|
| on christian meditation
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
SOME ASPECTS OF CHRISTIAN MEDITATION
I. Introduction
1. Many Christians today have a keen desire to learn how to
experience a deeper and authentic prayer life despite the not
inconsiderable difficulties which modern culture places in the way of
the need for silence, recollection and meditation. The interest which
in recent years has been awakened also among some Christians by forms
of meditation associated with some eastern religions and their
particular methods of prayer is a significant sign of this need for
spiritual recollection and a deep contact with the divine mystery.
Nevertheless, faced with this phenomenon, many feel the need for sure
criteria of a doctrinal and pastoral character which might allow them
to instruct others in prayer, in its numerous manifestations, while
remaining faithful to the truth revealed in Jesus, by means of the
genuine Tradition of the Church. This present letter seeks to reply to
this urgent need, so that in the various particular Churches the many
different forms of prayer, including new ones, may never lose their
correct personal and communitarian nature.
These indications are addressed in the first place to the Bishops, to
be considered in that spirit of pastoral solicitude for the Churches
entrusted to them, so that the entire people of God-priests, religious
and laity-may again be called to pray, with renewed vigor, to the
Father through the Spirit of Christ our Lord.
2. The ever more frequent contact with other religions and with
their different styles and methods of prayer has, in recent decades,
led many of the faithful to ask themselves what value non-Christian
forms of meditation might have for Christians. Above all, the question
concerns eastern methods. (1) Some people today turn to these methods
for therapeutic reasons. The spiritual restlessness arising from a life
subjected to the driving pace of a technologically advanced society
also brings a certain number of Christians to seek in these methods of
prayer a path to interior peace and psychic balance. This psychological
aspect is not dealt with in the present letter, which instead
emphasizes the theological and spiritual implications of the question.
Other Christians, caught up in the movement towards openness and
exchanges between various religions and cultures, are of the opinion
that their prayer has much to gain from these methods. Observing that
in recent times many traditional methods of meditation, especially
Christian ones, have fallen into disuse, they wonder whether it might
not now be possible, by a new training in prayer, to enrich our
heritage by incorporating what has until now been foreign to it.
3. To answer this question, one must first of all consider, even
if only in a general way, in what does the intimate nature of Christian
prayer consist. Then one can see if and how it might be enriched by
meditation methods which have been developed in other religions and
cultures. However, in order to achieve this, one needs to start with a
certain clear premise. Christian prayer is always determined by the
structure of the Christian faith, in which the very truth of God and
creature shines forth. For this reason, it is defined, properly
speaking, as a personal, intimate and profound dialogue between man and
God. It expresses therefore the communion of redeemed creatures with
the intimate life of the Persons of the Trinity. This communion, based
on Baptism and the Eucharist, source and summit of the life of the
Church, implies an attitude of conversion, a flight from "self" to the
"You" of God. Thus Christian prayer is at the same time always
authentically personal and communitarian. It flees from impersonal
techniques or from concentrating on oneself, which can create a kind of
rut, imprisoning the person praying in a spiritual privatism which is
incapable of a free openness to the transcendental God. Within the
Church, in the legitimate search for new methods of meditation it must
always be borne in mind that the essential element of authentic
Christian prayer is the meeting of two freedoms, the infinite freedom
of God with the finite freedom of man.
II. Christian Prayer in the Light of Revelation
4. The Bible itself teaches how the man who welcomes biblical
revelation should pray. In the Old Testament there is a marvelous
collection of prayers which have continued to live through the
centuries, even within the Church of Jesus Christ, where they have
become the basis of its official prayer: The Book of Praises or of
Psalms. (2) Prayers similar to the Psalms may also be found in earlier
Old Testament texts or re-echoed in later ones. (3) The prayers of the
book of Psalms tell in the first place of God's great works on behalf
of the Chosen People. Israel meditates, contemplates and makes the
marvels of God present again, recalling them in prayer.
In biblical revelation Israel came to acknowledge and praise God
present in all creation and in the destiny of every man. Thus he is
invoked, for example, as rescuer in time of danger, in sickness, in
persecution, in tribulation. Finally, and always in the light of his
salvific works, he is exalted in his divine power and goodness, in his
justice and mercy, in his royal grandeur.
