Monday, December 16, 2024

Held in the Presence of God

Artwork: Niki Bowers


This Advent I’m reading Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee’s book Sufism: The Transformation of the Heart. Perhaps for some it might seem a strange text to be reading during the Christian liturgical season of Advent. After all, isn’t Sufism the “mystical branch of Islam”?

While it’s true that Sufism has undoubtedly achieved a beautiful, unique, and profound flowering within Islam, its foundational truths have been embodied by women and men from the earliest days of humanity, and it exists today both within and beyond Islam. As expressed in the cultural milieu of Islam, Sufism is known as “classical Sufism,” while outside this milieu the term “universal Sufism” is often used.

I’ve come to recognize and understand Sufism as but one name for that great underground river of mystic thought and experience that wells up in and through all of humanity’s religious and spiritual traditions. This perspective mirrors that of poet and Rumi interpreter Coleman Barks, who notes that the Sufi Way is not religious but instead the “origin and longing inside religiousness.” (1)

Accordingly, Sufism is not a doctrine or a belief system but rather a tradition of enlightenment, a way of life that emphasizes love as the path to an ever-expanding realization of ourselves and our relationship with the Divine Presence, the Beloved One. This transforming and liberating realization takes place within and through our individual and communal journeys and leads us to recognize and celebrate God within all aspects of creation. The mystic, after all, is open to the sacred in all things, and Sufism, as Doris Lessing once wrote, “is always, has ever been, evolutionary in spirit and action.” (2)

For quite some time now I’ve been drawn to the teachings on universal Sufism promulgated by Inayat Khan (1882-1927). In particular, I appreciate Khan's emphasis on God as "the Beloved." He writes, for instance that:

The person who makes God his Beloved, what more does he want? His heart becomes awakened to all the beauty there is within and without. . . . When a person arrives at this realization, then he, so to speak, lives in the presence of God; then to him the different forms and beliefs, faiths and communities do not count. To him God is all-in-all; to him God is everywhere. If he goes to the Christian church or to the synagogue, to the Buddhist temple, to the Hindu shrine, or to the mosque of the Muslim, there is God. In the wilderness, in the forest, in the crowd, everywhere he sees God. (3)


Indeed, it is because of the deep universality of Khan’s life and work that I’ve come to understand myself as a Sufi. That being said, I generally prefer to define my path rather than myself in spiritual terms. Accordingly, I describe my spiritual path as “mystico/prophetic.”

I first encountered this path when reading theologian Albert Nolan’s book, Jesus Today: A Spirituality of Radical Freedom.

Reading the signs of the times, Nolan says, is prophetic work, and such work was integral to Jesus’ spirituality. We know this because Jesus recognized and spoke out against the oppressive assumptions, practices, and structures of the social and religious establishment of his time. He “turned their world upside down,” Nolan reminds us, and “the conflict that this created became so intense that in the end they killed him to keep him quiet.” (4)

Jesus was not only a prophet, however; he was also a mystic, a person who longs to experience oneness with God. Because he was both mystic and prophet, Jesus, says Nolan, was rooted in a “mystico-prophetic spiritual tradition,” one embodied by the Jewish prophets who came before him and which lives on to this day in those whose perspectives and actions provide a powerful example of “prophesy and mysticism forming an inseparable whole.” (5)

Vilayat Inayat Khan, son of Inayat Khan, reminds us that Sufism, like all mystical traditions, seeks first and foremost to awaken us to our oneness with God (6); or, in the words of Marianne Williamson, to align us with the “living light.” (7) Meditation, which involves cultivating stillness, plays an important role in this type of awakening and aligning.

At its deepest level of meaning, Advent is about actively waiting and preparing for one's awakening to and alignment with the Christic consciousness longing to be birthed in and through our lives. This Christic consciousness is, in the words of Sufi writer Kabir Helminski, “the current of love that runs throughout all life, the unity behind all forms.” (8)

With all this in mind and heart, I hope you will agree wth me that a book about the mystical path of Sufism is indeed appropriate for Advent. The section of Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee’s Sufism: The Transformation of the Heart that I’ll be highlighing in this year’s Wild Reed Advent series focuses on abiding in God, on being “held in the presence of God.”

