The Golden Sequence

A Fourfold Study of the Spiritual Life

EVELYN UNDERHILL

FELLOW OF KING S COLLEGE, LONDON

4-1 The Span of Prayer

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WITHIN the living experience of the soul it is impossible to separate the spheres of purification and of prayer; for this breaks up the solidarity of that Godward life of man, which is at the same time an ever-renewed movement of abandonment, an intercourse, and a transformation. The life of prayer, in its widest and deepest sense, is our total life towards and in God; and therefore the most searching of all the purifying influences at work in us. It is the very expression of our spiritual status, a status at once so abject, and so august; the name of the mysterious intercourse of the created spirit with that Uncreated Spirit, in whom it has its being and on whom it depends. We are called, as the New Testament writers insist, to be 'partakers of the Divine Nature': and this is a vocation which shames while it transforms. So prayer may be, and should be, both cleansing and quickening: by turns conversation and adoration, penitence and happiness, work and rest, submission and demand. It should have all

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the freedom and variety, the depth and breadth of life; for it is in fact the most fundamental expression of our life. And though it is and must be developed by means of a deliberate discipline, and through the humble practice of symbolic acts, these only have importance because they set free the will from unreal objectives, and help our whole being to expand towards God.

In all its degrees, from the most naive to the most transcendental, and in all its expressions from the most simple and homely devotional acts, to that passive waiting on the Spirit, 'idle in appearance, and yet so active', which is called by Grou 'the adoration most worthy of God'—the very heart of prayer is this opening up of human personality to the all-penetrating and all-purifying Divine activity. On one hand, we acknowledge our need and our dependence; on the other the certain presence of the supernatural world, the Patria ever in intimate contact with us, and our own possession of a seed, a supernatural spark, which knows that world and corresponds with it. Thus all progress in prayer, whatever its apparent form or achievements, consists in the development of this, its essential character. It must nourish and deepen our humility, confidence and love; and thus set up and maintain an ever more perfect commerce between the soul's true being and that Being in Whom it lives and moves. This is why, in the concrete reality of the interior life, prayer and purification must always go hand in hand.

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For this mysterious intercourse, so crudely and so casually practised by us, so little understood, places our souls conditioned as they are by succession and contingency at the disposal of that immanent Spirit of God which indwells and penetrates our life, and yet transcends succession and contingency. It is a movement out towards absolute action; man the ever-changing acknowledging the presence and reality of the Changeless, and adhering to It in trustful love. This communion with the Supernatural then, whether active or passive, interceding or adoring for all these are the partial expressions of one rich and various correspondence is the religious act, the religious state par excellence; the very substance of a spiritual life. The apparatus of institutional religion, its verbal and visual suggestions, its symbolic acts, are intended to evoke, nourish, organize and direct it. The form it will take in any one life, will depend on that soul's particular situation and type; the prayer itself, whether active or passive, corporate or secret, will always consist in a profound and active correspondence with the Spirit, more and more recognized as the inspiring cause of all we do and are. Devotional words and deeds, meditation, aspiration, recollection and the rest, are there to help us to evoke and maintain this, which alone matters; to steady the vagrant imagination, give us suitable suggestions, teach and tranquillize our souls. In meditation, says Sunn, we go to God on foot; in the prayer of affection we go on horseback;

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in the prayer of simple recollection we sail in a good ship with a favouring wind. The essential thing is that we should undertake the journey; that the soul's face should be set towards its home.

Yet, because prayer is indeed a supernatural act, a movement of spirit towards Spirit, it is an act which the natural creature can never begin or complete in his own power. Though it seems to him to be by his own free choice and movement that he lifts up his soul towards God, it is in truth this all-penetrating God, who by His secret humble pressure stirs man to make this first movement of will and love. The apparent spontaneity, the exercise of our limited freedom—genuinely ours, and most necessary to the soul's health—are yet entirely dependent on this prevenient and overruling Presence, acting with power and gentleness in the soul's ground. Progress in prayer is perhaps most safely measured by our increasing recognition of this action, the extent in which Spirit 'prays in us' and we co-operate with it: till, in the apparently passive and yet most powerful prayer of the great contemplative, the consciousness of our own busy activity is entirely lost in the movement of the Divine will, and the soul is well content to 'let Another act in her'.