5. Thanks to the words, deeds, passion and resurrection of Jesus
Christ, in the New Testament the faith acknowledges in him the
definitive self-revelation of God, the Incarnate Word who reveals the
most intimate depth of his love. It is the Holy Spirit, he who was sent
into the hearts of the faithful, he who "searches everything, even the
depths of God" (1 Cor 2:10), who makes it possible to enter into these
divine depths. According to the promise Jesus made to the disciples,
the Spirit will explain all that he had not yet been able to tell them.
However, this Spirit "will not speak on his own authority," but "he
will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you"
(Jn 16:13f.). What Jesus calls "his" is, as he explains immediately,
also God the Father's because "all that the Father has is mine;
therefore I said that he will take what is mine and declare it to you"
(Jn 16:15).
The authors of the New Testament, with full cognizance, always spoke of
the revelation of God in Christ within the context of a vision
illuminated by the Holy Spirit. The Synoptic Gospels narrate Jesus'
deeds and words on the basis of a deeper understanding, acquired after
Easter, of what the disciples had seen and heard. The entire Gospel of
St. John is taken up with the contemplation of him who from the
beginning is the Word of God made flesh. Paul, to whom Jesus appeared
in his divine majesty on the road to Damascus, instructs the faithful
so that they "may have power to comprehend with all the saints what is
the breadth and length and height and depth [of the mystery of Christ],
and to know the love of Christ which surpasses all knowledge, that you
may be filled with all the fullness of God" (Eph 3:18ff.). For Paul the
mystery of God is Christ, "in whom are hidden all the treasures of
wisdom and knowledge" (Col 2:3) and, the Apostle clarifies, "I say this
in order that no one may delude you with beguiling speech" (v. 4).
6. There exists, then, a strict relationship between revelation
and prayer. The Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum teaches that by means
of his revelation the invisible God, "from the fullness of his love,
addresses men as his friends (cf. Ex 33:11; Jn 15:14-15), and moves
among them (cf. Bar 3:38), in order to invite and receive them into his
own company." (4) This revelation takes place through words and actions
which have a constant mutual reference, one to the other; from the
beginning everything proceeds to converge on Christ, the fullness of
revelation and of grace, and on the gift of the Holy Spirit. These make
man capable of welcoming and contemplating the words and works of God
and of thanking him and adoring him, both in the assembly of the
faithful and in the intimacy of his own heart illuminated by grace.
This is why the Church recommends the reading of the Word of God as a
source of Christian prayer, and at the same time exhorts all to
discover the deep meaning of Sacred Scripture through prayer "so that a
dialogue takes place between God and man. For, 'we speak to him when we
pray; we listen to him when we read the divine oracles.'" (5)
7. Some consequences derive immediately from what has been called
to mind. If the prayer of a Christian has to be inserted in the
Trinitarian movement of God, then its essential content must also
necessarily be determined by the twofold direction of such movement. It
is in the Holy Spirit that the Son comes into the world to reconcile it
to the Father through his works and sufferings. On the other hand, in
this same movement and in the very same Spirit, the Son Incarnate
returns to the Father, fulfilling his will through his passion and
resurrection. The "Our Father," Jesus' own prayer, clearly indicates
the unity of this movement: the will of the Father must be done on
earth as it is in heaven (the petitions for bread, forgiveness and
protection make explicit the fundamental dimensions of God's will for
us), so that there may be a new earth in the heavenly Jerusalem.
The prayer of Jesus (6) has been entrusted to the Church ("Pray then
like this" (Lk 11:2). This is why when a Christian prays, even if he is
alone, his prayer is in fact always within the framework of the
"communion of saints" in which and with which he prays, whether in a
public and liturgical way or in a private manner. Consequently, it must
always be offered within the authentic spirit of the Church at prayer,
and therefore under its guidance, which can sometimes take a concrete
form in terms of a proven spiritual direction. The Christian, even when
he is alone and prays in secret, is conscious that he always prays for
the good of the Church in union with Christ, in the Holy Spirit and
together with all the saints. (7)
III. Erroneous Ways of Praying
8. Even in the first centuries of the Church some incorrect forms
of prayer crept in. Some New Testament texts (cf. 1 Jn 4:3; 1 Tim 1:3-7
and 4:3-4) already give hints of their existence. Subsequently, two
fundamental deviations came to be identified: Pseudognosticism and
Messalianism, both of concern to the Fathers of the Church. There is
much to be learned from that experience of primitive Christianity and
the reaction of the Fathers which can help in tackling the current
problem.
