Thursday, April 28, 2022

New Writ Has Come to Light

Here's something: a newish book called Towards the Essential: Letters of a Spiritual Master. It consists of of letters from Schuon, mostly to folks asking for advice on how to proceed -- as in, I've read your book(s), now what? I'm here, God is there, and how do we tie the room together?

Over a third of the letters are addressed to Christian correspondents, followed by other miscellaneous paths, eg., Sufi, Hindu, Native American, etc. I'd skip ahead to the section on Buddhism, but the Chinaman is not the issue. 

Here's a timely passage which, although written in 1986, goes to our era of mis- and disinformation:

the devil is fond of inculcating in people predisposed certitudes that are unshakable but diametrically opposed to the truth; the earmarks of satanism are precisely this diametrical falseness and the obstinacy of error.

Say what you want about Satan: that creep can roll. Worthy f'ing adversary.

Good news / bad news:

There is no spiritual method that does not wound our nature. Spirituality is both the easiest and the hardest thing. The easiest: because it is enough to think of God. The hardest: because fallen nature is forgetfulness of God. 

So, you're entering a world of pain. Nor does Schuon care about your feelings, which are "a matter of indifference" and "a contingent matter without importance." Besides, 

The happiness of worldly people, if one may say, is that they do not see all their disharmonies; they dwell in an opaque and easy homogeneity; it is a harmony procured for a pittance.  

Sometimes I wish I could live in a place where there were more people like me, instead of none. Well, the world doesn't start and stop at our convenience: 

I know where the difficulty lies: it is easier -- or less difficult -- to be alone on a desert island, than to be among men who do not understand us....

Nevertheless, 

we are obliged to accept the destiny God gave us and do the best we can with it.

I get it, but California? Really?

The world is a battleground, and it is necessary that there be warriors of Light everywhere, if I may express myself thus. In the meantime, you are where Providence has placed you...

There are always ups and downs, strikes and gutters: one must

be mindful of the equilibrium of the soul so as to avoid the alternations between phases of enthusiasm and aridity. If we are indifferent to aridity, it will dissipate in the end.... 

Ups and downs are natural for the soul; everything that is situated in duration undergoes phases; every continuous motion contains rhythms.

In short, abide. Yeah, but it's complicated: lotta ins, lotta outs:

In the spiritual life, one must know how to simplify things, which presupposes that one be firmly conscious of the essential elements of the path.... 

A strict regiment to keep the mind, you know, limber: 

I like to repeat that one must avoid complications, and that the essential, of which one must never lose sight, is this: discernment between the Real and the illusory, between God and the world...

But we are surrounded by nihilists.

God owes nothing to sheep, nor to somnambulists.... 

You must not allow yourself to be discouraged.... this absurd ambience, though so full of assurance and arrogance, is monstrously abnormal, with regard to both its convictions and tendencies; these people may be unanimous in their errors and vices, but it is you who are normal; so remain imperturbable in the face of this collective hypnosis....  

A smarter feller than myself once said

Serenity is to be above the clouds, above the world; above oneself. Recollectedness and serenity: we must discover these in prayer, and through prayer.

Ever thus to deadbeats:

The very length of your letter proves your problems are artificial, thus illegitimate, for one does not need to write a twelve-page letter to outline real problems.

You think far too much, in an artificial manner that is both bookish and psychological.

Maybe, but at least it's an ethos. 

28 comments:

John Venlet said...

Those are some excellent aphorisms which can make some firm foundation stones. The last rebuke, a most polite dismissal, I especially enjoy.

julie said...

I get it, but California? Really?

Ha - agreed. I sometimes feel as though my family were brought out of the desert and back to Egypt, but really it's just what happens when you go where the Cloud leads. I don't anticipate ever moving on from here, but then I never do...

julie said...

...one does not need to write a twelve-page letter to outline real problems.

Twelve pages?!

I see Schuon was all-too-familiar with the gamma wall of text.

Gagdad Bob said...

