The Golden Sequence

A Fourfold Study of the Spiritual Life

EVELYN UNDERHILL

FELLOW OF KING S COLLEGE, LONDON

4-4 Action

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'GOD', says Pascal, 'has established prayer, in order to communicate to His creatures the dignity of causality.' He delegates to our half-grown spirits something of His own power and freedom; allows our wills, under His incitement, and in union with His own, to originate action upon spiritual levels, exert influence within the web of circumstance. Christ's teaching about prayer emphasizes its energetic power; and suggests that we by our confident action evoke a responsive movement from the enfolding spiritual world. This is intercession; that creative prayer which crowns the life of adoration and communion. For the goal of this life can never be a sterile beatitude, a 'divine duet' between God and the soul. It must always point beyond itself. Even the purest prayer of adoring contemplation and self-mergence needs for its justification the whole economy of that spiritual universe within which it arises, to which it contributes, and by which it is fed.

For the aim of soul's self-giving to Spirit, and Spirit's possession of soul, is that the soul may expand, become more deeply living and creative,

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and be woven into that spiritual body, the Invisible Church, through which the work of the Spirit is done. The great liturgic action of the Church Visible, its ceaseless corporate life of intercession, self-offering, adoration, only has meaning as the outward expression of this mystery of 'the Spirit and the Bride'. And on the other hand, the personal life of prayer only has its meaning, because it is part of that great life-process, of which the limits are unknown to us, and which is bringing in the Kingdom of God. And hence, its full exercise is only possible where the Divine Charity purifies and possesses the soul. As adoration led on and in, to a personal relationship of communion and self-offering; so, from that entire self-offering and not otherwise there develops the full massive and active prayer in which the human spirit becomes in a mysterious way the fellow-worker with the Holy Spirit of Creation; a channel or instrument through which that Spirit's work is done; and His power flows out to other souls and things. The dynamic Love of God, moving secretly and quietly within the web of circumstance, finds in the man of prayer the most subtle and powerful of its tools.

'Thou hast made us for Thyself': not only to be worshippers but to be workmen. The will transformed in charity, and united with that power of God which indwells our finite spirits, can and does reach out by supplication, by immolation, by suffering, or by a steady and a patient love; to rescue, heal, change, give support and light. In and through

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it is manifested some small ray of the saving and redeeming power of God. That is real intercession; a spiritual activity which is entirely misunderstood by us, if we think of it merely in terms of petition. For real intercession is in the last resort a part of the creative action of God, exercised through those created spirits which have achieved a certain union with Him. And it requires for its real and safe exercise that temper of humble worship, and that habitude of docile correspondence, which the life of adoration and communion develops in the soul. Only a will that is purified and nourished by the indwelling Spirit and confirmed in the humble knowledge of its own dependent state, can recognize those quiet pressures which indicate the path its intercessions should take, and subordinate its work for souls to the overruling Divine Will: preserved from perverse desires and vagrant choices by its meek and adoring inclination towards God.

For as there is a counterfeit devotion which ministers to spiritual self-interest and self-love, and is content with a greedy enjoyment of the sweetness of prayer; so there is also a counterfeit intercession, which may be merely the disguised exercise of a vigorous but unsurrendered will not self-given for the promotion of the Divine purpose, but demanding the fulfilment at all costs of its own desires. This, and this only, is open to the common accusation of 'trying to change the mind of God'. For here the aim is not a self-abandoned collaboration in His unseen purpose, the conveyance of grace or healing

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in accordance with a hidden design; but the achievement of self-chosen ends, the particular success, conversion, rescue, or recovery on which our determination is set.

It is even possible that such a vigorous action of the will under the form of impetration may achieve its object, and snatch a dubious triumph; as our wilful intervention on the physical plane may sometimes enjoy an undesirable success. But this effective employment of our psychic energy is not to be claimed as an 'answer to prayer'; and is not necessarily in accordance with the Spirit's will. The mysterious power of mutual influence is little understood. But at least we know that it can operate on many levels, some of them less than spiritual; and in many directions, not all of which may lie in the direction of the Mind of God. That this should be possible is inherent in our limited freedom, and brings with it the capacity for going wrong, and even perhaps for doing harm. There may therefore be real danger in the persistent exercise of a strong and unmortified will, an obstinate choice, a passionate craving, under the appearances of prayer. It is clear, for instance, that the fervent and competing supplications born of national or sectarian intolerance, which demand with complete assurance the failure or success of military operations, the triumph of opposite doctrinal views, or the conversion of individuals from or to a particular Christian Church, cannot all be the work of the Spirit Who 'prays in us and above us'. Yet these

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acts of will make their contribution to our invisible environment; and in proportion to their vigour may produce certain effects upon the psychic atmosphere.