________________


Love is the greatest power in the universe. The Sufi path uses the energy of love to cleanse the heart of impurities and turn it back to God. When the heart spins with love it can carry the human being beyond the horizons of the ego to where the mind cannot follow. To quote the Sufi master Bhai Sahib: “We are simple people. But we can turn the heart of a human being so that the human being will go on and on, where nobody can even imagine it.”

Sufism is a science of love, for it understands how to ese this energy to transform the wayfarer and send her Home. The Home we seek is not a place but a state of being in which the heart is aligned with God. The remembrance of the heart is this state of being when the inner awareness of the heart is a part of our conscious life. Reconnected to the source of our own Self, we hear the heart’s continued affirmation that He is Lord. We are held in the presence of God.

We begin the quest with a longing for something we cannot name or place. The pain of the heart’s awakening is the pain of awakening to our own forgetfulness. We begin to remember that we are exiles who have forgotten from whence we came. The heart holds the secrets of our origin, and yet the door of the heart is obscured by the ego and its desires. What we long for is so close and yet unobtainable, as Ibn ’Arabi expresses:

God deposited within man knowledge of all things, then prevented him from perceiving what He had deposited within him. . . . This is one of the divine mysteries which reason denies and considers totally impossible. . . . “We are nearer to him than his jugular vein” (Qur’an 50:16). In spite of this nearness, the person does not perceive and does not know. . . . No one knows what is within himself until it is unveiled instant by instant.


The work of purification, confronting the shadow and the attachments of the ego, prepares us for this “unveiling.” Inner work takes us deep within to the root of the root of our being. Then we can stand on the rock of the Self, without which we would become unbalanced by the slightest glimpse of what is hidden behind the veils of separation.

What stands between the wayfarer and her divine nature is the ego, the “I.” Bayezid Bistami saw his Lord in a dream and asked, “How am I to find you?” He replied, “Leave yourself and come!” The wayfarer’s own self, her personal identity, is the illusion that separates her from her goal. We are the barrier between lover and Beloved. This simple but paradoxical reality is the basis of fana, the annililation of the lover that leads to union with the Beloved: “Listen, riffraff: Do you want it ALL? Then go, go and become NOTHING.”

To become nothing, to “die before you die,” is the only solution to the pain of separation. What we think we are has to be burnt in the pain of longing, destroyed [I would say transformed] in the fire of love. . . . The Sufi path is a journey of self [i.e., ego]-destruction. . . . As long as the ego rules the human being, there can be no lasting experience of the Self. Two cannot live in one heart, either the ego or the Self must go.

The ego has to get out of the way in order for the seeker to realize the truth of love’s union. But it does not want to surrender its position and power, and will fight with all its strength, trickery, and powers of illusion. We need tp persevere and keep the heart’s desire burning, and still it is not enough. Alone we cannot renounce our own self. This is why we need a teacher and a spiritual tradition to hold us while we make this transition. The grace of God that flows through a spiritual tradition breaks the pattern of attachment while holding us Somewhere. We are held in the heart of God as He[/She/They] takes us Home.

– Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee
Excerpted from Sufism: The Transformation of the Heart
The Golden Sufi Center, 1995
pp. 141-143


NEXT:
The Act of Surrender


NOTES
1. Barks, C. Rumi: The Book of Love – Poems of Ecstasy and Longing. Harper San Francisco, 2003.
2. Lessing, Doris. From the preface of Seeker After Truth: A Handbook by Indris Shah. ISF Publishing, 2018.
3. Khan, Inayat. “The Object of the Journey” in The Inner Life. Shambhala, 1997, pp. 10-11.
4-5. Nolan, Albert. Jesus Today: A Spirituality of Radical Freedom. Orbis, 2006, p. 73.
6. Khan, Vilayat Inayat. Awakening: A Sufi Experience. Tarcher/Putnam, 2000, p. 5.
7. Williamson, Marianne. Illuminata: Thoughts, Prayers, Rites of Passage. Random House, 1994, p. 60.
8. Helminski, Kabir Edmund. Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness and the Essential Self. Tarcher Putnam Books, 1992, p. 174.

