Science Without Religion is Like an Ocean Without Water

Science and Mysticism

Teilhard de Chardin was a scientist who thought of science as a process; he found joy in exploring the unknown mysteries of matter. In a small essay on the “The Spiritual Power of Matter,” he tells the story of two travelers in the desert, one seeks spiritual truth by leaving the world, the other is lured by matter as the realm of the Absolute. To survive, he must wrestle with Matter and see what it reveals. In the same way, Teilhard thought that the researcher wrestles with the world, and comes to understand it in a way that someone who simply gazes on it never can.[i] Should he return to society, he will find that many of its beliefs and claims do not hold up. For he has found a point d’appui, a place of support, in matter, away from the claims of the world and culture. Now that he knows God immediately, he can no longer return to his former life. Experience is a better teacher than abstract beliefs. In a commentary on this parable, Thomas King states:

Teilhard was challenged to wrestle with matter, and he did. This sets his mysticism apart from other mystical traditions. St Ignatius could gaze at the stars alt night and be at prayer, and so he advised other Jesuits that they could contemplate God in a blade of grass. Teilhard would sympathize with these passages in so far as they suggest an immanent God, but he would not go along with the quiet contemplation. His retreat notes make it evident that throughout his life he had difficulties with Ignatian prayer. When the traveler in the parable first encounters Matter, Matter tells him, ‘Your salvation and mine depend on the first moment’. The first moment is a moment of choice: which mysticism will he choose? His alternatives could be seen in terms of a distinction that the medieval philosophers made a distinction between intellectus and ratio. The intellectus rests passively, gazing at what is before it; while the ratio is the active power of discursive thought to search, abstract, refine and conclude. The medieval philosophers saw the intellectus as the basis of mysticism; and would-be mystics were advised to hush the busy ratio (mind) in order to gaze quietly. But in presenting a mysticism centered on research, Teilhard set the ratio (reason) at the center of the mystical. Here the mystical act involves the synthesizing work of the mind as it gathers facts and strives to form them into a wider synthesis.

Science was not a given set of truths about the universe for Teilhard. Science, like the mind itself, is a process, always probing into the unknown. Scientific research is a form of mysticism, a constant exploration into the infinite potential of matter in search of its secret life. King writes:

As scientists struggle to make sense of their findings—or, rather, as reality’s elements order and reorder themselves in the scientist’s mind until they fit—they are groping towards a unity and a form that will be new. The ‘fibers of the unifying universe’ come together in the scientist’s mind, which is essentially process. The scientist’s call to the love of God, to adoration, involves his or her research activity, an activity which is a  participation in the universe’s thought-fibers.[ii]

Teilhard’s mysticism is intellectually creative because it is the power of the mind or thought that pushes evolution forward toward greater complexity and unity. One begins with a world that is not understood and comes to know God at the point where experience lights up the fire of knowledge. Mysticism sets reason at the center of the mystical. Mysticism is not a matter of contemplating a truth already established but lay in the very act of discovery. That is, the mystic creates a new truth because the knower is a unifier. The mind searches its depths by extending beyond itself. “Each time the mind comprehends something, Teilhard wrote, “it unites the world in a new way.”[iii]

The Primacy of Thought

Thought undergirds evolution, according to Teilhard, because without real thought, the process of evolution cannot go forward. To think is to unify, to make wholes where there are scattered fragments; “not merely to register the fragments but to confer upon them a form of unity they would otherwise (that is, without thought) be without.”[iv] Thinking is a spiritual act. To think is to take a long, deep, hard look at reality where the knowing process becomes more than the vision itself. Thinking requires use of the intellect, as well as judgment, consciousness and connectivity to the object of thought. It is not a mere accumulation of information but the synthesizing of information into ideas and insight. Thinking is the work of the spirit, not only the human spirit but God’s Spirit; it is the dynamic engagement of the mind with the world as we know it. If knowledge is essential to the direction of evolution, then attentiveness and intelligence must be brought into encounter with physical reality.  The mind creates by perceiving the phenomena of reality and, in doing so, continues the fundamental work of evolution. Each time the mind comprehends something it unites the world in a new way.[v] Teilhard said:  “To discover and know is to actually extend the universe ahead and to complete it.”[vi]

Teilhard spoke of two types of knowledge: one is an abstract and timeless knowledge of “the world of ideas and principles” which he instinctively distrusted. The second is a “real” knowledge that is in constant development–the conscious actuation of the universe about us. The first type of knowledge leads to geometry and theology, while the second leads to science and mysticism; mysticism not based on possession of a complete truth from heaven but part of the ongoing process of earth.[vii]  He warned against any abstract knowledge that is divorced from physical reality, since abstract knowledge is a faded reality compared to boundless presence. Abstract knowledge is conceptual understanding that undergirds a will to power since only the individual can hold concepts. Such knowledge cannot further evolution nor can it deepen love because it is isolated in the knower. It forms individual ideas but leaves the physical relational world adrift. Even among physicists, Teilhard notes, the advent of quantum physics and the non-deterministic nature of reality has led to the imposition of the investigator’s mind on shifting patterns of phenomena.[viii]  The imposition of mind on nature thwarts the energy of evolution.

