The often
silent cry
During
February, Australian theologian David Ranson
gave a two day seminar to the bishops and
congregational leaders of Aotearoa New Zealand.
In this digest of his talks David explores
the connection between the spiritual hunger
of our age and the church’s
mission to share its experience of Jesus Christ
The new spirituality
One of the ‘signs of the times’ today
is a renewed sense of the need for prayer in the
lives of ordinary people. This desire for a spiritual
component in life seems to be growing all over the
Western world. A recent Roman document speaks of “the
often silent cry in people’s hearts”:
it is clearly something the church needs to respond
to. Practising Christians, therefore, should be happy
to share their experience of Christ with others.
Our personal prayer life should have a constant eye
on the needs of people and not just be self-centred.
At the same time David Ranson
warns us to be on our guard to the counterfeit
forms of spirituality which are also rife:
Spiritualism – a
fascination with the occult which
especially flourishes where there
is a climate of powerlessness.
Pietism – an amplification
of religious practice which is
really a form of defence mechanism.
The people involved avoid engaging
with the real world. Again, this
may be a symptom of powerlessness.
New Age Commercialism or ‘super-market
spirituality’. In place of
a church wedding, for instance,
people ‘go shopping for a
life-enhancing experience’.
None of these ‘-isms’ will
lead us closer to God.
The criterion of an authentic spirituality is: does
it take us away from the needs of the world – or
does it lead us back into the world. The Australian
writer David Tacey has an image of a river in flood.
In the Alice Springs area a dry riverbed can be transformed
overnight into a turbulent torrent. This provides
a beautiful image of the new spirituality which contains
within it great potentiality.
But the flood bears with it
a lot of dirt, froth and rubbish. The new spirituality
may contain much which is infantile and needs
to be filtered out. Nevertheless, formal religion
needs to hold dialogue with these new movements.
We should respond by being alert to this “silent
cry”, at the same time remaining firmly
rooted in the basics of our own faith.
What is spirituality?
The Greeks held a dualistic view of the universe.
Spirit is immaterial and is quite distinct from
matter. To be ‘spiritual’, therefore,
means to become unworldly. This is a Platonic notion,
and it has been very influential in the Christian
prayer tradition.
The Hebrews, on the other hand,
saw ‘spirit’ as that which is living,
energetic, vitalising. It is simply that active
principle which enlivens matter. If we follow
the Hebrew insight we can define spirituality
as that which keep us awake and alive
and more aware of our relationships – with
people and with God. Paul uses a different
metaphor but is saying the same thing basically
when he writes that we should be “children
of the light”. On this view, spirituality
is a normal part of living in the world.
Events which awaken us and stir
us into action are what Peter Berger calls “triggers
of transcendence”. Bernard Lonergan notes
a cyclic rhythm in our lives. The first stage
is attending ie. becoming alert to
the signs of the times and to events which
arouse us spiritually. The second is to inquire,
using one’s intellect and asking questions;
thirdly, to interpret what is going
on; finally to act on the information
and impulse we have received.
The religious elements of this cycle are the second
and third stages, when they happen in a framework
of faith.

Lonergan calls this the transcendental
imperative: he suggests that if any
stage is absent we will ‘fall asleep’ spiritually.
Bringing spirituality
and politics together
David Ranson is insistent that the spiritually alert
person needs to become involved in public life. Society
as a whole requires external triggers to render it
spiritually alert and awake. It is not difficult
to fit the Cardijn methodology of see/judge/act into
the above frame. First we must listen, which
means being alert to the signs of the times. If Christian
action is to be a spiritual experience, then we must
be motivated to act – to act with love. The
true Christian listens with love. It is
that which triggers social action.
Often, however, humans cannot
cope with too much reality. They prefer to
hide behind their prejudices and be dulled
into inaction. They become spiritually ‘asleep’,
ceasing to be spiritually alive and active.
Their love becomes stunted.
Johannes Metz suggests that
what stirs us to action more than anything
else are so-called “dangerous memories”.
These are memories of suffering which remind
us where things have gone wrong in the past.
In this way we do not close our eyes to the
injustices of the world; indeed, we become
more alert and see and hear more.
He calls it a “mysticism
of open eyes”. The questions we need
to ask are how we feel about the sufferings
of others. Do we acknowledge the plight of
marginalised people? Are we awake to their
sufferings? Will we be moved to act on their
behalf? Then it is no longer merely a memory.