It is true that in so far as any desire, however crude or mistaken, is really lifted up with confident trust into the spiritual realm, it is thereby cleansed and made safe; and may, in proportion to the praying soul's docility, be transformed into a channel of grace, unrecognised perhaps as an 'answer' yet truly the response of Spirit to the Godward movement of the soul's desire. For here there has been an appeal to the Holy; a virtual acknowledgement of its priority, which involves real subordination to its Will, even though the prayer itself be little better than a yelp of anguish or an desperate appeal for relief. And by this very fact, the situation, however little understood by us, is changed; subdued to the influences of the supernatural world, and rought into immediate contact with the 'power of God to salvation'. This is possible because intercessory action is always in the last resort the action of the Spirit using the human creature as its tool.

But this means once more that the will transformed in Charity, the desire which has been brought to Gesthemane and subordinated to the purposes of the Spirit—fusing all petitions in the great Fiat of surrendered love—is alone fully effective and entirely safe. So the final purification in love of the human spirit and the full achievement of its peculiar destiny as a collaborator in the Spirit's work, must go together; obverse and reverse of the unitive life.

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Then the soul's total prayer enters, and is absorbed into, that ceaseless Divine action by which the created order is maintained and transformed. For by the prayer of self-abandonment she enters another region; and by adherence is established in it. There, the strange energy of will that is in us and so often wasted on unworthy ends, can be applied for the world's needs—sometimes in particular actions, sometimes by absorbtion into the pure Act of God.

For all real prayer is part of the Divine action. It is, as St Paul says, Spirit that prays in us: and through and in this prayer exerts a transforming influence upon the created world of souls and things. But the path and method of this deep essential prayer may vary between the saint's entire self-immolation for the world's sin, and that symbolic battering at the doors of heaven. that agony of petition by which many sould actualise their ardent desire. All the apparatus of verbal intercession, with its lists and litanies and intentions, is meant to deepen and give precision to that intercessory life which shall gradually include in its span all the deeds, renunciations and sufferings of the soul; and is itself a small part of that redeeming life by which spirit purifies nature and makes it susceptible of God. Thuis the object of intercessory action may be general or particular, spiritual or physical. It may concern the most homely or transcendental levels of life: the fulfilment of little hops or of great ideals. Or it may seek without ceasing that restora-

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tion to wholeness of life of the diseased or the sinful, which must always lie within the will of the Creative Love.

For the prayer of a wide-open and surrendered human spirit appears to be a major channel for the free action of that Spirit of God with whom this soul is 'united in her ground'. Thus it seems certain that the energy of prayer can and does avail for the actual modifying of circumstance; the renewing of physical health; the refraining from sin; and that its currents form an important constituent of that invisible web which moulds and conditions human life. It may open a channel along which power, healing or enlightenment go to those who need them; as the watering-can provides the channel along which, water goes to the thirsty plant. Or the object achieved may be, as we say, 'directly spiritual'; the gradual purifying and strengthening, and final sublimation of the praying soul, or of some other particular soul. In all such cases, though much remains mysterious, the connexion between prayer and result does appear as the connexion of genuine cause and effect. Living as we do on the fringe of the great world of Spirit, we lay hold on its mysterious energies and use them in our prayer. We are plainly in the presence of that which Elisabeth Leseur called 'a high and fruitful form of action, the more secure that it is secret', and only limited by the power and purity of our faith and love.

There is, on the other hand, an intercessory prayer which seems to have no specified aim. It is poured

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out, an offering of love, in order that it may be used; and this is specially true of its more developed forms in the interior life of devoted souls. As spiritual writers say, its energies and sufferings may simply be 'given to God', added to the total sacrificial action of the Church. It may then do a work which remains for ever unknown to the praying soul; contributing to the good of the whole universe of spirits, the conguest of evil, the promotion of the Kingdom, the increased energy of holiness. Such general and sacrificial prayer has always formed part of the interior life of the saints; and is an enduring strand in the corporate work of the Church. It may be done by way of a secret immolation of the heart, by a routine of ordered petitions, or by the solemn ritual of vicarious suffering. It may capture and consecrate all the homely activities of daily life, and endue them with sacramental power. When St. Teresa founded the discalced Carmelites, it was not to promote the culture of individual souls; but in order that the corporate hidden prayer and sacrifice of these communities might generate power, combating in some degree the wickedness she saw in the world. It was of this aspect of prayer that Cardinal Mercier spoke, when he said in one of his pastorals, 'Through an ever closer adherence to the Holy Spirit in the sanctuary of your soul, you can, from within your home circle, the heart of your country, the boundary of your parish, overpass all earthly frontiers and . . . intensify and extend the Kingdom of Love.' As the rhythm of Christ's life

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went to and fro between adoring prayer upon the mountain and the manifestation of the Divine redeeming power in the world, so these two movements should form the rhythm of the life of prayer. For only such a double life can express our double relation to Spirit; the entire dependence on that which is higher than our highest, and the faithful mediation of that which is nearer than our most inward part.

