This used to be the self-designation of fundamentalist and evangelical
Christians. They were intent on saving souls, not saving the culture. But in
the late 1970’s and 1980’s a shift occurred. The Religious Right was born, and
the “culture wars” began. Conservative Christianity became increasingly identified
with conservative politics. Now it is difficult to separate the two.
I have gone through various phases in my spiritual journey, as
I explored the religious and political spectrum. Throughout it all there has
been a mystical streak that has come to fruition in the last decade. My life
has opened to a spiritual realm that was outside of my awareness previously.
I have called it transtheism, borrowing that term from the
Christian philosopher Paul Tillich. It transcends theism to the same degree
that theism surpasses atheism. I have also called it Christian nonduality,
focusing on our union with God. Some would label this monism, pantheism or
panentheism, but it is not an “ism” at all. It transcends religious and
philosophical systems. It is direct awareness of the Divine.
As this new way of seeing has integrated into my human
existence, I am once again aware of the tension between the spiritual and the
political. Most mystics are nonpolitical. They are concerned with spiritual things,
not worldly matters. They are more likely to retreat from the world into a
solitary or monastic lifestyle rather than be involved with the affairs of government
and society.
Yet there has always been mystics who were active in social causes. There are numerous modern examples. The most influential in my life have been the Trappist monk Thomas Merton, German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and the Hindu mahatma Mohandas Gandhi. Gandhi in turn influenced the Baptist preacher Martin Luther King, Jr.
I have come to see that spiritual union with the Divine does not mean
divorcing oneself from cause of justice in the world. This world and its
sufferings are part of the Oneness of Reality. This is evident in Jesus’
description of his ministry in the first sermon that he preached at his
hometown synagogue. He said his ministry fulfilled this prophetic scripture:
The spiritual involves the political. It cannot avoid it. Not political in a partisan sense. To identify any nation, political party, ideology or religion with the Kingdom of God is idolatry. That is the sin of Christian nationalism today.
To be spiritual is to be prophetic. Not prophetic
in the sense of predicting the future, but in the sense of “speaking truth to
power,” standing “against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of
the darkness of this world,” as Ephesians says.
To be spiritually prophetic is to be deeply biblical and Christian. It is to identify with the suffering of people in this world. It is to stand with the powerless against the power-hungry.
As we treat the “least of
these” his brothers and sister, so we treat Christ in our midst today. It means to
embrace the presence of God not just in silence and solitude, but in the
messy world of imperfect men and women. It is to take up the cross of Christ
and follow him.
1 comment:
Thanks Marshall. I have followed your journey into transtheism with great interest and profit. You have pulled me along with you! not all the way, because John Prine intervened and spoke to a different side of me!! Sort of. But I continue to seek and learn and wait and listen and talk about these things. I am now trying to discern what the church is for today, and where it is, and how I can participate and lead. It is a turbulent time, a shaking of the foundations, the Hebrew prophet said. Thanks.
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