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Comprising of 48 thought provoking Sutras for the Modern Mystic.
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A fascinating account of a life-long mystic bringing deep spirituality
to corporate America!
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Angelic Troublemakers
Robert Rabbin
As we enter 2007 together, I can think of no better theme than “embodied
spiritual action” to help us focus on, and commit to, demonstrating the highest
expression of our common humanity — love, wisdom, and peace — as conscious,
consistent choices in all areas of life.
We embrace spiritual principles and practices in order to become free from
self-created alienation, suffering, and confusion. We long to experience our
wholeness, our connectedness to others and the Earth, our creativity and joy,
our authentic being. As we do so, it is important to remember that experience
and its expression-as-action are a singular, inseparable movement, and that all
manner of personal growth, self development, and higher consciousness ultimately
bear fruit in this world, as embodied spiritual action.
Exploring the nature of mind, self, and reality often takes us into higher and
subtler planes of existence, where we can lose touch with the physical world and
the dramas of everyday life. Many religions and spiritual traditions place
spiritual above material, creating a false hierarchy and pitting Soul against
World in a struggle for supremacy. This misconception has helped to create the
common stereotype of a mystic or sage as an aloof witness to the world. But I
have learned the greater purpose of inner spiritual work: to unite spiritual
wisdom with compassionate action — in the world. The essence of this view
is that wisdom is both insight and action; thus we want to engage life fully and
with our whole heart — nourishing self, relationships, work, and world with
wisdom, compassion, and love through conscious choice and action.
This awakening to the practical implications of “oneness” was a long time coming
for me. For the first 20 years or so of my “spiritual” journey, I was addicted
to self-transcendence, to a medicated, meditative lifestyle in which I allowed
my feeling for the world—my caring and passion and enthusiasm for life and for
living—to be numbed by too much witnessing and watching, and not enough acting.
Shortly after the shattering morning of September 11, 2001, a deeper awareness
of the connection between spiritual awareness and social participation opened
within me. I was horrified at the militaristic responses of America. During the
US bombardment of Baghdad, I felt as if the missiles were exploding in my own
body. Is this firebombing of a city of 4.5 million people actually happening? Is
this carnage and slaughter of a nation half of whose population is under 16
years of age actually happening? Suddenly, my every cell awoke to the true
meaning of what I had first learned decades ago in India: tat tvam asi, Thou Art
That. I had first learned that the “that” was a transcendent consciousness, an
invitation to take refuge in pure consciousness as my fundamental identity, or
nature. But I was discovering that there was a relative dimension to Thou Art
That: I am this world, and this world is me. Every spasm of violence, each
shattered life and moments of horror were happening inside me. It was not
something I could hide from or ignore. My being, my body, had grown as big as
the world. I was that supreme, world-transcending consciousness, but I was also
the world and everything in it.
I began to write and speak about engaged spirituality, about taking
responsibility for the condition of our world and carrying spiritual practice
and principles from the meditation halls into the world. I realized that we risk
social apathy in our search for personal enlightenment if we believe that the
goal of spiritual work is to transcend the world. It is not, as these words from
Kabbalah suggest: “First we receive the light, then we impart it. Thus we repair
the world.” Imparting the light requires great things of us: authenticity,
honesty, courage, determination, empathy, personal responsibility, and
commitment. Repairing the world requires that we add responsibility to
realization, caring to love, and action to insight. The task of renewing society
to reflect the heart of wisdom requires us to demonstrate our unity-in-love with
all creation in all areas of life through direct action. “Every community,” said
civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, “needs a group of angelic troublemakers.”
The philosopher J. Krishnamurti once said, “The crisis is not out there in the
world; it is in our own consciousness.” It is self-evident that the outer,
cultural world in which we live is a direct manifestation of our inner world of
beliefs, attitudes, and values — all of which determine and drive our actions.
Naturally, whatever any one part does touches and affects the whole. Every
thought, every word, every slight touch of our hand sends energetic impulses
racing outward on the trillions of strands of connective tissue that enfolds us
all in the One. Whatever we do to ourselves, we do to each other as each action
is a stone thrown into the pond of our common existence. Within minutes, or
hours, or days we will feel the ripples of our actions wash over everything.
This is why we cannot use war as a tool of peace, because the killing keeps
coming back. We have to wage peace, not war. And then peace will keep coming
back. Our every thought, word, and action holds the power to create or destroy.
In the simplest of terms, our choices are between the paths of war and peace,
between violence and nonviolence, between hatred and understanding, between fear
and love, between retribution and reconciliation, between aggression and
restraint.
Our world is begging to be healed of violence, brutality, and greed. Let this be
our project. We cannot use our spirituality as an escape hatch from social life
and responsibility, nor be afraid to put our spiritual hands into the mulch of
committed action for social change. We cannot let national identities, religious
dogma, political ideology or spiritual apathy corrupt the knowing of our one
heart. Can we rise above the self-created tyrannies of our times — nationalism,
racism, militarism, sexism, corporatism — to establish just societies in which
all people, indeed all living creatures and the Earth herself, may live in
harmony and peace?
The French novelist Emile Zola once said, “If you ask me why I came to this
Earth, I’ll tell you: I came to live out loud.” And we, too, must live out loud,
but with wisdom and love and kindness. These are the truths we must embody and
send like a cosmic roar throughout the land. Let us start now, right now, this
very minute, to heal our world.
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