It becomes present and drives us to action.
It becomes an imperative of God. We receive
a mission.
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Leonardo Boff takes
this one step further still and places the
whole process in the context of the Blessed
Trinity. The Trinity itself becomes our ‘social
strategy’. The Trinity is the eternal
image of how we are created to live together,
to depend on each other and relate to others.
We are destined to live together simply because
we exist. God is the God of eternal hospitality.
Evils such as dominance, cruelty and exclusion
cannot coexist with that divine value. Human
life is made by God to be collaborative and
relational.
The Kingdom of Heaven
Unless we understand the Trinity we cannot understand
what Jesus meant by the Kingdom of Heaven.
The Kingdom is the incarnation of the Blessed Trinity
in our earthly society. Yet the Kingdom is elusive:
it doesn’t enter through the front door;
it comes in through the cracks. The Kingdom does
not overwhelm us; it infiltrates into our lives.
Healing miracles are a good
example in the Gospels. When Jesus heals someone,
the Kingdom infiltrates. It transforms death
into life, shame into dignity, fear into love,
deafness into receptivity. In a word, Jesus
is transforming the whole of society by his
message and actions. He changes isolation into
community and domination into mutual service.
The Kingdom touches the predicaments of ordinary
living. Even in the economic sphere, when sheer
profit gives way to co-operation, the Kingdom
is happening.
The most spectacular examples
of this transformation happen with marginalised
people. Their exclusion ceases when they are
touched by the Kingdom, and once again they
are brought to belong. They are acclaimed as “first” by
Jesus. They are first in the Kingdom of Heaven.
To summarise the lesson we learn from this:
• it is in the world especially that I
meet God;
• ascent to God happens through descent into
the world;
• prayer simply becomes for a Christian a new
way of listening;
• all this transformation leads us to a sense
of HOPE.
Our religious tradition in relation
to spirituality
Bernard Lonergan showed above how the spiritual and
religious aspects of our belief system form a single
cycle. It is important, he asserts, that the religious
moments of inquiring and interpreting do not happen
too soon in the process, otherwise spiritual awareness
becomes blocked. There can be a schism, so that the
religious aspect becomes rigid and dogmatic, and
the spiritual withdraws and becomes disdainful of
the religious.
The two aspects need to remain distinct but
not divided. They are like a tree. The canopy
interacting with the environment represents
the spiritual side. The religious side, the
roots, provide spirituality with a solid anchor.
Religion exists to be a service to spirituality,
not a dictator. Therefore religion should be
in continuous conversation with spiritual experience.
In that way the religious truth emerges. The
encounter of Christ and the disciples on the
road to Emmaus is a good illustration. The
spiritual experience of the two disciples,
their loss and their pain, is put into religious
context by the Risen Christ. The conversation
they have on the road helps the disciples to
recognise the truth and their hope is restored.
And they act at once to share their experience
with the Apostles.
Those seeking religious meaning need to be
aware of certain disciplines. Thus it is important
for the critical mind to distinguish clearly
what are the central questions and what is
the baggage inherited from the past needing
to be discarded. The imagination sometimes
needs to be allowed a free rein, so that the
spirit can search below the surface of things.
The spirit is like a midwife, seeing the divine
within the human and bringing it to birth.
Poetic language and imagination is important
in the expression of faith. Paul Ricoeur said
that ethics need to be served by poetry. The
poem doesn’t dictate what has to be done,
but suggests how something may happen.
A religion which lacks poetry can become dead.
Poetry allows for subtlety of meaning and for
a sense of transformation.
Poetry is valuable not just because it is
expressed in beautiful language. Beauty, as
a value, can be dangerous if it does not allow
for the paschal reality of suffering. There
is no beauty in simply having to endure evil.
An example of truly Christian ‘beauty’ is
the fidelity of a spouse caring for a dementia
patient.
Spiritual leadership: the ‘shepherd’ image
Jesus Christ proposed the shepherd to us
as a model. In a First Century context that would
be truly shocking. Shepherds were poor, often dirty
and were treated with contempt. They spent their
summers out in the pastures. They came back to the
village in the winter living in the meanest dwellings.
When they returned, petty theft in the village went
up.