In combatting the errors of pseudognosticism (8) the Fathers affirmed
that matter is created by God and as such is not evil. Moreover, they
maintained that grace, which always has the Holy Spirit as its source
is not a good proper to the soul, but must be sought from God as a
gift. Consequently, the illumination or superior knowledge of the
Spirit ("gnosis") does not make Christian faith something superfluous.
Finally, for the Fathers, the authentic sign of a superior knowledge,
the fruit of prayer, is always Christian love.
9. If the perfection of Christian prayer cannot be evaluated
using the sublimity of gnostic knowledge as a basis, neither can it be
judged by referring to the experience of the divine, as Messalianism
proposed. (9) These false fourth-century charismatics identified the
grace of the Holy Spirit with the psychological experience of his
presence in the soul. In opposing them, the Fathers insisted on the
fact that the soul's union with God in prayer is realized in a
mysterious way, and in particular through the sacraments of the Church.
Moreover, it can even be achieved through experiences of affliction or
desolation. Contrary to the view of the Messalians, these are not
necessarily a sign that the Spirit has abandoned a soul. Rather, as
masters of spirituality have always clearly acknowledged, they may be
an authentic participation in the state of abandonment experienced on
the cross by our Lord, who always remains the model and mediator of
prayer. (10)
10. Both of these forms of error continue to be a temptation for
man the sinner. They incite him to try and overcome the distance
separating creature from Creator, as though there ought not to be such
a distance; to consider the way of Christ on earth, by which he wishes
to lead us to the Father, as something now surpassed; to bring down to
the level of natural psychology what has been regarded as pure grace,
considering it instead as "superior knowledge" or as "experience."
Such erroneous forms, having reappeared in history from time to time on
the fringes of the Church's prayer, seem once more to impress many
Christians, appealing to them as a kind of remedy, be it psychological
or spiritual, or as a quick way of finding God. (11)
11. However, these forms of error, wherever they arise, can be
diagnosed very simply. The meditation of the Christian in prayer seeks
to grasp the depths of the divine in the salvific works of God in
Christ, the Incarnate Word, and in the gift of his Spirit. These divine
depths are always revealed to him through the human-earthly dimension.
Similar methods of meditation, on the other hand, including those which
have their starting-point in the words and deeds of Jesus, try as far
as possible to put aside everything that is worldly, sense-perceptible
or conceptually limited. It is thus an attempt to ascend to or immerse
oneself in the sphere of the divine, which, as such, is neither
terrestrial, sense-perceptible nor capable of conceptualization. (12)
This tendency, already present in the religious sentiments of the later
Greek period (especially in "Neoplatonism"), is found deep in the
religious inspiration of many peoples, no sooner than they become aware
of the precarious character of their representations of the divine and
of their attempts to draw close to it.
12. With the present diffusion of eastern methods of meditation
in the Christian world and in ecclesial communities, we find ourselves
faced with a pointed renewal of an attempt, which is not free from
dangers and errors, to fuse Christian meditation with that which is
non-Christian. Proposals in this direction are numerous and radical to
a greater or lesser extent. Some use eastern methods solely as a
psycho-physical preparation for a truly Christian contemplation; others
go further and, using different techniques, try to generate spiritual
experiences similar to those described in the writings of certain
Catholic mystics. (13) Still others do not hesitate to place that
absolute without image or concepts, which is proper to Buddhist theory,
(14) on the same level as the majesty of God revealed in Christ, which
towers above finite reality. To this end, they make use of a "negative
theology," which transcends every affirmation seeking to express what
God is, and denies that the things of this world can offer traces of
the infinity of God. Thus they propose abandoning not only meditation
on the salvific works accomplished in history by the God of the Old and
New Covenant, but also the very idea of the One and Triune God, who is
Love, in favor of an immersion "in the indeterminate abyss of the
divinity." (15) These and similar proposals to harmonize Christian
meditation with eastern techniques need to have their contents and
methods ever subjected to a thorough-going examination so as to avoid
the danger of falling into syncretism.
