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CHAPTER IX
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<br/>
THE THIRD FORM OF CONTEMPLATION
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<p>The hard separation which some mystical writers insist upon
making between "natural" and "supernatural" contemplation, has been on the whole
productive of confusion rather than clearness: for the word "supernatural" has
many unfortunate associations for the mind of the plain man. It at once suggests
to him visions and ecstasies, superstitious beliefs, ghosts, and other
disagreeable interferences with the order which he calls "natural"; and inclines
him to his old attitude of suspicion in respect of all mystical things. But some
word we must have, to indicate the real cleavage which exists between the second
and third stages in the development of the contemplative consciousness: the real
change which, if you would go further on these interior paths, must now take
place in the manner of your apprehension of Reality. Hitherto, all that you have
attained has been--or at least has seemed to you--the direct result of your own
hard work. A difficult self-discipline, the slowly achieved control of your
vagrant thoughts and desires, the steady daily practice of recollection, a
diligent pushing out of your consciousness from the superficial to the
fundamental, an unselfish loving attention; all this has been rewarded by the
gradual broadening and deepening of your perceptions, by an initiation into the
movements of a larger life, You have been a knocker, a seeker, an asker: have
beat upon the Cloud of Unknowing "with a sharp dart of longing love." A
perpetual effort of the will has characterised your inner development. Your
contemplation, in fact, as the specialists would say, has been "active," not
"infused."</p>
<p>But now, having achieved an awareness--obscure and indescribable
indeed, yet actual--of the enfolding presence of Reality, under those two forms
which the theologians call the "immanence" and the "transcendence" of the
Divine, a change is to take place in the relation between your finite human
spirit and the Infinite Life in which at last it knows itself to dwell. All that
will now come to you--and much perhaps will come--will happen as it seems
without effort on your own part: though really it will be the direct result of
that long stress and discipline which has gone before, and has made it possible
for you to feel the subtle contact of deeper realities. It will depend also on
the steady continuance--often perhaps through long periods of darkness and
boredom--of that poise to which you have been trained: the stretching-out of the
loving and surrendered will into the dimness and silence, the continued trustful
habitation of the soul in the atmosphere of the Essential World. You are like a
traveller arrived in a new country. The journey has been a long one; and the
hardships and obstacles involved in it, the effort, the perpetual conscious
pressing forward, have at last come to seem the chief features of your inner
life. Now, with their cessation, you feel curiously lost; as if the chief object
of your existence had been taken away. No need to push on any further: yet,
though there is no more that you can do of yourself, there is much that may and
must be done to you. The place that you have come to seems strange and
bewildering, for it lies far beyond the horizons of human thought. There are no
familiar landmarks, nothing on which you can lay hold. You "wander to and fro,"
as the mystics say, "in this fathomless ground"; surrounded by silence and
darkness, struggling to breathe this rarefied air. Like those who go to live in
new latitudes, you must become acclimatised. Your state, then, should now be
wisely passive; in order that the great influences which surround you may take
and adjust your spirit, that the unaccustomed light, which now seems to you a
darkness, may clarify your eyes, and that you may be transformed from a visitor
into an inhabitant of that supernal Country which St. Augustine described as "no
mere vision, but a home."</p>
<p>You are therefore to let yourself go; to cease all conscious,
anxious striving and pushing. Finding yourself in this place of darkness and
quietude, this "Night of the Spirit," as St. John of the Cross has called it,
you are to dwell there meekly; asking nothing, seeking nothing, but with your
doors flung wide open towards God. And as you do thus, there will come to you an
ever clearer certitude that this darkness enveils the goal for which you have
been seeking from the first; the final Reality with which you are destined to
unite, the perfect satisfaction of your most ardent and most sacred desires. It
is there, but you cannot by your efforts reach it. This realisation of your own
complete impotence, of the resistance which the Transcendent--long sought and
faithfully served--now seems to offer to your busy outgoing will and love, your
ardour, your deliberate self-donation, is at once the most painful and most
essential phase in the training of the human soul. It brings you into that state
of passive suffering which is to complete the decentralisation of your
character, test the purity of your love, and perfect your education in humility.</p>
<p>Here, you must oppose more thoroughly than ever before the
instincts and suggestions of your separate, clever, energetic self; which,
hating silence and dimness, is always trying to take the methods of Martha into
the domain of Mary, and seldom discriminates between passivity and sloth.
