SUCCESS AND THE TRUE SELF

The highest norm of human life is the divine law –

objective/universal/eternal – by which God

governs the whole universe and the human community

with a plan conceived in wisdom and love.

 

But Bernard Lonergan’s greatest criticism  

of the old/dogmatic theology

was its exaggerated notion of the objectivity of truth

and its corresponding neglect of the subject, the self

particularly since in the recent history of thought

Hegel/Kierkegaard/Nietzsche/Heidegger/Buber

emphasized the importance of subjective truth.

 

According to Carl Jung, “individuation” is the process

of continually finding parts of our subjective self that were lost –

this refinding of the whole self/True Self

is what the parables of the lost coin/lost sheep/

lost prodigal son were really about –

Jesus was way ahead of modern psychology.

 

The “prosperity gospel” sees success as the sign

of God’s blessing, but success is never what your True Self

is really about/never the real goal of the journey of life –

success only feels good/right temporarily

and then it is gone – all things must pass – except God.

 

After the Second World War everyone wanted to blot out

of their consciousness that disaster which pointed out the lie

of the liberal ideology of eternal progress

by highlighting our capacity for total depravity –

so everyone got into success and upward mobility

and to accommodate this we developed a culture

of choice not obligation – there were no longer any

religious or social obligations – there was no longer any pressure

from others to be religious – it became a choice not an obligation –

and many chose to be spiritual but not religious.

 

Once we were old enough to make conscious acts of love

our life became a never-ending series of choices

between our false self with its selfish ambitions for success

and our True Self with its loving consent to

God’s Mercy

despite our lostness and total depravity

which the True Self includes and transcends.

DOWN-TO-EARTH SPIRITUALITY

The process of becoming human

involves moving from idealism to realism/reality

from sky to Earth/to life in the real world –

we don’t have to be perfect

or stoically deny our emotions.

Travelling through the many layers of consciousness

contained in the psyche can be painful/confusing/frightening

but trusting in God’s love

can keep us on the path

to discovering God’s amazing life within us.

 

Neoplatonists promoted a flight-from-the-world spirituality

whereas Aquinas and Eckhart (who inherited

the philosophy chair of Aquinas in Paris)

taught an in-this-world-here-and-now spirituality.

 

The New Testament word for the compassion

of Jesus means “his bowels turned over” –

Jesus was in touch with his guts/feelings/passion/earthy life.

 

For Thich Nhat Hanh, the well-known Buddhist

the life of Jesus is his most basic teaching –

Jesus lived exactly how he taught –

so, imitating the life of Jesus

is more important in God’s eyes

than believing in airy-fairy concepts

like eternal life after you die –

life in God/eternal life begins now

in this life in this world.

 

But Christianity is inherently dangerous

when it lives in this world because it demands

self-sacrificing love and active compassion for the poor

which automatically puts it in direct conflict

with those who value competition and success above all else –

the Masters of the Universe who worship

the Money-god/Mammon

of our western culture.