Spiritual Experiences

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Richard Rohr’s message today describes Teresa of Avila’s conversion experience. It is a great example of religion versus relationship with God. The former being restrictive, limiting and following men’s interpretation of God versus experiencing God directly; the latter being freeing and empowering!! Instead of being taught by religion we can be taught by the Holy Spirit. Instead of knowing about God we can know God directly! “And they shall not teach every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord: for all shall know me, from the least to the greatest” Hebrews 8:11 KJV.

I love the description, “Teresa felt lifted out of herself and enjoying God’s Presence” as I also describe being absorbed into God’s Presence as rapture! You return to normal waking consciousness a changed being!! And thankfully there is a climate of acceptance now for spiritual experience and new ways of knowing that go beyond physical seeing or intellectual knowledge. The heart is capable of unlimited depth and heights, infinite possibilities and potential!! A heart filled with Christ is our right mind!!!!

“Teresa of Ávila, Part II: Conversion
Monday, July 27, 2015
Teresa eventually returned to the convent, but she fell back into superficial socializing and neglected the discipline of contemplative prayer. Mirabai Starr says that though Teresa used the excuse of her poor health “a more hidden reason was that she did not feel worthy to engage in intimate dialogue with the Friend. . . . Perhaps even deeper lay the sense that if she truly surrendered to the inner void, she might never return to ordinary consciousness.” [1] Teresa left the convent to care for her dying father, but remained detached from his experience and her own feelings. For almost two decades she kept her heart walled off spiritually and emotionally.

When Teresa was about forty, she experienced a sudden conversion while walking by an image of Christ tied to the pillar. Twenty years of indifference ended dramatically, followed by many trials, stages, and eventually moments of unitive encounter where Teresa felt lifted out of herself and enjoying God’s presence. She begged God not to give her such favors in public.

One of Teresa’s mystical experiences was captured in marble by Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini. In this “unabashedly sensual image” Carol Flinders sees “the nun swooning blissfully backward while a clearly delighted androgynous angel plunges a flaming sword into her, leaving her on fire with love for God.” [2] James Finley describes the golden arrow being continually thrust into Teresa’s heart and then pulled out. He says, “In the sexual imagery of this golden arrow, all that is outside goes inside and all that is inside is pulled outside until the distinction between outside and inside no longer applies. You can no longer find the place where you stop and God begins. You can no longer find the place where God stops and you begin. Nor are you inclined to try.” [3]

After some time, the raptures ended. When her friends asked about it, Teresa responded that she’d found a better way to pray. She no longer needed ecstasies; yet, as Flinders writes, “she remained grateful always for having had them because they had given her the detachment that her work would require–detachment from all things, including the admiration and affection of others she had always needed so desperately. She would never again look outside herself for joy or security because she had found the source of all joy and security within. . . . One cannot break attachments by force, Teresa discovered; they are the expression of an inner hunger. When that hunger is assuaged, attachments will fall away with almost no effort on our part.” [4]

In the last twenty years of her life, in spite of poor health, and with the help of her friend and fellow mystic, John of the Cross, Teresa reformed the Carmelite Order, taking it back to its origins of simplicity, poverty, and contemplative prayer. She traveled by carriage all over Spain, founding seventeen Discalced (Barefoot) Carmelite houses. She wrote several great spiritual classics along with poetry and hundreds of letters. She thus managed to function as a spiritual teacher, even though as a woman she was forbidden to preach or even comment on Scripture. Thankfully, she avoided being burned at the stake by the Spanish Inquisition for being of Jewish origin (or of a converso family), and for practicing mental and contemplative prayer, and experiencing raptures–all of which were unmediated by the official priesthood. In the end, Teresa was canonized in 1622 and declared the first woman Doctor of the Church in 1970.

Gateway to Silence
“God alone is enough.” –Teresa of Ávila

References:
[1] Mirabai Starr, Saint Teresa of Ávila (Sounds True: 2013), 13.
[2] Carol Lee Flinders, Enduring Grace: Living Portraits of Seven Women Mystics (Harper San Francisco: 1993), 10-11.
[3] James Finley, Following the Mystics Through the Narrow Gate . . . Seeing God in All Things (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2010), (CD, DVD, MP3 download).
[4] Flinders, Enduring Grace (Harper San Francisco: 1993), 171-172.

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2 Responses to Spiritual Experiences

  1. kathryneann says:

    Theresa of Avila and St John of the Cross lived fascinating lives. I love reading about the desert fathers & Christian mystics. Enjoyed reading this post. Be aware of Richard Rorh. He tends toward new age and a mixture of truth with untruth.

    Liked by 1 person

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