Perhaps you will find, when you try to achieve this perfect self-abandonment,
that a further, more drastic self-exploration, a deeper, more searching
purification than that which was forced upon you by your first experience of the
recollective state is needed. The last fragments of selfhood, the very desire
for spiritual satisfaction--the fundamental human tendency to drag down the
Simple Fact and make it ours, instead of offering ourselves to it--must be
sought out and killed. In this deep contemplation, this profound Quiet, your
soul gradually becomes conscious of a constriction, a dreadful narrowness of
personality; something still existing in itself, still tending to draw inwards
to its own centre, and keeping it from that absolute surrender which is the only
way to peace. An attitude of perfect generosity, complete submission, willing
acquiescence in anything that may happen--even in failure and death--is here
your only hope: for union with Reality can only be a union of love, a glad and
humble self-mergence in the universal life. You must, so far as you are able,
give yourself up to, "die into," melt into the Whole; abandon all efforts to lay
hold of It. More, you must be willing that it should lay hold of you. "A pure
bare going forth," says Tauler, trying to describe the sensations of the self at
this moment. "None," says Ruysbroeck, putting this same experience, this meek
outstreaming of the bewildered spirit, into other language, "is sure of Eternal
Life, unless he has died with his own attributes wholly into God."</p>
<p>It is unlikely that agreeable emotions will accompany this utter
self-surrender; for everything will now seem to be taken from you, nothing given
in exchange. But if you are able to make it, a mighty transformation will
result. From the transitional plane of darkness, you will be reborn into another
"world," another stage of realisation: and find yourself, literally, to be other
than you were before. Ascetic writers tell us that the essence of the change now
effected consists in the fact that "God's <i>action</i> takes the place of man's
<i>activity</i>"--that the surrendered self "does not act, but receives." By
this they mean to describe, as well as our concrete language will permit, the
new and vivid consciousness which now invades the contemplative; the sense which
he has of being as it were helpless in the grasp of another Power, so utterly
part of him, so completely different from him--so rich and various, so
transfused with life and feeling, so urgent and so all-transcending--that he can
only think of it as God. It is for this that the dimness and steadily increasing
passivity of the stage of Quiet has been preparing him; and it is out of this
willing quietude and ever-deepening obscurity that the new experiences come.</p>
<p></p>
<p> "O night that didst lead thus, <br/>
O night more lovely than the dawn of light, <br/>
O night that broughtest us<br/>
Lover to lover's sight--<br/>
Lover with loved in marriage of delight,"</p>
<p></p>
<p>says St. John of the Cross in the most wonderful of all mystical
poems. "He who has had experience of this," says St. Teresa of the same stage of
apprehension, "will understand it in some measure: but it cannot be more clearly
described because what then takes place is so obscure. All I am able to say is,
that the soul is represented as being close to God; and that there abide a
conviction thereof so certain and strong, that it cannot possibly help believing
so."</p>
<p>This sense, this conviction, which may be translated by the
imagination into many different forms, is the substance of the greatest
experiences and highest joys of the mystical saints. The intensity with which it
is realised will depend upon the ardour, purity, and humility of the
experiencing soul: but even those who feel it faintly are convinced by it for
evermore. In some great and generous spirits, able to endure the terrific
onslaught of Reality, it may even reach a vividness by which all other things
are obliterated; and the self, utterly helpless under the inundations of this
transcendent life-force, passes into that simple state of consciousness which is
called Ecstasy.</p>
<p>But you are not to be frightened by these special
manifestations; or to suppose that here the road is barred against you. Though
these great spirits have as it were a genius for Reality, a susceptibility to
supernal impressions, so far beyond your own small talent that there seems no
link between you: yet you have, since you are human, a capacity for the Infinite
too. With less intensity, less splendour, but with a certitude which no
arguments will ever shake, this sense of the Living Fact, and of its mysterious
contacts with and invasions of the human spirit, may assuredly be realised by
you. This realisation--sometimes felt under the symbols of personality,
sometimes under those of an impersonal but life-giving Force, Light, Energy, or
Heat--is the ruling character of the third phase of contemplation; and the
reward of that meek passivity, that "busy idleness" as the mystics sometimes
