Wednesday 13 November 2013

A QUISLING'S DOUBTS ABOUT CHRISTIAN MEDITATION (First published in 'NZ Catholic', November 17)


Who am I, to question the prayer of the World Community for Christian Meditation, a global movement present in 100 countries? However, even if I’m seen as a quisling or turncoat, I have to say that as a lay Carmelite member of a Christian Meditation group I now have serious doubts about this method of prayer. ‘Im indoors says I’m in good company – Richard Dawkins’.

I joined CM to support people wanting deeper prayer, and for a while I was hooked. CM is ecumenical, simple, accessible; I thought it was the best thing since sliced bread. Now I believe my initial graces flowed simply from a resolution to adopt CM’s twice-daily prayer routine: as Woody Allen has said, ‘showing up is half the work’. Then I began to think I was showing up at the wrong address.

I was discombobulated by CM’s claim to have retrieved from 4th century obscurity a prayer practised by Carmelites for the past eight hundred years. Recorded talks by CM’s founder John Main and his successor Laurence Freeman told us week in, week out to ‘say your mantra’; it sounded like to get God’s attention that was all we had to do.

CM is Hindu in everything except intention, and abolishes all distinctions between styles and stages of silent prayer. You ‘say your mantra’ (an effectively meaningless word) until you can’t say it - when God supposedly intervenes, infusing contemplation - and recommence when you realise you’ve stopped. Never mind traditional prerequisities for receiving contemplation like conformity to God’s will, humility, service, generosit y, purification, penance, receptivity, solitude, determination; just ‘say your mantra’. Was this a prayer word, I wondered, or a god?

John Cassian, a disciple of the desert fathers, was ‘discovered’ by Main as the Christian authority he needed for the meditation he’d learned from a swami, but on becoming a monk had obediently abandoned. The prayer which Cassian (who incidentally is to be found, quoted, in the Divine Office) had learned from  one Abbot Isaac is ejaculatory, continuous prayer, not reserved to periods of meditation. Detachment (in essence, the conditions given above for contemplation) was essential for such prayer, which ‘we hand on only to a very small number of souls eager to know it’: a principle reiterated in The Cloud of Unknowing (oft-quoted by CM), by Doctors of the Church Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross.

But CM is taught to allcomers – thousands, maybe millions - in the pious belief that regardless of their spiritual state, the Holy Spirit fetches them there and sits them down to repeat a meaningless word while emptying their minds of everything, including Jesus Christ- who taught that ‘no one comes to the Father except through me’ (Jn 14,6). And astonishingly, should the Spirit offer them the blissful experience of God’s love, they ought to refuse it.  

To CM’s theory of ‘one size fits all’, we may cite contrary, incontrovertible evidence: ‘Strait is the way, and few are they who find it!’( Mt 8,14).

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