academic and experiential reflection on psychology, mindfulness, philosophy, spirituality and christianity
in soul pursuit
Sunday, 24 December 2017
Tuesday, 19 December 2017
Confession Blog - Catholic Herald
Dear All,
Please find below a link to an interview regarding confession on the Catholic Herald. It may enhance your preparations for Christmas!
best wishes
Peter
Monday, 18 December 2017
Book Review: Mysticism in the Golden Age of Spain, 1500- 1650, Bernard McGinn
Mysticism in the Golden Age of Spain,
1500- 1650. (The Presence of God, Volume 6, A History of Western Christian
Mysticism)
Author: Bernard McGinn
Date: 2017
Publisher: Herder and Herder: Crossroad
ISBN: 9780824500900
pp. 478, hbk
We
live in a Golden Age of writing on Christian mysticism. McGinn’s own monumental
and era-defining study now sails triumphantly into Spain’s own Golden Age and
his galleon delivers us a wealth of riches to admire. From its origins in the
‘Spiritual Exercises’ of Abbot García de Cisneros in the fastnesses of the
Abbey of Montserrat in Catalonia to the quarrelsome but brilliant Fray Luis de
Léon, the professor of Hebrew at Salamanca University arrested for his
controversial translation of the Song of Songs, the book takes us on an
incredible and dazzling journey through this incomparable era of mystical
writing. Thus, as well as the titans of the era, Ss. Teresa of Avila, John of
the Cross and Ignatius of Loyola, we are introduced to a host of unfamiliar mystics,
saints and seers who populate this fabled time and place. We hear of the early
visionary and mystic, Juana de la Cruz (1481 – 1534) who ran away from home at
the age of fifteen disguised a a man in order to join a community of Franciscan
holy women. Here she became a local celebrity famed for her sermons which will
seem rather provocative to 21st Century sensibilities. Then there is
the controversial figure of María de Jesús de Agreda (1602 – 1665) who had the
remarkable ability of bi-locating between Spain and her transatlantic missions
in New Mexico. I shall be praying to her from now on whenever I get on a Virgin
Airways flight. As well as navigating us skillfully and tactfully through this
colourful collection of characters McGinn presents us with thoughtful and
arresting surveys of the life and works of the major players of the period.
There is very little secondary literature on the great saints that is not
thoughtfully assessed, weighed and incorporated into three fascinating central
chapters that summarise the state of play with regards to contemporary
scholarship on these key figures of Western mysticism. For any serious student
of Spanish mysticism this book will become a must-have. We have to go back to
Edgar Allison Peers’ three volume ‘Studies of the Spanish Mystics’, published
in the middle of the twentieth century, to find anything comparable, and in
many ways McGinn’s work will now supersede that masterpiece. Indeed, there is
very little to compare with McGinn’s magnum
opus. Now into the seventh volume, there are three more projected to come.
In the present volume we already have signs of the ‘Crisis of Mysticism’ that
will come with the Quietist affair of the seventeenth century and we await
these last volumes with anticipation. In the meantime we pray for Professor
McGinn’s continuing good health so that the final ships of his fleet may be
brought safely into harbour.
Thursday, 14 December 2017
'A Scent of the Divine' - Happy Feast Day of St John of the Cross!
Happy Feast Day of St John of the Cross!
Born on the feast day of St John the Baptist, like his name-saint, Juan de la Cruz points us towards the Christ-child and the approaching Joy of Christmas, often whilst standing in the darkness. But don't forget he also called his night 'more lovely than the dawn'. In the passage below, from my recently published book 'Confession: The Healing of the Soul', I concentrate on the mysterious passage in 'The Living Flame of Love', his last poem, in which the saint urges us to seek out, like a truffle hound, the sharp scent of the rastro of God in the frosty early morning air. Rastro is the scent or spoor left by a wild animal during the night. We know a fox or boar has been in our gardens the night before but we do not see it - all we are left with is the 'trace of the Divine'. An earthy metaphor for a saint often accused of being too other-worldly. So, as Christmas approaches, let us follow the 'scent of the Divine' which will, he assures us, lead us to the Christ-child.
Born on the feast day of St John the Baptist, like his name-saint, Juan de la Cruz points us towards the Christ-child and the approaching Joy of Christmas, often whilst standing in the darkness. But don't forget he also called his night 'more lovely than the dawn'. In the passage below, from my recently published book 'Confession: The Healing of the Soul', I concentrate on the mysterious passage in 'The Living Flame of Love', his last poem, in which the saint urges us to seek out, like a truffle hound, the sharp scent of the rastro of God in the frosty early morning air. Rastro is the scent or spoor left by a wild animal during the night. We know a fox or boar has been in our gardens the night before but we do not see it - all we are left with is the 'trace of the Divine'. An earthy metaphor for a saint often accused of being too other-worldly. So, as Christmas approaches, let us follow the 'scent of the Divine' which will, he assures us, lead us to the Christ-child.
Confessions
of Fire - St John of the Cross
Flame,
alive, compelling,
yet tender past all telling,
reaching the secret center of my soul!
Since now evasion’s over,
finish your work, my Lover,
break the last thread,
wound me and make me whole!
yet tender past all telling,
reaching the secret center of my soul!
Since now evasion’s over,
finish your work, my Lover,
break the last thread,
wound me and make me whole!
Burn
that is for my healing!
Wound of delight past feeling!
Ah, gentle hand whose touch is a caress,
foretaste of heaven conveying
and every debt repaying:
slaying, you give me life for death’s distress.
Wound of delight past feeling!
Ah, gentle hand whose touch is a caress,
foretaste of heaven conveying
and every debt repaying:
slaying, you give me life for death’s distress.