Yet this is who Jesus chose – a marginal
character without power or prestige in society.
This model is clearly countercultural. It is
not a charism of power, but of care and concern.
The ‘shepherd’ is to be with us
in our hurts and problems.
All spiritual leadership starts in a climate
of grief. The religious leader comes
to the people in their need. He/she resists
the illusory images (like those in our media)
which seduce us. The shepherd gives the people
back their truth and invites them to a new
form of humanity by articulating for them their
grief.
The shepherd lives by hope. The
whole gospel message that Jesus brings is that
love will triumph in the end, that fear will
be driven out and that we are commissioned
to celebrate the Divine presence among people.
This leadership model demonstrates the sympathetic
nature of God. Mercy, in Hebrew, means ‘the
womb’. It is more than pity; it is creative
love of giving birth. Mercy is the pain endured
to bring the dead back to life. Mercy rejoices
in the light, but understands darkness.
There is nothing especially new in all this.
It is founded on Jesus’ own words in
the Gospels. It was spelt out in detail hundreds
of year ago by Meister Eckhart in his theology
of the Trinity. And it is a vitally relevant
answer to the spiritual hunger of our own age.
Fr David Ranson teaches theology at Catholic
Theological Union, Sydney |
Farmers’ Market
There’s an
air of excitement and purpose about the
much-photographed Dunedin Railway Station
on Saturday mornings.
Hundreds of people armed with boxes and
carry bags converge on the platform and
station yard to fossick
and browse and compare prices – and carry away
the freshest produce a foodie could wish for. The
old hands arrive early – but not as early as
the stallholders who have been setting up since six
a.m.
The Dunedin Farmers’ Market has become a social
occasion which makes good economic sense, a place
to take visitors, to meet the growers, to have the
first coffee of the day with a freshly-baked goodie,
to revel in the bounty on offer.
"It all started,” says manager
Lesley Cox, “with a group of people who
wanted to do something to rejuvenate the southern
end of town and thought a market would be a
good idea. The original plan was to hold it
in the Exchange area and develop but that wasn’t
possible. Then someone suggested the Railway
station – it was the right idea at the
right time. Farmers markets around the world
are gathering momentum. We are under the auspices
of The Otago Farmers’ Market Trust, a
charitable trust with the assistance of staff
and volunteers.
“I started here four years ago selling.
I had a small nursery, but in winter my plants
went underground and you can’t sell what
you can’t see! When the previous manager
resigned I thought I could do that job, so
I applied for the position – and here
I am.
“On an average Saturday we have between
60 and 65 stalls. There are 110 sellers registered
but a lot are seasonal. A good core of them
are here every week right throughout the year.
What the sellers appreciate is getting a very
large public in a short time.
“The first benefit to growers and sellers
is financial. Orchardists would sell their
fruit to a wholesaler or a supermarket and
receive a pittance. One seller told me he was
getting 30 to 40 cents a kg for his apples.
The supermarket might sell them for $3 to $4
kg. He sells them here for $1.50 – and
he gets the lot.
“One of our vendors was told if he ‘went
to this market thing’, he would be blacklisted.
He came here and has done well. We are not
so big, and we open only one morning a week.
I think the supermarkets have learned to live
with us. But every time there is a new product
here at the Market I think: that’s something
else I don’t have to buy at the supermarket!
“Whoever is selling a product here has
grown it, or raised it, pickled, preserved,
baked, smoked or caught it themselves. It is
not permitted to buy in someone else’s
product and sell it. So the public can talk
to the seller and learn how a particular produce
is grown; what sprays have been used; what
the animals have been fed on. People like to
know that.
“You shop according to what’s
in season and plan your menu once you’re
here. Appearances can be deceiving: that strange
shaped cucumber might just be the result of
fewer sprays.
“The market fosters a sense of curiosity
in the buyer: so what is celeriac and how
do you cook it? You get to taste something
you’ve never tried before. You might
even discover how to tell the gender of an
aubergine!”
Pat Harrison has been a regular at the market
since the very first day. “Three things
particularly appeal to me,” Pat says. “First,
the busy atmosphere of people who come regularly
and who relate so well to the sellers. It’s
an atmosphere of happy relationship between
buyer and seller.
“Secondly, the produce is so colourful.