True knowledge, according to Teilhard, must engage physical reality because reality is the basis of who we are. Discovery of the world is ultimately self-discovery, and the openness of the self to the infinite is the openness to God. The human’s evolving consciousness must be seen as integral to the physical world and the physical world must be seen as integral to the human’s desire to know. As a scientist and believer in physical reality, Teilhard rejected knowledge divorced from experience.  Abstract knowledge is sterile and lifeless, he thought. Rather, knowledge must deepen and make whole that which is real and, in turn, lead to greater unity of the real. Faith begins with trust in the ultimate goodness [or love] of matter. In this respect, faith and thought belong together; the one who believes “forms an intellectual synthesis.” It is not so much an inner spiritual experience detached from the real but a whole-hearted surrender to the ineffable depth of matter, that is, a faith in matter itself. Although we may think of faith as separate from reason, it is the basis of reason. To have faith is to commit oneself to that which is not seen but believed, and to believe invites one to understand. Faith and reason are two sides of the same reality, according to Teilhard, and are built into the fabric of evolution.

In this respect, Teilhard saw that the work of the scientist is a spiritual pursuit of the secrets of nature, a mystical quest of the unknown. Just as the Christian spiritual journey is one of purgation, illumination and union, so too, the scientific endeavor is the relentless pursuit of matter’s mystery. One must pass through the difficulties of failed experiments and hypotheses until one reaches a breakthrough that opens up to new insights. The success of a scientific endeavor can lead to a major discovery that can be ultimately transformative for humanity or planetary life. Teilhard spoke of scientific truth as “the supreme spiritual act by which the dust-cloud of experience takes on form and is kindled at the fire of knowledge.”[ix] As the scientist struggles to make sense of one’s findings, s/he is searching for new truths, grasping for new horizons of insight. The fibers of the unifying universe are seeking to come together in the scientist’s mind. He called the work of science, “dark adoration,” because the mind is drawn to a power hidden of matter. Thomas King states:  “This supreme spiritual act is an act of dark adoration, homage to the unifying Power. Drawn back to the moment of adoration, the scientist feels a holy mission to continue the process.”[x] To enter the world of matter disturbs the mind because one is confronted by the unlimited potentials of matter, the basis of discovering new insights never before imagined or conceived Scientific work is “troubled worship” in so far as one is disturbed by the unknown.[xi]When the mind opens up to matter, we lose our sense of control, everything becomes muddled, and rightly so. The scientist, whether explicitly or implicitly, finds oneself in the midst of nature’s elusive organization. The experience of matter leads one to new understandings of matter’s hidden life, yielding new horizons of insights and new realities. Science is an ongoing journey of evoking the secrets of matter through observation and determination, forming these into new insights and furthering the overall process of evolution. This relentless pursuit of questioning matter is a type of love or passion for the real. We might think of scientific research as creative evolution driven by love. It begins with a world not understood and comes to know a depth of mystery at the moment when the dust of experience lights up with the fire of knowledge.[xii] To think and discover, in Teilhard’s view, is to be an artisan of the future.

While scientific research is often described in reductionistic terms, the observation and measurement of empirical facts, scientific research is a form of devotion, a relentless pursuit of matter’s potentials, exploring the infinite secrets of matter.  Scientific research is driven by a passion or thirst for the real, which is why reducing science to mere empirical knowledge or treating it as a highly technical field otherwise irrelevant to the overall quality of life thwarts the fact that science is the basis of philosophy and, in turn, theology. We need to retrieve the integral relationship between science and religion in order to make sense of our rapidly evolving world. Teilhard thought that science and religion are two phases of the one and the same complete act of knowledge; that is, knowing matter in its depth, breadth and organization is an integral act of knowing on the levels of both science and religion. Teilhard saw the insufficiency of science by itself to bring about a new type of superconsciousness or a higher level of thought on the level of interconnected, planetary life. “It is not tête-à-tête or a corps-à-corps we need; it is a heart to heart,” he wrote.[xiii] To contribute to the overall welfare of planetary life, science needs to acknowledge the essential role of spirituality and mysticism in the pursuit of knowledge. It is the power of the mind that pushes evolution forward toward greater complexity and unity, but it is the power of love that draws life onward toward more unitive life. Thought can lead us to create new horizons of insight, but love draws all together and leads us into the future.

