Session 67 Spiritual Senses, part 2

Father Keating continues to try and describe for us what is meant by the Spiritual Senses as written about by the Desert Fathers.  He likens the first sign of spiritual attentiveness to a perfume.  When we smell a flower as we walk by it, we notice it and sometimes try to identify it.  Keating says, “Similarly, what the Fathers mean is that the first sign of spiritual attentiveness is the attraction for interior silence, the desire for a time of prayer in which to be still, for a place of solitude, for a few moments of quiet.”

He goes on to give this wonderful description, “It’s as if God, who dwells here in the ground unconscious and beyond [points to top of skyscraper chart], lifts a corner, so to speak, of the veil and a little whiff of the delicious and delightful scent, so to speak, of God’s beauty and goodness slips out, and a waft, or a little breeze of this, gets down into the spiritual faculties of passive intellect. And the will, then, is attracted with great desire to rest in this presence, to open to it, and to surrender to it.”

The second spiritual sense is when you begin to desire to take the time to practice your centering prayer twice daily.  One is aware that the experience may not be of solace, or rest, but the desire, the attentiveness and attraction to centering prayer is present and one responds to this.  Keating says this spiritual sense is more like a “touch.”  He notes “But an attraction that pulls you into your daily practice of prayer, to which you are committed rain or shine, in sickness and health, no matter what the content of that is in the form from boredom, distress, bombardment of thoughts, the unloading of the unconscious, the intense purification and humiliation of the false self system that gradually takes place through the dynamic of purification, healing, unloading the unconscious damage of a lifetime.”

The third spiritual sense is one that is compared to taste because one feels the presence of God as an interior presence.  One experiences unity with the Ultimate Reality and one may experience this occasionally and it comes and goes.  Keating notes “One experiences the presence of God as an interpenetration of spirits, as a decisive presence within us that is living our life, so to speak, or living in us, or, more simply, living you and I.”

Father Keating uses Mary of Bethany and St. John, the apostle, as examples of people with spiritual senses.  But he continues and acknowledges that we all have been enabled to receive the Eucharist, the body and blood of Jesus “So that you and I, as we receive the Eucharist, are offered the interior grace that corresponds to the spiritual sense of taste, the highest of all the experiences of spiritual awakening, at least in the doctrine of these Fathers of the Church. Taste then is the most intimate of the spiritual experiences in which the object of our knowledge of God disappears.”

And finally, Father Keating gives examples of what St. Teresa of Avila experienced, “And this is the grace that gradually develops from that prayer, the “lights on” mysticism, in which the presences of God gradually unfold as “felt” experiences at deepening levels of union, assimilation and transformation. This grace is the fruit of moving beyond experiences into the restructuring of consciousness and the transforming union where it takes place, in which the fruit of those experiences, of the undifferentiated presence of God, are now an abiding state of being …” 

Father Keating says “In other words, all that we experience of God, however exalted, is only a radiance of God. It can’t be God as he is in himself, because he infinitely transcends all our categories and experiences. So even these great experiences of union that St. Teresa describes, or the Fathers in the spiritual senses, is not the goal of the Christian life, but rather the transforming union in which the energy of faith and trust and love is constantly beamed to us, whether we experience it or not. And the body itself has become sufficiently stabilized and able to receive the divine communication. So that this gift of God’s person, his self, his love can be manifested in all our activities in daily life, even in the most ordinary.”

He also claims “This is total freedom, the freedom not only of union, but of a union that is maturing into unity. Thus, if you could envisage the divine energy as infinite potentiality, infinite possibility, and it gets localized in you and I, then, if there’s no obstacles in us, no self projects, no false self-system, then one becomes a pure light through which the Divine Presence can manifest itself as it is, as distinct from a stained-glass window in which the divine light is serving your virtues or your beauty.”

What a wonderful plan for us and I appreciate Father Keating bringing these possibilities to our awareness so we can possibly bring them into our lives through our practice of centering prayer.  Thank you.