But having said this, we must at once add that here, as elsewhere in the spiritual life, the action of God is always felt to deepen, stimulate and direct the self's own action—never to abolish it! The 'holy passivity' of the extreme quietist is

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coma, not contemplation.

Refer my note in the previous chapter. The last sentence adds little to the sense of the passage except a repetition of the invective we have come to expect in this area of her experience. See also, "limp dependence" in the next paragraph.

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Again and again experience endorses the axiom of St. Thomas: 'God's grace and man's will rise and fall together.' And if by 'grace' we mean, as we should, the actual self-giving of the immanent Divine Life, the personal, manward-tending, love and will of God; then prayer, from the human side, begins with man's response to God's incitement. It is the movement and expression, part-effort, part-surrender, of his Godward-tending love and will. 'A certain impulse of the will tending to God with all its strength ', says Malaval, is the first point of real prayer.

This means that even the most passive prayer shall never be a state of limp dependence. Concealed within its quiet is a vigorous and yet humble co-operation with Spirit's ceaseless action; sanctifying and sensitizing our spirits, and turning them to the purposes of Eternal Life. Though all that really matters is indeed done to us and not by us, and we realize this more and more fully as the life of prayer proceeds and deepens our creaturely sense, the 'marvelous intercourse between finite and Infinite' is a genuine communion. It demands the deliberate use of our initiative and will. Acknowledging that we can do little, we must yet do all that we can: be alert to look, listen and adhere. The asking, seeking, knocking of the Gospel, are surely the successive stages of an action 'which at last takes all that we have of determination and desire; a deliberate 'drawing nigh' to that only Reality, the Father and living Ocean of all life—

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ever ready to pour in on the creature who desires Him, and proves its desire by an exertion of the will, an opening of the soul's door. This is why the great masters of the spiritual life attach so much importance to the form of mental prayer which is known as ' forced acts of the will ' ; a spiritual and psychological discipline which is often laborious and fatiguing, but unequalled in its power of bringing the reluctant will into ever closer conformity with the Will of God. For real prayer is a mutual act. It is that correspondence between our dependent spirits and His Absolute Spirit, worked partly by grace, but also partly by our wills, which is our mysterious privilege as living children of the Spirit of all spirits, God. This deep communion, this ' prayer which is ceaseless ', continues without interruption in the ground of the loving soul.

It is true that in the advanced degrees of prayer, the action of the will is chiefly realized as a total movement of surrender, a mere placing of the soul in God's hand; and the further deep action which follows this surrender is always felt to be the action of God, rather than that of the soul. Hence the exaggerated language of some contemplatives about 'ceasing to act'. But this language really describes their own overwhelming sense of the Divine activity; as the salmon going down-stream might feel itself wholly passive in the powerful current that sweeps it to the sea. Yet the salmon must do some steering, if it is to make the voyage

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in good order; and maintains itself in the torrent by a thousand subtle movements of adjustment and response. So too that willed surrender, that faithful adherence, which maintains the contemplative in prayer, is itself an action which makes great demands upon the soul—an active and passive co-operation, minute by minute, with the subtle pressures and incitements of God. The Indian teachers of Bhakti devotion describe two ways in which the finite spirit may be abandoned to the Infinite Life : the 'Way of the Cat' and the 'Way of the Monkey'. In the first, the soul is like a helpless kitten in the mother-cat's mouth, carried to safety without any effort on its own part. In the second, it cleaves to God with all its might, like the baby monkey clinging to its mother's breast. The full creative energy of prayer is found in those who follow the monkey-way.

As we are nearest facts when we think of Spirit in terms of Creative Will, so too prayer in its wholeness is best understood in terms of will and intention. Therefore the special form and kind of prayer developed by any one soul matters very little ; and distinctions based on the use of set words, the practice of meditation, the degree of abstraction from images, have little more importance than distinctions of custom and dress. All that is required of any 'degree' of prayer is that it should be the unstrained response of the praying soul to its true light and vocation ; and so bring it into ever more complete harmony with the immanent Divine will.

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And since the vocation of each soul within that great symphony differs, and all are needed for the complete expression of the thought of God, we need not be surprised by the wide diversities, or even the apparent contradictions in attrait and in practice, which are found in the world of prayer. We are not to criticize our neighbour's monotonous performance on the triangle, censure the first violin's deliberate silence, or look dubiously at the little bit of score we have received. All contribute to one only music; and this alone gives meaning to their prayer. 'This it is that I ask and desire', says Thomas a Kempis, 'that I may always laud and praise thee.' Some will do this above all in the upward glance of an adoring worship, some by a more intimate love, some by the small offerings of a devoted industry.

