The Pandemic Mirror

The coronavirus has thrown the world into a tailspin. The closure of schools and stores, the dramatic spike in unemployment, the precipitous fall of the stock market and talk of recession has created a global climate of panic, anxiety, fear and depression. It is not unlikely that the rate of suicide will rise, as despair sets in. While Facebook posts of friendship, poems, and “we’re in this together” posts are helpful, reassuring us in the moment that we are not alone, the fact is, feelings of existential loneliness and isolation abound. College students now completing their courses online at home express anxiety, loneliness and feelings of being disconnected from friends and social relationships, the stuff that makes college life memorable. This may be the first time in the history that graduation is online. Life has become dystopic and we are not sure if technology is our friend or our foe.

It is difficult to look existential threats in the face and rationally discuss outcomes. The truth is the future is unknown and unpredictable; things make get a lot worse before they get better, or things may get better temporarily, or simply remain in the flux and flow of uncertainty. What is even more alarming is that we are waiting for this crisis “to pass” so that we can return to “normal.” We anticipate that life will continue “as usual” once we find a vaccine for COVID19. But what is “normal?” And here is perhaps the biggest reality staring us in the face, we have no social, psychological, spiritual/religious, political or economic tools to deal with breakdown, chaos and disequilibrium that mark our present age. We have become so thoroughly conditioned by the modern framework of individualism and Newtonian mechanistic systems, objective, controllable, manageable and profitable systems, chaotic disorder seems like a surd, a defect to be quickly remedied.

Sure, the internet connects us and we can connect on Facebook but at the end of the day we still feel alienated, for we have constructed a world where we are alone together. Our institutions—especially education and religion–have denied us the necessary means to live in a world of evolution and complexity. Christianity insists that original sin is our problem, Jesus is our solution, and a place above earth called heaven is our destiny. The University has become the locus of hyperspecialization, drilling down to the details of one’s particular discipline, sending graduates into the world completely unprepared to think in a world of hypercomplexity. So what is the “norm” that we are expecting to return to?    Norms are expressive of stable systems, closed systems, predictable systems where the rules are known. We now live in a world of open systems, where the rules can change spontaneously, where breakdown and chaos are part of waking up in the morning, where new things can arise spontaneously, without warning or overt signs (like the coronavirus).  How to live in a world of chaos and find peace, purpose and happiness must be the heart of discussions, if we are to survive in the 21st century.

It is time to embrace our new reality; medieval Christianity is bankrupt, Newtonian systems are deadly, and individualism is an illusion. Evolution is speeding up, like an Acela train, and we are standing still in the middle of the tracks. The fastest evolver today is technology and Ray Kurzweil’s dream of the Singularity, the merger of biology and machine, seems more appealing today than ever before. Yet for all the good the internet affords us during these days of lockdown, we miss human relationships. We are social beings by nature and religious beings as well, for God springs up in joy, beauty and wonder, precisely in and through relationships: “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (Matt 18:20).

Maybe one of the gifts of the present moment is the invitation to return to the inner self, the personal core of our unique personhood. The current crisis is creating conditions for a new type of desert spirituality. Just as women and men in the early church went out to the desert to fast and pray so as to be transformed in the love of God, so too we are being impelled to return to the deserts of our hearts. While we are all sitting at home, plugged into our devices, hoping to connect with the wider world, we may be missing the opportunity to come to grips with ourselves. “Lack of self-knowledge,” Bonaventure wrote, “makes for faulty knowledge in all other matters.” Our contemporary technoculture has created exoskeletal selves, selves melded with electronic devices; we find it difficult to unplug and watch the breath of our own being-in-stillness. Yet to do so can liberate us from the institutional God of dogmas and canons and return us to the living God of evolution. Here we will find a different type of God, a God who is at home with change, chaos and breakdown. God is the name of over-flowing life, the name of Future, and one who lives in God knows oneself to be free and oriented toward the future fullness of life.

