“It
is no accident that we’ve been born in these times, that we find our
lives unfolding now, with our particular histories and gifts, our
brokenness, our experience, and our wisdom. It is not an accident.
In talking about the fate of the earth, we know that its fate is
really up for grabs. There are no guarantees as to its future. It is
a question of our own critical choices. Perhaps what we need most is
a transforming vision, a vision that’s deep enough, one that can
take us from where we are to a new place; one that opens the future
up to hope. More than anything, we must become people of hope.
That’s what I hope this reflection will be about.
I’m
going to be speaking from a context created by Thomas Berry. He is a
Passionist priest and the president of the American Teilhard
Association. Teilhard de Chardin was a Jesuit priest who brought
together in his own psyche the insights that come out of the history
of the Judeo-Christian tradition with the contemporary scientific
understanding of evolution. He put both together and integrated them
into a world view that has probably done more to shape the modem
world than any of us yet understand. Teilhard de Chardin died in the
1950s, before the ecological crisis. He died before we had access to
the image of the earth from space and before the more available
perception of the earth as a living system such as made popular by
James Lovelock. Thomas Berry has tried to take Teilhard’s work and
bring it up into the present.
Often
we question the fate of the earth and the critical state in which it
is now unfolding, and conclude that humanity is undergoing a kind of
moral failure. It’s so easy to read the signs of the times and blame
ourselves for our lack of spirituality or religious fervor, or
simply believe that we’re just an inherently greedy, selfish,
destructive species. We tend to conclude that if we could only come
up with a religious revival, everything would be all right because
our crisis is one of a moral and ethical nature. I’m not saying that
there aren’t levels of truth in that. But I think that there’s
really another area to consider before we make that final
conclusion. That’s what
I’d
like to suggest we do now. Thomas Berry would interpret the crisis
as a crisis of cosmology. Now what does cosmology mean? It simply
means that all people have stories wherein they describe how the
universe was made. All peoples on the planet have such a story; it’s
their origin story. Western culture has a genesis story.
These
stories reflect people’s observations and conclusions about the
origin and nature of the world. At this point in time, we find
ourselves in a crisis that has to do with our original story, not
just a crisis of evil. When we
look
at it in this way, we can begin to see that the future does open up
to hope. It gives us the capacity to rethink our origin story with
an expanded view of it. It gives us images that are positive. We’re
able to live out of
those
images. If our images of the future are negative because we conclude
we are an inherently destructive species, or these are the end times
... if we live out of those images, we’re going to bring them about.
Our images of the future are self-fulfilling. It’s imperative to
read the signs of the times in broader ways constantly, to deal with
the signs of the times and allow the pain of them to come into us,
and not be paralyzed by them. Above all, we can’t deny them.
There’s an extraordinary short poem by Wendell Berry that has
touched this for me personally.
In
the dark of the moon,
In
the flying snow, in the dead of winter
War
spreading, families dying, the world in danger
I
walk the rocky hillside, sowing clover.
That
kind of hope, that sense of significance of doing things for life,
is what hope and meaning is about. It reminds me of a story of an
old woman in the Mid-East who planted a date. When you plant a date,
you know you’re never going to eat the fruits of the tree, because
it takes about eighty years for a date seed to grow into a tree with
roots deep enough to take that scarce water and bring it up to the
surface and produce the fruit. If you understand this process, you
can make the commitment. You know that in the eighty-year period,
date trees are buffeted by sandstorms and windstorms and all kinds
of impacts on their growth. For the most part, the tree could look
as if it is dying during those eighty years. If you did not
understand this, if you didn’t understand the process, you could
easily make a judgment about the severity of its condition and cut
it down. You have to live out of the image of what is going to
happen, and that’s what I’m talking about, living out of our images
of hope.
A new
perspective coming out of cosmology can enable us to do that. Hope
is a choice. We make a choice to hope. And once we do that, it can
make all the difference in the world about what we do. So let’s look
at this
idea
of cosmology and see how it connects to our present world crisis. A
people’s cosmology, or origin story, predates everything else they
create, their culture, religion, economics, politics, whatever. We
can understand this better by way of comparison. For instance, the
Native peoples who lived in this area before our European ancestors
were operating out of a cosmology. Their experience of the world
helped them shape an origin Story. That story gave them a sense that
the Great Spirit, the Divine Creator force, lived inside the
universe; lived in the earth. Because they believed that, and
because they believed that the earth was infused with the presence
of the spirit, out of this understanding they evolved their
religious systems, their manner of worshipping and coming in contact
with the Divine. They shaped their morals, their ethical systems,
and their economic
systems out of the same beliefs. If the spirit was inside things,
they concluded that all living beings were relatives of the spirit.
Native American cosmology reflected in a concrete, incarnate way the
unique power of the spirit being transmitted through each creature.
So, for instance, to take the feather of the eagle and to wear it
was a way of being in touch with the divine power that the eagle
reflected. They understood that the water and the trees were
relatives, that the only reason they breathed was because the breath
of the Spirit was in them.
