Session 72 Guest Quotes for this Week

Session 72

No video from Father Keating this week, but instead a brief note from two other spiritual seekers, Cynthia Bourgeault and Barbara Brown Taylor:

"... I enter the cave of the heart and discover there that God is alive and interpenetrating, in, of, and around, illumining and enflaming all. My own heart is a hologram of the divine triune heart, love in motion, and the finite and infinite realms are connected by an unbreakable bond of mutual yearning This 'in here' vision of God is not only closer to the vison of Jesus and the mystics; it is also increasingly confirmed by the discoveries of contemporary scientific understanding. As the popular Episcopal preacher and theologian Barbara Brown Taylor writes, regarding the radical shift in her image of God brought about by her exposure to quantum physics:

" 'Where is God in this picture? God is all over the place. God is up there, down here, inside my skin and out. God is the web, the energy, the space, the light -- not captured in them, as if any of those concepts were more real than what unites them -- but revealed in that singular, vast net of relationships that animates everything there is.' **

"Contemplation, understood in the light of a hologram universe, is not a special gift. It is simply seeing from the perspective of oneness, or in other words, from, the level of our spiritual awareness. It can indeed be practiced, and over time, with sincerity and persistence, it becomes an abiding state of consciousness. At times this unitive seeing may sweep you up into rapt adoration; at other times, it simply deposits you powerfully and nakedly in the present moment. Either form is an expression of the same under laying consciousness. It is this consciousness itself that is the attained state of contemplation, and it is neither infused nor acquired, because it was never absent -- only unrecognized."
-- Cynthia Bourgeault, Centering Prayer and Inner Awakening

 * Thomas Merton, Contemplation in A World of Action
** Barbara Brown Taylor, The Luminous We: Essays on Science and Religion