One of the insights from desert spirituality that has perdured through the centuries is the spirit of poverty. Francis of Assisi was deeply impressed by the spirit of poverty and taught his followers to live sine proprio, not necessarily without material things but without possessing anything. The modern autonomous individual has learned to possess everything, creating conditions of separation and division; but life in the flow of God calls us to live sine proprio, in the spirit of dispossession. The modern autonomous individual is frightened by dispossession because dispossession equals powerlessness. But this is what Saint Francis realized, material things can create an illusion of power that can vaporize by the snap of a virus.  One who needs God will find all that one needs.  As Saint Teresa prayed, “God alone suffices.” This is not spiritual pep-talk; this is the deepest root of our reality. Nature lives sine proprio because nature is sympoietic; it exists within layers of deep interconnectedness and flowing boundaries. Nature is not “red in tooth and claw” but group gatherings, communal sharings and naturally-occurring co-ops. The outdated Neo-Darwinian notion of survival of the fittest (grab what you can for yourself) undergirds our consumeristic, economic system of buying life at any cost. We will perish under these conditions unless we return to the roots of nature and rewire ourselves to be part of nature. For we belong to nature; nature does not belong to us.  The simplest forms of life will survive us because they live to be themselves and no other, as Thomas Merton wrote, “a tree does nothing more than be a tree, and in being a tree, it gives glory to God.”  The spirit of poverty is rooted in nature.

Teilhard de Chardin anticipated breakdown in the 20th century. He saw the inability to grasp evolutionary convergence as the basis of annihilation. “Unify or die out” was a theme running throughout his writings on religion and evolution. The Omega Center is committed to bringing a new paradigm of sustainable evolutionary life into focus and to help realize this new paradigm by shifting the religious, political and economic sails of our lives. We have to rebuild our sense of personal, religious, social and political identity for a world of change and complexity, a world in evolution and technoevolution. It is not only possible; it is the most exciting time in the history of our existence.

Yes, death is real; there is suffering and we will continue to suffer. But in the inner room of the heart, there is an unyielding of power, a mysterious depth to our lives, who is known by various names: God, Presence, Compassion, Love or simply Being. The name is the way we relate to the mysterious depth of our lives and hence the life of the whole; for the depth of each of our lives is the depth of the whole of which we are a part. Our challenge in the 21st century is learning anew how to live in the whole.

As we consider who and what we are in the mirror of the coronavirus pandemic, we can ask, who are we and what do we hope for? If we think as small, puny individuals, we create a small, puny, individualist world that cannot survive. If we think as holons, smaller wholes who are part of larger wholes, we think in terms of participation, evolution and future. One can almost hear the author of Deuteronomy at this point: “I have set before you life and death; choose life” (Dt 30:15). We have a chance to rewire ourselves for a new existence but we must begin to live in a new way.

Here are some tips gleaned from the wisdom traditions that can enlighten our choices. Live each moment as if it were the last because eternity dwells in every breath; live sine proprio not counting possessions but counting the gifts of the moment; forgive out of an abundance of goodness because the future is our only reality; love without regret, trust the power of divine presence within, and live to the point of tears. God is the name of life’s dynamic flow, oriented toward the moreness of life, the future. Where there is God, there is change and where there is change, there is future life. It is time to let go of Newton’s world of predictability and the notion that we will return to “business as usual.” There is no “usual” and the rules of what is normative have been dispensed. We are in a global breakthrough in evolution and if we want a different world, we must become a different people.

 

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15 Comments

  1. Gregorius kukuh nugroho on March 31, 2020 at 7:26 am

    Thank you for your deep and profound reflection… God Bless… Greetings from Indonesia ??



  2. Sister M.Sujita, SND on March 31, 2020 at 12:51 am

    Thank you Ilia for that heart-warming and impelling call to ” return to the deserts of our hearts.” We Indians would say, “the cave of our hearts” where we will discover our own true inner self and the Eternal Self! May corona virus be the open door that leads us to the ever changing and renewing ocean of Transforming Presence and fullness of life for all. Thank you, Ilia!



  3. Rosemary Ferris on March 27, 2020 at 7:26 pm

    So grateful to be living at same time as you, Ilia. Wow, God, thanks for lending us Ilia!!



  4. kevin barr on March 27, 2020 at 8:29 am

    i placed a comment/reflection earlier this week. It was received and I confirmed it for appearance and comments bit it has never shown.
    Was there something else that I needed to do?



  5. Donald Wallace on March 26, 2020 at 7:39 pm

    Yes, I love your remark of not being possess by power, material, and fear. The future in looking forward not back to the normal. I feel and have found God’s presence giong forward mixing with nature.