Thus,
that affected the people’s relationship to what was living. This
explains why it was impossible for them to invent an economic
concept like private property. They lived here for seven to ten
thousand years and it never dawned on them to own, buy, or sell
land. This under- standing became a grave problem when they met the
Europeans. Each group learned to use each other’s language and
concepts, but their understandings of them were totally different.
The Native peoples thought that the settlers who bought Manhattan
Island were crazy. How could you own, or buy or sell, this womb,
this earth mother that gave you birth and would take you back? It
was incongruous. This group’s difference of perception was not so
much rooted in each one’s religion as in their cosmology. Now let’s
look for a moment at the cosmology which has shaped Western
civilization, for the difference will make some sense when we look
at what’s happening presently on the planet. Fundamentally, we’re at
a point in time where we’re all shifting our perspectives about
cosmology. We have new insights, with new implications. But we’re
living within institutions that are totally rooted in the old one.
And they’re inflexible.
You
can’t make a shift within structures as easily as you can make a
shift in understanding. So the ambiguity and the tension and the
conflict we’re experiencing is a part of the process, and there is
no small pain involved in dealing with it.
Basically, the premises within Western cultures are derived from
different origin stories, but there are a couple of implications in
those stories that have the same sense. The first is in their
perception of the Divine, or the deities, or the gods, however they
were imaged. They were seen as being fundamentally transcendent to
the universe; they lived outside of the universe; they were greater
than and different from the universe. God was a transcendent being
who had power and dominion over it, and was far greater than and
different from it. Apart from it- other than it.
Secondly, there is a sense of the human as being intrinsically
connected to the Divine, as having a major significance, being in
union with the Divine. But in order for the human to do that, the
human, too, had to transcend the world of material reality to go to
the ideal world. So the locus, the meeting place, was transcendent.
Finally, this left a perception of the world in purely material
terms. Because the world was not involved in that process, it didn’t
have an inherent spiritual dimension. It was understood in totally
material terms. It was a reflection of the divine, and was therefore
holy, but it was not spirit, it was material. This perception
enabled Western peoples to sense they were detached from the world,
and possessed dominion over it. In some instances that was terribly
abused, in other instances it evolved into a sense of stewardship.
Stewardship was an ethic of caring for what was a reflection of the
Divine. But, the world was still material.
Ironically, this sense of detachment is what enabled us to
probe the world. We were observers, so therefore we could explore
the world and figure out how it worked. We could look into its
physical, purely material, mechanistic parts and figure out how they
worked. We could use that understanding as applied technology.
Whether it was as simple as creating a wheel, or whether it was the
kind of technology we’re shaping today, we can do what we’re doing
only because of the cosmology. The whole evolution of Western
history is marked by this ever-broadening and deepening knowledge of
the physical energies of the universe and their application in
technology. It was the cosmology which enabled us to take what we
thought was the last dense piece of matter—the atom—in our century,
and split it open. Of course, in that event, we came to the
realization that our cosmology was completely inadequate. We
realized that we were living out of a set of assumptions that no
longer could underpin our world or activities, because they were no
longer truthful.
As we
have probed the interior of the atom, we’ve come to see that its
inner dimension is not material. It is not measurable; it has a deep
spiritual, psychic, inner dimension. Likewise, as we’ve probed the
outer universe, as we’ve learned its age and its unfolding nature,
we’ve shifted our fundamental assumptions about both the universe
and the earth. We’ve had to move from this ready-made, totally
furnished, spatial universe, which we simply inherited to exist
upon, to an understanding of the universe that is itself in process,
which from the very beginning has had a deep, spiritual interior.
This interior aspect, too, we realize has been expanding and
unfolding over eons of time. Our planet and our solar system are
recent manifestations, recent developments within a sequence of
events that began fifteen billion years ago. We have a direct
connection with that. It defines who we are, our crises, and our way
of opening up into the future. At this point of our human journey,
we’re just beginning to grapple with a universe that has a
fifteen-billion-year history, from its first emergence as hydrogen
out of the mystery which brought it info being. Now, I happen to be
a person of faith, and so my explanation of that origin is that it
comes from a Divine source which has within it all the potential
that the universe can possibly express. But whatever
our-understanding of its beginning, we are the first generation on
the planet, at least, to have the Story in a new context of
expanding time and space.
So,
if we were to look at that fifteen-billion-year process, from the
beginning until now, we’d see that the universe began with hydrogen.
But out of the hydrogen atoms came helium. And out of the unfolding
of helium and hydrogen came carbon, all those differentiated
elements by which the universe unfolds to greater and greater levels
of complexity. These elements have the capacity to unite, make new
combinations, and become .ever more complex. From the very
beginning, as we’re discovering, there are spaces within the
hydrogen so vast that they’re immeasurable. Thus their interiority
develops as well. Not only does the universe begin to unfold
externally, but its interior dimension unfolds, evolves to a high
psychic complexity in order to realize its inner potential.
