Surely a classic, though, curiously, unfamiliar to many people
who aspire to live a spiritual life, The Spiritual Life (Morehouse
Publishing, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) is a small book which originally
appeared as a series of four broadcast talks delivered by Evelyn
Underhill prior to World War II. Underhill has an extraordinarily
broad and deep appreciation of the histories, literatures, and
theologies of many religious movements. She wrote several masterful
studies, including Worship and Mysticism, which are exhaustive
in scope and judiciously balanced in objectivity.
In this compact work, the English author's object "was to
present some of the great truths concerning man's spiritual life
in simple language; treating it, not as an intense form of other-worldliness
remote from the common ways and incompatible with the common life,
but rather as the heart of all real religion and therefore of
vital concern to ordinary men and women." In this reviewer's
estimation, Underhill has admirably and eloquently achieved her
objective.
Although admitting that the "spiritual life" is a dangerously
ambiguous term, Underhill makes short work of disposing of that
ambiguity. It is not "the life of my own inside," nor
necessarily something very holy, difficult and peculiar-"a
sort of honors course in personal religion." The essence
of the spiritual life, seen through the "wide-angle lens
of disinterested worship," is being in Being. The author
observes, "We mostly spend our lives conjugating three verbs:
to want, to have, and to do-craving, clutching and fussing,"
thus keeping us in a state of perpetual unrest and dissatisfaction.
But released from our self-referential context, our personal ups
and downs, our desires, grasping, and agitation are seen as small
transitory facts within a vast, abiding spiritual world lit by
a steady spiritual light.
The spiritual life becomes a conscious fact for us when we realize
that the tendency of all life is to seek God, Who made it for
Himself; that ultimate security is secured only by gaining a hold
on the eternal; and that there is in each of us that which is
also unchanging and which finds its true home and goal in God.
The spiritual life is not something specialized and intense, "a
fenced-off devotional patch rather difficult to cultivate and
needing to be sheltered from the cold winds of the outer world...On
the contrary, it is the very source of that quality and purpose
that makes my practical life worth while." The spiritual
life does not consist in mere individual betterment, or in assiduous
attention to one's own soul, but in "a free and unconditional
response to that [Holy] Spirit's pressure and call, whatever the
cost may be." And that call transcends the question "What
is best for my soul?" and even the question "What is
most useful to humanity?" It addresses the ultimate question,
"What function must this life fulfill in the great and secret
economy of God?" God comes first, we are His creatures, His
instruments. He is the controlling factor of every situation,
religious or secular. It is only for His glory and creative purpose
that we exist.
A spiritual life, then, is one in which all we do comes from the
center where we are anchored in God and self-given to the great
movement of His will. "Our spiritual life is His affair...It
consists in being drawn, at His pace and in His way, to the place
where He wants us to be, not the place we fancied for ourselves."
The spiritual life is based on communion with God. It becomes
a conscious fact when we acknowledge our spirit as an unfinished
product upon which the creative action of God is constantly working.
We awake to and in spirit, gradually or abruptly, and may hear
spoken or speak the equivalent of "God only." We have
glimpses of one living Perfection and, desiring it, see also the
costly response it demands. From our finite center we long for
infinity, but could and would not did not that incomprehensible
Beneficence stoop toward mankind and incite and support and strengthen
its seeking.
The two means by which conscious communion is pursued are mortification,
killing the roots of self-love, and prayer, turning toward the
living Reality and establishing a continual conversation with
It. Prayer "is really one's whole life toward God: our longing
for Him, our 'incurable God-sickness,'" as Barth calls it.
Nor shall we know peace until our communion with Him is at the
center of our experiential life.
Underhill distills man's right relation to God into three words:
adoration, adherence, and co-operation. We cling to the Invisible
in the visible and regard the Unseen as the most real of all realities.
Adoration is the "atmosphere within which alone the spiritual
life can be lived." Hallowed be Thy Name; not "described,
or analyzed be Thy Name. Before that Name let the most soaring
intellects cover their eyes with their wings, and adore."
In adoration we widen our horizons and drown our limited interests
in the total interest of Reality, redeeming our souls from religious
pettiness and giving them richness, depth, and breadth. Every
aspect of our practical life can become part of this adoring response,
from peeling potatoes to waiting for a bus.
The deepening communion with God calls for complete and confident
adherence. An attitude of humble and grateful acceptance, a self-opening,
an expectant waiting is the second essential point in the development
of the spiritual life. If we approach Divinity out of a sense
of spiritual poverty, we will be spiritually enriched. But no
communion is possible for the one ostentatiously dressed in self-esteem,
for "the dew of Grace" can not pass through the veneer
of him whose righteousness is self-given. The Spirit of spirits
draws us with irresistible power to and by His Love and we adhere
to Him as iron is drawn to a magnet.
When we co-operate with God, we "pull our own weight."
The theological axiom "Man's will and God's grace rise and
fall together," is translated into practical terms by our
learning to will God's will. He made us in order to use us, for
His purpose, not ours. We are not only His handiwork; we are at
times His tools. Our goal is that all merely self-willed choices
and obstinacy be drained out of us and that our work become more
and more God's work in us. Then, as agents of the creative Spirit,
we transform our homely activities and harmonize our everyday
actions with our spiritual outlook and impersonal utility.
Our glimpses or intuitions of Perfection painfully contrast with
our sense of imperfection and unworthiness. Yet, by God's grace,
we want to co-operate. We volunteer. We become compliant. "Here
am I." Which means going anyhow, anywhere, at any time. We
are enkindled by a will ours, yet not ours. We become transmitters
as well as receivers. Real co-operation always entails sacrifices,
and therefore suffering.
Complete self-giving to Spirit produces three distinguishing characteristics
in human souls: tranquillity, gentleness, and strength-which implies
an immense depth and an invulnerable steadiness as the soul's
abiding temper. While fuss and feverishness and every kind of
hurry and worry "are signs of the self-made and self-acting
soul, the spiritual parvenu; tranquillity, gentleness, and strength
manifest the threefold imprint of the spirit on souls surrendered
to God's great action." Such souls equably endure the rising
and falling of religious temperatures and the myriad upheavals
of inner and outer circumstance.
Underhill concludes her wise and beautifully expressed exposition
by answering a few questions which detractors and sceptics often
raise as obstacles to embracing the spiritual life. She dispatches
these objections with quick, clear-minded intelligence. We may
say to God, "Thou hast made us for Thyself, and our hearts
find no rest save in Thee." And we concur with St. Augustine
that "God is the only Reality, and we are only real insofar
as we are in His order, and He in us." Nevertheless, what
is asked of us, writes Underhill, is not necessarily a great deal
of time devoted to what we regard as spiritual things, but the
constant offering of our wills to God by trying to give spiritual
quality to every detail of our everyday lives. "It is the
constant correlation between inward and outward that really matters."
"Many people seem to think that the spiritual life requires
a definite and exacting plan of study. It does not. But it does
require a definite plan of life; and courage in sticking to the
plan, not merely for days or weeks, but for years."
The Spiritual Life is one of those rare books which may be taken
up again and again, each time providing fresh insight and inspiration
for whomever is earnestly seeking to live the spiritual life.
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