Sunday, 3 May 2026

Should we be spiritually engaged at all times and in all situations? Or stick to a schedule?

From the classical and Medieval eras, during which Christianity was established, the ideal was an overall religious basis for society, with a religiously approved monarch - but in practice life was divided between religious and secular activities.


In essence; there was a prescribed (minimum) ritual and ceremonial religious life; and the rest of a personal and community time was de facto engaged in all the other necessities of living. The proportions of secular and sacred varied, but the division was necessarily present (in practice) even in monasteries. 

This division was also (usually) reflected in terms of individual subjective experience. In general, people strove, and were perhaps often able, to achieve a properly spiritual, devotional attitude during daily prayer and formal church services and the like; but accepted that this level was impossible to sustain.

And indeed, from whatever combination of character and circumstances, it was often impossible to be spiritual at all. The main thing was to "do it" in the prescribed times and places. 

Indeed, as the centuries passed, it seems that even the minimum frequency of experienced religious participation was increasingly difficult to achieve. People could conform to all requirements in "the letter", yet "the spirit" became feebler...

More and more often, "the spirit" was altogether absent. 


Against this backdrop of enfeebled faith and increasing apostasy; were those (from the late 1700s, but much more so later) who advocated (and sometimes claimed to achieve) a continuous and unbroken spiritual life. 

They claimed, indeed, to strive for what they saw as the real possibility of living all life (from waking to sleeping, and ultimately even during sleep) in a state of devotion, spiritual awareness, religion. Conversely, they poured scorn on the ideal and reality of "Sunday Christians" - who switched-off religion, in between their required church attendances. 

Such people included Christian revivalists of various kinds  - and often these claimants were not Christian. Often enough they were atheists (spiritual but not religious), or neo-pagans of a wide range of types. For instance a serious Buddhist told me that a Zen Masters' whole life was one of continual spirituality, even when doing the most routing chores. More generally, it was claimed that this could happen by the continuous and habitual effect of prayer (i.e. a "mantra": this is also one of the expressed ideals of the Jesus Prayer.) 


As of now, in The West, these two religious ideals still dominate:

On the one hand, a Medievally-rooted ideal that aims at serious spiritual participation in relation to a finite series of discrete and pre-specified practices, times, and places; usually of a formal and prescribed nature. 

And, on the other hand, an ideal of qualitative "enlightenment": the idea that a person can break-through to a permanently transformed nature; a life that is always and everywhere spiritual. 


My belief is that neither of these ideals actually work - for different reasons...

But that they don't work just seems a fact of observation. 

Therefore we ought to seek for something that does work. 

We need another ideal for our spiritual life. 


One might be that we try various possibilities, and do more of whatever works for us... Meanwhile monitoring the situation for how things are progressing (with an awareness that any activity or plan may do us - personally - harm, as well as perhaps good). 

Another notion is that we strive for a higher self-awareness, and by this aim to recognize and "seize the moment" for spiritual activities - not to put them off. 

And also we might strive to hold-onto the insight that - whatever we do in this mortal life - it cannot be sufficient; because this mortal life is not, and is not intended to be, The Whole Thing. 


If we are (as I believe) eternal Beings, then we lived (as spirits, IMO) before this incarnated mortality; and also we will continue to exist (in some form, about which we have a choice) after we die mortally. 

This life is therefore a finite phase between eternities. 

Therefore, instead of deluding ourselves that there is any possibility at all of an ideal life during this mortality; our best bet is to regard our task as trying to have the right kind of helpful experiences; and learning the right kind of lessons from whatever actual experiences come our way. 

This mortal life is intended to be transformative; but the intended (and perhaps, in significant ways although not completely,  achieved) transformation is not for this mortal life; nor is eternal qualitative spiritual transformation even possible in this world of change, of entropy and death. 


Therefore, as with any kind of intentional development, such as the following analogy of school or college work; we may realize that:

On the one hand that we cannot always be studying and practicing. And if we seriously attempt this, we will not only be wasting our time - but indeed sabotaging the possibility of that focused and intense (therefore necessarily brief) learning which really works. 