When
our sun came into being some five billion years ago with our solar
system, atomic elements were formed which became the heavy metals
eventually forming the crust of the earth. There are the unique
elemental structures within the atoms of the sun and our planet. But
this is a single continuum; this is one event, one event present to
itself in the unfolding of the process. If we look at our earth over
the past five billion years, we begin to see an extraordinary
acceleration of that complex structure. But it’s the universe we are
describing in the creative process of the earth. Now, I can’t
imagine five billion years; that number totally escapes me. You
might as well say five million as five billion. Some popular
scientific writers help us to image this time frame by compressing
five billion years into a twelve month period, watching the process
unfolding in a stepped-up speed. So let’s do that. If five billion
years could equal one year, then we could begin to see how the earth
developed in its potential for life. From its first gaseous state,
to the formation of life, it took the earth about eight months, the
first eight months. The higher capacities, such as breathing,
sensory capabilities, reproduction, and self-healing, took place in
the last four months. But it’s the earth as a subject performing
these functions. It’s the earth, through its inner psychic
dimension, that is acting in these new sensitivities.
It
would have taken the last four months of increasing complexity and
diversification for the earth to unfold within itself a brain so
highly evolved, a nervous system so highly organized, a skeletal
structure so highly developed, that the earth became capable not
only of living and breathing, moving, feeding, reproducing itself,
of seeing and hearing, but now it had evolved an organism so complex
that the earth became capable of thinking about itself. And that’s
the human. The human is the being in whom the earth has become
spiritually aware, has awakened into consciousness, has become
self-aware and self- reflecting. In the human, the earth begins to
reflect on itself. In our deepest definition and deepest
subjectivity, we humans are the earth. Conscious. You and I are the
beings in whom the earth thinks . . . knows . . . comprehends. . .
analyzes . . . rationalizes . . . judges . . . remembers . . .
chooses . . .acts . . . decides. Of course, we’re not used to
thinking of ourselves in this way at all. As a matter of fact, it’s
rather upsetting. We don’t know what to do with it. It doesn’t fit
into any of our categories. As Teilhard de Chardin said, the human
person is fifteen billion years of unbroken evolution now thinking
about itself. That’s who you are. And you are irreplaceable and
unrepeatable. The way the earth is thinking at this moment in you is
unique. Totally. And it will never think that way again.
Let’s
look at the consequences of this. In this twelve-month time frame,
the human, too, has been around for only one day. We’re one of the
youngest species, very primitive. It might be a miscalculation to
say we’re human; we might still be pre-human, except for some great
enlightened beings who walked the planet as more fully human. But
we’ve only been here one day, and we’re very young! Now if you could
take this last day and look at the twenty-four hours that we’ve been
around, we know that the majority of that time was spent in that
tribal age of which we know very little. This is where consciousness
began to awaken and unfold, and our human ancestors went through the
extraordinary process of learning to abstract thought, shape
symbols, and create something as highly complex as language, to
learn to survive in extraordinary circum stances while developing
the social systems and the myths and stories which became the basis
of the earliest stage of culture. But, the later civilizations which
we describe as ancient history only began about thirty minutes ago.
And it was in this time frame that we wrote our cosmology, our
earliest science, our earliest explanation for how the universe came
into being.
So
you see our cosmology is relatively new. For thousands of years, it
has given great coherence to our sense of purpose and meaning. It
was a paradigm which provided a story of how we humans fit in the
universe. This story has provided the meaning which has guided us
into the present. It was not evil or wrong. It was just our
explanation of reality. It was what we knew. But what’s happened in
the past half-hour and especially in the past few moments, in what
we might call the scientific-industrial age, is that our knowledge
has exploded, and ‘our power has expanded so astronomically, that
through us, and what we now know, the earth is coming to a new
moment of awareness. It’s learning its own story. It’s learning
where it came from and who it is. It’s coming into a new phase. And
we, who are the five and a half billion people around the rim of
that little planet, we who are its thoughts, are the ones in whom,
right now, the earth is coming to awareness. Our understanding has
become so deepened and broadened that we are literally bringing the
earth into a whole new phase in its unfolding. This is as radical as
the shift from non-life to life, or life to conscious life. The
shift that’s happening now is that consciousness has such a
knowledge and understanding and power over its own process. It is
starting to take control of the process. It’s going off “remote
control.”
The
past process of the universe and earth has come about through an
“internal guidance system,” for want of a better term. Now we, and
therefore the earth, know how that system has been operating. And we
have the power to turn it off automatic” and put it on “manual.”
That’s what’s happening. Consciousness is taking over. Now that’s
extraordinary. We could all walk out of here right now and just deal
with that. But I want to
make
that specific so that we can see the depth of what it is that we’re
talking about. Look at the area of genetics, for instance. Since
we’ve broken the code of DNA, we’ve gone inside the chromosome; we
know how it works, we can figure out the genetic memory that has
been accumulating and is now imprinting itself within a living cell
though this whole time frame. Consciousness understands it. And our
knowledge of it, our power over it, is giving us the capacity to go
in and rearrange it. We can interfere with the natural process and
alter it to whatever we decide we want it to be.
