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Center for Action and Contemplation

Contemplation in Action: Week 2 Summary

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Contemplation in Action: Week 2

Summary: Sunday, July 2-Friday, July 7, 2017

“We are concerned not just with going to heaven when we die, but with bringing God’s kingdom down here. That means figuring out how we can be a part of the restoration of our world.” —Shane Claiborne (Sunday)

Action and contemplation live through one another, and neither of them can exist healthily by themselves. (Monday)

Action is not the important word, nor is contemplation; and is the important word! How do you put the two together? (Tuesday)

Meditation makes it almost inevitable that your politics will change, the way you spend your time is going to be called into question, and any snug socioeconomic perspective will be slowly taken away from you. (Wednesday)

If your prayer goes deep, your whole view of the world will change from fear and reaction to deep and positive connection—because you don’t live inside a fragile and encapsulated self anymore. In meditation, you are moving from ego consciousness to soul awareness, from being driven to being drawn. (Thursday)

There is a deep relationship between the inner revolution of prayer and the transformation of social structures and social consciousness. (Friday)

 

Practice: Wholeness

You shall be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect. —Matthew 5:48

Jesus is not calling us to live without making mistakes or to achieve some impossible level of perfection. He calls us, as Jack Jezreel—founder of JustFaith Ministries—says, to love without exception. Jezreel reflects on this invitation to wholeness in the Center for Action and Contemplation’s journal Oneing:

We are either a people who love, embrace, and enter into a caring posture with our family, friends, neighbors, strangers, and even enemies (real or imagined) or we will spend our lives mercilessly trying to define who is lovable and who is not, who is worthy and who is not, who deserves my attention and who does not. Inevitably, we will end up loving people who look like us, think like us, and pledge allegiance to the same flag—and we will exclude the rest. In this truly useless pursuit, we will separate ourselves from God (through tribal worship), from the world’s good (by avoiding healing and restoration), and from our very souls (through self-pre­occupation with ego).

In effect, the wisdom of Jesus describes the powerful, but often neglected, bridge between spiritual insight and social action/real compassion. In fact, the wisdom of Jesus seems to suggest that the link is even more intimate than a bridge; it is the collapse of the two categories altogether. The separation of spirituality from action is a false one. In other words, we are not called to do spiritual prac­tices—prayer, study, meditation, retreat, ritual—and then make our way, now inspired, to the work of mercy and justice. In fact, it might be argued that, if anything, it’s just the reverse: Love those who strug­gle with poverty and suffer abandonment and the effect is that we will find ourselves on a path that leads to maturity, prayer, wisdom, and Christ-likeness. If, however, we choose to avoid engagement and community with those who suffer, we will certainly live an incom­plete life, including an incomplete spiritual life.

To put it rightly, I think, the practice of prayer and the practice of compassion are both necessary and complementary spiritual practices. . . . We are called to be both activists and mystics, missionaries of love and contemplatives, great lovers and deep thinkers. And, in all of that, the spiritual journey can happen; in all of that, we can be made whole; in all of that, the world can be made whole. . . . Personal transformation and social transformation are one piece. . . .

The true spiritual quest is not that I become whole. Informed by the belief that the world is birthed by God and is precious and sacred and one, the true spiritual quest is that the world become whole—and we along with it.

Gateway to Silence:
Give me a lever and a place to stand.

Reference:
Jack Jezreel, “To Love Without Exception,” “Perfection,” Oneing, vol. 4, no. 1 (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2016), 49-50, 52. Learn more about JustFaith Ministries at justfaith.org/about-us/history-mission/. 

For Further Study:
Richard Rohr, Dancing Standing Still: Healing the World from a Place of Prayer (Paulist Press: 2014)
Richard Rohr and Shane Claiborne, When Action Meets Contemplation (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2010), MP3 download

Image credit: CAC Interns in Action (detail), Juarez Mexico, 2008. CAC Archives.
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