
Translator of the mystics and spiritual guide Mirabai Starr shares her definition of mystical experience:
A mystic is someone who skips over the intermediaries (ordained clergy, prescribed prayers, rigid belief systems) and goes straight to God. Meaning, someone who experiences the divine as an intimate encounter rather than an article of faith…. Mysticism is not about concepts; it is about communion with ultimate reality. And ultimate reality is not some faraway prize we claim when we have proved ourselves worthy to perceive it. Ultimate reality blooms at the heart of regular life. It shines through the cracks of our daily struggles and sings from the core of our deepest desires.
A mystic knows beyond ideas, feels deeper than emotions, is fundamentally changed by that which is unchanging. Mysticism is a way of seeing—beyond the turmoil, the rights and wrongs, the good guys and villains—to the radiant heart of things. [1]
On the Everything Belongs podcast, Starr explores how receiving divine love through mystical experience strengthens the mystic’s commitment to others:
Mystical experiences brim from all kinds of moments in any given day. This is not a rarefied, specialized, meritocracy-based reality; it’s not about some belief that I’m espousing or buying into. It’s not even necessarily about a practice that I’m engaged in, although there are some practices that are fairly reliable for opening the heart. A mystical experience is an experience of the heart opening—out of that open heart flows the parts of us that are often in the way of a direct experience of the divine and into that open heart flows grace, that sacred substance, that mercifully helps me forget for a moment that I am separate.
For me, the mystical path is not fluffy. This love of which I speak is what I think Jesus was referring to by the “narrow gate” (Matthew 7:13–14). It’s rigorous and demanding. This is a love that welcomes all that we are. As Richard Rohr so often teaches us, everything belongs in this love, but we have to show up for it and we have to do our work. Fr. Thomas Keating also taught me that this path of love requires courage and fortitude because it’s so much easier to actually just keep your heart closed. The thing about living with your heart open—and this is part of where the rigor comes in—is that it’s harder to “otherize.” It’s harder to make “the other” evil and wrong and stupid, and all of the things that we’re tempted to judge people for on a daily basis in small and larger ways. This mystical disarming of the heart creates a felt experience of our unity with all beings.…
The sacred is always brimming from the heart of everything. If what it means to be a mystic is to walk through this world looking through the eyes of love, then anything and everything that we do with the intention and attention on the sacred, including our most difficult experiences, counts and belongs. [2]
References:
[1] Mirabai Starr, Ordinary Mysticism: Your Life as Sacred Ground (HarperOne, 2024), 1–2.
[2] Adapted from Mike Petrow, Paul Swanson, hosts, with Mirabai Starr, Everything Belongs podcast, season 2, ep. 1, “What Do We Mean by ‘Mysticism’?,” Center for Action and Contemplation, September 10, 2024.
Image credit and inspiration: Alexander Klarmann, Untitled (detail), 2017, photo, Unsplash. Click here to enlarge image. The leaf can be a doorway into being with what is, experiencing the ineffable and intangible nature of the Great Mystery.
Story from Our Community:
I really enjoyed the meditation from Richard Rohr, “The Faith of Scientists.” It struck such a chord with me. It may be the best explanation I’ve heard for why fundamentalist religious beliefs are … unsatisfying, not to mention divisive and repressive. I’m lucky to have met scientists who are inspired by the mystery of science more than the facts and the certainties, so I know that many scientists are inspired by faith and the mystical.
—Rita S.