That’s what’s happening. So in a very real sense, the breakthrough
in biogenetic engineering is the story of the earth coming off
“remote control” and beginning to consciously shape the future
evolution of its life. And, of course, the question for us, who are
this consciousness, is have we arrived at anywhere near the level of
integrity, wisdom, or maturity to do what we can do with the
truthfulness that life had when it was on “remote control”? We’re
like adolescents. We have these extraordinary powers, but without
the life experience to integrate the power into a large context. And
the question is so profound because presently, we’re preparing to
release into the web of life organisms which did not preexist, which
did not come out of the slow, laborious process of evolution, where
at each stage all organisms worked together in a finely tuned
balancing act to enable the conditions for the survival and ongoing
process to continue toward life. If we err, if the finely tuned
balancing act which has sustained this planet and helped it develop
into the most extraordinary life community in our solar system, if
this gets violated, if it goes off, or becomes totally whacked out,
the only cause of that will have been its own consciousness. Without
consciousness, while still on “internal control,” it was moving
toward life, and toward sustainable life.
And
it’s not even so much a question of ethics, because you have very
fine, righteous people involved in biotechnology. They love their
husbands Or wives and their kids. They don’t tell lies. They’re
pure. They’re good people. Their goodness isn’t the issue if they’re
operating out of the old cosmology. This isn’t a question of ethics.
It can become a question of ethics. But you see, we don’t have a
tradition of ethics out of which to Judge this. Our cosmology
created an ethical system that was human/human, or human/God, but
not human/universe process. We don’t have it. The indigenous peoples
do, but Westerners do not. We do not relate to the earth in this
ethical manner.
Here’s another example. We now know that we’re alive because the
earth is alive. Unlike Mars, or the moon, or Venus, or the other
planets in our solar system, we’re a water planet. Seventy percent
of the earth’s surface is salt water. That’s why the earth is alive.
Its a fluid planet. But in our old cosmology, we call these fluids
oceans. We name them . . . Atlantic, Pacific, Arctic, Antarctic.
They’re places. They’re things. They’re its. They’re sniffs. You
swim in them, you fish in them, you sail in them, you own them. You
own home fronts on them. And if your cosmology is such that those
are just places, then it’s very logical to dump wastes there,
including our very lethal wastes.
But
now we’re beginning to understand that the oceans are the actual
fluids of the planer. And everything that lives has the ocean in it.
The oceans are not oceans. They are one single salt water system
which flows through everything on the surface of the earth that has
life in it. That’s why things are alive—maple trees, bananas, or
you. If we took you to the chemistry lab and had you analyzed right
now, regardless of your size or weight, you would be seventy percent
salt water. And it’s the same salt water as if flowing through the
oceans. The rest of you would be the minerals that form the crust of
the earth. We’re the earth, with consciousness, with soul, with
spirit. We’re the earth in a new form. But we are the earth! And now
we understand that these fluids within the oceans are in us.
Because the oceans become the clouds and the clouds become the rain
and the rain becomes the corn. And we eat the corn. And we get our
minerals and our salt water replaced. And we cry the ocean. We
excrete the ocean. We are just beginning to realize that the oceans
are alive because over this long, painstaking process toward life,
they became a community of millions of varied species and organisms,
all of which are a fabric and a community of life. They are totally
interdependent, all .essential for each other’s existence and for
the well-being of the whole earth so that it can function and
constantly maintain the oxygen needed by everything that lives.
As we
continue to dump our toxins in the oceans, we’re beginning to see
gaps in the fabric. These marine organisms never evolved with the
capacity to endure this sudden onslaught of poisonous new
substances. Many can’t reproduce. They’re becoming extinct. And as
one becomes extinct, the food chain gets altered. And as those
toxins build up in the food chain, more complex species are becoming
extinct, so that the oceans could literally die.
Jacques Chouteau says we have very few years left. If we don’t
change what we’re doing, the oceans are going to become toxic; they
will have lost their capacity to break down toxins and to keep
oxygen flowing. If the oceans do become toxic, then the clouds are
going to be toxic, and the rain will be toxic, and the corn will be
toxic. And our children will be toxic, and their tears will be
toxic. If the oceans die, that’s literally the death of the planet.
And if the planet dies, the only cause of it will have been
consciousness, because without consciousness, the whole thing was
coded toward life. Something’s interfering with the process. There
are dynamics happening at the most profound level which are altering
the capacity of the earth to do what the universe has
mandated it to do. That is to continue to live and to continue to
heal and nourish and regenerate itself. Consciousness is violating
this mandate. And that’s us.
What
binds all of us in this terrible crisis is the realization that
through us, the earth could actually choose its own suicide, its own
self-destruction. Basically, this is what we’re talking about.
Because our consciousness is so
young
and primitive, we don’t understand the magnitude of our behavior. We
don’t have a context adequate for what we know and what we can do.
We’re still unable to understand who we even are as humans in the
community of life. We’re still operating out of old assumptions and
patterns that deal with war and conflict in totally inappropriate
ways. Totally immature ways. But that pattern of behavior is now
coupled with our knowledge of splitting the atom. We’re fooling
around with radioactive isotopes in our weapons, not cannon balls.
