Beloved One, may you be blessed because it is so: all is well.
—Julian of Norwich, Showings
Spiritual teacher and translator Mirabai Starr describes how Julian’s positive experience of God sustained her when things were not “well” in the world around her:
The medieval English anchoress Julian of Norwich bequeathed us a radically optimistic theology. She had no problem admitting that human beings have a tendency to go astray. We rupture relationships, dishonor the Divine, make unfortunate choices, and try to hide our faults. And yet, Julian insists, “All will be well and all will be well and every kind of thing shall be well.” [1]
Take that in.
This assertion is meant to penetrate the fog of our despair and wake us up. She does not simply state, “Everything’s going to be okay.”… She does not ask us to engage in a spiritual bypass by relegating everything that unfolds to the will of God, calling it perfect against all evidence to the contrary. She squarely faces the inevitability that we will miss the mark and that there is wickedness in this world. Even so, she is convinced that the nature of the Divine is loving-kindness, and she wants us to absorb this into every fiber of our being.
Starr considers Julian’s teachings on sin:
In her mystical masterwork The Showings, Julian shares that she used to obsess about sin. She couldn’t figure out why God, who is all-powerful, wouldn’t have eliminated our negative proclivities when he made the world. “If he had left sin out of creation, it seemed to me, all would be well.” But what God-the-Mother showed Julian in a near-death vision was that all shall be well anyway….
Julian unpacks this for us [in chapter 27]. In doing so she dispenses with the whole concept of sin and replaces it with love. “I believe that sin has no substance,” Julian writes, “not a particle of being.” While sin itself has no existential value, it has impact. It causes pain. It is the pain that has substance.
But mercy is swiftly forthcoming. It is immediately available. Inexorable! It is frankly rude of us to doubt that all will be well (and all will be well and every kind of thing shall be well). “When he said these gentle words,” Julian writes, speaking of God-the-Mother, “he showed me that he does not have one iota of blame for me, or for any other person. So, wouldn’t it be unkind of me to blame God for my transgressions since he does not blame me?” The merciful nature of God renders the whole blame game obsolete….
For those of us who do not subscribe to a belief in some perfect afterworld but, rather, are focused on making things better right here on Earth, this teaching may feel disconnected. But what Julian is saying, with heartbreaking compassion, is that we cannot know this now, from our limited, pain-drenched perspective. Yet eventually we will awaken to the truth that we are unconditionally adored by God.
References:
[1] Julian of Norwich, The Showings: Uncovering the Face of the Feminine in Revelations of Divine Love, trans. Mirabai Starr (Hampton Roads, 2022), 67. Selection from chap. 27.
Mirabai Starr, Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce and Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics (Sounds True, 2019), 175–177.
Image Credit and inspiration: Syuhei Inoue, untitled (detail), 2020, photo, Japan, Unsplash. Click here to enlarge image. The light streaming through the window represents Julian of Norwich’s quiet revelation; she is illuminated by a wisdom and strength she cannot contain or fully grasp—available to all of us, whether in peacetime or in crisis.
Story from Our Community:
I’ve learned much from reading and listening to the mystical writers of our time, like Fr. Richard and Thich Nhat Hanh, as well as more ancient mystics, like Julian of Norwich. In my adult life I’ve dealt with a certain amount of unexplained depression, particularly in the waking hours of the morning. I’ve learned that I can simply sit quietly, breathe, and center my thoughts on Divine Love. As I sit in the Presence, I find that my mind, with its bent toward a dark place, is aligning with the light. The heart fills with gratitude. For many years I’ve been on medication as well, but I find that I can employ all the tools God has granted.
—Daniel K.
