Lent: Poised for Action
Today we begin the season of Lent which has, traditionally, been a time of personal fasting, prayer and conversion. While these three activities are good, they also reinforce the old religious paradigm of individual salvation. The “I” must be purified so that one may return to God. As I reflect on our current events, the paradigm of the individual is giving way to a new paradigm of the collective self. What is the collective self? It is the self beyond the self, the hyperpersonal self for whom identity is replaced by intensity, that is, relationships which intensify being in love. The hyperpersonal self is the posthuman intensity of networked relationships, in which to be is to be with, to think with, to love with, to be free with; not the self that looks inward but the self’s inwardness that is outward, expressed in consciousness extending itself into other fields of shared life. The life of Jesus of Nazareth was a hyperpersonal self, a self in, with and for others, a self that was rooted in the immanent presence of God. There is a new expression of this selfless self that is being born anew in our midst, for whom gender intensity, racial and global justice intensity, earth intensity are being kindled by our networked world. The seeds of these ideas are in my book Re-Enchanting the Earth: Why AI Needs Religion. How does the hyperpersonal self relate to Lent? It invites us into a new way of thinking about Lent in a chaotic, evolutionary world.
The Gospel message has never been more urgent than it is today. We are invited to stand up, open our eyes, and get the splinters out of them. We are asked to clean out our hearts which has stored so much debris from the past and wake up. Something new is breaking into our teeter-tottering world-at-war, and those who see the new will live anew. The message of Jesus is a revolution of the heart but also an evolution of life. The God-centered person acts from a new center of intensified being, a radical center of love that is unencumbered, free, daring, adventurous, boundary-crossing, hybrid and future-oriented. Christian life is meant to be creative, novel and future-oriented, but the packaging of this life into rigid dogmatic formulas has all but killed the spirit of terrestrial life, keeping God unrelated and unaffected by the world’s sufferings. Carl Jung spoke of religion as a ‘dead system’ imprisoned in isolated dogmatic certitudes. Religion has become a matter of the head and not of the total person.
The isolation of religion from all that comprises organic life, including matter, body, sex, feelings, emotion has been disastrous for planetary life. Intellectual, dogmatic religion has essentially stripped the world of its soul, and without a collective soul, we are a lifeless mass of objects beholden to the powers of political brute force and economic greed. Earth life cannot sustain itself indefinitely under the present conditions because, simply put, there is no center.
Living in in the radicality of love is a good beginning to this Lenten season. But the demands of love are costly and I do not think we are prepared for what is on the horizon of our everyday lives. Our current systems are like old, brittle paper; they are falling apart and there is no new paper to replace them. Economic security in various parts of the world continues to prevent radical change in so far as collective change will place demands on personal property and security. Even more so, however, the world is now too big and too complex without sufficient cooperative leadership to effect real change; there is too much information, too many streams of knowledge for the human mind to comprehend; there is no spiritual unity to gather us into a collective whole. And without a collective whole, without a feeling of interdependence and a consciousness of interrelatedness, that is, without real catholicity, we are headed for a series of cataclysmic events. The pandemic and the war on Ukraine are preludes to what lies ahead, not simply for the world at large but, in particular, for us here in the United States.
It is time to get our lives in order, to live creatively and freely in the radicality of love, to live with a consciousness of readiness. Something new is breaking into our world; it is the power of God rising up from what is dead and lifeless into a new more incredible life that we cannot imagine. Artificial intelligence anticipates this new breakthrough of life, this “transhumanism,” but it cannot bring about the needed convergence for planetary wholeness without a world soul.
Lent is a time for living on the edge, poised for the next moment of life. We are invited to get out of our comfortable centers of security and live on the brink of the incomplete, the not-knowing, the open future, and to find comfort in the chaotic flow of life. It might a good time to reflect on the Gospel passages of eschatological readiness. Jesus speaks about knowing neither the day nor the hour (Matt 25:13); to watch therefore and be ready for whatever comes in the next moment. We might be in our cars or watching television or surfing the internet when the winds of change blow through our lives: one person will be taken, another swept away, and another will be left behind. Homes will crumble and power lines will be destroyed. These changes will happen so quickly we will not know the cause only the effects.
We here in the comfortable West have thought too long in terms of essentialism, that we are essentially good people, and that God is essentially powerful, and that we are essentially exempt from suffering, sorrow, famine and destruction. Essentialism is a vestige of Greek philosophy; it has prevented us from entering into a quantum society, and the realization of an entangled planet.
This Lent we are called into a new consciousness of love. It is time to move beyond Plato’s cave, of returning to God with some type of detached spirit, and to wake up to the reality that we have cut God out of physical evolution and taken the reins of godly power into our own hands. We have “de-incarnated” God and are now left with a planet stripped of spiritual soul. Is there hope? Yes, where there is God, there is hope and future, but the Gospel message is clear: hope is what dawns when new wine is put into new wineskins. The old must die for the new to be born. So let us be attentive and be ready for the birth of the new in our midst.
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[…] “Lent is a time for living on the edge, poised for the next moment of life. We are invited to get out of our comfortable centers of security and live on the brink of the incomplete, the not-knowing, the open future, and to find comfort in the chaotic flow of life..” —Ilia Delio, Lent: Poised for Action […]
As always, thank you for your thoughtful insights, Ilia. Once again, I find myself needing to pause on short phrases to catch the fullness of your message. It is so refreshing to hear the truth of hope in light of death/renewal.
The specter of death presents everywhere and pervades everything in this world, from a false sense of self separate from God identity, to disease and disorder, to dead religion, to autocratic leaders with weapons that can swallow innocents wholesale, and may sooner end life on earth. There’s only one way out from under this dark shadow of death, the hope of the Gospel message and resurrection life. Both death and life, darkness and light, wheat and tares are polarities that have been growing exponentially on earth, side by side, for millennia. And they’re reaching critical mass headed for a flashpoint of light (Christ), who will come, says Scripture, not as a meek lamb led to slaughter, but “like lightning that can be seen from east to west” (Matt. 24:27). The transformational energies resulting thereof will be explainable via pure physics, nuclear in nature, far and away exceeding any form of man-made device, the latter of which can only be destructive by nature.
Thank you Ilia for such an inspiring and challenging article as we set out on the Lenten jounney. The call from the future is surely the call to collective love and I have been reflecting on how the Pandemic and the war have been melding the World into this love-body as we all feel that oneness with the people of the Ukraine who are surrounded by such horror. The unity is surely the coming of the kingdom/kindom and a sign of the times.
Thank you, Ilia, for the richness of your Lenten gift. Your words are like a magnet attracting me/us forward. I will reflect on them often this Lent. It is such a blessing to feel their attraction and to be drawn to live more lovingly. Gratitude for your writing.
Brilliantly clear assessment of where we’re at as a human species and the beginnings of what’s needed. Thank you Illia!
Thanks Ilia. Appreciate this to begin anew this Lenten season!
Wally Saunders: Beautiful, Ilia! Lent does mean “Springtime” and Springtime presupposes Autumn and its dead and dying foliage and the darkness, discomforts and dormancy of Winter. ❤️