Struck by the Power of Now

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Posted by Brian Draper Fri, 25/07/2008 - 10:30am :: Books and Literature | more by Brian Draper

It’s hard to learn from someone who doesn’t seem to believe the same as us. If we’ve made up our minds that they’re ‘unsound’, our curiosity tends to wither on the vine.

Imagine my own disbelief, therefore, when a ‘Mind, Body and Spirit’ bestseller I’d bought (to check out the opposition) crept up on my blind side and helped me to see things afresh.

Eckhart Tolle’s star is in the ascendant right now; suffice to say he’s the subject of the Oprah Winfrey Book Club ‘Summer School’ this year. Russell DiCarlo’s introduction to Tolle’s The Power of Now sets an intriguing scene: ‘Our ultimate destiny’, he writes, ‘is to re-connect with our essential Being and express from our extraordinary, divine reality in the ordinary physical world, moment by moment.’ Sounds dodgy on one level, of course, but so did Jesus. On another level it resonates deeply.

Tolle, who at 29 experienced a ‘profound spiritual transformation’, describes compellingly how most of us rarely still the incessant, insecure chattering of our minds – the commentary of the ego (or ‘false self’) that we mistake for who we really are. Those souls who manage to - through contemplation, meditation, prayer… - find there’s so much more to life.

It’s a matter of dying to one’s self in order to live. Which rings a bell. But how many of us have truly inhabited the mystery of that biblical paradox? How many Christians have honestly learned to detach themselves from vain ambition and the battle to keep up with the Joneses? How many genuinely slow down to become more fully present to themselves, other people, God, the planet?

Father Richard Rohr has written a helpful article on Tolle, perhaps as a response to puzzled Christians like me who find themselves warming to this man’s wisdom. Fear not, is the nub. Tolle is no New Age freak. Instead, he provides ‘an opportunity for us to understand our own message at deeper levels.’ Today, writes Fr Rohr, ‘we need whatever methods or help we can receive to allow the Christian message to take us to a deeper level of transformation.’

That’s because most of us are still paddling in the shallows of our humanity, even if intellectually we’ve been swimming in ‘sound’ Christian waters for years. Sometimes a provocation such as Tolle’s will draw us deeper – if we let it - and help us to realise more of the great potential of our own faith.

Brian Draper

Links

Father Richard Rohr's reflection on Eckhart Tolle can be found here.

Fr Rohr's own books - on the relationship between action and contemplation - are a useful place to begin a contemplative Christian journey. Discover more about his work here.

Eckhart Tolle's website sits quietly here.

Catch Oprah's 'live' webcasts with Eckhart Tolle for her summer school here.

Eckhart Tolle changed his name when he underwent his spiritual transformation, in homage to Meister Eckhart, the Christian mystic. Discover more about the Meister here.

Find out more about Brian Draper's work on spiritual intelligence in business - through the consultancy MCA – here here.

Alternatively, email brian by clicking here.

Hey Brian! Nice to hear your
Posted by  Gwennie on Fri, 25/07/2008 - 4:54pm.
Hey Brian! Nice to hear your thoughts again and, as usual, they resonate very much with my own.

I think you hit the nail on the head with the conclusion of your article:
"Today, writes Fr Rohr, ‘we need whatever methods or help we can receive to allow the Christian message to take us to a deeper level of transformation.’ That’s because most of us are still paddling in the shallows of our humanity, even if intellectually we’ve been swimming in ‘sound’ Christian waters for years."

My main quest of recent years has been to discover the depths of my God-given humanity; not as an excuse for unbridled sin but an honest attempt to find out who I am & who God wants/created me to be. To enjoy & celebrate the person he has made me rather than try & beat myself into conformist, Christian submission, denying the old(wo)man in an effort to be "holy" & orthodox. In that quest I have found great freedom & a closeness to God which was often unattainable in the past due to evangelical orthodoxy getting in the way.

I believe God has put his divine spark in us all & from it flows our creativity & whatever goodness we find in ourselves. I have found that many followers of "New Age" thinking/belief, in one form or another, are just simply fellow humans who are searching for the Divine & who are often much more open & honest than many "sound" Christians. And, as you point out, they are often capeable of actually teaching we Christians a thing or two - if we listen to them, as fellow human, searching travellers on this earth.

Gwennie
Muslims too
Posted by  JulianC on Sat, 26/07/2008 - 10:10am.
I've had a very similar experience this week. I started reading a book I picked up quite a few years ago: On Being a Muslim by Farid Esack. I was expecting it simply to be broadly informative on where moderate Islam is going: something that is important for us to know, and perhaps be able to help moderate Muslims overcome extremism (as Barack Obama reminded the world only this week in Berlin...)

But what a revelation! To realise that it's not just those in the Christian tradition who are struggling to find a personal spirituality that resonates with real life. To find someone from another tradition talking about the self-awareness and self-acceptance that are necessary for an authentic relationship with God; in fact talking about this more transparently than any Christian pastor I have ever heard. To find recognition in another tradition that all too often it is the worship tradition itself that gets in the way of taking time to reflect on who we are; that it is possible to take part in religion for years, even at the most earnest level ('evangelical' in our terms) with all its trappings, and still hardly scratch the surface of what it means to be human in relation to God and others. How far short the typical Christian church falls!

I am only a quarter of the way through this book and looking forward to learning how this author has successfully related his spirituality to personal relationships, gender, society and the world, and to his specific situation as a black South African Muslim. I can always hope otherwise, but I am not expecting to hear anything quite so authentic from the pulpit this Sunday morning.
Stilling the chattering...
Posted by  brett jordan on Sun, 03/08/2008 - 8:23pm.
I find myself increasingly drawn to putting myself in 'quiet places', whether that be a 5-minute walk to purchase milk and eggs, or a 40-minute run, or even a few minutes sitting on the lavatory, to re-centre myself, count my blessings, say my 'sorries', and giving God a few nanoseconds to speak to my soul in whatever way he chooses.

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With love (and extra resources, group-work ideas and links...)
from
www.licc.org.uk/culture.