The Golden Sequence

A Fourfold Study of the Spiritual Life

EVELYN UNDERHILL

FELLOW OF KING S COLLEGE, LONDON

2-1 Created Spirit

page 45

SO now we turn from these scattered and tentative thoughts of God, the Absolute Spirit distinct and all-holy ; standing over against His human creatures, yet intimately present in every fibre of the soul. And we enter on a fuller consideration of our own case. 'My God and all! What art thou and what am I?' said St. Francis. What is man, the derived, created spirit? In what sense is that mysterious word to be applied to our strangely compounded human personality?

It is a platitude that man is amphibious, a creature of the borderland 'set between the unseen and the seen'. He cannot be explained in physical terms alone, or spiritual terms alone; but partakes of both worlds. But, like many other so-called platitudes, this one conveys a stupendous truth which is seldom fully realized by us: the truth of our unique status, our mysterious capacity for God. Man's relation to the animal world needs no demonstration. A stroll round the Zoo reveals plenty of disconcerting family likenesses. A very little introspection dis-

page 46

covers animal instincts, politely disguised, in control of our normal behaviour. In moments of passion, the standards of the jungle still make an irresistible appeal. Physically we rank as a part of that rich and varied natural order, which is brought forth and maintained by the Divine Immanence. Yet on the other hand, we are called to witness to the Divine Transcendence. There is in us a ground and knowledge of Eternity, a thirst for ultimates, a penetrating sense of incompleteness which is the true cause of our secret unrest; whatever the disguises it may assume. A certitude, a dim but real experience of another world and level of life, in contact with our deepest selves, grows with our interior growth. 'So foolish was I and ignorant, I was as a beast before Thee; and yet, I am continually with Thee. Beyond and within the web of temporal circumstance which seems to shut us in, is that steadfast brooding Presence, the Fact of all facts, Who is making us for Himself. Natural man may be subject to contingency, metaphysical man is in the Hand of God : and knowledge of this situation and all it must imply for us, deepens with our increase in spiritual sensitiveness. Anchored to this planet, with our obvious animal affinities and more obvious spiritual obscurities and limitations, we cannot describe ourselves or account for our mysterious situation, without recourse to other-worldly categories. When we penetrate beyond the sensible, we discover in ourselves a substantial life which is non-successive, nonextended ; we perceive ourselves to be derived

page 47

spirits, somehow akin to the holy Spirit of all spirits, God. There is within us at least a crumb, a seed, which belongs already to the order of the timeless; yet cannot achieve its destiny, become fully real, without a gift from beyond itself. And here we find the basis in experience for all that religion means by prayer and grace—prayer, the Godward movement of the soul; and grace, the manward movement of God's Love.'

'Man', says Lionel Thornton, 'cannot evade the ultimate conviction that his true home is in the eternal order; and that his individuality was meant to reach its fulfilment through the transforming activity of that order on his life.' And the first meaning of a spiritual life is, that in it man accepts this marvellous intercourse as the ruling fact of his existence. He ceases to give exclusive attention to the passing, to pour himself out in response to the invitations of sense, and looks towards this, his true being on one hand quietly receiving in his ground the action of God, on the other freely seeking to conform to the eternal order, instead of to the natural series alone. No psychology which ignores this double status and double response of the unstable psyche, poised between eternity and time, can give any intelligible explanation of human action and human desire.

Certainly our conscious hold on this spiritual heritage is still far less clear and certain than our hold on our physical heritage. Our powers have been developed in close contact with the senses, and

page 48

by the pressure of the physical world, with its constant stimulation of the instinctive life. Clear correspondence with the other order must be the prerogative of a minority of souls, acting in the interests of the race. We may note certain facts, certain recurrent experiences, though we know little about them ; and may seek to combine and present them under images. But we do this, not because we have any hope of reaching ultimate truth in these matters, but in order to tell souls how to act. All descriptions of the spiritual life are thus tentative and symbolic. They are road maps, not representations of reality. We move with comparative safety step by step; but we risk mountain sickness, if we raise our eyes too often to the awful landscape that surrounds us. For our minds are so made that we can only realize Spirit vaguely and in patches; and only by the deliberate use of symbolic speech can give precision to our awareness. When we ascend in prayer to the soul's summit, we find we have come up to the frontiers of another life, in respect of which we are dependent, needy, dumb and dim of sight. Yet this abjection and this poverty are the very conditions of our happiness and wealth.

