Now is the Time to Change

Ilia DelioThe rapid changes of our modern world, kindled by the meteoric rise of computer technology, has created a needed space for spirituality. The fast-paced, breathless amount of information coming across our screens and into our lives has created anxiety and fatigue, among other things.  It is not surprising that spiritual seekers have returned to the mystics, from John of the Cross to Rumi and Siddhartha. The path of solitude, silence and quiet prayer, is alluring in view of a busy culture, running on algorithms. Social media sites are flooded with meditation groups, prayer groups and a host of other human communities that speak of faith in a higher power and promises of belonging and mutual support. The bouquet of spiritual paths and practices means that there are many roads to silence and peace. The proliferation of books and webinars on life paths suggest that spirituality has become essential to human survival in the 21st century. Even younger generations, who reject institutional religions, are attracted to spirituality, expressed by the maxim: “Spiritual but not religious.”

With an overflow of spirituality in our midst, one wonders how our world can be so fractured and conflicted.  Is spirituality alone sufficient to redirect our out-of-control planet toward a sustainable future?  I do not think so. Spirituality simply expresses inner content, what fills our minds and hearts, what comprises our core beliefs; more so, what sparks our desires.  The real question is, what forms our beliefs?  What fills our minds and hearts?  Beliefs are what a person holds to be true, whether or not it is true, that is, whether or not there is coherence between knowledge based on research, data and critical thinking, and our personal experience. True knowledge is diaphanous, light-filled; it lifts us up and draws our minds and hearts into greater wholeness. Truth makes life overflow with more life, which is why knowledge is the well-spring of truth. To know is to form new horizons of insight, to create.  Teilhard de Chardin said that “to think is to unify, to make wholes where there are scattered fragments, not merely to imitate (or repeat information) but to contribute a new unity to the world and thus to contribute new form of insight to the world it would otherwise be without.”

While spiritual paths abound today, what is lacking is deep thought and a reasonable pursuit of truth. Knowledge is not information alone but the work of the mind creatively forming new insights.  In his book Where is Knowing Going?, the late John Haughey SJ distinguished between concepts and notions.  When we rely on concepts, he wrote, we let ideas spawned by other minds do our thinking for us. Today, information-loaded concepts dominate the internet, to the extent that our devices have become intellectual crutches. On the hand, Haughey said, notions are ideas gradually forming in us in which we encounter reality with unrestricted wonder and attend to the real as an act of engagement. Notions undergird the life of the scholar whereby the mind engages reality in its manifold expressions of art, history, science, literature, economics and other disciplines, forming new unities and new insights.  While spirituality may connect us to the world, scholarship in its many forms, shapes the world by creatively engaging ideas.  The scholar is to be an artisan of the future.

As one who has spent the last three decades in academic life, it is hard to understand the rejection of modern science by many different people today, especially in higher education.  Recently I was in conversation with a student who asked me, “What does science have to do with religion?” And “Why is Pope Francis talking about the environment and the economy when he should be talking about spirituality and God?”  Although we are immersed in a scientific-technological culture, many religious people both within and outside higher education, express a distrust of science because “the facts change.” One person said to me, “I am not interested in science because I have my own set of beliefs”; another person said, “science is too complex for me to understand.”  I have heard many theologians say, “I don’t have time to read up on the new science,” or “I don’t see the relevance of science to my work.”  Recently, a theology graduate student argued in class that Aristotle’s notion of matter and form is perfectly reasonable for today’s world; there is no need to discuss quantum physics and evolution, because quantum physics is still speculative. Aristotle is correct:  clear and to the point.   Other theology students have rejected evolution because it contradicts core Christian teachings, such as original sin.  However, they hold fast to the medieval metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas (which undergirds the official theology of the Catholic Church) because it logical, structured and somehow explains reality (with a few philosophical adjustments).  There is an implicit sense among science-deniers that Thomas is much more reasonable than Einstein—and really—who cares about a Big Bang universe.

The problem of anti-science cuts across all world religions but especially the monotheistic faiths. Conservative Jews, Shiite Muslims and orthodox Christians all adhere to religious belief systems formed with the tools of Greek metaphysics (primarily Aristotle) and constructed against the backdrop of the ancient Ptolemaic cosmos. No matter how much data or reasonable explanations are provided to help understand the integral relationship between Science and Religion, ancient dogmatic beliefs trump scientific data.  More so, people reject modern science in favor of their beliefs, even if the content of the beliefs are no longer true. Original sin, monogenism and evolution is a case in point.  Recently, I was asked to review a book on religious life and the new cosmology and was surprised by a survey which indicated that younger members of some religious communities rejected modern science because it interferes with their religious beliefs and form of life.  They would rather dress with ancient garb and follow fifth century ideas then reorient their lives to an evolving world.  The truth is, we are no longer in Plato’s world or Aristotle’s world.  We are in our own radically individualized worlds, and if we want to follow thirteenth century theology, we will do so and no one will make us do otherwise. Of course, those who oppose religion and science drive cars, ingest all sorts of drugs for medical conditions, accept prosthetic devices into their bodies and navigate the internet. However, when science is explained as a fundamental body of knowledge for the welfare of human and planetary life, it is simply marginalized or rejected.  It is as if the human brain shuts down, claiming we do not need that knowledge to be saved.  Our medieval religion is sufficient.