IV. The Christian Way to Union with God
13. To find the right "way" of prayer, the Christian should
consider what has been said earlier regarding the prominent features of
the way of Christ, whose "food is to do the will of him who sent [him],
and to accomplish his work" (Jn 4:34). Jesus lives no more intimate or
closer a union with the Father than this, which for him is continually
translated into deep prayer. By the will of the Father he is sent to
mankind, to sinners, to his very executioners, and he could not be more
intimately united to the Father than by obeying his will. This did not
in any way prevent him, however, from also retiring to a solitary place
during his earthly sojourn to unite himself to the Father and receive
from him new strength for his mission in this world. On Mount Tabor,
where his union with the Father was manifest, there was called to mind
his passion (cf. Lk 9:31), and there was not even a consideration of
the possibility of remaining in "three booths" on the Mount of the
Transfiguration. Contemplative Christian prayer always leads to love of
neighbor, to action and to the acceptance of trials, and precisely
because of this it draws one close to God.
14. In order to draw near to that mystery of union with God,
which the Greek Fathers called the divinization of man, and to grasp
accurately the manner in which this is realized, it is necessary in the
first place to bear in mind that man is essentially a creature, (16)
and remains such for eternity, so that an absorbing of the human self
into the divine self is never possible, not even in the highest states
of grace. However, one must recognize that the human person is created
in the "image and likeness" of God, and that the archetype of this
image is the Son of God, in whom and through whom we have been created
(cf. Col 1:16). This archetype reveals the greatest and most beautiful
Christian mystery: from eternity the Son is "other" with respect to the
Father and yet, in the Holy Spirit, he is "of the same substance."
Consequently this otherness, far from being an ill, is rather the
greatest of goods. There is otherness in God himself, who is one single
nature in three Persons, and there is also otherness between God and
creatures, who are by nature different. Finally, in the Holy Eucharist,
as in the rest of the sacraments-and analogically in his works and in
his words-Christ gives himself to us and makes us participate in his
divine nature, (17) without nevertheless suppressing our created
nature, in which he himself shares through his Incarnation.
15. A consideration of these truths together brings the wonderful
discovery that all the aspirations which the prayer of other religions
expresses are fulfilled in the reality of Christianity beyond all
measure, without the personal self or the nature of a creature being
dissolved or disappearing into the sea of the Absolute. "God is love"
(1 Jn 4:8). This profoundly Christian affirmation can reconcile perfect
union with the otherness existing between lover and loved, with eternal
exchange and eternal dialogue. God is himself this eternal exchange,
and we can truly become sharers of Christ, as "adoptive sons" who cry
out with the Son in the Holy Spirit, "Abba, Father." In this sense, the
Fathers are perfectly correct in speaking of the divinization of man
who, having been incorporated into Christ, the Son of God by nature,
may by his grace share in the divine nature and become a "son in the
Son." Receiving the Holy Spirit, the Christian glorifies the Father and
really shares in the Trinitarian life of God.
V. Questions of Method
16. The majority of the great religions which have sought union
with God in prayer have also pointed out ways to achieve it. Just as
"the Catholic Church rejects nothing of what is true and holy in these
religions," (18) neither should these ways be rejected out of hand
simply because they are not Christian. On the contrary, one can take
from them what is useful so long as the Christian conception of prayer,
its logic and requirements are never obscured. It is within the context
of all of this that these bits and pieces should be taken up and
expressed anew. Among these one might mention first of all that of the
humble acceptance of a master who is an expert in the life of prayer,
and of the counsels he gives. Christian experience has known of this
practice from earliest times, from the epoch of the desert Fathers.
Such a master, being an expert in "sentire cum ecclesia," must not only
direct and warn of certain dangers; as a "spiritual father," he has to
also lead his pupil in a dynamic way, heart to heart, into the life of
prayer, which is the gift of the Holy Spirit.
17. In the later non-Christian classical period, there was a
convenient distinction made between three stages in the life of
perfection: the purgative way, the illuminative way and the unitive
way. This teaching has served as a model for many schools of Christian
spirituality. While in itself valid, this analysis nevertheless
requires several clarifications so as to be interpreted in a correct
Christian manner which avoids dangerous misunderstandings.