It is true that many phrases of the great masters of prayer, taken alone and out of their context, seem entirely to exclude this spiritual action of one soul on other souls, for and in God; and make the life of prayer consist entirely in adoration and adherence. But this contradiction is only apparent: and is simply a vigorous statement of the obligation to put first things first. The adoring surrender of the soul to God, and even a certain union with the immanent Holy Spirit, forms the one essential foundation of all intercessory action. For this action depends primarily, not on the intensity of our sympathetic interest, our psychic sensitiveness, the sustained energy and confidence of our demands, or our telepathic power—though all these may contribute to its effectiveness—but on a profound and selfless devotion to the purposes of the Divine Charity. Even in the crudest, most naive act of prayer, the soul lays itself open in some degree to that overruling Divine action; and this movement, initiated by God, is completed and used by Him. Thus the action of God and the soul collaborate in different

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ways and degrees in every prayer. 'Feelings', 'experiences' and all the rest, fade into insignificance before this most solemn privilege of men.

Here we are surely face to face with one of the great mysteries of that spiritual world in which our real lives are lived; one of the ways in which, as Newman said, we can already 'share the life of saints and angels'—those ordained distributors of the love and power of God. We cannot understand it, but perhaps we grasp its reality better if we keep in mind two facts. The first is, that all experience proves that we are not separate, ring-fenced spirits. We penetrate each other, influence each other for good and evil, for the giving or taking of vitality, all the time. 'Souls, all souls', said Von Hügel, 'are deeply interconnected. The Church at its best and deepest is just that—that interdependence of all the broken and meek, all the self-oblivion, all the reaching out to God and souls. . . . Nothing is more real than this interconnection. We can suffer for one another. No soul is saved alone or by its own efforts.' This accessibility, and this changefulness, is at once our weakness and our strength. And this interaction of souls, this mysterious but most actual communion, depends for its life and reality on God, Spirit, the immanent creative life, Who penetrates and indwells us all, working in and with us. We are all linked in Him. Therefore it is literally true that the secret pressure of the Eternal is present in all movements of mutual service and love.

And the second fact is, that the value and reality

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of our souls is at least as much social as individual. We do, and must, reinforce each other; make good each other's weakness. Each saint has something to give which adds to the glow of all saints: and only by self-loss in that one radiance can make his own life complete. We are woven together, the bright threads and the dull, to form a living tissue susceptible of God, informed by His infinite, self-spending love. 'We have soon', says Von Hügel again, 'reached the limit of what we ourselves can ever become: it is in joy for the others, for the countless constellations of the spiritual heavens, it is only there but even there, at bottom, because of God, the Sustainer and fulfiller of all that splendour that our poor hearts and wills find their peace.'

Thus, intercession is the activity of a spirit which is a member of this living society, this fabric of praying souls penetrated and irradiated by God-Spirit. For this membership gives to each unit a special quality, vigour, power; a power only given in order that it may be used and shared. Its essence is not the activity of the little soul over against Spirit, but the action of Spirit through and in the little soul self-given to the Spirit's Will. Here we reach the real dignity of the creature, and the very object of the life of prayer: it is able to convey God because it has become susceptible of God. We see this again and again in the lives of the Saints. In the arrogant Sienese scholar, asking the girl Catherine with an insulting pretence of reverence for her prayers, and brought in two days by their steady pressure

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to an abject and heart-broken penitence. In the Curé d'Ars, drawing to himself and then vanquishing the malice of invisible powers. In the transforming action of Christian philanthropists, whose lives are given to the Spirit's will.

Hence all effective intercession depends on the one hand on the keeping alive of the soul's susceptibility to God, its religious sensitiveness, by constant self-openings towards Him and movements of humble and adoring love; and on the other hand, on keeping keenly alert to the needs of the world; through an untiring and informed pity and sympathy, 'a wide spreading love to all in common'. Only a charity poured out in both directions can become and remain a channel of the Spirit's Will. And such a vocation in its fullness means much suffering; a bearing of griefs and a carrying of sorrows, an agonized awareness of sadness and sin. For the great intercessor must possess an extreme sensitiveness to the state and needs of souls and of the world. As those who live very close to nature become tuned to her rhythm, and can discern in solitary moments all the movements of her secret life, or as musicians distinguish each separate note in a great symphony and yet receive the music as one whole; so the intercessor, whether living in the world or enclosed in a convent (for these are only differences in technique) is sensitized to every note and cadence in the rich and intricate music of the common life. He stretches out over an ever wider area the filaments of love, and receives and endures in his own person the

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anguish of its sorrow, its helplessness, its confusions, and its sin; suffering again and again the darkness of Gethsemane and the Cross, as the price of his redemptive power. For it is his awful privilege to stand in the gap between the world's infinite need and the treasuries of the Divine Love.

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Next: Conclusion

 

 

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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