Jesus is presented as the
“revealer of inner thoughts” in today’s reading. So, I intend to focus on
the interior dimension of spirituality – in the language of today,
consciousness.
Consciousness is the most
mysterious dimension of existence. In us, after 14 billion years, the
universe has become conscious of itself. We are called homo sapiens sapiens
- not merely conscious beings. We are the ones who are conscious of being
conscious. The greatest conundrum of science these days concerns the nature
of our “inner thoughts”, what I am equating this morning with consciousness.
Most scientists believe that it is an emergent phenomenon. They mean by this
that they are convinced that it was a latecomer to the universe. It emerged
out of our neocortex, the part of us responsible for complex thought. But
this conclusion has more to do with philosophical bias than scientific
evidence. There are many other scientists who are concluding that it is a
fundamental constituent of the universe. It was there right from the
beginning and therefore can be found in lesser form throughout the universe
– in atoms and ants, and dolphins and giraffes. Consciousness, for these
scientists, doesn’t come out of a brain. It comes through the brain. Our
nervous system is simply the most advanced conveyer of consciousness.
A person like Eckhart Tolle,
who wrote the Power of Now and A New Earth, is trying to help us to
understand that we can cultivate the capacity to bring awareness to our
consciousness experience. And as we begin to identify, not with the forms
that arise in awareness, but with awareness itself, we can experience
enlightenment. We are that which is aware, not that which we are aware of.
After being dedicated to God
in the Temple – as was the custom with first-born males, Simeon declares
that this child is special. His presence, he predicted, would have a
profound influence on the affairs of humanity. He would be responsible for
the “rise and fall of many”. What this means to me is that the light of his
consciousness would shine upon the world. Some would be elevated by it. They
would evolve in spiritual wisdom and would serve the world from a place of
wisdom – from pure awareness, which in the Jewish and Christian tradition is
loving awareness – more personal than in Eastern traditions. We begin to
realize that our personal consciousness is one with and an expression of
God.
Others – those who were
threatened by the light of loving awareness – would cling to the past and
would fall. They would not have the evolutionary stamina to meet the
challenges or life conditions they were facing. The point is that Jesus was
known for helping his followers connect with their interior life. This
provided the motivation and the energy to feed the hungry, clothe the naked,
heal the sick, and advocate for justice.
Humanity right now stands at
a crossroad. The problems we face, as we head into 2009 can seem
overwhelming; the collapse of our economic system; global warming, species
extinction, the AIDS epidemic, terrorist threats, urban gang violence,
poverty, food security. The list is long. I haven’t even mentioned the
challenges we face in our intimate relationships and in our personal lives.
All of these indicate that yesterday’s solutions are not sufficient for the
complexities we face today. At core, all of these problems are crises of
consciousness. We’ve lost touch with our interior or spiritual dimension. We
don’t know who we are. We will rise or fall depending upon our capacity as a
species to shift into a new mode of consciousness. As a Christian, I would
talk about this as the birth of Christ consciousness – the capacity to be
the loving presence or awareness of Christ, not just talk about it.
I mean by this more than
simply the return of traditional Christian values to society. There’s
nothing wrong with solid Christian values, but we will need to go deeper.
The future of the church depends on whether we can offer to the world a new
mind and a new heart for a new age. We must address our interior condition
along with the way we behave. Just as the light of God – what our tradition
calls Christ consciousness - shone in and through Jesus, so we must be
carriers of that light and be able to offer this to the world.
Put simply, we will rise or
fall depending on whether we will be transformed by the love of God – loving
awareness - and then offer this love to the world. And while the love of God
may be unconditional, in the human realm it’s radically conditioned. For
example, when I became a Christian I experienced God’s love in a rather
dramatic fashion. I felt as though I fell in love with the whole world. But
three weeks later, I was being taught that this love didn’t extend to gay
and lesbian people, or to people who didn’t believe what I believed. The
unconditional love was God was translated through a very limited vessel. My
consciousness – my “inner thoughts” – got in the way. The point is that the
experience of pure loving awareness is not enough – sorry Eckhart. It’s the
beginning, not the end. We need to keep growing and evolving in the realm of
space and time – historically. If we don’t we fall and we bring others down
to the level that we ourselves are stuck at.
What happened to me – being
an imperfect vessel of God’s love – happens in every religious tradition.
I’ve told the story before about Genpo Roshi, an enlightened Buddhist monk.
It bears repeating. He has realized that enlightenment – realization of
unity with God – is not enough. He says that the majority of enlightened
Buddhist masters he knows are nevertheless homophobic, sexist, and
authoritarian. They’ve had a genuine enlightenment experience. They know
that they are one with all that is. But this gets translated into practice
through a very traditional structure of consciousness. So for Genpo,
enlightenment involves both the experience of unity with loving awareness –
God in our tradition – as well as growing into higher and broader levels of
consciousness.
When the old priest says that
Jesus will “reveal the inner thoughts” of people, he was saying that for
Jesus life in God would be an inside-out affair. “The Kingdom of God is
within”, Jesus taught. And it’s the same for us today. For many of us our
Christian life has been an outside-in proposition. It’s about obeying the
rules, believing the right things, and doing good things for others. Who can
argue with these things? But what’s missing in this arrangement is deep
connection with the Source and an intentional path of spiritual growth.
Some of us were taught to put
the cart before the horse. But in this new era of Christ consciousness if we
live by a social contract, and treat others with kindness, it will be
because we’ve dipped into the pool of God’s Being and we’re still dripping
love all over the place. This is what was so radical about St. Paul’s
conversion experience. He had tried all his life to live by the rules – and
became very frustrated and angry, because he could never quite live up to
them. The rules condemned him, because he always fell short. Then he had an
experience of Christ consciousness, the rules dropped away, and he lived
from the inside out from that point on – by his heart. He experienced an
incredible freedom. And noticed that Paul knew about both dimensions of the
interior path – identifying with Loving Awareness, which he called the mind
and heart of Christ” and needing to grow in faith: “When I was a
child I spoke like a child, I reasoned like a child; when I became an adult
I put away childish things”. Paul knew we needed to evolve.
It drove Paul crazy that
Jesus’ disciples in Jerusalem still wanted to put the cart before the horse
and live by the old laws and rules. They, of all people thought Paul, should
know about the freedom of living in the loving awareness of Christ.
The world’s problems are a
signal that we need to find our way back to the Source – to the heart of
God. It’s actually not that long a journey. We’re already there, but it
takes a little bit of work to realize it. That’s the practice of Christian
faith. I’m more convinced than I ever have been that until there is a great
transformation of consciousness we won’t have the intelligence, creativity,
and wisdom to create the systems required to survive. There’s a role for the
church in this, and as we embrace it in an intentional way – teaching about
loving awareness and helping people to consciously evolve toward more
complex stages of development – we will find our purpose in Christ.