The Inner Divine: Re-Thinking Revelation

By Michael Morwood

Comments by Rosemary Gray-Snelgrove

As happens sometimes, this edition of A Bigger Circle is written by a guest blogger – Michael Morwood – who at this point does not know that you are each being invited by me to read his work! This has been published in cyberspace, so it is intended for as wide a circulation as it can find.  

It was sent to me today by Brian Shaunessy of the Sunday Community at the Paulist Centre in Toronto.  It seemed so refreshing to me, on this hot hot summer day, that I wanted you to have a chance to feel the same fresh breeze.  It comes from a Roman Catholic source. Of course, many among us are not Catholic, not Christian, not of a religious bent at all. And some are comfortably atheist.  

But even if not engaged in any religious practice, the thinking put forward by Michael Morwood here presents an understanding of a path being grasped, more and more confidently, by many.  Some people who were or have never been embedded in traditional doctrines are discerning a way of listening to the holy voices of their tradition – in a way that fits with our psychological understanding of who we are.  And that I think can be freeing and soul-enlarging.

In this perspective, Morwood hears the message of Jesus Christ in a way that moves aside from dogma. I claim that it’s not only Jesus but the great teachers of every faith who have left a legacy that can be rediscovered to the benefit of persons and the cultures within which we live. That legacy isn’t what has been encrusted with authority, power and regulation. It is simply what lies at the beating heart of life – love of self, of others, of life, of the earth, 

Michael Morwood says it without the sentiment!   I hope that you too find it hopeful.

Re-thinking “Revelation”

by Michael Morwood on 06/29/14   (will try to find the full reference and sedt it to you)

 

Vatican II never questioned the traditional understanding of “Revelation” .  It is most likely that no bishop since Vatican II has questioned it either. It is truly an amazing state of affairs that given the extraordinary wealth of scientific knowledge showered upon us in the past fifty years, that no voice has been raised or has been permitted to be raised in the Catholic Church suggesting it is time to rethink how  “Divine Revelation”works. And I do not want to suggest that Catholicism is alone in this.

The traditional understanding of “Revelation” requires belief in a God, external to our world, who intervenes from wherever this God is thought to be located. As recently as 1992, The Catechism of the Catholic Church presented the world with the understanding of God wanting ‘to compose the sacred books’ and choosing ‘certain men’ to write ‘whatever he wanted written and no more’ (#106)

In the worldview of more than two thousand years ago, the prophets heard their heavenly-based God ‘speak’ to them the message God wanted ‘his people’ to hear. The prophets spoke with certainty and intensity: ‘Thus said the Lord God to me ‘¦ This is what the Lord God wants’¦  The Lord of hosts has sworn ‘¦ Woe to the rebellious says the Lord ‘¦ For thus says the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel’¦’Thus says the Lord God’ is repeated over and over in some of the prophetical books. (e.g. Jeremiah, chapters 30-32)

Today when we are not imagining ‘God’ as an external heavenly deity, but rather as the mysterious source and sustainer of everything that exists, present and active everywhere, we are challenged to turn our understanding of “Revelation” upside down or back to front, or better,  from out to in. In other words, we should consider that the ‘voice’ the prophets heard did not come from an external source, a God in the heavens, but from internally, from the mysterious source of all, present, embedded, active within them, as it is in every human.

Another phrase that some of the prophets, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Joel and Micah, use, may help us embrace this shift in thinking:  ‘The Word of the Lord came to me’¦ ‘ Today we can imagine that the teaching, the path to be followed, came from personal reflection, from a moment of sudden insight, or in one of those waking from sleep moments when something dawns with surprising clarity or from a deep inner conviction or ‘knowing’ as in ‘I just know, don’t ask me how, that this needs to be done or I need to do this.’

The word we commonly use for this phenomenon is ‘intuition’, a way of perception and knowing that is like an inner voice, an inner guidance. Carl Jung wrote that, ‘Intuition enables us to divine the possibilities of a situation.’   Perhaps we could play with his words and say, ‘Intuition enables us to know the divine possibilities of a situation.’

From this perspective we can see that “Divine Revelation” is within all of us. We can move from the traditional understanding that it comes from an external source and that it is granted to a privileged few or a privileged group. This thinking, of course, is not acceptable to the institutional custodians of “Divine Revelation” who consider they have a God-given mandate to let the world know the thoughts and opinions of an external deity.

Jesus knew better. He knew what was in people. He wanted to free people from whatever prevented them from knowing what he knew and experienced. Only with such freedom could ‘divine possibilities’ ever shape the future of humanity.

Albert Einstein wrote, ‘The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.’

If we could learn to understand “Divine Revelation” in the way suggested in these paragraphs, religion could regain, treasure and promote the sacred gift, and help all people come to know what Jesus wanted everyone to know: the ‘divine voice’ is within all of us.

 

3 Comments

Filed under A Bigger Circle, Rosemary's entries

3 responses to “The Inner Divine: Re-Thinking Revelation

  1. elizabethsherk

    I do not have the source of my response here with me at RockPineandSunlight House, “Nurtured by Love” by Dr. Shinichi Suzuki.
    But in my work as a Suzuki Teacher we are admonished by this great humanitarian, teacher and musician from Post World War 2 Japan to cultivate the skill of kan–Kan is intuition, the skill that makes it possible for a string quartet to start together to play together and to bring the quartet to a graceful end together.

  2. Karen

    Thankyou for this concise and beautiful way of understanding intuition, and freeing it from the context of tradition and accepted wisdom it is a free gift to all!

  3. Diana Buck

    When I listen to my intuition/heart, I am fine. When I don’t…..Heaven help me!
    We as humans need to drop the religious differences and simply ‘vibrate’ on the same frequency. The frequency of LOVE.
    Nice piece.
    Diana

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