call it, which you have been striving to attain. Sooner or later, if you are
patient, it will come to you through the darkness: a mysterious contact, a clear
certitude of intercourse and of possession--perhaps so gradual in its approach
that the break, the change from the ever-deepening stillness and peace of the
second phase, is hardly felt by you; perhaps, if your nature be ardent and
unstable, with a sudden shattering violence, in a "storm of love."</p>
<p>In either case, the advent of this experience is incalculable,
and completely outside your own control. So far, to use St. Teresa's well-known
image, you have been watering the garden of your spirit by hand; a poor and
laborious method, yet one in which there is a definite relation between effort
and result. But now the watering-can is taken from you, and you must depend upon
the rain: more generous, more fruitful, than anything which your own efforts
could manage, but, in its incalculable visitations, utterly beyond your control.
Here all one can say is this: that if you acquiesce in the heroic demands which
the spiritual life now makes upon you, if you let yourself go, eradicate the
last traces of self-interest even of the most spiritual kind--then, you have
established conditions under which the forces of the spiritual world can work on
you, heightening your susceptibilities, deepening and purifying your attention,
so that you are able to taste and feel more and more of the inexhaustible riches
of Reality.</p>
<p>Thus dying to your own will, waiting for what is given, infused,
you will presently find that a change in your apprehension has indeed taken
place: and that those who said self-loss was the only way to realisation taught
no pious fiction but the truth. The highest contemplative experience to which
you have yet attained has seemed above all else a still awareness. The cessation
of your own striving, a resting upon and within the Absolute World--these were
its main characteristics for your consciousness. But now, this Ocean of Being is
no longer felt by you as an emptiness, a solitude without bourne. Suddenly you
know it to be instinct with a movement and life too great for you to apprehend.
You are thrilled by a mighty energy, uncontrolled by you, unsolicited by you:
its higher vitality is poured into your soul. You enter upon an experience for
which all the terms of power, thought, motion, even of love, are inadequate: yet
which contains within itself the only complete expression of all these things.
Your strength is now literally made perfect in weakness: because of the
completeness of your dependence, a fresh life is infused into you, such as your
old separate existence never knew. Moreover, to that diffused and impersonal
sense of the Infinite, in which you have dipped yourself, and which swallows up
and completes all the ideas your mind has ever built up with the help of the
categories of time and space, is now added the consciousness of a Living Fact
which includes, transcends, completes all that you mean by the categories of
personality and of life. Those ineffective, half-conscious attempts towards free
action, clear apprehension, true union, which we dignify by the names of will,
thought, and love are now seen matched by an Absolute Will, Thought, and Love;
instantly recognised by the contemplating spirit as the highest reality it yet
has known, and evoking in it a passionate and a humble joy.</p>
<p>This unmistakable experience has been achieved by the mystics of
every religion; and when we read their statements, we know that all are speaking
of the same thing. None who have had it have ever been able to doubt its
validity. It has always become for them the central fact, by which all other
realities must be tested and graduated. It has brought to them the deep
consciousness of sources of abundant life now made accessible to man; of the
impact of a mighty energy, gentle, passionate, self-giving, creative, which they
can only call Absolute Love. Sometimes they feel this strange life moving and
stirring within them. Sometimes it seems to pursue, entice, and besiege them. In
every case, they are the passive objects upon which it works. It is now another
Power which seeks the separated spirit and demands it; which knocks at the
closed door of the narrow personality; which penetrates the contemplative
consciousness through and through, speaking, stirring, compelling it; which
sometimes, by its secret irresistible pressure, wins even the most recalcitrant
in spite of themselves. Sometimes this Power is felt as an impersonal force, the
unifying cosmic energy, the indrawing love which gathers all things into One;
sometimes as a sudden access of vitality, a light and heat, enfolding and
penetrating the self and making its languid life more vivid and more real;
sometimes as a personal and friendly Presence which counsels and entreats the
soul.</p>
<p>In each case, the mystics insist again that this is God; that
here under these diverse manners the soul has immediate intercourse with Him.