So, the fifty thousand and more nuclear weapons that we have buried
under the skin of the planet, under this living tissue, into this
live organism, these are literally tumors. If they go off, they are
going to-spread. And like tumors, they will make the whole life
fabric go awry. Atoms do not know how to behave when they’ve been
affected by a radioactive isotope because that isotope is
unbalanced, and it hits on the acorn of the one next to it, and
knocks its whole genetic memory out. And there’s no way to contain
this. It knocks out genetic memory! We’ve got fifty thousand tumors
in the Mother, and the only place they’ve come from is our
imagination. An imagination at the service of a perception and
understanding which are totally inadequate for what we, in fact,
know how to do.
“Editor’s Note: Since this talk was presented in 1986, the number of
nuclear war heads has decreased significantly, but the potential for
total destruction is Just as real today as then.
Each
of these “nuclear tumors” is wired into a nervous system of
computers and satellites and radar. If one goes off, just like in
the body, it’s almost impossible to contain the process. We’re
describing the planet’s capacity to choose its own death. And if
this happens, it’s because of consciousness, because without our
human species, this could not happen. It’s a conscious choice. And
what’s the consciousness? The consciousness is the five and a half
billion of us. The way you and I think is not irrelevant. We cannot
be neutral. We’re totally relevant and totally significant. It is
our very consciousness which is making the decision and doing the
probing. How I think affects the whole. The earth thinks as you
think. The earth thinks as all of us think. And the earth is in a
process of coming out of its adolescent fixation with itself and its
powers, into a whole new level of maturity. And to the degree that
you and I make that jump, the earth makes the jump. It’s as simple
and as profound as that.
Ironically, it’s the physicists among us who seem to be most in
touch with this as they explore the inner dimensions of space. They
are touching and probing and contemplating interior realms of energy
and of activity that are beyond our comprehension. It’s the
physicists who are beginning to speak in metaphysical language with
new ethical and theological insights. It’s the astronauts, too, who
are becoming the mystics of this age. They are being changed by
their new perspectives of inner and outer space. This is not because
they happen to be morally better people, but because they’ve got a
different view. They’ve got a whole other perspective into the
nature of creation and it’s causing a humility that is, to a certain
extent, unprecedented. It’s a new revelation.
Now,
let’s consider certain principles pertaining to why the universe has
unfolded, and why our particular little planet is so resplendent
with life. We now understand these principles through an empirical
observation of different levels of reality. What is so astounding is
that these principles do not deny or contradict the deep insights of
all the earth’s spiritual and moral traditions, but rather expand
and complement them. The principles are extremely simple, and of
course, that’s why they’re so difficult. What I’d like to do is try
to put them into a perspective. They’re interconnected. You can’t
separate them from each other. They don’t exist except that they go
together. And they underpin everything.
The
first is the principle of differentiation. Simply put, it means that
the universe works because it’s coded to differentiate itself toward
greater levels of complexity. So, if the universe had stayed just
hydrogen, it would still be hydrogen. You can only have a universe
because it’s coded to differentiation. Now that’s an essential,
integral principle. It implicates everything. So, once there is
differentiation, there can be hydrogen and helium and carbon, and so
on, and because there are these differences, they interact with and
change each other. But, don’t forget. It’s all connected. The
universe, even in its simplest forms, is a single event with itself.
It’s present to itself, not only in its external, but in its inner
dimension. It’s a communion. Because you have different elements,
they come up against each other and cause each other to change. The
changing process causes what is simple to break down. When it breaks
down and interacts with the other, what is released from within
itself is the potential to become more. This is a fundamental law.
This is what enables complex elements to evolve. And when our earth
comes into being, this process simply takes off. The earth has
developed so highly, has become capable of life and of consciousness
because of this particular principle.
Let’s
look at the earth’s crust. It’s essential that all those differing
elements be there. Our chemistry chart describes those elements as
the basic component pans of everything that is on the planet. You
couldn’t have a living earth made of just iron, or just calcium. It
wouldn’t work. It is all of those elements that become the substance
of the planet and then unfold into simple organisms, and then into
more complex ones. At every stage, we can see the conditions by
which the whole system is working. All those differing organisms
unlock the potential still within the process to become transformed
into something more complex, more capable of life and consciousness.
It’s the law. There couldn’t be a green planet if the only
vegetation that existed were maple trees. It couldn’t work. If the
only insects on the planet were fleas, the planet would have died
long ago. Within a shovel full of soil are millions of organisms and
microbes, which, by the way, are the real farmers. They’re the ones
that produce food. Fanners don’t produce food. Part of our problem
is that farmers think they produce food. No. Microbes grow food.
That’s why agriculture is collapsing; the microbes are gone. It’s
just a matter of time.
So,
because those essential elements are all there, this total
diversification within the planet enables the next stage to unfold.
That’s coded in and it progresses. And the genetic coding within a
particular life form continues into the future and is carried forth
into the next stage. When the earth finally becomes conscious within
the human, differentiation enters another level, even within its
physical diversity. There is black and white and brown and red.