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
The Sufi Way
Sufism: Way of Love, Tradition of Enlightenment, and Antidote to Fanaticism
Doris Lessing on the Sufi Way
Sufism: A Living Twenty-First Century Tradition
“Joined at the Heart”: Robert Thompson on Christianity and Sufism
Sufism: A Call to Awaken
Don’t Go Back to Sleep
Clarity, Hope, and Courage
In the Garden of Spirituality – Doris Lessing
In the Garden of Spirituality – Kabir Helminski
In the Garden of Spirituality – Inayat Khan
Inayat Khan and the Heart of Sufism
Inayat Khan: “There Must Be Balance”
Inayat Khan on the Art of Selflessness
Jesus and the Art of Letting Go
The Most Sacred and Simple Mystery of All
The Source Is Within You
Jesus: Mystic and Prophet
The Mystic Jesus: “A Name for the Unalterable Love That All of Us Share”
Called to the Field of Compassion to Be Both Prophet and Mystic
Mysticism and Revolution
Michael Morwood on the Divine Presence
Prayer and the Experience of God in an Ever-Unfolding Universe
Prayer of the Week – October 28, 2013
Neil Douglas-Klotz: Quote of the Day – December 29, 2011
Advent: Renewing Our Connection to the Sacred
Advent Thoughts
Bismillah
Cultivating Stillness
A New Beginning
Thoughts on Transformation | II | III
As the Last Walls Dissolve . . . Everything Is Possible

Opening image: Niki Bowers.


Sunday, December 15, 2024

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Advent Questions for These Times of Challenge and Change


This past Thursday, December 12, I shared a reflection at the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet’s monthly “Signs of the Times” prayer service.

Specifically, I was invited to share my thoughts on the Advent reading of Luke 1:26-38, which is the story of the angel Gabriel’s announcement to Mary that she would conceive and give birth to Jesus. I was asked to reflect on this story in the context of current events in the U.S. and the world. I then facilitated a discussion around a number of questions – Advent questions; questions that guide us in mindfully considering and remembering how we are called to bring forth Jesus into the world today through our thoughts and actions.

Following are my words of reflection.

__________________

Friends, it is a great honor to be with you as together we explore the signs of our times and our response to them. And what times we are living through! As always, we embark on this journey of exploration and response in a spirit of trust and with a love of God and the dear neighbor without distinction.

The wisdom we heard from the Gospel of Luke is a fitting resource and guide for our shared journey. Perhaps like me, you appreciate the depth dimension of the wisdom literature of our faith tradition. What do I mean by this?

Well, on one level, today’s reading is a story that took place 2,000 years ago. At this level we recognize and celebrate Mary as a woman who lived and responded within her specific time and place in history.

But we can go deeper. All types of wisdom literature – both within our Christian tradition and beyond it – speak to humanity in the here and now. Yes, on one level, Mary, Jesus, and Joseph are historical figures. Yet on a deeper psychological and metaphysical level they serve as archetypes, as representatives of aspects of our own psyche. This is true of biblical figures we admire as well as those whose actions we abhor.

I’ll give an example. In the Christmas story, of which our reading today is really the beginning, we can recognize that part of ourselves called to – and longing to – bring forth into the world the light of Christ. Said another way, we all have a Mary aspect to us. Yet, if we’re honest, we also have to acknowledge that we have an ego which, like Herod, fears what this light will illuminate for us and within us. We have a part of ourselves that fears and seeks to avoid the hard work of recognizing and overcoming our own fears and perceived limitations.

Yet here’s the beautiful thing in which we can trust: As we heal and transform these false and broken aspects of ourselves, we contribute to the healing and transformation of the world. This is because at the deepest level of who we are, we are not only one with the source of all creation, but with all creation itself.

Friends, we are living in and through a time where our world is under great stress and strain, where the most justice-seeking and life-honoring structures and institutions of our society are under threat from political figures and movements opposed to justice, democracy, and compassion.