Yet something of all these responses of spirit to Spirit must enter and mingle in the full Godward life of every awakened soul; as the hymn of the Sanctus, the act of Communion, and the prayer of oblation, have each their necessary part in a perfect Eucharist. For the first gives us realism and awe, protects us from pettiness: it maintains and nourishes the transcendental sense. 'Cease the beholding of yourself and set yourself at nought, and look on Me and see that I am God.' The second warms and strengthens that close personal adherence which is the heart of a spiritual life; enriches awe with deep tenderness, and makes the praying self more and more supple to the delicate

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pressures of the indwelling Power. The third redeems our prayer from selfishness, and gives to it its special place and function within the mystical body which is built of praying souls. And each of these responses, will have its active and its passive form; and often the two will alternate within the self's experience. For passive prayer does not consist in abnormal states of soul, or peculiar feelings. It is simply that deep movement of surrendered love, that muted music, in which our own small action is more and more subordinated to the living Charity of God.

If we turn from this great vision to our own poor practice, and ask what that is or should be, we find that the span of man's actual prayer, his total Godward aspiration, stretches from the extreme of a crude and child-like demand, to the extreme of a disinterested and undemanding adoration, offered to 'God Himself and none of His works'. At one end, we acknowledge our utter and detailed need and dependence on Spirit—our creaturely status—and turn with an instinctive confidence to the 'hidden richness which can meet that need in all its forms. At the other end, the soul's innate passion for Reality flames out, in awed and delighted worship of the holy loveliness of God. And between these terms, one so homely, and one so august, there is no point at which the intercourse of spirit with Spirit cannot take place.

It is easy for a hurried or fastidious fervour to point out the clear superiority of that worship which

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'means only God', and discredit all petitionary prayer. Certainly this is the most primitive and instinctive of all the movements of the soul, and the one that may most easily be tainted by selfishness. Yet a loving and confident relation with our Home and Father, an entire trust in the intimate loving kindness of the Unseen, a deliberate laying hold on the forces of the spiritual universe, is declared by Christ to be the first point of efficacious prayer. And being small and limited in resources and understanding, we must manage this the best way that we can. 'Ask and ye shall receive . . . every one that asketh receiveth. . . .' Not perhaps the expected answer to its petition; but a disclosure and gift of Spirit, penetrating and transforming our situation, with all its needs and desires. Therefore 'what matters here is not the thing demanded, the poor range of our asking, but the trustful, childlike temper of the soul; its straightforward relation to God. Where this relation is set up, a new factor enters human experience. Man is in personal and filial touch with that Transcendent Life which penetrates and engulfs him; and because of his acknowledged dependence and confident expectation, he becomes capable of its gifts. For the indwelling Spirit, in His creative freedom, must reach down to, and touch, every need and relationship of His creation. Indeed, He is already present within those relationships those we call little and those we call great in the ceaseless activity of His flexible love. Thus the soul deliberately bringing in the

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Divine factor, appealing to it with a realistic trust, does effect a genuine change in every situation so treated ; even though the change may not be apparent on the visible surface of life. So petition or 'impetration' is the naive expression of a real relationship: all that Origen meant, when he said that 'the Christian life is a prayer'.

It is true that the actual prayer of demand, like all man's religious activities, is a symbolic and dramatic act. We cannot escape this judgement, when we consider the relation of that battering on the doors of heaven, that desperate wrestling with the Spirit to which we are sometimes drawn, with the God Who is 'present everywhere and at all times' and works in tranquillity within the soul. Yet this urgent and trustful petition, crude though its expression may sometimes be, is the beginning of realistic and efficacious prayer; and one of the most significant of all the movements of man's spirit. The open beak and expectant trust of the baby bird are a tribute to the mother's faithfulness and love; an acknowledgement of fact. So, in this ever-renewed movement of supplication, this waiting on God, we express that deep sense of the infinite Generosity on which we depend and our own poverty and need over against it, which is the very heart of man's religion: tempering the awe-struck worship of the Holy by a confident appeal to the Father and Shepherd of souls. As the child said when she first heard the Te Deum, ' the splendid bit is where you change the gear'.

Back to Contents

Next: Adoration

 

 

 

 

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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DCW