The Golden Sequence

A Fourfold Study of the Spiritual Life

EVELYN UNDERHILL

FELLOW OF KING S COLLEGE, LONDON

1:3 Spirit As Person

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THE mind which has reached this point in its exploration of the strange word Spirit, may well feel baffled by the paradox which confronts it. For how shall the 'tranquil operations of perpetual Providence' be reconciled with those abrupt experiences of an invading Life and Power, of personal and incalculable contacts, which are never wholly absent from the religious intuitions of great souls? Yet it is certain that these contrasting experiences of a Reality that is one—of that Spirit which, as St. Thomas says, 'both brings God to the soul and places the soul in God'—form the warp and weft of a full religious life. Though we must acknowledge a perfect continuity between that Creative Spirit disclosed by the physical universe and the Holy Spirit of Divine Love, yet here we reach an experience which is wholly 'other' and for which no degree of nature mysticism can prepare the soul. Life, as that soul's awareness deepens, is more and more known to be immersed in and penetrated by a living spiritual order. But it is also known to be subject to sudden new incitements, fresh personal lights and

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calls and penetrations, the ceaseless possibility of novelty; as that same abiding spiritual order floods and works upon the stuff of our successive life. It is true that the world is already 'pregnant with God'; yet also true that the key-word of our spiritual life is 'Come'. The 'Power of the Spirit' is no inborn possession of the creature. There is no place where God is not, no situation in which He is not there first; yet something from another dimension called the child Samuel, broke in upon the young Isaiah in the Temple, and on Saul on the Damascus road.

And here, that other name of God which is of all the most surely guaranteed by Christ's own experience and teaching—'our Heavenly Father'—comes with its rich suggestions of a personal action which is the outcome of a personal relationship, to qualify that sense of boundless Spirit which is the ground of natural religion. For this term carries us beyond the awed sense of an unmeasured Reality that is 'wholly other'; even beyond the confident belief in a creative and fostering Presence, as the origin of 'all that is'. It hints at a closer link, a certain profound likeness in nature, a fetter of love, between the 'rapting Spirit and rapt spright'. It 'sets up a relationship within which gifts and illuminations, genuine expansions and enrichments of our small experience, can be conceived as coming to the sense-conditioned creature from the free and generous action of a spaceless creative Power within the soul.

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Veni, pater pauperum,
Veni, dator munerum,
Veni, lumen cordium.

Religion is penetrated through and through by this conviction of human incompleteness; of our dependence on a personal Reality, which can and does make good the insufficiencies of a creature that emerges from the animal yet possesses a capacity for God. The Christian liturgy returns again and again to the thought of something given, sent, poured in from the Transcendent, and makes each sacrament the occasion of a heavenly gift. Rorate coeli desuper! Pour into our hearts love towards Thee ! And though we may surely refer that sense of invasion, even of a shattering impact, which is a character of great transforming moments, to the narrow span of our space-conditioned consciousness; yet this too has its value, in so far as it maintains our sense of dependence on a present yet infinite Power.

So here we turn back from the contemplation of the Mystery of Being to our own situation, which is not less mysterious; our dimly-guessed and yet direct relationship with that unseen, all-penetrating Reality. 'The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God.' Now we begin to consider those elements in our own nature, for which the temporal order cannot account ; and which, because of their subtlety and uneven manifestation, we easily push aside and neglect. And first we perceive that our curious power of

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standing away from succession and judging it to be incomplete, that sense of the whole temporal world as dust and ashes, which is a phase in nearly every full awakening to God, is a part of this witness to our mysterious kinship with the Unchanging. Though we arise within the time-series and are conditioned by it, we know by these signs that we have another citizenship; beyond succession, in the eternal order. Our small created spirits originate with God the Pure Spirit; owe their being to Him, and depend utterly on Him. Were this not so, the human soul could never have reached that realistic experience of the Spirit, which is characteristic of a fully expanded religious sense. God, Who is Absolute Being, is also the Father, Fount, and Origin of souls.