We were not always this resistant. In the early Church, theological discussions abounded, not only among the theologians but among all types of interested persons. In the fourth century, for example, the hot topic was the Trinity and whether or the Son of God was equal to the Father. Was Jesus truly God or not?  Was the Spirit a divine person like the Son?  The luminary Cappadocian theologian, Gregory of Nyssa supposedly recounts how the discussion on the Trinity spilled over into the marketplace. It was a much smaller world then, and everyone from the shopkeeper to the blacksmith had an opinion.  Gregory put it this way:

Everywhere, in the public squares, at crossroads, on the streets and lanes, people would stop you and discourse at random about the Trinity. If you asked something of a moneychanger, he would begin discussing the question of the Begotten and the Unbegotten. If you questioned a baker about the price of bread, he would answer that the Father is greater and the Son is subordinate to Him. If you went to take a bath, the Anomoean bath attendant would tell you that in his opinion the Son simply comes from nothing.

There is no doubt that when the world was smaller and more localized, ideas could circulate more freely—for better or worse. Today, our world is large and complex, and the manipulation of information across the web makes it difficult to engage in meaningful discussions.  In his book, The Shallows, Nicholas Carr suggests that the internet is making us shallow and dumb. We are losing the capacity to think and to feel. The infinite amount of information has induced a type of cognitive coma because the human brain cannot process the overabundance of input. We are like mental couch-potatoes, exporting our minds onto the internet because our brain circuits are overloaded or jammed. Hence, we capture and hold tight to ideas and beliefs which keep us breathing and upright and perhaps inspire us to live for a better world beyond this one.   Frozen brain circuits prevent new thinking because they block any new input. Fear, anxiety and distrust swiftly emerge in fight or flight mode when the brain is confronted with new ideas, evoking existential fear and, for some religious people, the possibility of sin.  We saw something of this recently when the US Catholic Bishops were confronted by vaccine-deniers who claimed that the COVID vaccines contradict Church teaching because they are derived from aborted fetuses.   Not only did some religious zealots oppose the Bishops but they outrightly swore them down:  the vehemence of opposition knows no bounds.

The truth is the world is out of control and has been for some time. Things will not get better; they will get exponentially worse. AI technology will accelerate, and we will soon be in a world of even greater divisions, fostered by a widening gap between super-wealth and various levels of poverty because the middle-class is simply dissolving. Those who can afford advanced technologies will live longer, healthier, and perhaps happier (although “happy” is an ambiguous term), while those who cannot afford advanced technologies will struggle for survival and eventually perish. The fate of the earth is the great unknown.  With continued rates of global warming, we will see massive land shifts, rises in sea levels, more species extinctions and, simply, a radically scarred earth.

It does not have to be this way.  We have a choice now to turn the fate of the earth into a hopeful future. However, we will need to make significant choices and decisions. We simply cannot have it all, at our disposal and according to our whims.  Our lifestyles need to change; our value systems need to change, and our belief systems need to change. The integration of Science and Religion is not an option; it is an imperative. All institutional religions and places of higher education have a responsibility to ensure a new integrative framework of Science and Religion. Perhaps we need a moratorium on ancient philosophies and historical thinkers.  We are too stuck in the past and not enough concerned for the future. Despite the fact that I admire the initiatives of Pope Francis and his efforts to integrate and unify, the Catholic Church is a principal culprit of climate change. In fact, all world religions must get on board with evolution or face eventual extinction. This is not a topic for academics to debate or the topic of another conference; it is the fate of the earth.

Teilhard de Chardin saw our predicament almost a hundred years. In a 1931 essay on the “Spirit of the Earth,” he wrote that “the age of the nations is now past, and our task, if we are to survive and not perish, is to build the earth.” To “build the earth” is to recognize the divine depth of all reality, urging us to come together and emerge in a new whole of co-reflective consciousness, where love shapes all that we do, including the pursuit of knowledge and the advancement of science.

The key to a Teilhardian universe is the union of religion and evolution, as Teilhard wrote: “Religion and evolution . . .are destined to form one single continuous organism, in which their respective lives prolong, are dependent on and complete one another… it is for us to effect this synthesis.”   I suggest that we make Teilhard’s insight the core of our spirituality and prayer and strive to find God in all things of the earth, having faith in the world and faith in one another, knowing that God is active and alive in everything, for God is the overflow of life, the future fullness of life, already present in this moment, inviting us into a new unitive reality of love:  “Do not fear for I am with you” (Is 41:10).

