Tuesday, January 20, 2015

The personal and non-personal aspects of divinity continually shapeshift INTO one another!


Many "Spiritual, Not Religious" seekers have trouble accepting the possibility of a personal God because the only image they've been given is that of an old man sitting in the sky. Rejecting this image, they end up moving to its polar opposite: God as completely identified with impersonal energy. However, both of these images are based on a dualistic Western logic where Divinity can only be viewed either as a literal person or as literal energy. By contrast, mystical logic - sometimes called "Crazy Wisdom" - understands that personal and non-personal qualities are readily able to transform themselves INTO one another.

Speaking from my own experience, I realize that whenever I begin, for example, with an image of the person of Jesus, I am led by the Spirit to move THROUGH his eyes and form into a non-personal light, warmth and spaciousness, albeit one that is suffused with love. Similarly, when I hike to the most non-personal places I can find; namely, the wilderness spaces of mountains, deserts, badlands and wide-open skies, a sense of personal presence suddenly appears within those non-personal spaces - one that is, paradoxically, emptied out in bliss into those very spaces.

It is time, I'm convinced, for all of us to move beyond a black-or-white, either-or, dualistic kind of logic and travel instead into the wonder of a mystical logic where opposites are continually shapeshifting into one another. Here, the personal aspect of divinity shapeshifts - surprise! - into the realm of the non-personal, just as the non-personal aspect shapeshifts - surprise! - into the realm of the personal. What else could we possibly expect, when even a scientific field like particle physics teaches us that the 99% empty space composing an atom manifests itself on a regular basis as solid matter?

Photo: An Engelmann Spruce tree with its top sheered off in an avalanche, with rocky spires in the background, above Emerald Lake, Rocky Mountain National Park, CO, January 19, 2015

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