But we must remember that when they make this declaration, they are speaking
from a plane of consciousness far above the ideas and images of popular
religion; and from a place which is beyond the judiciously adjusted horizon of
philosophy. They mean by this word, not a notion, however august; but an
experienced Fact so vivid, that against it the so-called facts of daily life
look shadowy and insecure. They say that this Fact is "immanent"; dwelling in,
transfusing, and discoverable through every aspect of the universe, every
movement of the game of life--as you have found in the first stage of
contemplation. There you may hear its melody and discern its form. And further,
that It is "transcendent"; in essence exceeding and including the sum of those
glimpses and contacts which we obtain by self-mergence in life, and in Its
simplest manifestations above and beyond anything to which reason can
attain--"the Nameless Being, of Whom nought can be said." This you discovered to
be true in the second stage. But in addition to this, they say also, that this
all-pervasive, all-changing, and yet changeless One, Whose melody is heard in
all movement, and within Whose Being "the worlds are being told like beads,"
calls the human spirit to an immediate intercourse, a <i>unity</i>, a fruition,
a divine give-and-take, for which the contradictory symbols of feeding, of
touching, of marriage, of immersion, are all too poor; and which evokes in the
fully conscious soul a passionate and a humble love. "He devours us and He feeds
us!" exclaims Ruysbroeck. "Here," says St. Thomas Aquinas, "the soul in a
wonderful and unspeakable manner both seizes and is seized upon, devours and is
herself devoured, embraces and is violently embraced: and by the knot of love
she unites herself with God, and is with Him as the Alone with the Alone."</p>
<p>The marvellous love-poetry of mysticism, the rhapsodies which
extol the spirit's Lover, Friend, Companion, Bridegroom; which describe the
"deliberate speed, majestic instancy" of the Hound of Heaven chasing the
separated soul, the onslaughts, demands, and caresses of this "stormy, generous,
and unfathomable love"--all this is an attempt, often of course oblique and
symbolic in method, to express and impart this transcendent secret, to describe
that intense yet elusive state in which alone union with the living heart of
Reality is possible. "How delicately Thou teachest love to me!" cries St. John of
the Cross; and here indeed we find all the ardours of all earthly lovers
justified by an imperishable Objective, which reveals Itself in all things that
we truly love, and beyond all these things both seeks us and compels us, "giving
more than we can take and asking more than we can pay."</p>
<p>You do not, you never will know, <i>what</i> this Objective is:
for as Dionysius teaches, "if any one saw God and understood what he saw, then
it was not God that he saw, but something that belongs to Him." But you do know
now that it exists, with an intensity which makes all other existences unreal;
save in so far as they participate in this one Fact. "Some contemplate the
Formless, and others meditate on Form: but the wise man knows that Brahma is
beyond both." As you yield yourself more and more completely to the impulses of
this intimate yet unseizable Presence, so much the sweeter and stronger--so much
the more constant and steady--will your intercourse with it become. The
imperfect music of your adoration will be answered and reinforced by another
music, gentle, deep, and strange; your out-going movement, the stretching forth
of your desire from yourself to something other, will be answered by a movement,
a stirring, within you yet not conditioned by you. The wonder and variety of
this intercourse is never-ending. It includes in its sweep every phase of human
love and self-devotion, all beauty and all power, all suffering and effort, all
gentleness and rapture: here found in synthesis. Going forth into the bareness
and darkness of this unwalled world of high contemplation, you there find stored
for you, and at last made real, all the highest values, all the dearest and
noblest experiences of the world of growth and change.</p>
<p>You see now what it is that you have been doing in the course of
your mystical development. As your narrow heart stretched to a wider sympathy
with life, you have been surrendering progressively to larger and larger
existences, more and more complete realities: have been learning to know them,