Notes:

[i]  Thomas M. King, Teilhard’s Mysticism of Knowing (New York: The Seabury Press, 1981), 27.

[ii]  King, Mysticism of Knowing, 29.

[iii] Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, “The Spiritual Power of Matter,” in Hymn of the Universe, trans. Simon Bartholomew (New York: Harper & Row, 1961), 36.

[iv] King, Teilhard’s Mysticism of Knowing, 36.

[v] King, Mysticism of Knowing, 36.

[vi] King, Mysticism of Knowing, 35.

[vii] King, Mysticism of Knowing, 40.

[viii] King, Mysticism of Knowing, 5.

[ix] Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Activation of Energy, trans. Rene Hague (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1963), 9.

[x]  Thomas King, S.J. “Scientific Research as Adoration: Pierre Teilhard de Chardin SJ (1881-1955),” The Way 44/1 (July 2005): 21-34 at p. 29.

[xi] King, “Scientific Research as Adoration,” 29.

[xii] King, “Scientific Research as Adoration,” 29.

[xiii]  Teilhard de Chardin, Future of Man, 75; W. Henry Kenny, A Path Through Teilhard’s Phenomenon (Dayton, OH: Pflaum Press, 1970), 138.

View print-friendly version View print-friendly version
Posted in

17 Comments

  1. Mary Pat Jones on September 18, 2023 at 4:45 pm

    Thank you! Wrapping one’s head around unitive consciousness is not adequately conveyed in empirical understanding. The suffering that lies ahead will be very difficult to avoid, but Mercy is never limited.

  2. Mary Pat Jones on September 17, 2023 at 9:01 pm

    As usual, I am deeply invigorated by your writing and sharing. I hear we need more scientists to anchor unity (non-dual) . Alice’s entry of Teilhard’s referring to the reality of “purity not lying in separation but deeper penetration into the Universe, and plunging to where it is deepest and most violent by struggling into it’s currents” sounds much like the dark nights of the soul and spirit. Not only individual, but collective. I’ve often wondered how if “We” collectively understood this we would embrace non-dual.

    I remember watching a video on YouTube between Thomas Keating and Ken
    Wilber where Thomas referred to (in my perception) Christianity/Catholic Church not having evolved far enough. He used the term “conveyor belt” regarding how not only individuals but the Church needed to evolve. This kind of change cannot happen just on a consciousness level, our view can only bear fruit from a change in behavior individually and collectively.

    My husband and I were listening to one of Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s latest video’s in which at the end of the interview he admits to staying awake at night with trepidation anticipating the quest a new development quantum physics/string theory will present. (My play on his words). I did enjoy your pod cast with him.

    My understanding of non-dual going somewhere is a conviction/willingness to live into, through action the Truth of Non-dual. Like assassinated Arch Bishop ‘Oscar Arnulfo Romero” during beginning era of Liberation theology. Like Etty Hillesum refusing to escape to safety during holocaust. Like so many through history. How do we get a collective consciousness level in science on non-dual? Or a collective of world religions. Jesus of Nazareth knew not even his apostles except perhaps his closest, Mary understood his acceptance of a grueling death without ill will towards those who wanted him dead. I do feel we will see much more of this ahead. I think of all those leaving their families to go to war under anarchy. How many go to save their democracy? How do we even define what we perceive a reasonable democracy to be, a reasonable citizen? How do we trust the amount of devolving in our own view of political parties? How do state/stages of faith alter our behavioral patterns/personal relationships?

  3. Mark R. Turner on September 15, 2023 at 2:47 pm

    Thank you, Ilia, for clarifying Teilhard’s unitive view of spirit and matter. You help me contemplate Incarnation of the Cosmos. I write and teach a similar view from the artist’s perspective in that the creative process begins spiritually within the maker and gradually emerges through chosen elements into materiality. I love the kinship between what the scientist and the artist are doing in their contributions to the growth of God’s Body Universe.