Those differences, those racial differences and characteristics
within particular people from particular geographic areas are as
much coded in as the difference in oak and birch and sycamore and
pine. It’s the truth. They’re not mistakes, they’re not errors,
they’re not miscalculations. It’s the truth. There are male and
female. That’s the truth. And from the moment that the universe
began to reproduce itself, to regenerate life sexually, in the most
primitive organisms, from that moment on the universe became sexual
and the differences between male and female became the process.
That’s the truth.
Now
if you believe in a Divine Creator, then this sexual condition for
creation or regeneration is a reflection of the way the creator
designs it. This is truly revelation. If the universe evolves in
this way, then this process reveals the mind of the Creator, or the
origin principle. We’re just starting to catch on to this. But some
people haven’t. If their only frame of reference for revelation is
through human channeling and the revelation was channeled out of an
old cosmology, well, they’re not going to find this revelation
there. Because it wouldn’t be perceived. You know what I’m saying?
The truth of the universe itself is prior to what we call
revelation. The differences in the universe are the truth. So then,
how people consciously become aware of reality, reflect on it, and
make their judgments and decisions, is also rooted in this impulse
towards differentiation. Just as wrens or nightingales, robins or
thrushes, are all genetically coded to a particular song, but sing
differently, so humans participate in the shaping of their language.
All humans are coded to speech. But because we create the symbols of
speech, the languages of the earth’s peoples are different. That is
not a problem. All peoples create architecture. But they create
architecture out of reflecting on the experience of the world around
them and of the materials at hand. And though we all might create
temple architecture, the temple architecture of the earth’s peoples
is going to be differentiated. And that’s the truth.
We
all mourn our dead but we sing our dirges in different languages.
Yet, the dirge itself is universal. And we all reflect on reality
and try to grasp and be open to the deep mysteries. But Jew isn’t
Hindu, and Hindu isn’t Buddhist, and Buddhist isn’t Aztec, and Aztec
isn’t Christian, and Christian isn’t Mayan, and Mayan isn’t Dakota
Sioux. And that’s the truth.
And
all humans take their meaning systems and connect them with their
history and their experience and their culture and their language,
and their wisdom and their traditions, and they shape culture. But
Polish isn’t Greek. And Greek isn’t Russian. And Russian isn’t
Eskimo. And Eskimo isn’t Mayan. And that isn’t Czechoslovakian. And
that isn’t English. And that’s the truth.
Now
the problem is, you see, that unlike the birch and the sycamore and
the oak and the maple, we humans reflect on ourselves, and we can
say, “I.” “I am.” Once we can say “I am,” we say, “I am true.” Once
we claim the truth of our being, then we experience a certain
susceptibility, a certain inclination to reflect on our own truth,
as being in the image of the “Big Truth,” out of which we’ve come.
That’s still all right. But when we see somebody come along who’s
different, we have this tendency to say, “I am the truth. You are
different. You obviously cannot be the truth. So since you’re not
the truth, and I am the truth, then it’s really an imperative on my
part to make you conform to my truth. So you’ll be all right. And if
you don’t want to do that, then you obviously are not the truth. And
since you’re not the truth, and therefore not fully human, then it’s
totally legitimate to enslave you or to reduce you to another level
of definition which is not truth. And if you don’t like that, we’ll
just annihilate you.”
There’s some strange tendency in the human stemming from our self
awareness that wants to force others to conform to our criteria of
truth. And we have this love-hate relationship with the tension
between truth and conformity. Individuality and conformity. It’s a
thing we have not finely tuned yet, perhaps because we’re still so
new to it. But in the last half-hour, we’ve recorded that we’ve
fought over eight thousand wars with each other. I suspect part of
the cause of those wars is this tendency to demand others to conform
to a perception of truth as we perceive it. It has not yet occurred
to us that the capacity of the human to reflect on the truth must
bring about differentiation. And rather than the differentiation
being a problem to solve, it’s a solution to the challenges of any
existence.
Just
as you cannot have a living planet except with all the diversity of
minerals and vegetation, so it is within the realm of consciousness.
No single consciousness can totally reflect what is infinite.
Ironically, it’s the physicists who are warning that we’d better
learn that or in spite of our being “good people” who love our kids
and don’t tell lies or do unethical things, we will continue to
violate the very process out of which the universe has been coded by
its creator. I think they are trying to help us to understand that
the human is the being in whom the universe can finally comprehend
the need for differences. We must grasp the differences. We have the
capacity to contemplate the differences and to delight in them and
celebrate them. That’s the proper mode of the human! That’s who we
really are! We’re the ones capable of delighting in the designs that
came out of the process.
