Learning to see the whole:
coming home to the oneness of reality
We are faced with so many things that make peace and compassion (both within and without) seem almost impossible or at least a little foolish to imagine.
We see immense inequality and injustice, and continuing conflict and violence in the world. We are the first people in the history of our species to measure the finitude of natural resources and witness their depletion and destruction from a global perspective.
For these reasons and more, there has perhaps never been a more urgent need to discover afresh the contemplative heart within each of us; to know that we exist within an interrelated, interdependent whole and that we are not in any way separate from this whole.
Put very simply, we are more likely to show more care, to act with more peace and compassion, when we are aware of how deeply, intimately connected we are with something or someone — if we can see beyond our immediate preoccupations and become aware of the bigger picture.
Let’s think a little about this coming to awareness and the practice of Christian meditation with some help from the old saying about not being able to see the wood for the trees. Not being able to see the wood for the trees usually means being so preoccupied with a single aspect of something that we can’t see anything else, we don’t see that what we are fixating on is just one aspect of a much larger whole.
Consider our thoughts (or our mental representations) of reality as the trees. And let’s think of the wood as the undifferentiated whole, the oneness of life. If we spend all our time with our attention riveted on individual trees, we lose sight of the wood. We lose sight of the oneness of life.
In meditation, we learn to see the trees and the wood.
We begin to see with ever greater clarity the relationship between
the particularity of what we encounter and the mysterious oneness in which we and everything is always happening, which some of us call God.
Awareness opens through a quality of attention which notices without grasping or aversion, without choosing, without preferences. Awareness, like the sun, illuminates all things equally.
Savour this beautiful teaching from the famous anthology of teachings on prayer called the Philokalia (which means love of the beautiful):[1]
“Sitting down, collect your mind, lead it into the path of the breath, and maintaining this attention enter the heart with your breath and keep your mind there.
But do not leave the mind unoccupied.
Instead, give it a prayer word or short phrase. Let this be its constant occupation, never to be abandoned.
The kingdom of God is within us, and for a person who has seen it within, and having found it through pure prayer, has experienced it, it is no longer unpleasant and wearisome for them to be within.
Just as a person who has been away from home is beside themselves with joy at seeing their loved ones again, so the mind, after being disbursed, when it reunites with the soul, is filled with unspeakable sweetness and joy.
These blessed words were given for the purpose of teaching the mind, under the influence of this natural method, to abandon its usual circling, captivity and dispersion and to return through attention to itself; and through such attention to reunite with itself, and in this way to become one with the prayer and, together with the prayer, to descend into the heart and to remain there...”
By means of “this natural method” the mind reunites with the heart of
who we are.
Like a wave relaxing back into the ocean, we come home to
the heart of reality, to the oneness that holds and sustains all things.
As we learn to greet our thoughts and moment-to-moment experience
with greater stillness, with greater silence, a space of opportunity
opens in which we can better see those around us, their needs, their
mysterious beauty and dignity, in which can become places of solidarity,
agents of reconciliation and community.
If you feel inspired to meditate, you’re very welcome to join one of our free online meditation sessions or download a practice guide.
[1] Writings from the Philokalia on Prayer of the Heart, trans. Kadloubsky and Palmer (Faber and Faber, 1992), pp. 192-195 (translation altered slightly and abbreviated).