18. The seeking of God through prayer has to be preceded and
accompanied by an ascetical struggle and a purification from one's own
sins and errors, since Jesus has said that only "the pure of heart
shall see God" (Mt 5:8). The Gospel aims above all at a moral
purification from the lack of truth and love and, on a deeper level,
from all the selfish instincts which impede man from recognizing and
accepting the will of God in its purity. The passions are not negative
in themselves (as the Stoics and Neoplatonists thought), but their
tendency is to selfishness. It is from this that the Christian has to
free himself in order to arrive at that state of positive freedom which
in classical Christian times was called apatheia, in the Middle Ages
Impassibilitas and in the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises indiferencia.
(19)
This is impossible without a radical self-denial, as can also be seen
in St. Paul who openly uses the word "mortification" (of sinful
tendencies). (20) Only this self-denial renders man free to carry out
the will of God and to share in the freedom of the Holy Spirit.
19. Therefore, one has to interpret correctly the teaching of
those masters who recommend "emptying" the spirit of all sensible
representations and of every concept, while remaining lovingly
attentive to God. In this way, the person praying creates an empty
space which can then be filled by the richness of God. However, the
emptiness which God requires is that of the renunciation of personal
selfishness, not necessarily that of the renunciation of those created
things which he has given us and among which he has placed us. There is
no doubt that in prayer one should concentrate entirely on God and as
far as possible exclude the things of this world which bind us to our
selfishness. On this topic St. Augustine is an excellent teacher: if
you want to find God, he says, abandon the exterior world and re-enter
into yourself. However, he continues, do not remain yourself, but go
beyond yourself because you are not God; he is deeper and greater than
you. "I look for his substance in my soul and I do not find it; I have
however meditated on the search for God and, reaching out to him,
through created things, I have sought to know 'the invisible
perfections of God' (Rom 1:20)." (21) "To remain in oneself": this is
the real danger. The great Doctor of the Church recommends
concentrating on oneself, but also transcending the self which is not
God, but only a creature. God is "deeper than my inmost being and
higher than my greatest height." (22) In fact God is in us and with us,
but he transcends us in his mystery. (23)
20. From the dogmatic point of view, it is impossible to arrive
at a perfect love of God if one ignores his giving of himself to us
through his Incarnate Son, who was crucified and rose from the dead. In
him, under the action of the Holy Spirit, we participate, through pure
grace, in the interior life of God. When Jesus says, "He who has seen
me has seen the Father" (Jn 14:9), he does not mean just the sight and
exterior knowledge of his human figure ("the flesh is of no avail"-Jn
6:63). What he means is rather a vision made possible by the grace of
faith: to see, through the manifestation of Jesus perceptible by the
senses, just what he, as the Word of the Father, truly wants to reveal
to us of God ("It is the Spirit that gives life [...]; the words that I
have spoken to you are spirit and life"-ibid.). This "seeing" is not a
matter of a purely human abstraction (ab-stractio) from the figure in
which God has revealed himself; it is rather the grasping of the divine
reality in the human figure of Jesus, his eternal divine dimension in
its temporal form. As St. Ignatius says in the Spiritual Exercises, we
should try to capture "the infinite perfume and the infinite sweetness
of the divinity" (n.124), going forward from that finite revealed truth
from which we have begun. While he raises us up, God is free to "empty"
us of all that holds us back in this world, to draw us completely into
the Trinitarian life of his eternal love. However, this gift can only
be granted "in Christ through the Holy Spirit," and not through our own
efforts, withdrawing ourselves from his revelation.
21. On the path of the Christian life, illumination follows on
from purification, through the love which the Father bestows on us in
the Son and the anointing which we receive from him in the Holy Spirit
(cf. 1 Jn 2:20). Ever since the early Christian period, writers have
referred to the "illumination" received in Baptism. After their
initiation into the divine mysteries, this illumination brings the
faithful to know Christ by means of the faith which works through love.
Some ecclesiastical writers even speak explicitly of the illumination
received in Baptism as the basis of that sublime knowledge of Christ
Jesus (cf. Phil 3:8), which is defined as theoria or contemplation.
(24) The faithful, with the grace of Baptism, are called to progress in
the knowledge and witness of the mysteries of the faith by "the
intimate sense of spiritual realities which they experience." (25) No
light from God can render the truths of the faith redundant. Any
subsequent graces of illumination which God may grant rather help to
make clearer the depth of the mysteries confessed and celebrated by the
Church, as we wait for the day when the Christian can contemplate God
as he is in glory (cf. 1 Jn 3:2).