And, on the other hand; that one secret of effective learning is to be aware of any moments when the opportunity for some really special experience has arrived. 

When that moment is here; we should be able to set-aside the routines, plans and programs devised to get us through dull-dry times; and, seizing the opportunity, take the chance, here-and-now.

And learn from it that which is divinely-intended for our benefit. 

If at all possible.  


5 comments:

  1. I went to a Catholic school (almost all Irish schools were Catholic back then) and most classes had a prayer beforehand. One history teacher didn't do this. I remember once, before this teacher's class, one of my classmates automatically launched into a prayer, then stopped bashfully. The teacher said, rather smugly: "And that's why I don't have a prayer before my class". I was greatly impressed by this at the time, but looking back, I've completely changed my mind.

    ReplyDelete
  2. @Mal - I'm not sure what inferences you are drawing from that incident.

    My first point, above, is that people have gradually realized since the Medieval times that there really is such a thing as going through the motions, and that this is not necessarily a good thing - and (IMO) may be a bad thing, for various reasons including that the words mean nothing and are devalued in a lasting fashion, or that the intent behind the words is malign.

    To the Medieval mind, words (and acts) had an objective meaning, regardless of intent or situation. Hence an animal might be tried for murder, a promise or oath abolished by a slip of the tongue, a sacrament be invalidated by departure from exactly correct procedure etc.

    Most people would now suppose (and believe in their hearts, whatever they said) that whether a prayer is a good, futile, or bad thing - its "effect" depends on the individual person's motives and the situation.

    This was evident in 2020 by the churches willingly and cheerfully (without any objection) throwing-out centuries of teaching and practice and principles overnight.

    But IMO those who fight against this and try to restore Medieval "literalism" Will fail, no matter how sincere, because human nature has changed.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My inference is that the teacher was wrong to dismiss a mindless, automatic prayer as valueless. I THINK I'm agreeing with you!

      Delete
  3. You’ve covered all the bases I’ve been able to suss out. God drove us away from our first church (conservative evangelical) a few years ago and eventually I could see a few interesting (amazing, really) things from that. First, there was no one reason but rather one or more personal reasons for each member of our family (5 people in all!). Second, one of my reasons was that this church that advocated 24/7 religion in practice just made me “busy” and spiritually lazy. In my own heart, I long for the ritual I grew up with (RCC), but I don’t really expect it to be objectively meaningful but rather a potentially useful tool to which I would supply the meaning, possibly only for a brief season.

    God doesn’t give me a lot of instruction (admittedly a case could be made that I could do a better and more consistent job of asking for it), but when He has it’s usually open-ended and exploratory. Actually I would say He more presents me with opportunities than even instructs me most of the time. So even though “leave that church” was an instruction, where to go next was totally open.

    At first, it was stressful as a parent bc the obvious thing to want is a blueprint to teach your children correctly from. But once we got going I found it really wasn’t difficult to tell even an 8yo: here is how people have thought about God in the past, here is what seems to work about that and what doesn’t, here are some ways I think about God, the important thing is to *think about God really truly from yourself*. Know that this will change over the course of your life and that that’s what God intends bc you’re here to grow and learn. This doesn’t make her untethered or insecure but rather curious and engaged. So far, so good!

    ReplyDelete
  4. @Mia - "God doesn’t give me a lot of instruction (admittedly a case could be made that I could do a better and more consistent job of asking for it), but when He has it’s usually open-ended and exploratory. Actually I would say He more presents me with opportunities than even instructs me most of the time."

    This chimes with my view that - judging by the way that we are, and the world is set up, and that "communication" with the divine is not straightforward or unambiguous - it seems "obvious" (once I thought about it) that God does not want us to be guided by him as a normal thing.

    We are meant to work things out for ourselves, as much as possible - that is one of the reasons for being alive - and only if we get into difficulties, will God step in and "tell us" what he wants us to do (if asked, and we can listen).

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated. "Anonymous" comments are deleted without being read.