Showing posts with label The spiritual life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The spiritual life. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

The Spiritual Life - Forgiveness

What Blocks Your Forgiveness? – Power of TED*

Topic thirty nine
Forgiveness

The first component of spiritual health is peace and joy, the second component is kindness, and the third component contributes to the first two which is forgiveness.

Forgiveness means different things to different people and its meanings change depending on context. There are band-aid apologies which are used for appeasement and submission, and there are genuine apologies expressing regret and remorse. When it comes to spiritual health, the meaning of forgiveness is a rising above, a turning the other cheek as Jesus suggested, and moving on not getting caught up in attempts to rectify injustice in a vengeful or self righteous way attempting to regain a sense of justice of reciprocity or even domination and superiority..

The rising above the hurt, the injustice, the abuse is a willingness to give up making other people and circumstances responsible for one’s own unhappiness. A person’s happiness or unhappiness is a choice one can make. Does the person want to see themselves and act like a victim or see themselves as a beloved child of God whose natural inheritance is happiness and abundant joy?

As Jesus was tortured and crucified He never played the victim except at the end when He exclaims, “My God, My God why have You forsaken Me?,” but then as He dies He says, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do,” and “into your hands I commend my spirit.” Jesus in the end willingly gives up His ego, forgives,  and merges with the non dualistic Oneness from which He emerged when He was incarnated here on Earth.

Gary Renard, the teacher of A Course In Miracles, points out that we all have tens if not hundreds of what he calls “forgiveness opportunities” every day. How will I respond to this injustice  in this situation? Do I want to play the victim with self righteous indignation or rise above it and go about my business?

This type of forgiveness is not about ignoring or avoidance but rather about recognition, acknowledgement and a conscious decision whether to respond from the ego or from the Spirit. We always have this choice although we often don’t realize that we do. Awareness of the forgiveness opportunities gives us a choice. Spiritually healthy people usually choose to forgive.

Over the last few weeks or month what percentage of the time have you risen above injustice and not made it responsible for your unhappiness and allowed this sense of unhappiness to deprive you of a sense of well being? What could you do in the coming month to recognize forgiveness opportunities and choose to utilize them to rise above the temptation to play the victim?

Saturday, May 23, 2020

The Spiritual Life, Topic Thirty three, The mirror of holiness

IMPACT OF EMOTIONAL BOND BETWEEN MOTHER AND CHILD ON CHILDREN'S ...

Topic Thirty three
The mirror of holiness

“Just as you have to look into the mirror to see your physical face, you have to look in the mirror of love to see your spiritual face. Love is a spiritual mirror. It nourishes you, it integrates you, it makes you ready for the inner journey, it minds you of your original face.” p. 77

Osho. Maturity: The Responsibility of Being Oneself (Osho Insights for a New Way of Living) . St. Martin's Press.

In an ideal ego world, Osho is correct, and the attachment psychologists would agree that the mirror neurons are the gateway to the soul. However, this experience is rare and occurs when one is loved unconditionally.

Conditional love is not the gateway to the soul and does not reflect one’s original face. Conditional love is counterfeit and what is called “fool’s gold.” Conditional love creates hell on earth and is not the narrow gate to heaven which Osho describes in this passage.

The “love” which Osho is describing is unconditional love and is a rare experience but when it does occur is the gateway to heaven. Have you ever been unconditionally loved? Have you ever unconditionally loved another? Unconditional love requires a maturity that fewer people have achieved. This level of maturity is achieved when a person has achieved a level of satisfaction, fulfillment, and joy in their life that is unshakable. This level of satisfaction, fulfillment, and joy is constant and stable and is based on one’s peace of mind and not external events.

How does one achieve this level of maturity? It is based on a practice of forgiveness where the person decides to no longer make others responsible for their own unhappiness. The person gives up the victim role and chooses agency which is the willingness to be responsible for one’s own responses to the external circumstances that impact one’s  consciousness. It is in taking responsibility for one’s own functioning regardless of external circumstances that one becomes mature.

The love that radiates from such a soul is precious and rare, and is a mirror that anyone who perceives it is immediately aware of their own holiness which they see reflected back to them. Do you know such a person or people? It is in this kind of maturity that we can put our faith.

It is the mission of UU A Way Of Life to help people become aware of their own holiness. We aspire to become that mirror for our audience.

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