22. Finally, the Christian who prays can, if God so wishes, come
to a particular experience of union. The Sacraments, especially Baptism
and the Eucharist, (26) are the objective beginning of the union of the
Christian with God. Upon this foundation, the person who prays can be
called, by a special grace of the Spirit, to that specific type of
union with God which in Christian terms is called mystical.
23. Without doubt, a Christian needs certain periods of retreat
into solitude to be recollected and, in God's presence, rediscover his
path. Nevertheless, given his character as a creature, and as a
creature who knows that only in grace is he secure, his method of
getting closer to God is not based on any technique in the strict sense
of the word. That would contradict the spirit of childhood called for
by the Gospel. Genuine Christian mysticism has nothing to do with
technique: it is always a gift of God, and the one who benefits from it
knows himself to be unworthy. (27)
24. There are certain mystical graces, conferred on the founders
of ecclesial institutes to benefit their foundation, and on other
saints, too, which characterize their personal experience of prayer and
which cannot, as such, be the object of imitation and aspiration for
other members of the faithful, even those who belong to the same
institutes and those who seek an ever more perfect way of prayer. (28)
There can be different levels and different ways of sharing in a
founder's experience of prayer, without everything having to be exactly
the same. Besides, the prayer experience that is given a privileged
position in all genuinely ecclesial institutes, ancient and modern, is
always in the last analysis something personal. And it is to the
individual person that God gives his graces for prayer.
25. With regard to mysticism, one has to distinguish between the
gifts of the Holy Spirit and the charisms granted by God in a totally
gratuitous way. The former are something which every Christian can
quicken in himself by his zeal for the life of faith, hope and charity;
and thus, by means of a serious ascetical struggle, he can reach a
certain experience of God and of the contents of the faith. As for
charisms, St. Paul says that these are, above all, for the benefit of
the Church, of the other members of the Mystical Body of Christ (cf. 1
Cor 12:17). With this in mind, it should be remembered that charisms
are not the same things as extraordinary ("mystical") gifts (cf. Rom
12:3-21), and that the distinction between the "gifts of the Holy
Spirit" and "charisms" can be flexible. It is certain that a charism
which bears fruit for the Church, cannot, in the context of the New
Testament, be exercised without a certain degree of personal
perfection, and that, on the other hand, every "living" Christian has a
specific task (and in this sense a "charism") "for the building up of
the body of Christ" (cf. Eph 4:15-16), (29) in communion with the
hierarchy whose job it is "not indeed to extinguish the Spirit, but to
test all things and hold fast to what is good" (LG, n. 12).
VI. Psychological-Corporal Methods
26. Human experience shows that the position and demeanor of the
body also have their influence on the recollection and dispositions of
the spirit. This is a fact to which some eastern and western Christian
spiritual writers have directed their attention.
Their reflections, while presenting points in common with eastern
non-Christian methods of meditation, avoid the exaggerations and
partiality of the latter, which, however, are often recommended to
people today who are not sufficiently prepared.
The spiritual authors have adopted those elements which make
recollection in prayer easier, at the same time recognizing their
relative value: they are useful if reformulated in accordance with the
aim of Christian prayer. (30) For example, the Christian fast
signifies, above all, an exercise of penitence and sacrifice; but,
already for the Fathers, it also had the aim of rendering man more open
to the encounter with God and making a Christian more capable of
self-dominion and at the same time more attentive to those in need.
In prayer it is the whole man who must enter into relation with God,
and so his body should also take up the position most suited to
recollection. (31) Such a position can in a symbolic way express the
prayer itself, depending on cultures and personal sensibilities. In
some aspects, Christians are today becoming more conscious of how one's
bodily posture can aid prayer.
27. Eastern Christian meditation (32) has valued psychophysical
symbolism, often absent in western forms of prayer. It can range from a
specific bodily posture to the basic life functions, such as breathing
or the beating of the heart. The exercise of the "Jesus Prayer," for
example, which adapts itself to the natural rhythm of breathing can, at
least for a certain time, be of real help to many people. (33) On the
other hand, the eastern masters themselves have also noted that not
everyone is equally suited to making use of this symbolism, since not
everybody is able to pass from the material sign to the spiritual
reality that is being sought. Understood in an inadequate and incorrect
way, the symbolism can even become an idol and thus an obstacle to the
raising up of the spirit to God. To live out in one's prayer the full
awareness of one's body as a symbol is even more difficult: it can
degenerate into a cult of the body and can lead surreptitiously to
considering all bodily sensations as spiritual experiences.
