Friday, June 24, 2016

Presence

"Meditation is a discipline of presence. By stillness of body and spirit we learn to be wholly present to ourselves, to our situation, to our place. It is not running away. By staying rooted in our own being we become present to its source. We become rooted in being itself. Through all the changing circumstances of life nothing can shake us.

"The process is gradual. It requires patience. And faithfulness. And humility.

"The humility of meditation is to put aside all self-important questioning. To put aside self-importance means to experience ourselves poor, divested of ego, as we learn how to be. To be present to the presence. We learn, not out of our own cleverness, but from the sources of wisdom itself, the Spirit of God." - John Main from Door To Silence.

Monday, June 20, 2016

Conversion of Heart

“One of the most difficult things for Westerners to understand is that meditation is not about trying to make anything happen. But all of us are so tied into the mentality of techniques and production that we inevitably first think that we are trying to engineer an event, a happening. . . The first thing to understand, however, is that meditation has nothing to do with making anything happen. The basic aim of meditation is indeed quite the contrary, simply to learn to become fully aware of what is,  . . to learn directly from the reality that sustains us. [. . . .] So often we live our life at five percent of our full potential. But of course there is no measure to our potential. The Christian tradition tells us it is infinite. If only we will turn from self to other, our expansion of spirit becomes boundless. It is all-turning; what the New Testament calls conversion. We are invited to unlock the shackles, to be freed from being prisoners within our self-limiting egos.” — JOHN MAIN: ESSENTIAL WRITINGS

Sunday, June 12, 2016

The Human Spirit

“Every great spiritual tradition has known that in profound stillness the human spirit begins to be aware of its own Source. In the Hindu tradition, for example, the Upanishads speak of the spirit of the one who created the universe as dwelling in our hearts. The same spirit is described as the one who in silence is loving to all. In our own Christian tradition Jesus tells us of the Spirit who dwells in our heart and of the Spirit as the Spirit of love. This interior contact with the Life Source is vital for us, because without it we can hardly begin to grasp the potential that our life has for us. The potential is that we should grow, that we should mature, that we should come to fullness of life, fullness of love, fullness of wisdom. The knowledge of that potential is of supreme importance for each of us. In other words, what each of us is invited to do is begin to understand the mystery of our own being as the mystery of life itself. [. . . .]” — Moment of Christ, John Main OSB

Saturday, June 4, 2016

The Spirit of Love

"Every great spiritual tradition has known that in profound stillness the human spirit begins to be aware of its own Source. In the Hindu tradition, for example, the Upanishads speak of the spirit of the one who created the universe as dwelling in our hearts. The same spirit is described as the one who in silence is loving to all. In our own Christian tradition Jesus tells us of the Spirit who dwells in our heart and of the Spirit as the Spirit of love. This interior contact with the Life Source is vital for us, because without it we can hardly begin to grasp the potential that our life has for us. The potential is that we should grow, that we should mature, that we should come to fullness of life, fullness of love, fullness of wisdom. The knowledge of that potential is of supreme importance for each of us. In other words, what each of us is invited to do is begin to understand the mystery of our own being as the mystery of life itself. [. . . .]" - John Main, OSB

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