A
second principle of the unfolding universe is that of interiority,
which simply means that things are different because everything that
is, is itself a truth. It has its own inner reality which makes it
itself and not anything else. Hydrogen is not helium. Mary is not
Fred. Fred is not Gary. Black is not white. Male is not female. And
whether you’re speaking of the atom in its simple substance, or
whether you’re speaking about a Mozart composition, this is this,
each is what it is. And therefore, it’s different. When we probe the
interior spaces of things, we begin to understand that we go beyond
what is measurable. Our physicists are coming in touch with the fact
that what’s at these deep interior levels is being generated as
they’re observing them. This means these energy patterns are coming
into existence and going out of existence. They’re being created in
the moment. The center of any one interior is the center of all
interiors. The volume of
any
one atom is the volume of all atoms. At its depths, it is not
material. Therefore, what has come to be expressed as hydrogen, or
Mozart, is a revelation of this and it’s truth. This is why the
universe has expanded. In human beings, the universe can comprehend
this process, and out of our capacity to see the interior of the
other, to see its truth. We’re capable of reverence. We’re capable
of non-violence toward the uniqueness of the other. We’re either
going to learn this quickly or we’re going to die. In this century
alone, we will have caused the extinction of close to a million
species of plant and animal life. And not even God brings back
extinct species. To say nothing of the individuals and cultures that
have simply been slaughtered because of their differentiation or
because we didn’t understand their interiority. Some groups of
people with their unique culture are being pushed toward
annihilation. This is totally against the laws of the universe. If
their wisdom is lost, it will never be regained. The child silenced
is silenced forever, and that voice will never be a revelation of
the Creator that it was meant to be. Our problem is we don’t
understand revelation.
A
third principle is that of communion, which simply means that from
the very beginning the universe has been in communion with itself;
that no differentiated interiority can exist alone. It can exist
only because it’s a member of a bonded community that has evolved in
a mutually interdependent way with itself. The universe indwells
with itself. There are no empty spaces; there are no vacuums; there
are no islands. So the earth has evolved as a single communion with
itself, both inwardly in its psychic development and externally in
the whole composition of its diverse forms. It’s a single organism.
If you could see into my hand you would see every atom articulated,
every atom different. But every atom is bonded so that my hand
operates as a whole. The universe and the earth do not violate these
principles. Communion does not demand conformity. Conformity and
community are diametrically opposed. Uniformity is a violation.
We’re beginning to understand that the human is the being in whom
this can be understood with awareness and freedom. This is the
meaning of love. Love is the bonding of the planet through awareness
and through freedom. This is our true human destiny, to be entranced
with the whole; to love it and become the ground of its being. And
love is not love when it demands the conformity of the other. As we
probe the depths of the inner space of the human psyche, we’re
starting to understand that. In other words, if you know who you
are, if you know who your interiority is, your unique manifestation
of life, if you’re in touch with that, and you’re aware of who you
are, and you’re affirmed in that and you know you are good and
lovable, then you are not threatened by me if I’m different. If you
know who you are, you have the capacity to delight in my
differences. And the more you delight in me, the more I can dig into
fifteen billion years of energy and keep pulling out all kinds of
treasures. If you affirm me because I have different tastes than
you, I’ll develop that. I’ll become a poet. You affirm me, I’ll
become a playwright, I’ll become a musician, I’ll become a computer
analyst. You become the ground of my being, and the more you affirm,
the more I’ll bring out. I will even become, at your rejoicing,
capable of compassion, and mercy, and gentleness, and justice, and
integrity, and peace. So that you bring out of me, you activate in
me the deepest mysteries of the universe. That’s love.
And
you can do it without liking me! And it’s this the physicists are
saying to us. We’ve got to learn it, it’s got to become
internalized, and it’s got to become the inner core of our
institutions and culture. You know, when you put these principles
together with the discoveries in human intuition over the past
half-hour, you begin to see that we were shaping a way to touch the
deep inner mysteries of existence. Our religious stories express how
we were grappling with the deep force of the universe all along! But
we didn’t have the evidence available to see as we do now. We were
attuning to the medium of the spirit.
We
can trace this through any of the religious traditions. But to
reflect on my own, which is the Judeo-Christian, is to open up new
understandings. For instance, when Israel as a people evolved, when
through Israel, the earth came to a new moment of consciousness,
they conceived of God as one, not many, as faithful, not arbitrary.
God was simple and loving and life-giving. When such a consciousness
evolved in the Hebrews, then that was a moment of breakthrough.
Israel understood that it was to participate with that life-giving
God in a very real way and to bring that energy and that spirit into
time and into history. So, if Israel was faithful as God’s creature,
adhered to a covenant relationship with the Creator, if she was
obedient, then though her life and the work of her hands, she was
bringing the energy of God into time and place. It was based on the
notion of a covenant. She had to be obedient to the law as revealed
through Moses in the Ten Commandments. That law is really an
articulation of the three aforementioned principles of the universe.
Likewise, Jesus carried the same Hebrew consciousness and expanded
it to another realization. He reduced the commandments to two. The
first one is, be conscious in your humanness of who you are; be
conscious with your whole heart, mind, soul, and strength; adhere to
the Creator in whose image you’re made. Then out of that, hold
everything in communion. Love it as yourself. His breakthrough in
consciousness was to be aware of and choose the communion of
everything.