There are a number of unintentionally funny putdowns in the book. Just chuckled at this one:

"P. looks like a discarded circus clown... He is energetic and insignificant, moralist and immoral, modest and proud, intellectual and rudimentary. There is something in his gaze like a broken mirror; something empty and heteroclite, a little stupid and a little mad."

Gagdad Bob said...

"I have read your article, and I must cause you disappointment again. You do not have the vocation to write; it is certainly not your mission.... You 'think too much,' and that is your business; but the reader has neither interest nor desire to follow you in your inner problems, which you clothe with metaphysical ratiocinations.... in a word, you are not yet sufficiently yourself to be able to serve as a receptacle for metaphysical inspiration."

John Venlet said...

The unintentionalness of putdowns, delivered in lovely prose form, is what makes them spark.

julie said...

Ouch! I wonder how many more letters the writer sent to prove that Schuon was wrong (while of course continually proving him correct)?

Anonymous said...

Word of the day - ‘heteroclite’!

Gagdad Bob said...

I had to look that one up myself. It'll come in handy next time someone calls me heteronormative.

Gagdad Bob said...

More fine insultainment:

To dissimulate the pettiness of your soul, you hide behind subtleties that have only a quantitative value and thus do not alter your true nature in any way....

Your exigent attitude has nothing to do with a sincere search for God, for you are only seeking yourself.... You can be certain that where you find what flatters your natural tendencies, you will not find God.

Cousin Dupree said...

"What I do not like in your style is a tone that is both familiar and ironic, and often misses the mark; say that the believers you knew seemed superficial to you, but do not say that they were 'morons.'"

Understood.

Cousin Dupree said...

"Who do you think you are? In short: if you think that you have to criticize men or attitudes, do it coldly, calmly, soberly, with dignity..."

Three out of four?

julie said...

Ha - I think you need to read this one with a bowl of popcorn handy.

Gagdad Bob said...

This looks interesting: first ever English translation of Garrigou-Lagrange's On Divine Revelation: The Teaching of the Catholic Faith. Only 856 pages, but don't worry, there's a Vol. 2. I'll be waiting for the price to drop.

JWM said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ted said...

These Garrigou-Lagrange books feel like medicine more than dessert. But as I get older, perhaps more medicine is in store.

ted said...

Speaking of medicine, seems like the left is taking theirs now. But they won't let it go down easy.

Gagdad Bob said...

Their hysteria is turned up to 11, when nothing will change for the average person.

For one thing, it will force red state legislatures to be more sensitive to public opinion instead of just trolling the Supreme Court. Plus, I'm betting right now that California will pass a law that pays for women to come to California for abortions.

But a new War on Women is a much needed distraction from inflation, crime, illegal immigration, war, and a senile president, so here we are.

julie said...

Yep.

ted said...

It does give them fuel for silly season. Perhaps the Dems found their scapegoat while the country falls apart.

julie said...

Apropos of nothing, watching my kid's team play ball this spring, I now have a deep and painful understanding of the phrase "tighten that loose shit up!"

Van Harvey said...

Julie said "...I now have a deep and painful understanding of the phrase "tighten that loose shit up!"
LOL on that from memory!

julie said...

:D
To be fair, they are getting there. Last night's game was only lost by one run, if the time hadn't run out they had a decent chance of finally winning a game. Maybe Friday will be their day.

The crazy thing is, we've been on the same team with a lot of these kids for several years now, and at least three of them were All Stars last year. They're not bad players, but sometimes it seems like the other teams' kids all hit puberty and ours didn't. Tough age.

Gagdad Bob said...

I remember the first team I coached -- the ball was hit to our third baseman, and he raced home with it thinking he'd scored a touchdown.

julie said...

That would be hilarious. Fortunately, our boys aren't quite that confused :D

Gagdad Bob said...

Called it:

Newsom Vows to Make California a Sanctuary State for Abortions

julie said...

No surprise, sadly. Moloch smiles.

julie said...

Wasn’t someone in CA also pushing for legalized infanticide for up to a month after birth?

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