to share their very being, through the magic of disinterested love. First, the
manifested, flowing, evolving life of multiplicity: felt by you in its wonder
and wholeness, once you learned to yield yourself to its rhythms, received in
simplicity the undistorted messages of sense. Then, the actual unchanging ground
of life, the eternal and unconditioned Whole, transcending all succession: a
world inaccessible alike to senses and intelligence, but felt--vaguely, darkly,
yet intensely--by the quiet and surrendered consciousness. But now you are
solicited, whether you will or no, by a greater Reality, the final inclusive
Fact, the Unmeasured Love, which "is through all things everlastingly": and
yielding yourself to it, receiving and responding to its obscure yet ardent
communications, you pass beyond the cosmic experience to the personal encounter,
the simple yet utterly inexpressible union of the soul with its God.</p>
<p>And this threefold union with Reality, as your attention is
focussed now on one aspect, now on another, of its rich simplicity, will be
actualised by you in many different ways: for you are not to suppose that an
unchanging barren ecstasy is now to characterise your inner life. Though the
sense of your own dwelling within the Eternal transfuses and illuminates it, the
sense of your own necessary efforts, a perpetual renewal of contact with the
Spiritual World, a perpetual self-donation, shall animate it too. When the
greater love overwhelms the lesser, and your small self-consciousness is lost in
the consciousness of the Whole, it will be felt as an intense stillness, a quiet
fruition of Reality. Then, your very selfhood seems to cease, as it does in all
your moments of great passion; and you are "satisfied and overflowing, and with
Him beyond yourself eternally fulfilled." Again, when your own necessary
activity comes into the foreground, your small energetic love perpetually
pressing to deeper and deeper realisation--"tasting through and through, and
seeking through and through, the fathomless ground" of the Infinite and
Eternal--it seems rather a perpetually renewed encounter than a final
achievement. Since you are a child of Time as well as of Eternity, such effort
and satisfaction, active and passive love are both needed by you, if your whole
life is to be brought into union with the inconceivably rich yet simple One in
Whom these apparent opposites are harmonised. Therefore seeking and finding,
work and rest, conflict and peace, feeding on God and self-immersion in God,
spiritual marriage and spiritual death--these contradictory images are all
wanted, if we are to represent the changing moods of the living, growing human
spirit; the diverse aspects under which it realises the simple fact of its
intercourse with the Divine.</p>
<p>Each new stage achieved in the mystical development of the
spirit has meant, not the leaving behind of the previous stages, but an adding
on to them: an ever greater extension of experience, and enrichment of
personality. So that the total result of this change, this steady growth of your
transcendental self, is not an impoverishment of the sense-life in the supposed
interests of the super-sensual, but the addition to it of another life--a huge
widening and deepening of the field over which your attention can play.
Sometimes the mature contemplative consciousness narrows to an intense point of
feeling, in which it seems indeed "alone with the Alone": sometimes it spreads
to a vast apprehension of the Universal Life, or perceives the common things of
sense aflame with God. It moves easily and with no sense of incongruity from
hours of close personal communion with its Friend and Lover to self-loss in the
"deep yet dazzling darkness" of the Divine Abyss: or, re-entering that living
world of change which the first form of contemplation disclosed to it, passes
beyond those discrete manifestations of Reality to realise the Whole which
dwells in and inspires every part. Thus ascending to the mysterious fruition of
that Reality which is beyond image, and descending again to the loving
contemplation and service of all struggling growing things, it now finds and
adores everywhere--in the sky and the nest, the soul and the void--one Energetic
Love which "is measureless, since it is all that exists," and of which the
patient up-climb of the individual soul, the passionate outpouring of the Divine
Mind, form the completing opposites.</p>
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