Friday, June 19, 2020

SACRED HEART TALK 2020: A Heart that Mirrors God (1)



Welcome to the first of three, short reflections concerning the Sacred Heart.

I’d like to begin by recalling why the Sacred Heart of Jesus – and when I speak of the Heart of Christ, I also infer the Heart of Mary for the two Hearts are as one – why it’s of such importance by sharing some words by the Orthodox theologian, Archbishop. Kalistos Ware:

‘The heart, it has been said, is the primary organ of our being, the point of convergence between mind and matter, the centre alike of our physical constitution and our psychic and spiritual structure.  Since the heart has this twofold aspect, at once visible and invisible, prayer of the heart is prayer of body as well as soul: only if it includes the body can it be truly prayer of the whole person. A human being, in the biblical view, is a psychosomatic totality — not a soul imprisoned in a body and seeking to escape, but an integral unity of the two. The body is not just an obstacle to be overcome, a lump of matter to be ignored, but it has a positive part to play in the spiritual life and it is endowed with energies that can be harnessed for the work of prayer.’

Recently, I came across a small book called, ‘The Sacred Heart of the World’, written by David Richo and published in 2007.  Two years before, he writes, he had received the graces needed to vow to make a contribution to devotion to the Sacred Heart: this book is the consequence.  In reading it I’ve realised I’d found the book I would like to have written!  David is a psychotherapist, mindfulness teacher and retreat leader in California and his book does what it says on the cover – restores mystical devotion to our spiritual life – so I’d like to use these four sessions to share some of his insights. 

He begins by inviting us to consider the universal context in which the Sacred Heart needs to be set.  Right at the beginning he writes: (p.2): …  This clearly reveals the way the Sacred Heart isn’t just a rather saccharine, individualistic devotion, but concerns the essence of our humanity.  (p.3) … It also reveals, of course, that the nature of God is love: (p.6, 7, 9)

It was inside us because God breathed his Spirit into Adams nostrils – the heart of God is a Trinity of Love which flows out and enfolds all things: O then, let my heart awake to your breath within me!  There, where mind sinks into the depths of God, there are rivers of love flowing from the Heart!  ‘In Sufi tradition’, writes Richo, ‘The heart is eternity, light, and divinity.  It is the centre of consciousness and the vehicle by which God sees us.  God breathing life into Adam means that a heart was given to him.’ (p.14)  Later, in sharing some words of Jung, he says that ‘The heart mirrors the psyche itself, which includes both our personal experience and the heritage of wisdom of the entire human collective that keeps stirring in all of us.’ (p.16)

Finally, he writes of the way that the Sacred Heart is a universal symbol which is in everybody's soul.  Yet it’s not only a symbol, a word meaning password in Greek, it’s also a passport to participation in what it signifies.  The sacramental nature of the Sacred Heart contains the power to awaken spiritual truths in us and to give us an appetite for it.  The Heart of Jesus is indeed the centre of the mystical body of humanity and the universe. 

To end this session, I’ll share words from a Sioux Indian which he quotes; ‘the heart is a sanctuary at the centre of which is a little space wherein the Great Spirit abides.’  Hearing them, I was immediately remined of something Thomas Merton wrote in Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander’:

‘At the centre of our being is a point of nothingness which is untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of truth, a point or spark which belongs entirely to God, which is never at our disposal, from which God disposes our lives, which is inaccessible to the fantasies of our own mind or the brutalities of our own will.  This little point of nothingness and of absolute poverty is the pure glory of God in us.  It is, so to speak, His name written in us…  It is like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven.  It is in everybody, and if we could see it we would see those billions of points of light coming together in the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life vanish completely.  I have no program for this seeing; is it only given.  But the Gate of Heaven is everywhere.’ 

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