Contemplation
teaches a different mind which leaves itself open so when the “biggies” come
along (love, suffering, death, infinity, contradictions, God, and probably
sexuality), we still remain with an open field. We just don’t close down when it
doesn’t make full sense, or we are not in full control. That mind is called
contemplative, or non-dual thinking.
The lowest level
of consciousness is entirely dualistic (win/lose)—reproduction, me versus the
world, and basic survival. Many, I am afraid, never move beyond this. The higher
levels of consciousness are more and more able to deal with contradictions,
paradoxes, and all Mystery. This is spiritual maturity. At the higher levels, we
can teach things like compassion, mercy, forgiveness, selflessness, even love of
enemies. Any good contemplative practice quickly greases the wheels of the mind
toward non-dual consciousness. This is exactly why saints can overlook offenses
and love enemies! We must be honest enough to admit that this has not
characterized most Christian clergy or laity up to now. It is not really their
fault; no one taught them how to pray, even in seminaries.
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