Letters from the International School
What is mysticism? by Kim Nataraja
The background to this series of letters is the teaching coming
out of the mystical tradition. We have already heard some of the
wisdom from the Desert and we will continue to look in subsequent
letters at the teaching of the mystics throughout the centuries
up to our time.
But what is mysticism and what is the relevance of the mystics
for us in our time? Mysticism is a modern word. The early Christians
did not use this term but spoke only of certain experiences as being
mystical.
Bernard McGinn, a perceptive and knowledgeable writer who has
engaged with this topic in his series of books on the history of
Western Mysticism, says: “The mystical element in Christianity
is that part of its belief and practices that concerns the preparation
for, the consciousness of, and the reaction to what can be described
as the immediate or direct presence of God.”
This really is the aim of engaging seriously in meditation, contemplative
prayer. It allows us to break through the rational level of our
ordinary consciousness to a higher intuitive level of consciousness.
It teaches us to ‘leave self behind’, to leave our self-centred
view of reality and in doing so allows us to transcend the ego and
reach that wider, more open mode of perception. It moves us from
a knowledge based reality to one informed by the wisdom of the Divine
Reality. Then we enter insightful states, where we just ‘know’
without knowing, where we are held in love. It is a way of becoming
fully alive, from a life centred on survival to one of meaning,
as John Main explains so beautifully:
“More and more men and women in our society are beginning
to understand that our personal problems and the problems we face
as a society are basically spiritual problems. What more and more
of us understand is that the human spirit cannot find fulfilment
in mere material success or prosperity. It isn’t that material
success or prosperity is bad in itself but they are simply not adequate
as a final or ultimate answer to the human situation....To know
ourselves, to understand ourselves, and to get our problems and
ourselves into perspective, we simply must make contact with our
spirit.” This in fact he sees as our prime responsibility
as a human being: “Our first task...is to find our own spirit
because this is our lifeline with the Spirit of God.”
Meditation leads us onto the path of ‘finding our own spirit’
and it is a path not only for the mystics but for ordinary people.
The mystics are our research scientist; they prove it can be done
and all they say is based not on theory but on experience. Dedication
and faithful perseverance leads us to our Centre, to the presence
of the spirit within ourselves, where our essence “is being
emanated and renewed by the loving overflow of the life of the Trinity.”
(Word into Silence)
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