Session 75 From Contemplation to Action

Session 75    From Contemplation to Action

Father Keating begins with the question we all ask of ourselves, “’What can I do as a single individual?’” Or, again, others will raise the question a little differently: “How can I contribute to peace, to some social ministry, however much I see it’s demanded and it needs to be done, when I, myself, am experiencing so much of the residue of the false-self system . . .”   And yet Keating reassures us that we only need to live our ordinary lives and look for those who need our help as we go along our way each day.  “In other words,” Father Keating reminds us, “Jesus isn’t asking for so much. He says whatever you did to the least of these little ones, my little people, you did to me. So “whatever” doesn’t sound like a great deal. It could be as simple as giving someone a cup of water, a smile, or to be concerned if they’ve lost someone in the family, or to take responsibility to get them medical help or psychiatric help if they’re very disturbed, or to help them to deal with their addictions if they’re hopelessly caught in them.”

Father Keating shares a story about a couple who ran a catering business who hired an ex-convict and when their customers heard about it, they stopped using their business.  But the couple believed in the ex-convict and they started a new business with him and they were more successful than they had been before.  When we act out of compassion and love, “you may not get the return that you’re expecting. But you’ll get something infinitely better. You may lose on these sub-human levels, but you will reap your investment on the higher levels of consciousness, inner freedom, and the joy of service, which Jesus seems to say ... if you do it right, for the love of God, is the greatest happiness there is” says Father Keating.

Father encourages us to use the Beatitudes as our instrument of reflection on “how are we doing?” in our compassion for others.   He uses the example of “The great archbishop, Dom. Helder Camara (who) really started what are called the Base Communities in South America and Central America. Which are just people reading the Gospel as if they were part of it, as if they were the characters in the Gospel; and applying those principles, not only to their daily life, but as a community. In other words, here is the first time to my knowledge where a group of people have addressed the question, can you lead the Beatitudes not just as an individual, but as a community, as an institution? If there were a few institutions with that “magna carta,” they would change the world. Because then there would be a network of individuals practicing the Beatitudes, and the power that is inherent in each individual would be multiplied geometrically, astronomically, as a group of people actually puts the Beatitudes into effect as an institution.”

Father Keating shares the story of Dom Helder Camara speaking before many of the world religious at a conference in New York City and as he spoke about the poor, or “the destitute” as Father Keating called them, Dom Helder began to cry and tears ran down his face for five minutes and he could not speak.  No words could have been more powerful to convey the sadness of how the people lived and yet in this community they are learning how to live through the Beatitudes and responding to their situation through non-violent means of change. 

And Father Keating again reminds us that in our daily lives we have the power to help others, “That is to say, you have the destiny to be transformed and the capacity to transmit your personal transformation, that is your absorption of the divine mystery, your assimilation into the Word of God, into daily life among the people you know and with whom you live. And it’s the very failure of your efforts to serve that teaches you little by little how to serve, which is with complete dependency on the divine inspiration, mercy, so that you serve without demanding success. And this is what changes the world, maybe not in your lifetime, but it will bring people into union and unity with the Ultimate Mystery whom we call God.”

Another point that Father Keating makes in this video is that we take with us after we die what we have done or not done in this lifetime.  There is no “Let someone else worry about it” because we will “never leave! You may have a new relationship to the earth and the human family. But whatever your attitude to it was when you were alive, it will continue after death to your weal or to your woe. And that’s the meaning of the last judgment. Humanity isn’t going to go away. Whatever you did to the least of these little ones, that’s what’s going to happen to us in eternity, according to Jesus’ teaching, which is coming out of the higher levels of consciousness, indeed the very highest levels; and hence, is wisdom.”

So Father Keating encourages us to stay on the spiritual journey, to reflect on the Beatitudes and live with compassion and love towards everyone and all things and the earth each day in our ordinary lives. 

 

Resources for Further Study: You may wish to read Chapter 22, "From Contemplation to Action" and 23, "Contemplation in Action" from Invitation to Love, Chapters 20 and 21 in older editions.