 

 

 

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7 Comments

  1. James Philipps on December 4, 2021 at 12:00 pm

    Illia’s reflection and the comments that follow call to mind for me Fowler’s levels of Spiritual development and maturity. I think that most people spend most of their adult lives at the Dogmatic level- on which level the basic assumption seems to be that our perceptions of truth and eternal Truth are basically the same. For those who find their way into the Paradoxical-Consolidative level, it becomes increasingly obvious that our perceptions of truth are simply that. At best we can catch glimpses of eternal Truth, but it will always be elusive. And, realizing that, people on this level of understanding and perception learn to become more and more comfortable with apparent contradiction. Maybe even celebrate it.
    Here’s the problem, as I see it: for anyone in the Dogmatic stage of development, those in the P-C stage (not the usual meaning of those two letters!) appear to be muddle-headed, confused and weak. They seem unable to fully commit to anything, especially “the group” – be that group family, church, or state – and thus will always be viewed with suspicion and, mostly, dismissed. Or worse, if times get desperate enough.
    From reading the writings of the mystics, I believe that all of this looks different to those who have fully developed spiritually in the way that Fowler things of it and have achieved holiness. But I couldn’t tell you that from personal experience.



  2. Alice MacDonald on November 18, 2021 at 10:21 pm

    Excellent overview Ilia. As always you are able to see the broader perspective of where we are and how we got here. And no easy answers as you say. I do believe its time to take Jesus’ advice to Nicodemus to be born again, to return to the womb where we can be born again spiritually and experience the union that has always been our heritage. Maybe the time for words is over, as Eliza Doolittle says, “words, words, words, I’m so sick of words….don’t talk of love, show me.”!! When I made the decision to pursue a graduate degree in Theology, I came across the quote by John of the Cross….”The knowledge of the scholar compared to the Wisdom of the mystic is light a lit candle next to the noon day sun.” Maybe in Silence is where the knowing is going.



  3. Maria Amélia Carreira on November 17, 2021 at 6:31 pm

    THANK YOU, ELIA DELIO, for your endeavor in sharing new life into LIFE



  4. Patricia Devlin on November 13, 2021 at 3:54 am

    Yes, I too agree with your perspective. The challenge to take on Teilhard’s way of seeing is not easy, but the liberation to let go into the wonder of being alive to all life; all matter energised by Love, a god, triune, transcendent and personal in Christ, is intoxicating. Marching this week in our city ,with thousands in support of the COP26 talks in the morning and joining a virtual pilgrimage of silent meditation in solidarity with all suffering on earth related to the Climate crisis, expressed for me how to co create a present and a future, where science and faith are as intrinsically entangled as our amazing, complex, groaning, evolving reality where all matter acclaims the glory of God.



  5. Joe Masterleo on November 11, 2021 at 9:27 pm

    Well stated, Ilia, looking ahead as always, residing on the pointed tip (‘bullet point’) of the evolutionary arrow in these post-modern times, leading the charge for the “love phylum” Teilhard spoke of. In principle, the faithful may nod in agreement as hearers of the Word, but as doers most will balk at entering in, focusing mainly on what they stand to lose, not what they will gain. Everyone wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die. So the status, as always, remains mostly quo, with smatterings of hopeful change here and there. Reason enough to continue with persistence and hope toward the mark of your high calling, resistances to same notwithstanding.



  6. Joe Weber on November 11, 2021 at 5:14 pm

    Unfortunately, down through the ages institutional religions have only told people what to believe, without questioning; never encouraging or developing paths for adherents to their ideologies on how to think, process knowledge or their spiritual experiences, assisting and permitting them to form their own conclusions.

    Institutional religions have failed to “save” souls, nor have they liberated minds to grow beyond childlike spirituality or faith with special rewards in an afterlife.

    Of course, some individuals are most content with not having to think, grow mentally or spiritually.



  7. Craigus on November 11, 2021 at 4:47 pm

    I live in Australia. I recently listened to a podcast interview with Gigi Foster, an associate professor of economics, who, along with Paul Frijters and Michael Baker, wrote The Great Covid Panic. One of the areas of interest in their book is the hijacking of science for political and monetary ends that has resulted in a very quick rise in authoritarian decision making, particularly in Australia and New Zealand, via the manipulation of scientific data resulting in the replacement of scientific diversity with a kind of scientific narcissism (C.S. Lewis’s The Magician’s Twin speaks to this somewhat).

    I mention this merely as a real example among many for the distrust of our time. I wonder if people are not so much rejecting science as rejecting scientism. It’s taken me many years to establish enough of a base to really grasp Chardin’s paradigm of perception largely because there seem to be so many new “spiritual teachers” who haven’t really grasped it themselves but are talking as if they’re an authority on it and/or are adding unnecessary amendments to it that stop certain demographics from even getting a glimpse of it’s essential core. I mean, even C.S. Lewis had issues with Chardin, though I’ve personally arrived (not easily) at the conclusion that the time he lived in played more into those issues than anything…

    Personally, I think elitism is more a detriment to Chardin’s revolutionary paradigm shift getting out there than any real rejection of science. We need something more relatable. We need more artists and writers of truthful fiction. The substance is there but wow is it a slog to get it for most of us non-academics. It’s the communication that’s lacking. We need new C.S. Lewis’ and Tolkien’s and Chesterton’s for our time…



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