One
of the most significant realizations within the process of the
universe is the vital dynamic of change. Because these principles
are functioning, there has to be change. The universe cannot remain
static. As soon as there are different components interacting on one
another, each has to break down and change. They enter into chaos.
They have to let go of being what they were, and in that chaos, that
breaking down, they breakthrough to a new level of being. Thus,
there is the event of energy, of breakdown, and of breakthrough.
When that dynamic emerges within the realm of human consciousness,
it becomes the life, death, and resurrection cycle which is at the
heart of all of our spiritual traditions. This dynamic plays itself
out in a unique way within consciousness. It means that when the
human deals with some one or some thing that is different, it calls
for a new exercise of power, not power over the other, or a power
that causes conformity or annihilation. Rather it is a power to
enter into a relationship of dialogue or communion, wherein chaos is
experienced. Both pass into change. And then out of that comes a
deeper wisdom which is a transformation. This life, death, and
resurrection is out of levels of fear and ignorance and prejudice
and hostility. It brings about the clarification of the deeper self
and it is totally congruent with the health of the universe. As a
matter of fact, it is the way to choose life. Otherwise, we choose
death. Personal and collective.
Let
me end finally with two implications. This new cosmology, which is
our connection to a fifteen-billion-year process, causes us to do
two things. One is to come home. We’ve got to acknowledge our
identification with the earth and with the spiritual dynamics of the
universe. We are literally stars dunking about themselves. This is
the context of our true existence. We can’t have our life, or
nourishment, or learning except as it comes out of the earth, which
is our very body. And the earth as a body is a communion and a
community. At its deepest level, it’s in communion with itself, and
in its external manifestation, it is a community of all the beings
who share existence on this planet, from atoms of oxygen to the most
complex organisms. And if this earth is sick, we will be sick. We
have to come home. We’ve got to leave the dualisms of the past and
become members of the community of home. I mean home now in terms of
the literal sense of where we actually live on this planet. We live
in a particular region. Long before humans ever came into it, this
region was marked by a unique geological history, a unique
temperature, unique water systems, unique climates, and
macroclimates. These were the actual conditions that evolved over
time, and determined the kinds of vegetation that could exist there.
Over long eons of time, a unique community of vegetation worked out
a balancing act wherein all could coexist in total obedience to a
principle of differentiation, interiority, and communion.
All
species that came into the community had to abide by these laws or
they got kicked out fast. They went into oblivion. Only the ones
that could cooperate in this balancing act survived. Only the
fittest survived— those who could fit in with the whole. So, the
insects, birds, fish, and animals who learned to cooperate became
the integral community of life. Unless we learn that this community
is the source of our health and our nourishment and our governance,
our human cultures are not going to make it. We’ve got to come home
to the prior community because the community is sick. Our water is
sick, our air is sick, our soil is sick, our vegetation is
sick, and they no longer even inspire our souls, our poetry, our
children, or our understanding of God. Thomas Berry asks the
question, “How will we baptize our children with toxic water and
tell them about God? How will we give pills and medication out with
toxic water, and hope to make people well? How will we eat
contaminated food, and think that we will be nourished?”
We’ve
got to come home in a new humility. And become members of the
community, or else we’re simply going to be a bad experiment on the
planet, and get kicked out. Secondly, we’ve got ourselves organized
into a hundred-and-fifty-some- odd nation states, and we still think
that the best way each nation state can secure its survival is to
compete against the other hundred-and-fifty-odd nation states. And
so we continue to mobilize all our internal resources to produce the
nuclear tumors and to compete against each other. And that very
competition is what is causing the death of the air and the soil and
the water and the whole bit. For the first time, we’re in a new
place. We have a new revelation. We arc literally the First humans
to go off the planet, to go out into space, look back, and look in
the mirror. With the image of the earth in space, we have a new
image of who we are and what our destiny is: the beauty of it, the
magnitude of it, and the silence in which it finds itself!
Let
me end finally with a favorite reading that I have on hope. It comes
from a Brazilian theologian by the name of Ruben Alvez, who wrote
“Tomorrow’s Child.” He said:
What
is hope? It is the pre-sentiment that imagination is more real, and
reality less real than it looks. It is the suspicion that the
overwhelming brutality of facts that oppress us and repress us is
not the last word. It is the hunch that reality is more complex than
the realists want us to believe. That the frontiers of the possible
are not determined by the limits of the actual. And that in a
miraculous and unexpected way, life is preparing the creative events
which will open the way to freedom and to resurrection. But, the
two, suffering and hope, must live from each other. Suffering
without hope produces resentment and despair. But hope without
suffering creates illusions, naiveté, and drunkenness. So let us
plant dates, even though we who plant them will never eat them. We
must live by the love of what we will never see. This is the secret
of discipline. It is a refusal to let our creative act be dissolved
away by our own need for immediate sense experience. And it’s a
stubborn commitment to the future of our grandchildren. Such
disciplined love is what has given saints, revolutionaries, and
martyrs the courage to die for the future they envisage. They make
their own bodies the seed of their own highest hopes.”