O
lamps of fire bright-burning
with splendid brilliance, turning
deep caverns of my soul to pools of light!
Once shadowed, dim, unknowing,
now their strange new-found glowing
gives warmth and radiance for my Love’s delight.
with splendid brilliance, turning
deep caverns of my soul to pools of light!
Once shadowed, dim, unknowing,
now their strange new-found glowing
gives warmth and radiance for my Love’s delight.
Ah,
gentle and so loving
you wake within me, proving
that you are there in secret, all alone;
your fragrant breathing stills me
your grace, your glory fills me
so tenderly your love becomes my own.[1]
you wake within me, proving
that you are there in secret, all alone;
your fragrant breathing stills me
your grace, your glory fills me
so tenderly your love becomes my own.[1]
Prologue: A Trace of the Divine
I have felt somewhat
reluctant, most noble and devout lady, to explain these four stanzas, as you asked, since they deal with such
interior and spiritual matters, for which
communication language normally fails (as
spirit transcends sense) and I
consequently find it difficult to say anything of
substance on the matter. Also, it is difficult to speak well of the intimate depths of the spirit (entrañas del espíritu, literally
‘entrails of the spirit’) if one
doesn’t inhabit those depths oneself. And as I have not much done that up to now I have delayed writing about these matters. But now the Lord has appeared to grant me a
little knowledge and given me a
little fire... I feel encouraged knowing for certain that by my own power I can say little of value,
especially regarding such sublime and important
matters. (LF: Prol.1)
So begins the commentary by St John of the Cross on his last, and
possibly greatest, poem, The Living Flame
of Love. The poem probably written sometime between May 1585 and April 1587
(according to the testimony of Juan Evangelista he only took a fortnight to
write it) whilst he was Prior of the Convent of Los Martires in Granada under the shadow of the magnificent Sierra
Nevada and Alhambra Palace.[2]
The preamble to his explanation above resembles the prologue to the last work
of his equally famous co-worker and spiritual associate, St Teresa of Avila.
John had arrived in Granada in 1582, the year of Teresa’s death, and I don’t
think it is too fanciful to suggest that in this, his last great poem, he
recalls the indomitable spirit of the great Teresa whose shade often hovers
over the pages. For had she now not reached the place of bliss of which they
had both spoken during their long and eventful collaboration together?
At this point of entry to the transcendent he declares that:
There is a certain “I
don’t know what” which is felt yet remains to be said, a thing which is known but remains to be described, a
trace of the divine discovered by the
soul which God has left to track Him down... (CA
7.9)
It is as if having entered the Grail Castle only poetry will now suffice
to convey what is happening. Using the language and imagery of the hunt John
speaks of a divine trace or scent (un
subido rastro que se descubre al alma de Dios quedándose por rastrear)
which we have caught on the early morning air – this alone ( the ‘I-don’t-know-what’) will lead us to the Divine. It
is, as he continues, ‘a love that wounds the soul,’ an outstanding experience
that really cannot be put into words. It is Abhishiktananda’s ‘Grail’
experienced outside the bus station of Rishikesh, it is Wittgenstein’s fire of
longing felt in the lonely dark nights of Norway:
One of the outstanding
favours God grants briefly in this life is an understanding
and experience of Himself so lucid and lofty as to make one know clearly that He cannot be completely understood or experienced. (CA: 7.9)
John’s Living Flame is thus
his final confession and testament as he goes ‘gently into that good night.’ A
testimonial made not to a Priest or Bishop, or even a Discalced Friar, but to a
simple ‘unlettered’ lay woman – Doña Ana del Mercado y Peñalosa. Born in
Segovia, to which she would return with John to found his convent there, she
was at this time widowed and living in Granada with her brother. John’s final testament is made to a woman,
and it is to a woman’s heart that he confides his last attempts at spiritual
writing.
[1]St John of the
Cross, The Living Flame of Love, translated by Marjorie Flower, OCD: The Poems of St. John
of the Cross, incorporating adaptations by Fr Iain Matthew OCD:
¡Oh llama de amor viva
que tiernamente hieres
de mi alma en el más profundo centro!
Pues ya no eres esquiva
acaba ya si quieres,
¡rompe la tela de este dulce encuentro!
que tiernamente hieres
de mi alma en el más profundo centro!
Pues ya no eres esquiva
acaba ya si quieres,
¡rompe la tela de este dulce encuentro!
¡Oh cauterio süave!
¡Oh regalada llaga!
¡Oh mano blanda! ¡Oh toque delicado
que a vida eterna sabe
y toda deuda paga!
Matando, muerte en vida has trocado.
¡Oh regalada llaga!
¡Oh mano blanda! ¡Oh toque delicado
que a vida eterna sabe
y toda deuda paga!
Matando, muerte en vida has trocado.
¡Oh lámparas de fuego
en cuyos resplandores
las profundas cavernas del sentido,
que estaba oscuro y ciego,
con estraños primores
color y luz dan junto a su querido!
en cuyos resplandores
las profundas cavernas del sentido,
que estaba oscuro y ciego,
con estraños primores
color y luz dan junto a su querido!
¡Cuán manso y amoroso
recuerdas en mi seno
donde secretamente solo moras,
y en tu aspirar sabroso
de bien y gloria lleno,
cuán delicadamente me enamoras!
recuerdas en mi seno
donde secretamente solo moras,
y en tu aspirar sabroso
de bien y gloria lleno,
cuán delicadamente me enamoras!
[2]
For more on the chronology and background of John’s poems see Tyler 2010. For
both Teresa and John I will use the BAC Spanish edition of their writings and
the Kavanaugh and Rodriguez translations modified where necessary. See
bibliography for more details and abbreviations of texts used.
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