  4. Myrt Rollins on September 15, 2023 at 1:26 pm

    And the Love of your last paragraph is God? Let that Love draw us together and unite us now and /or in the coming times! So many thanks Ilia! Myrt Rollins

  5. Nancy wolter on September 15, 2023 at 12:16 pm

    Beautiful

  6. Alice MacDonald on September 15, 2023 at 11:05 am

    Meeting Teilhard in graduate school was a turning point for me in my search to bring God and the world together in the ordinariness of my own daily life. Seeing him struggle between a scientific career and the priesthood, between the spiritual and material resonated with my own experience and vocation to the married life. These words of his tugged at my heart:
    “You thought you could do without it (matter) because the
    power of thought had been kindled in you? You hoped the
    more thoroughly you rejected the tangible, the closer you would
    be to spirit; that you would be more divine if you lived in a
    world of pure thought, or at least angelic if you fled the
    corporeal? Well you were like (sic) to have perished of hunger . .
    Never say matter is accursed, matter is evil . . . Purity does not
    lie in separation from, but in a deeper penetration into the
    universe . . . Bathe yourself in an ocean of matter; plunge into
    it where it is deepest and most violent; struggle in its currents
    and drink of it waters. For it cradled you long ago in your
    preconscious existence; and it is that ocean that will raise you up
    to God.”
    These words gave even greater meaning to Paula D’Arcy’s statement, “God comes disguised as your life.” Plunging into the struggles of married and family life raised me up into the inner life of God’s own great self-sacrificing Love. Its all one Life, one World, one Love.!

  7. Greg on September 15, 2023 at 10:00 am

    Great article Ilia, thanks. I’m definitely a ratio mystic. Contemplating my navel has never been easy or natural for me, but studying new thoughts and ideas about the world has always been like candyland.
    Science figures it out, religious love unifies it.
    Scientists tend to be individual thinkers. Love is a collaborative activity.
    To some degree the scientist figures it out and the artist, the lover, makes it knowable to the masses.

  8. Joe Masterleo on September 14, 2023 at 11:37 am

    Everywhere God creates (generates) and joins things in seamless harmonious wholes. Oppositionally, by dividing asunder what God has joined at all levels and in sundry ways via dualistic thinking, mankind acts much like a butcher dividing the same cow (holy cow) into separate cuts of meat; flank, chuck, rib, sirloin, brisket, etc., labeling and pricing each cut in terms of popular preference and taste. Yet all in all, it’s the same cow (meat) divided, called by different names. Ditto science and religion, different “cuts” of divinity incarnate, visible and invisible, empirical and mystic, called by different names, joined by a common element. Sorry, separation consciousness (spiritual apartheid) neither “meats” the expectations, nor makes the “cut” in the kingdom of heaven. Not upon “meating” your Maker anyway, either here or in the hereafter. Truth be told, non-dual consciousness is a horse of a different color, the choicest “cut” above all the rest. It’s the Good Shepherd’s standard of separating his sheep from the goats. Best change your thinking here, lest in the beyond you fail to qualify, being duly asked at the gate, “Where’s the beef?” of unitive consciousness. And in the higher scheme of things, that’s no bull.

  9. George Marsh on September 14, 2023 at 10:17 am

    Thank you deeply. More wonderful days to you and all at the Center.

  10. George Marsh on September 13, 2023 at 7:59 pm

    Grateful to Ilia Delio for showing Thomas King’s mystical understanding of Teilhard’s deep science. For a lay person like me, taking a hint from the words of Bonaventure as I dimly understand them, I apply the particular love of God from the scientific to the practical sphere, and in acting I love every little holon within the bigger holons in creation, hoping I’m doing good wisely and compassionately.

    • Christogenesis on September 14, 2023 at 8:06 am

      Dear George, I have no doubt that you are doing just with much compassion and wisdom. Blessings to you and all your good works.

Leave a Comment





icon-light-1

Related Posts

Embracing Connection: Wireless Signs and the Spirit of Togetherness

Trinity and Personhood

I have been teaching a graduate course on the Trinity this semester and it has impelled me to think anew about the Trinity and what the implications of the Trinity…

VOTF

Listen to “An Audience with Ilia Delio” from the Aspen Chapel Retreat.

“An Audience with Ilia Delio” at Aspen Chapel Retreat. Ilia argues that quantum physics and neuroscience are key elements informing our understanding of spirituality and the future of both the…

Screenshot 2024-04-04 at 12.57.11 PM

Podcast Alert: Robert Wright interviews Ilia Delio on “The Cosmic Pierre Teilhard de Chardin”

Robert Wright interviews Ilia Delio on podcast, NonZero. Ilia answers question surrounding the Teilhard solution to the mind-body problem and does AI suggest “nature to nature?”  View print-friendly version