Many of us have been shaken by the election result of last month and the shifts in our society that this result both signifies and seeks to expand in ways that many of us find profoundly disturbing. It’s hard to know how to respond to this.

We can look for guidance, however, in the wisdom of Luke – and specifically in the story we’ve come to call the annunciation. The setting of this story is not unlike our own present moment. Mary and her loved ones lived under an occupying imperial force. Such forces of empire – both corporate and military – continue to dominate our world, causing untold suffering.

Yet like Mary, we are called to bring forth Jesus – the “Light of the world.” In that deeper, mystical understanding of which I spoke earlier, Jesus is one of many names for that divine, transforming love that all of us share.

Can we, like Mary, trustingly say “Yes!” to birthing this Love?

How do we hear the call to do so? Who or what are our Angel Gabriels?

How do we connect with – and stay grounded in – the Mary aspect of ourselves?

What does our unique manifestation of the Light look like?

These are the types of questions that surface when we open ourselves to the deeper significance of our wisdom literature. Indeed, it’s our questions, our exploration of them, and our response to them, that makes these stories sources of wisdom and guidance in every age – our troubled and troubling one included.

So let us start our shared journey of exploration and response with this question: In these times of challenge and change, what am I drawn to say “Yes” to?

__________________


In the discussion that followed, many of those in attendance said that in the midst of the challenges and changes of our times, they felt renewed to continue being an informed, hope-filled, proactive, and loving presence in the world – starting with how they interact with their family and friends during the approaching holiday season. Many also said they were renewed in recommitting and/or seeking out new ways to help those who will most likely be negatively impacted by a second Trump administration, immigrants in particular.

One attendee, a friend within the CSJ community, voiced feeling totally overwhelmed by recent events, so much so that she simply didn’t know what she can or should do. I talked with her afterwards and acknowledged how she is feeling. I also reminded her that Mary too felt confused and unsure at one point in the annunciation story, but that her story – and ours – doesn’t end there; it goes on. We can sit in the midst of unknowing, surrender our discomfort and uncertainty to God, and trust that the way will open for us; that we’ll discern what to do next. My friend appreciated this perspective and was, I believe, heartened by it.





Right: With friends Jane and Christine at Thursday’s Signs of the Times prayer service at Carondelet Village in St. Paul.







Related Off-site Link:
The Advent of Divine Love – Marianne Williamson (Spirituality and Health, December 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
In the Chill of Winter, a Prayer of Light and Love
For 2015, Three “Generous Promises”
The Vatican and U.S. Women Religious (2009)
Beginning the Process
Making My Consociate Commitment
The Inspiring Brigid McDonald
In Wintry Minnesota, An Australian Afternoon Tea
Celebrating the “Sisters of Peace”
(Old) Catholic Thoughts on the Feast of the Theotokos
Celebrating the Dormition of Mary
Something to Think About (and Celebrate)
How the Light Comes
Christmastide Approaches
Clarity and Hope

Images: Michael J. Bayly.


Thursday, December 12, 2024

Inayat Khan and the Heart of Sufism

My exploration of – and walking on – the mystical path known as the Sufi Way continues.

Today I not only share an essential writing by the great Sufi musician and teacher Inayat Khan (1882-1927) but I also declare that, based on Khan’s deeply universal understanding of Sufism, I am a Sufi.

To be honest, I think I’ve known this for years, but the following words of Khan have brought this truth home to me in a very definitive way, and one that very much mirrors my work as an interfaith chaplain in the field of palliative care. I often share with patients who are on the threshold of the “sweet beyond” and experiencing some trepidation or fear, my deep trust that “we all come from God and we all return to God.” Imagine, then, both my surprise and sense of deep and calm resonance when I read this same sentiment, almost to the word, in the following description of Sufism by Inayat Khan.

Sufism is the ancient school of wisdom, of quietism, and it has been the origin of many schools of mystical and philosophical nature. Its roots can be traced to the school which existed in Egypt and from which source all the different esoteric schools have come. Sufism has always represented that school and has worked out its destiny in the realm of quietism.

