditions. We teach that the cosmos, seen and unseen, is a singular consciousness which has complexified and ordered itself over time into billions of things within a vast web of interdependence. Or, as Sri Aurobindo put it, “Existence that multiplied itself for sheer delight of being and plunged into numberless trillions of forms so it might find itself innumerably.”  
We come to Sunday services where we practice affirmative prayer, meditate, sing together, and hear uplifting talks. Like other faith traditions, we have both outer and inner forms through which to come to grips with the immensity of reality. For most people in any religion, following the outer form is enough to enrich their lives. Mystics of all traditions feel a deep urge to go beyond the forms, to comprehend this immensity intimately – now there’s a contradiction in terms!
 One of my favorite aspects of the Science of Mind philosophy is our delight in learning from other groups. I am very much an interfaith kind of person. From time to time here, I’ll showcase the brilliance of some other tradition than my own.
Today, I’m looking at the oldest known faith tradition, that of Australia’s First Peoples. Originally spanning 400 or more languages and at least as many spiritualities, I share here are a sprinkling of insights from that vastness of time and culture.
We are cautioned that humans are prone to exploitative behavior if not constantly reminded they are interconnected with the rest of creation. We are told that we are spiritual beings here on earth having a human experience. And we can deepen our intimacy with the cosmos and each other by following an Australian First Peoples’ 10 commandments, a set of dos rather than don’ts. They are:
Express your individual creativity.
Realize that you are accountable.
Before birth, you agreed to help others.
Continually mature emotionally.
Entertain others with positive energies.
Be a steward of your energies.
Indulge in music.
Strive to achieve wisdom.
Learn self-discipline.
Observe without judging.
Truly, fine guidelines for living; rich enough to sustain any follower of the forms and deep enough in practice to satisfy the mystic in me. In you too, I hope.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Late Entry Tonight

My weekly entry is a few days late this week. I have been focusing on a favorite spiritual practice for the past 5 days or so - utter relaxation!
After an intense summer in both academic and heart awareness terms plus the ongoing development of my own ministry direction, I was ready for a break. I took the Labor Day holiday literally - there are many forms of labor, as a friend said - and extended it by a couple of days.
I visited several friends, talked and laughed, spent a joyful hour on the phone with my son on the other side of the US, listened to great music (thanks again to Phish and a techno-savvy pal), went out to lunch, sipped margueritas under the coolness of the misting system another friend has hooked up at her place, went to the movies, toured a Greek Festival with yet another friend...
I mainly ignored email, school or dishes... even this blog.
I read a whole novel and I slept in once or twice.  Ahhhh. Good practice.

About my developing ministry, it is called The Wisdom Bridge; A Home for Intercultural/Interfaith Harmony and Celebration. I am interested in promoting dialogue across different belief systems. The inaugural Wisdom Bridge events are a series of workshops and classes exploring the realities of Muslim life and religion in the US and abroad while exposing the huge amount of misinformation currently being circulated.
Next iteration of this work takes place this Sunday, Sept. 11. After my Sunday noon talk for Center for Spiritual Living, Davis titled "Many Paths to Wholeness" I'll facilitate a two hour workshop called "Embracing Muslim Lives." We'll read and discuss several scenarios from real Muslim American lives, using these as vehicles to understand various human levels of meaning as well as some metaphysical inplications.
Next, this Wisdom Bridge work will show up as a 3 week course in October through the Experimental College, the student-run independent learning institution on the University of California, Davis campus. This expanded presentation will have time to explore the many cultures of Islam globally.

The one unifying idea I can find between the two sections of this blog entry is this. Take time off. Have lots and lots of fun doing things that you won't regret later. That spiritual practice will nourish the helping and healing work you do the rest of the time.