Nor do we mean by such an image to present our relation with Spirit as the relation of a finite something 'here', with an infinite Power 'there' which is yet utterly outside the world; but rather as an unbroken continuity, in the soul's essential ground, between the creature and the absolute creative Love. 'We are all in Himself enclosed', says Julian of Norwich, 'and He is enclosed in us.' In that filial adherence, even though it never rise to consciousness, we can find an explanation at once spiritual and reasonable for those direct movements and incitements of the soul whether felt as steady pressure or as abrupt invasions which are of the very substance of personal religion ; so too those painful purifications by which, once it is awakened,

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it is pressed to establish harmony with the indwelling Power. 'The Spirit', says Caussade, 'keeps school within us, in the soul's ground. He listens and speaks, teaches, moves, turns and moulds it as He wills. Of these workings of Spirit on spirit, the person concerned knows as it seems almost nothing; yet comes from them with certain impressions by which he is completely renewed.' And the same essential truth which is indeed the philosophic sanction of all incarnational and sacramental religion is given in other terms by Von Hügel: 'The central conviction and doctrine of Christianity is the real prevenience and condescension of the real God—the penetration of spirit into sense, of the spaceless into space, of the Eternal into time, of God into man.' Here is a doctrine of the universe which already contains in germ a doctrine of redemption, and a life-history of the human soul. Prophecy and sanctity, Pentecost and Church, can all be resumed under this law; and not these alone, but all intimations of Holiness reaching us through finite things. These are partial exhibitions of one Divine method and act.

Thus we reach a truth of the transcendental order which, once accepted, must transform and control our whole attitude to the natural order. For it means first that we, knowers and beholders of that natural order, cannot fulfil our lives by a correspondence, however perfect, with the natural alone. Nor are we to be explained on evolutionary lines, as merely growing up from within it. 'Spirit' in

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its unearthly beauty, its overwhelming demand, breaks in from another world, which is over against us and yet within us; to possess, purge and transform. And only under its penetrating action and through its indwelling presence can any human life become complete. Moreover, this penetrating action of God takes place, above all, through and in human spirits; and along the paths of the common life. Here is the only territory known to us, in which nature and supernature meet and merge.

'Spirit and spirit, God and the creature ', says Von Hügel again, 'are not two material bodies, of which one can only be where the other is not ; but, on the contrary, as regards our own spirit, God's Spirit ever works in closest penetration and stimulation of our own; just as, in return, we cannot find God's Spirit simply separate from our own spirit within ourselves. Our spirit clothes and expresses His; His Spirit first creates and then sustains and stimulates our own.'

It may well be that on this doctrine of the interpenetration of realities, the practical theology of the future will be built. Nor is it to be suspected as a disguised pantheism. No theologian of the modern world has been more consistent and emphatic than Von Hügel in his warnings concerning the impoverishment and perversion of the religious sense which comes from opening the door to any kind of pantheistic monism. These words are the words of a teacher intensely concerned to safeguard those twin truths of the eternal distinctness of God

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and the derivative being of man, without which we can never hope to construct a sane and realistic, because humble and creaturely, theology of the Spirit.

The pendulum swing of religious experience and religious thought has tended sometimes to overstress one, and sometimes the other, of these twin truths. Sometimes it is God's utter distinctness which is overwhelmingly felt; as when Karl Barth exclaims that He stands 'over against man and all that is human, nowhere and never identical with that which we call God—the unconditioned Halt as against all human action, and the unconditioned Action as against all human rest'. This profound religious intuition, if taken alone, must land us in virtual or actual Deism; and sterilizes the germ-cells of the spiritual life. Sometimes, on the other hand, it is God's immanence in, and total possession of, the soul which is most actual to us; and this, unbalanced by its completing opposite, prepares the way for that pantheism which ever lies in wait for the exclusive mystic. Only the Christian theology of the Holy Spirit seems able to safeguard the deep truths in both these extremes, and by carrying them up to a higher synthesis, to create a landscape wide enough and rich enough for all the varied experiences of the spiritual life. The solemn awe with which we abase ourselves before, the numen is here softened and humanized by the humble and loving response of human nature in its totality to the Divine Nature incarnate in Christ, and there disclosing on the

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narrow stage of history the ultimate mystery of redeeming love. And this outward gaze of faith is saved from a mere hopeless contemplation of the Other and the Perfect by the veritable experience of a Spirit of Love and Will already working 'in closest penetration and stimulation of our own'; a source of energy, and also a personal influence. So here we have three experiences or revelations of God-Spirit, each compensating and enriching the rest. And while every Godward tending soul will perhaps combine them in a different manner, and for none will their outlines be quite clear and neat, there is no healthy life of the spirit in which some response to each facet of this threefold revelation is not found.