28. Some physical exercises automatically produce a feeling of
quiet and relaxation, pleasing sensations, perhaps even phenomena of
light and of warmth, which resemble spiritual well-being. To take such
feelings for the authentic consolations of the Holy Spirit would be a
totally erroneous way of conceiving the spiritual life. Giving them a
symbolic significance typical of the mystical experience, when the
moral condition of the person concerned does not correspond to such an
experience, would represent a kind of mental schizophrenia which could
also lead to psychic disturbance and, at times, to moral deviations.
That does not mean that genuine practices of meditation which come from
the Christian East and from the great non-Christian religions, which
prove attractive to the man of today who is divided and disoriented,
cannot constitute a suitable means of helping the person who prays to
come before God with an interior peace, even in the midst of external
pressures.
It should, however, be remembered that habitual union with God, namely
that attitude of interior vigilance and appeal to the divine assistance
which in the New Testament is called "continuous prayer," (34) is not
necessarily interrupted when one devotes oneself also, according to the
will of God, to work and to the care of one's neighbor. "So, whether
you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God," the
Apostle tells us (1 Cor 10:31). In fact, genuine prayer, as the great
spiritual masters teach, stirs up in the person who prays an ardent
charity which moves him to collaborate in the mission of the Church and
to serve his brothers for the greater glory of God. (35)
VII. "I Am the Way"
29. From the rich variety of Christian prayer as proposed by the
Church, each member of the faithful should seek and find his own way,
his own form of prayer. But all of these personal ways, in the end,
flow into the way to the Father, which is how Jesus Christ has
described himself. In the search for his own way, each person will,
therefore, let himself be led not so much by his personal tastes as by
the Holy Spirit, who guides him, through Christ, to the Father.
30. For the person who makes a serious effort there will,
however, be moments in which he seems to be wandering in a desert and,
in spite of all his efforts, he "feels" nothing of God. He should know
that these trials are not spared anyone who takes prayer seriously.
However, he should not immediately see this experience, common to all
Christians who pray, as the "dark night" in the mystical sense. In any
case in these moments, his prayer, which he will resolutely strive to
keep to, could give him the impression of a certain "artificiality,"
although really it is something totally different: in fact it is at
that very moment an expression of his fidelity to God, in whose
presence he wishes to remain even when he receives no subjective
consolation in return.
In these apparently negative moments, it becomes clear what the person
who is praying really seeks: is he indeed looking for God who, in his
infinite freedom, always surpasses him; or is he only seeking himself,
without managing to go beyond his own "experiences," whether they be
positive "experiences" of union with God or negative "experiences" of
mystical "emptiness."
31. The love of God, the sole object of Christian contemplation,
is a reality which cannot be "mastered" by any method or technique. On
the contrary, we must always have our sights fixed on Jesus Christ, in
whom God's love went to the cross for us and there assumed even the
condition of estrangement from the Father (cf. Mk 13:34). We therefore
should allow God to decide the way he wishes to have us participate in
his love. But we can never, in any way, seek to place ourselves on the
same level as the object of our contemplation, the free love of God;
not even when, through the mercy of God the Father and the Holy Spirit
sent into our hearts, we receive in Christ the gracious gift of a
sensible reflection of that divine love and we feel drawn by the truth
and beauty and goodness of the Lord.
The more a creature is permitted to draw near to God, the greater his
reverence before the thrice-holy God. One then understands those words
of St. Augustine: "You can call me friend; I recognize myself a
servant." (36) Or the words which are even more familiar to us, spoken
by her who was rewarded with the highest degree of intimacy with God:
"He has looked upon his servant in her lowliness" (Lk 1:48).
The Supreme Pontiff, John Paul II, in an audience granted to the
undersigned Cardinal Prefect, gave his approval to this letter, drawn
up in a plenary session of this Congregation, and ordered its
publication.
At Rome, from the offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, October 15, 1989, the Feast of Saint Teresa of Jesus.
Joseph Card. Ratzinger
Prefect
Alberto Bovone
Titular Archbishop of Caesarea in Numidia
Secretary
|