Lotus of the Heart > Path of Spirit > Meditative Calm

 
 

Calm, Be Quiet!

On Meditative Quietude

Jul 23, 2009

Saying For Today: If we are gentle with mind, then, it, of itself, will naturally calm and we will be in meditative quietude.


Opening Prayer

God, you expect one thing of me - that I come out of myself as a created being and let You be You in and through me. Give grace, that your Strength will shine in my weakness, your Word in my silence, your Wisdom in my ignorance, and your Love in all I do and say. Help me to love my humanness, so to feel your spark at the core of my being. Help me so to die to myself, to know Christ alone as my Life, always, in Love. Amen.

Today's Scripture

35On that day, when evening had come, he said to them, "Let us go across to the other side." 36And leaving the crowd, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. And other boats were with him. 37And a great windstorm arose, and the waves were breaking into the boat, so that the boat was already filling. 38But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion. And they woke him and said to him, "Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?" 39And he awoke and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, "Peace! Be still!" And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm. 40He said to them, "Why are you so afraid? Have you still no faith?" 41And they were filled with great fear and said to one another, "Who then is this, that even wind and sea obey him?"

*Mark 4.35-41 (ESV)

Spiritual Teaching

Meditation is the root practice of OneLife Ministries. Readers who have been with OneLife for a considerable time are aware of this priority on meditation. Often, Christians do not even admit the viability of meditation in the Christian path. Generally, others ignore it or consider it one spiritual discipline among others. OneLife considers it one practice among others, but the root practice, or core spiritual discipline, leading into contemplation. This means daily meditation is the priority among all other spiritual disciplines.

Meditation and contemplation are not the same. Meditation is any number of methods that lead to the meditative calm essential for contemplation. Contemplation is the state of quiet being in and with Being.

Meditation is a method toward a goal, contemplation. Contemplation is the fruit of meditation. Meditation is a technique, while contemplation is beyond technique.

Contemplation is the experience of communion and union with Being, our Essence. When you are in contemplation, you are experiencing pure, naked Isness. You are experiencing Interbeing with all others, as one in One. We can describe meditation, nothing can be said to describe contemplation.

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Essential to contemplation is meditative calm. Over time, with consistent daily meditation, mind will become naturally calmer. Without calmness, one cannot practice contemplative prayer, only meditative forms of prayer.

Meditative calm we can call meditative stabilization (Traleg Kyabgon, Mind at Ease) or quietude. Tibetans call it samatha, “calm.”

In regard to meditative calm, I often recall a story from the Gospel, given as Today's Scripture. “Peace” and “Be still” are words bringing quietude to a boisterous lake. “Peace,” the Greek siopao, fundamentally refers to an unchosen muteness or involuntary stillness (Strong's Concordance). This contrasts with sige, which refers to chosen silence. However, the two words are used interchangeably. The context of Mark 4 shows the literal sense of “unchosen quiet, silence, stillness” is the meaning. Phimoo, “be still,” means “to muzzle.” “Ceased” is kapazo, literally “to tire” and, thus, figuratively “to relax.” “Great calm” has the noun galene, “calm, tranquility.” Reading the passage with these meanings in mind highlights how this Gospel narrative is figurative of the calming of unruly mind through meditation.

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When we go into meditation, we find mind can be like an animal needing muzzling or like a turbulent stream in need of silence and stillness. A meditation technique, like a prayer word or phrase, or following the breath, or doing breath prayer, is a means to help calm mind. We can call this meditation technique for calming a “calming mechanism.”

We do not deal harshly with mind. Otherwise, the agitation of mind will only be increased and we will have more turbulence, not less. One does not calm a stream by jumping in and flapping the hands all over the place. Rather, we use a calming mechanism (prayer word, prayer phrase, Jesus Prayer, breath, breath in consort with beads) to calm mind with compassion and gentleness. If we are gentle with mind, then, it, of itself, will naturally calm and we will be in meditative quietude.

Then, we can remain with the calming mechanism or let it go. Even if we seek to continue with it, we will forget to use it and have to return to it. When mind wanders off, we bring it back with the calming mechanism. And, with either a continuous or discontinuous use of the calming mechanism, mind will wander off.

This calm is a silent confession of God within and all around us, equally present in all places. We do not have to feel this truth, however. Sometimes we will feel such feelings, at other times we will only experience the restfulness of quiet and peace, and trust.

Quietly Responding

1. Do you recall a time when you found yourself in a state of total relaxation, feeling that you were fully in the moment, without any effort on your own evoking that state? What was it like? Was there a site or something else that led you into that in-the-moment tranquility? How long did it last? What led you out of it? Have you tried getting back “there”? How? Did it work? Would you like to know disciplines to enable you to experience that blissful detachment and loving awareness more often?

2. Try meditating for twenty to thirty minutes, without getting up. For details on preparing to meditate or choosing a meditation technique, write me at the email address given below.

3. Why do you think that I would have chosen "mind" rather than "the mind" throughout the above writing?
Blessings! In Love! And Peace to All!
Brian Kenneth Wilcox July 22, 2009
briankwilcox@yahoo.com
Facebook: Brian Kenneth Wilcox

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*OneLife Ministries is a ministry of Brian Kenneth Wilcox, SW Florida. Brian lives a vowed life and with his two dogs, Bandit Ty and St. Francis, with friends and under a vow of simplicity. Brian is an ecumenical-interspiritual leader, who chooses not to identify with any group, and renounces all titles of sacredness that some would apply to him, but seeks to be open to how Christ manifests in the diversity of Christian denominations and varied religious-spiritual traditions. He affirms that all spiritual paths lead ultimately back to Jesus Christ. He is Senior Chaplain for the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, Punta Gorda, FL.

*Brian welcomes responses to his writings or submission of prayer requests at briankwilcox@yahoo.com . Also, Brian is on Facebook: search Brian Kenneth Wilcox.

*Contact the above email to book Brian for preaching, Spiritual Direction, retreats, workshops, animal blessing services, house blessings, or other spiritual requests. You can order his book An Ache for Union from major booksellers.

 

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