Friday, 16 December 2016

The World's Hope Comes From Outside

"The world's hope comes from outside it," says Professor Timothy Keller in his excellent book on Advent, "Hidden Christmas".

Indeed, it must be so.

The Christ child, the agent of our ultimate redemption, has a physical body, to be sure, composed of the elements of earth, just as his mother, Mary, is a human being.

His spirit, however, comes from God, directly from the Holy Spirit himself.

In a sense, this is similar to the state of every human being, as we saw in the previous post. We are all part of the animal creation, but our soul comes from God. The difference between our own state and that of Conscious Humanity - which includes Jesus, its Head, and all the many saints, messengers and teachers who have reached the highest state possible for a human being-  is that we are undeveloped; they have reached their highest potential and are Objectively Conscious.

We too are offered the chance to develop to this state, if we wish. This development may only be brought about by our willing cooperation with the forces of redemption, themselves springing from God, from a place far higher than this little, low-down planet, Earth.

We can't save ourselves. Earth cannot redeem herself. We need help, and we have, first of all, to acknowledge that need. If we think we are self-sufficient and can already "do", then we cannot be educated. Humility, the acceptance of our fallen and ignorant state, is the first prerequisite for any education in the realm of the spirit.

Mary, the virgin mother of Christ, is the most complete example of humility in the gospels. It is why she is the Chief Apostle, the Queen of Angels, and the model for all Christians.

From the very start, she accepts her role as one of "active passivity", of cooperating fully with God so that His aims may be accomplished through her.

"Be it done unto me according to thy word," she tells the Angel Gabriel at the Annunciation. She does not understand what is to happen, but she has been raised among conscious people dedicated to the service of God, and she knows that what is from Him will be good.

Whenever we encounter Mary in the gospels, her role is to direct us towards Jesus, He who is both God and man.

At the wedding in Cana, she tells the anxious steward and servants, who have run out of wine, to "Do whatever He tells you".

We meet her again in Bethany, where we see clearly once more that the role of Mary - the Mary within us all - is to sit at the feet of Christ and listen to His teaching.

That is the "better part", Jesus affirms. We cannot do anything unless we first listen to what God is telling us, unless we allow His teaching to enter into us and transform us. All our rushing around and Martha-like busy work leads nowhere unless informed by divine instruction and inspiration.

In the Work, all meetings begin with a passive Doh. This is the first requirement for any meeting to take place. We gather together in silence and we sit in the presence of our teacher, maintaining that silence, so that Work I's from a place deep within may come to the foreground of our awareness. Only then may we receive new energy and understand what is taught. Only then are we ourselves in a state worthy to speak.

Our passivity is really a state of watching and waiting while the little, formatory I's in the outer parts of centers die away and cease to draw our attention. In this sense we can call it an "active passivity", and it is in this state that we are able to receive teaching from a higher source.

Mrs Pogson explained that Mary represents the Higher Emotional Centre in us. Her "Be it done unto me according to thy will" is that state which we need to attain so that God may act within us.

Her passive waiting is the equivalent of the passive Doh at the beginning of a Work meeting. She is not passive for the sake of it, or because she is lazy or ignorant; quite the reverse. This state is one of high alert, of serene watchfulness.

Her virginal state symbolizes the purity of the Higher Emotional Centre, free from all other distractions.  There is nothing to take the attention away from God, Who speaks to that center not in words but in pictures, and through the inspiration of Positive Emotions.

It is in this "virginal" state that we must wait in Advent for the coming of Christ. We do not know exactly what to expect, because the new birth in Essence which we may experience will be utterly new, utterly different from our everyday experiences.

And the birth, although it takes place deep within, is ultimately a gift from outside our own limited consciousness.

In this way, the Christian religion is completely the opposite of New Age systems. The latter tell us that we can have anything we want, that we can influence the universe to bend to our will. The success of books based on this false premise shows how deepseated is the belief in the power of wishful thinking, despite all evidence to the contrary.

Christianity tells us the opposite, as do all the world's true religions. We are not all-powerful, far from it - and thank goodness for that. If we were, the world would be in an even worse state than it is at present. Our ability to "do" is limited, and ultimately we depend entirely on God for our wellbeing and our growth.

So that He may act in us, so that He may be born in us, we need to cultivate Mary's attitude of serene acceptance and contemplation. Then we will become aware of His presence, and He will be able to use us for our own highest and best good and for the good of the universe.

"Absolute stillness for as long as possible, that is what is best for you," says Meister Eckhart. That is the state in which we need to dwell for God to accomplish His will in us. That is Mary's inner state, and it is why she is the model for contemplatives from every denomination.

In Advent, we remain still, we wait, and we hope.







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