In the different schools the ideal remained the same, although the methods varied. The main ideal of every Sufi school has been to attain that perfection which Jesus Christ has taught in the Bible, “Be ye perfect [i.e., whole], even as your Father in heaven is perfect.” The method of the Sufis has always been that of self-effacement. But which self? Not the real, but the false self upon which man depends, and upon which he prides himself as being something special; and by effacing this false self he allows that real Self to manifest in the world of appearance. Thus the Sufi method works towards the unfoldment of the soul, that Self which is eternal and to which all power and beauty belong.

The Sufi sees the one truth in all forms. If anyone asks a Sufi to come and offer prayer in the Christian church, he is ready to do so. If someone would like to take him to the synagogue and ask him to pray as the Jews do, he would be quite willing; and among Muslims he will offer nimaz as they do. In the Hindu temple he sees the same God, the living God, in the place of the idol; and the temple of Buddha inspires him instead of blinding him with idolatry. Yet his true mosque will be his heart in which the Beloved lives, who is worshipped by both Muslim and kafir alike.

. . . Sufism is a religion if one wants to learn religion from it; it is a philosophy if one wants to learn wisdom from it; it is mysticism if one wishes to be guided by it in the unfoldment of the soul. And yet it is beyond all these things. It is the light, it is the life which is the sustenance of every soul, and which raises a mortal being to immortality. It is the message of love, harmony, and beauty. It is a divine message. It is the message of the time; and the message of the time is an answer to the call of every soul. The message, however, is not in its words, but in the divine light and life which heals the soul, bringing to them the calm and peace of God.

Sufism is neither deism nor atheism, for deism means a belief in a God far away in the heavens, and atheism means being without belief in God. The Sufi believes in God. In which God? In the God within him and outside him; as it is said in the Bible, we live and move and have our being in God. That teaching is the teaching of the Sufis.

The Sufi believes in God as the idealized Self within the true life, as the collective Consciousness, and also as the Lord of both worlds, the Master of the day of judgment, the Inspirer of the right path, and the One from whom all has come and to whom all will return.

In reality there cannot be many religions; there is only one. There cannot be two truths; there cannot be two masters. As there is only one God and one religion, so there is only one master and only one truth. The weakness of man has always been that he only considers as truth that to which he is accustomed, and anything he has not been accustomed to hear or to think frightens him. Like a person in a strange land, away from home, the soul is a stranger to the nature of things it is not accustomed to. But the journey towards healing and wholeness means rising above limitations; rising so high that not the horizons of one country or of one continent only is seen, but that the of the whole world. The higher we rise, the wider becomes the horizons of our view.

– Inayat Khan
From The Heart of Sufism:
Essential Writings of Hazrat Inayat Khan

Edited by H.J. Witteveen
Shambhala, 1999
pp. 3-6


In the following video David C. Lane reads from Inayat Khan’s 1923 book, The Mysticism of Sound. About this classic in spiritual literature, W. A. Mathieu writes:

Inayat Khan says that music is the “picture of our Beloved” and then draws the picture stroke by stroke from every angle and plane until we see it. He is the only holy man I know who delivers an authentic and inclusive spiritual message from a musical sensibility. He does this rigorously, poetically and spontaneously, until we perceive our own actions as music. Open to any line on any page: you will be opened.


Lane’s reading of Inayat Khan’s words is accompanied by the music of the Sufi Music Ensemble.





See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
In the Garden of Spirituality – Inayat Khan
Inayat Khan on the Art of Selflessness
Inayat Khan: “There Must Be Balance”
The Sufi Way
Sufism: Way of Love, Tradition of Enlightenment, and Antidote to Fanaticism
Sufism: A Call to Awaken
Sufism: A Living Twenty-First Century Tradition
In the Garden of Spirituality – Kabir Helminski
As the Last Walls Dissolve . . . Everything is Possible
Clarity, Hope, and Courage
“Joined at the Heart”: Robert Thompson on Christianity and Sufism
The Mystic Jesus: “A Name for the Unalterable Love That All of Us Share”
Doris Lessing on the Sufi Way
In the Garden of Spirituality – Doris Lessing
The Soul’s Beloved
Resting in the Presence of the Beloved
You Are My Goal, Beloved One
Be In My Mind, Beloved One
Finding Balance in the Presence of the Beloved
Your Peace Is With Me, Beloved One
I Need Do Nothing . . . I Am Open to the Living Light
New Horizons
Adnan and the Winged Heart


Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Let Someone Love You . . .