So by the Christian doctrine of the Spirit we mean God Himself in His holy reality and love, in so far as these can be known to us: the utter distinctness of His Eternal Being, yet His intimate cherishing care for His whole creation. We do not mean some immaterial energy, the soul of an evolving universe. We mean a substantial Reality, which is there first in its absolute perfection and living plenitude; which transcends yet penetrates our world, our activity, our souls, and draws its transforming power from the fact that it is already perfect. 'Holy' Spirit, transcendent and dynamic, is at once other than our own spirits, other than the 'spirit of nature'; yet felt and known, in its ecstasy of divine generosity, in all the splendours of creation. And because truly living, personal, free, it is most

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sharply and personally known, most deeply operative, in the secret intercourse and discipline of the interior life of man. That Spirit infinitely exceeds while it informs the created; not merely in degree, but also in kind. Even the most feeble and fleeting religious experience is enough to assure us of that. It is not subject to the conditions of the striving evolutionary process, but free and distinct; and therefore able to intervene, pour out dowers of life and light, and reveal actual but unguessed levels of reality beyond the finite structure of the natural world.

Thus the twin names of 'Spirit' and 'Heavenly Father' do give us a sort of picture, imperfect but suggestive, of a Reality which satisfies our metaphysical cravings and is known in the fundamental experience of praying souls. First, the certitude of a most rich and living Fact, yet quite invisible and unearthly; a region of Spirit truly here, and already found in our first steps over the threshold of the sensible, yet stretching away to the unsearchable depths of the Divine life. And next, the penetrating and cherishing character of that World and Presence; so that the impact of its life upon us is also the impact of its love. This double sense of God so near and all-penetrating, so steady in His pressure of the soul towards generosity, purity, nobleness, and yet so far away in His achieved perfection of that same generosity, purity and noblenessthis is the very heart of human religion. And as we hold these two facts together in medita-

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tion—that boundless Reality, in its delightfulness and wonder, this intimate, heart-piercing care—our own world shrinks, the world of daily life and even the greater world of religion; and we know that it only has significance as the theatre of that ceaseless and many-levelled Divine Act. Then, penetrating all those finite facts, both physical and psychological, which make up the environment and conditioning character of our life, we know an Infinite Fact, personal and creative, whose moulding pressure and demands reach us through and in that finite environment to which our natural lives are tuned. For if the lovely natural scene is like a great fresco where we see the breadth and splendour of the thought, of God, the soul is like a little bit of ivory, on which the same Artist works with an intimate and detailed love.

Such a doctrine of the holy, living Spirit's moulding action can never be translated into the terms of 'emergent evolution' or other process: because it is of the essence of Christian philosophy, endorsed by Christian experience, to hold that Spirit is there first. 'With thee is the well of life'—the prime originating cause. Therefore, while Christian philosophy can in a general sense accept and spiritualize the evolutionary account of natural process, it cannot accept as complete the evolutionary account of cause. Beyond and within the natural, it requires the supernatural; if all that has been revealed to it is to be expressed. And even the wholly natural, seen in spiritual regard, reveals in ever-deepening

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degrees a quality which points beyond itself. Thus Gerard Hopkins:

'The World is charged with the grandeur of God.
It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;
It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil
Crushed ...

. . . Nature is never spent ;
There lives the dearest freshness deep down things ;
And though the last lights off the black West went
Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs
Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.'

The warm breast, fount of creative and cherishing life, is turned earthwards : the bright wings, spread out upon another, a transcendent, free, and perfect order of existence, reflect the radiance of Eternity. Surely a wonderful image of the Divine double action, and the Divine double love.

Back to Contents

Next: The Revelation of Spirit

 

 

1906 - The Miracles of Our Lady Saint Mary

1911 - Mysticism

1912 - Introduction to The Cloud of Unknowing

1913 - The Mystic Way

1914 - Introduction: Richard Rolle - The Fire of Love

1915 - Practical Mysticism

1915 - Introduction: Songs of Kabir

1916 - Introduction: John of Ruysbroeck

1920 - The Essentials of Mysticism, and other Essays

1922 - The Spiral Way

1922 - The Life of the Spirit and the Life of Today (Upton Lectures)

1926 - Concerning the Inner Life

1928 - Man and the Supernatural

1929 - The House of the Soul

1933 - The Golden Sequence

1933 - Mixed Pasture: Twelve Essays

1936 - The Spiritual Life

1943 - Introduction to the Letters of Evelyn Underhill
by Charles Williams

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