Session 83 The Divine Dance and the Householder Parable

Session 83  The Divine Dance and the Householder Parable

Part One

As we continue on the spiritual journey, we may being to experience a dryness to our sense of the spiritual.  What before brought us great joy or peace, no longer works and we may wonder if God is absent.  This is a place on the path and it comes to those who have been traveling on the journey for some time.  The secret is to remember and to Know, that God continues to be with you at all times, even when those small pleasures/signs of His presence are no longer are available.  What happens instead is that one’s faith deepens and one becomes aware that ordinary life is full of God’s love and we are filled with God’s love at our very deepest center and to act through it. 

Keating says, “And it may take some very searching forms that alert us to the fact that an enormous intelligence is working with us and in spite of us and around us and underneath us and above us and respecting mightily our freedom but finding ways to bring us around to what God really wants us to do for our own benefit, even at times against our will or what we thought was against our will. And this immense intelligence, therefore, reveals itself in time as an enormous love which is much more wonderful than signs and wonders and much more wonderful than what we thought the spiritual journey would terminate in; in other words, not in moral perfection or in spiritual consolation or in experiences of ecstatic quality.”

Keating continues, “What is our experience, then, from this point on in the spiritual journey with this God who we know is present but whose presence is hidden from us? And we call this the life of faith; that is, where our trust in God is not based on human props or examples or re-encouragement of a spiritual nature, but simply on the trust in God’s infinite mercy, his forgiveness, his love, his support, his protection. But that is totally at the service, again to refer to Paul, of the growth in love within us. So, all of those wonderful gifts also include the challenges that upset, or question, or invite us to an ever-deeper self-knowledge which, in turn, moves us to ever increasing total dependence on God’s love.”

One begins to be more and more aware of God “taking over” one’s life.  Keating uses the image of a pencil to illustrate what happens for people at this point in the spiritual journey.  They feel like a pencil that God picks up and uses to write with and they are aware that the energy they have for the writing is not coming from them but from another source and so they have a greater dependency upon God to help them.  They realize they are not alone and God is doing for them what they cannot do for themselves.

Keating notes,” With this view that Jesus has communicated to us, that the Kingdom is present in the most ordinary circumstances and is not any less when circumstances are difficult, begins to increase this sensitivity to the movements of the Spirit within us. So that now, life, with a little more grace, can become a little dance ... a little dance.” 

And Keating continues, “So that now Divine Love is the partner and it’s inviting us to respond in the details of life to this movement which always the initial movement comes from the partner and then one follows, but follows with every increasing skill, so that each movement is in synchronicity with the divine movement. This, it seems to me, is what it means to be transformed.”

Keating explains, “The dance, then, of God with us is an effort to exercise this hymn of divine love in terms of action, not just in terms of words. So now, as Paul says, love is kind – this is the movement – love bears no grudges, love has endless forbearance, love has no end or limit to its trust. And so, you can see here how the Divine Partner is sort of leading you and twirling you and standing on your toes and then bending over you with some embrace. Everything becomes a sensitivity to this action. But people as a whole may not notice this at all because it’s so ordinary. It’s so much the way things are supposed to be anyway, that it can completely escape notice because it’s so ordinary; unless there’s someone there with the eyes of faith and a sensitivity to the transmission of divine life that is going on there in secret.”

Father Keating goes on to relate the gospel story of the Householder who invites his friends to a party at his house and no one comes so he invites in everyone else who is available to the party instead.  He doesn’t care who they are, if they accept the invitation, and Keating says that this is the story of Jesus.  Jesus was the rabbi who loved everyone and he joined the poor and the destitute where they were and became one with them.  And this is our message, that Jesus doesn’t care about “honor” but about love.  And He received this love from his father, Jesus was total receptivity to this love as it was poured into him. 

Keating concludes, “This means that the Son is absolutely everything that the Father is, except the relationship of receptivity. So, the Father has the Godhead to give and the Son to receive. And together they rejoice in this incredible goodness in an act of total self-surrender in which each of these persons try to give themselves totally away in order to express an inconceivable love that is unconditional; a sigh of love that is not an aspiration for something, but is the expression of infinite satisfaction in being nothing. That is to say, of having no particular identity ... no thing-ness ... just by being. And they want to communicate that capacity just to be and just to enjoy it to everyone who is willing to accept the invitation. Anyone. That means everyone is invited”

Resources for Further Study: You may wish to read Chapter 7, "Dancing with God" from Manifesting God and Chapter 19, "The Great Dinner" from Meditations on The Parables of Jesus or Chapter 12, "The Parable of the Great Dinner" from The Kingdom of God is Like...