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Last Updated: Thursday - 05/30/2002Week of June 3, 2002Move from fear to the house of love
By FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi
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Deep neuroses, as Freud pointed out, hit us with a vengeance in mid-life. |
What this does is keep us, almost always, inside the house of fear. Because we live inside of families, churches and communities where there is gossip, cynicism, jealousy and bitterness, it's natural that our first instinct so often is to protect ourselves, to be hard, to be cynical, to be angry. We live, as Nouwen puts it, inside the house of fear rather than inside the house of love.
How do we save ourselves from getting lost there? How do we remain free of fear when there is so much anger around? How do we continue to share what is deep and intimate inside us when we live inside of circles rife with gossip, cynicism and jealousy? Indeed, how do we continue to even strive to deal with this when, so often, we are just as guilty as everyone else?
There are no easy answers. Moreover this is not, as Nouwen himself points out, something that we can ever accomplish once and for all. The world is not divided up between those who have conquered fear and those who haven't. Rather, our own days and hours are divided up between those times when we live more in fear and those times when we live more in love. There are times when our fears take over and we act out of them, just as there are other times when grace opens us beyond fear and we can act in graciousness and love.
The task of coming to spiritual adulthood is linked with moving from fear to love. This is partly what Jesus meant when he urged us to save ourselves from this world and when, in his priestly prayer, he prayed that we might be where he is, in love, free of fear.
To be free of fear, suspicion and the need to protect ourselves is a major spiritual task.
One of the great ironies is that, both in spirituality and human life in general, this is often easier for us when we are young and immature than when we are older and supposedly wiser.
Why? Because when we are young, totally independent of maturity, we are still naturally more idealistic, more wary of cynicism, more trusting, less jaded and less in touch with our wounds.
Deep neuroses, as Freud pointed out, hit us with a vengeance in mid-life and beyond. It's then that it becomes harder to live inside of the house of love, free from bitterness and distrust. It's there too that the air that we breathe can be so bitter and jaded.
The spiritual task of mid-life and beyond is to resist hardness, cynicism, bitterness, and fear, and to become childlike and trusting again. But this isn't easy.
Alice Miller, the great Swiss analyst, suggests that the spiritual task of mid-life and beyond is that of grieving, grieving until the very foundations of our lives shake. Grieving, she suggests, is the only thing that can save us from bitterness.
The full answer of course lies in prayer, sustained daily prayer. God is always inviting us into the house of love, but, given the hardness we so often experience in our everyday circles, it is only in intimate prayer that we can hear a voice gentle and trusting enough to entice us to let go of fear and move beyond the need to protect ourselves.
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