Veni, pater pauperum.

So here Religion is justified in her insistence on the blessed state of the childlike and the humble: her constant reminder that what matters supremely is not our own exact degree of understanding, but the

page 49

hold which the spiritual order has on us, and the power which flows from it through surrendered and self-oblivious personalities. In other words, in the great strange work of man's spiritualization the initiative ever lies with God and His Spirit, not with us. His priority is absolute. We realize, then, why the life of the spirit so often begins in a sense of personal incompleteness, of dependence and need: and why man's progress in spirituality, his interior growth, is felt at its deepest far more as a response to that Spirit's incitement than as a deliberate ascent to new levels of life. It is, in fact, an opening of the door of the finite to the Infinite Love, an increasing surrender to the subtle pressure of that Power 'which ever lifts and bears us'; not a self-actualized adventure of the independent will and heart, a pilgrim's steady progress from 'this world to that which is to come'.

'Unto Him who is everywhere', says St. Augustine, 'we come by love and not by navigation.' Talk of the 'Mystic Way' and its stages, or the 'degrees of love', may easily deceive us unless the Divine immanence, priority, and freedom be ever kept in mind. We may think of the soul's essential being as ever lying within the thought of God; and, equally, of His creative love as dwelling and acting within that soul's ground. These are contrasting glimpses of that total Truth 'of which no man may think'. And the true life of the spirit requires such a gradual self-abandonment to that prevenient and all-penetrating Presence that we become at last its

page 50

unresisting agents; are formed and shaped under its gradual pressure, and can receive from moment to moment the needed impulsions and lights.

Veni, lumen cordium.

Here we find a place for that mysterious attraction or compulsion which is perhaps the most striking of the ordinary evidences of the Holy Spirit's action on souls. The persistent inexplicable pressure towards one course—the curious attraction to one special kind of devotion or of service—the blocking of the obvious path, and the opening of another undesired path—all these witness to the compelling and moulding power of the living Spirit; taking, and if we respond, receiving the gift of our liberty and our will. This indeed is what the spiritual life has always seemed to the greatest, humblest, and most enlightened souls; whatever symbols they may use in their efforts to communicate it. It is God, vividly and intimately present in all things and in us, ever setting the demand of His achieved Perfection over against the seething energies of His creative love, Who works in and through that world of things on us. And He demands our entire subjection to His creative action, our endurance of His secret chemistry; that He may work through and in us on the world. We matter and our transformation matters, only in so far as we and it contribute to God's total purpose—the only thing that matters at all. This is the double truth which colours and harmonizes all the various

page 51

strands of man's religious life, and finds intimate and detailed expression in the facts of conversion, vocation, and guidance. For by this secret action, so little understood, the fluid and changeable nature of man, at first conformed to that natural series within which our lives arise, is gradually subdued to the purposes of the Unchanging; to become at last a channel of Absolute Life, an agent of the Creative Will. The Psalter and the Christian liturgy, in which so much of that life is crystallized, and which possess the deep and genuine realism of all great works of art, are full of allusions to this absolute dependence; this confident hold on the Unseen, and its redeeming, cleansing action on the soul.

'O God make speed to save us. Lord make haste to help us. ... Prevent us Lord in all our doings; further us with thy continual help. Raise up, we pray thee, thy power and come among us . . . that we may daily be renewed by thy Holy Spirit . . . that so we may be made partakers of the divine nature. . . . For with thee is the well of life and in thy light, we see light;. . Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts, by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit. . . . Without thee we are not able to please thee. . . . Assist us with thy grace. . . . what great troubles and adversities hast thou shewed me! and yet didst thou turn and refresh me; yea, and broughtest me from the deep of the earth again.' In these constantly repeated phrases, once their

page 52

profound realism is understood, we can hear the authentic voice of the human spirit. Like a recurring melody, they bind the Divine Office in one; and make of it the supreme expression of the Godward confidence of men.

Back to Contents

Next: MAN NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL

 

 

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

COPYRIGHT

As far as I have been able to ascertain, all of these works are now in the public domain. If you own copyright in any of these, please let me know immediately and I shall either negotiate permission to use them or remove them from the site as appropriate.

DCW