Monday, October 21, 2013

ETERNAL ECHOES PART 5

The theory of co-inherence put forward by the poet and theologian Charles Williams explains creation as a web of order and dependency between all of us and God. Within this belonging, a mystical exchange of Spirit continually flows between us.

Teilhard de Chardin describes our inter-dependency this way, “I acclaim you (God) as the universal power which brings together and unites, through which the multitudinous nomads are bound together and in which they all converge on the way of the Spirit.”

If indeed we are all connected, then our suffering is connected too.


How is the Hard-Earned Harvest Divided?


One of the most haunting questions is, How are the fruits of suffering divided? This question touches on the old question of the one and the many. Though there are billions of people in the world, we are all part of the one individuality. We are all one. Each of us is intimately linked with every other person. Though most of the others are strangers to us, who knows the secret effect that we have on each other? “No one lives for himself alone,” the Bible says.

The pathways of causality and continuity are hidden in the world of the soul. Perhaps the visitation of suffering in your life is bringing healing and light to the heart of someone far away, whom you will never know or meet. When the lonely suffering is courageously embraced and integrated, it brings new light and shelter to our world and to the human family. This is the invisible work of the Great Spirit, who divides and distributes the precious harvest of suffering. Gifts and possibilities unexpectedly arrive on the tables of those in despair and torment. This perspective brings some consoling meaning to the isolation of pain. When the flames of suffering sear you, you are not suffering for yourself alone. Though you feel like a nobody and you are locked into a grey nowhere, you were perhaps ironically never nearer to the heart of human intimacy. When we receive the courage to stand gracefully in the place of pain, we mediate for others the gifts that help heal their torment. Through the fog of forsakenness, a new shoreline of belonging becomes clear.

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