  6. kevin barr on March 25, 2020 at 10:37 am

    Sr Ilia,
    Love your ongoing call for the evolution of a shift in consciousness from scarcity, unworthiness, and fear.
    Each of these perspectives and emotions are fed by “the great lie of Individualism” (a phrase often used by Richard Rohr).

    In Isaiah we hear –
    I AM doing something NEW (in the midst of this Pandemic)
    Now its Springs Forth (today.. this moment.. Not only when the economy improves)
    Do You Not Perceive it! (for we must both perceive it and be prepared to receive it for “it” is Love, unitive energy and consciousness, grace) and that won’t happen as long as our conditioned egoic thinking continues to dominate.

    Sr Ilia… you are always talking about the need for us to BECOME… become new, become who we are meant to be, become aware, whole, the observer from a greater level of mind…
    Buddha tells us … “What we think. We Become.” We are not our thoughts yet when our fear-based thinking dominates our lives we BECOME FEAR.

    Check out this transformative reflection “FEAR” by Khalil Gibran. Let us turn our gaze away from becoming trembling fear and to open our hearts and minds and BECOME the OCEAN. Enjoy!

    IT IS SAID THAT BEFORE ENTERING THE SEA A RIVER TREMBLES WITH FEAR.

    SHE LOOKS BACK AT THE PATH SHE HAS TRAVELED,
    FROM THE PEAKS OF THE MOUNTAINS, THE LONG WINDING ROAD,
    CROSSING FORESTS AND VILLAGE.

    AND IN FRONT OF HER, SHE SEES AN OCEAN SO VAST, THAT TO ENTER THERE SEEMS NOTHING MORE THAN TO DISAPPEAR FOREVER.

    BUT THERE IS NO OTHER WAY. THE RIVER CAN NOT GO BACK.
    NOBODY CAN GO BACK. TO GO BACK IS IMPOSSIBLE IN EXISTENCE.

    THE RIVER NEEDS TO TAKE THE RISK OF ENTERING THE OCEAN.
    BECAUSE ONLY THEN WILL FEAR DISAPPEAR.
    BECAUSE THAT’S WHERE THE RIVER WILL KNOW
    IT’S NOT ABOUT DISAPPEARING INTO THE OCEAN, BUT OF BECOMING THE OCEAN.

    FYI – Isn’t this a call for us to become (like the early Christians) people of “the Way”, a new, evolving process of trusting, loving ,becoming…. ONE!



    • Ilia on March 29, 2020 at 4:19 pm

      Yes Kevin. This is very true. Christian life is a life of becoming – what we become must be in tune with what God is doing. And from what science is telling us, God is doing amazingly new things.



  7. Elizabeth Stamp on March 24, 2020 at 7:58 pm

    May we lovingly embraced the Divine within our souls, respond communally in unconditional love in justice. Peace can be found in chaos; lessons learned as we evolve as a new species caring for the environment and all creation. A new spirituality coupled with the truths that are emerging through the scientific community creating a new cosmic way of BEING. Humanity and all creation shall be centered in the Cosmic Christ.



  8. Gwen Nowak McGrenere on March 24, 2020 at 5:13 pm

    Humanity needs Ilia’s grounded / transcendent wisdom to trust and fulfill the ancient promise – and now the hope – that “darkness will not overcome light”. I am very grateful to be able to share Ilia’s vision with family and friends. Another visionary on a similar trajectory is Douglas Rushkoff. His latest book is TEAM HUMAN.



  9. Danielle Julien on March 24, 2020 at 9:27 am

    Thank you Ilia. Keep writing, thus helping us to rewire ourselves for the new which is knocking at our doors.



  10. Benjamin Hoch on March 23, 2020 at 5:19 pm

    Thank you, Ilia. Your prophetic voice rings true.

    “It is time to embrace our new reality; Medieval Christianity is bankrupt, Newtonian systems are deadly and individualism is an illusion.”
    “…we are being impelled to return to the deserts of our hearts.”
    The Neo-Darwinian notion of ‘survival of the fittest’ is outdated and we face great peril if we continue to follow it.
    “If we want a different world, we must become a different people.”

    I pray that we somehow move closer to the truth of these words. Amen.



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