And there are some quite colourful personalities
too among the stall holders! Thirdly, it provides
the opportunity to buy fresh fish, vegetables,
meat and fruit. The food has been grown and
nurtured by the seller.
“I also enjoy seeing young people shopping
there – the students arriving on their
bikes to shop. I like the fact that it has
not allowed itself to grow and lose its intimacy.
You find arts and crafts shops in adjoining
streets. It’s a true farmers’ market.
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“Modern society
has tended to concentrate too much on the individual.
Whereas at the market you see a true community
in operation and you feel its spirit. It takes
you back to the days when shopping was largely
a person to person encounter.
“The supermarkets have largely destroyed
that atmosphere: they negate any sense of intimacy.
They’re totally impersonal. Sometimes
they are built close to each other to encourage
people to ‘graze’ for the specials – as
if we were nothing better than sheep! The Farmer’s
Market helps to restore a sense of humanness.
“The entertainers, the musicians and
the jugglers all have a place especially when
the weather is good. I just like it. That’s
why I go”
Another market regular, Mary Young, agrees: “It’s
the fresh produce which attracts me. If I buy
courgettes at the market I know where they
come from. But in the supermarket – God
knows where they come from. They may be flown
in from Australia. They’re fresh here – and
they are grown by the seller. “I can
get organic produce here – meat, vegetables
and eggs. “I buy different cuts of meat
from the organic meat producer, and he will
sometimes give me hints how best to cook it.
He also has smaller cuts for people who live
on their own. At first I fully expected to
pay more. But in fact you pay less. Apples,
for instance – all varieties, are much
cheaper.
“I enjoy shopping here – it’s
a people place. In the supermarket you never
stop and talk – you spend your time dodging
other people’s trolleys. But at the market
you stop and chat with complete strangers.
One day I met someone from Tauranga, who had
visited lots of markets. But he liked the Dunedin
one because it wasn’t just boutique type
stalls. It was selling genuine local produce.
“Some stalls are quite different, like
the man who sells English porkpies. And you
find special chocolate, tea, wine, olive oil – specialist
goods. Once again, the person selling to you
is the producer. I enjoy chatting to Olivier
who grinds and blends his own coffee: he always
has a joke. I like to shop around and support
the small growers.
“Another interesting thing – the
market attracts as many men as women. They
seem to know what they’re buying and
they obviously can cook. And children wander
around without being a nuisance. I like hearing
the buskers and the instrumentalists.”
Stan Randle is an organic orchardist. He
comes down every Saturday morning from Alexandra
to sell his fruit and other produce. “We
just about break even,” he says. “What
we are largely selling is our export ‘overrun’.
Organics is a niche market. We don’t
make a fortune coming here.
“But I come because I enjoy coming.
I don’t come for the money. It’s
a real social event. And I’ve met some
amazing people. The girls who help me sell
just came along one day and volunteered. Then
there was a German couple living in Dunedin
who offered me a bed, so now I can come down
on Friday evening.
“I think the market is an outstanding
concept. It’s run by an incorporated
society, so any money they make is reinvested
in the community.
“After Christmas when the fruit is at
its peak we are flat out all morning. Price
is a big driver for what people buy. Where
we are in Central Otago many of the conventional
growers have pulled out because they can no
longer compete on the export market with Chile
and China for pip fruits. They now concentrate
solely on apricots, cherries and nectarines.
“Organics, however, are controlled by
very strict international protocols. Every
time there is an outbreak of mad cow disease
or bird flu our exports shoot up! And these
local markets are growing all the time.
“Organics is a philosophical thing.
When I first started on a small block the Apple
and Pear Board provided me with a fixed
regime for spraying by the calendar. My budget
for sprays was over $10,000 a year. I said
to myself: there’s got to be a better
way of doing it than this. You spray and
spray. You are killing everything off with
chemicals. Of course, there’s a cost.
We’ve lost our crop to fungal infection
twice. It’s so easy to control fungal
infections with sprays.
“In organics we use a strategy of ‘competitive
exclusion’. If you populate the orchard
enough with benign species, you exclude the
nasties. Of course, they’re always there.
One morning I saw a forest of spider webs covered
with dew glistening in the sun, tens of thousands
of spiders eating all the nasties! I wish I’d
had a camera. It rejoiced my heart”.
Michael Hill |