. . . just the way you are.


Let someone love you just the way you are – as flawed as you might be, as unattractive as you sometimes feel, and as unaccomplished as you think you are. To believe that you must hide all the parts of you that are broken, out of fear that someone else is incapable of loving what is less than perfect, is to believe that sunlight is incapable of entering a broken window and illuminating a dark room.

Marc Hack


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
David Whyte: “To Be Courageous Is to Stay Close to the Way We Are Made”
“God Made Me and Loves Me Just As I Am”
The Challenge to Become Ourselves
Tian Richards’ Message to Queer Youth: “Every Part of Your Identity Is a Superpower”
LGBT Catholics Celebrate “Being Wonderfully Made”
Seeking Higher Perceptions
Your True Source
“Queer Love Is My Divine Companion”
Awakening the Wild Soul
The Dance of Life
Love’s the Only Dance
Love as “Quest and Daring and Growth”
Love Is My Guide
Love as Exploring Vulnerability
To Know and Be Known
To Be Held and to Hold

Art: “Seated Half in Shadow” by Kendrick Tonn.


Monday, December 09, 2024

Quote of the Day


As another country falls to Islamist forces, we should remember that Islamist terrorism was sourced by one main thing: the United States invading Iraq. No generation of Americans should forget it, and every generation needs to learn it. A million Iraqis (and thousands of Americans) died because of it, plus it unleashed the scourge of extremist Islamism that continues to this day. Both Republicans and Democrats participated in the Iraq War madness, and none of them have been held accountable for the criminality, irresponsibility and sheer stupidity of that decision.

Marianne Williamson
via social media
December 9, 2024




Related Off-site Links:
The Fall of Bashar Assad After 13 Years of War in Syria Brings to an End a Decades-long Dynasty – Zeina Karam and Abby Sewell (AP News, December 8, 2024).
Assad's Fall in Syria Weakens Iran But May Fuel Islamist Resurgence – Samia Nakhoul and Andrew Mills (Reuters, December 9, 2024).
The Fall of Assad and What it Means for the Mideast: An Interview with Alastair CrookeThe Chris Hedges Report (December 9, 2024).
Syrians Are Celebrating Fall of Assad, Even as “the Bigger Picture Is Grim”: An Inteview with Scholar Bassam HaddadDemocrack Now! (December 9, 2024).
“A Tool for Empire?”: Mehdi Hasan Courts Backlash for Weak Syria TakeDue Dissidence, December 9, 2024).
U.S. Bombs Over 75 Targets in Syria After Assad Falls – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, December 9, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressive Perspectives on U.S. Military Intervention in Syria
Rallying in Solidarity with the Refugees of Syria and the World
Rallying to End U.S. Militarism
Phyllis Bennis on the Crisis in Afghanistan
Saying “No” to War on Iran
Quote of the Day – March 20, 2018
Saying “No” to Endless U.S. Wars
Something to Think About – June 18, 2014
The Tenth Anniversary of the U.S. Invasion of Iraq
“Our Anti-Imperialism Must Be Consistent”
Norman Solomon’s “Objective Look at U.S. Foreign Policy”

Image: Kristen Solberg.


Sunday, December 08, 2024

Something to Think About . . .

Dr. Butch Ware
Former Green Party 2024 vice presidential candidate
December 7, 2024


Above: Butch Ware in Minneapolis – October 14, 2024.
For The Wild Reed’s coverage of Dr. Ware’s September 8, 2024
meet-and-greet event in Minneapolis, click here.


Related Off-site Links:
Single Payer Has Been Part of the Green Party Platform Since 2000 – The Green Party U.S. official website.
Killing of Insurance CEO Reveals Simmering Anger at U.S. Health System – Mike Wendling and Madeline Halpert (BBC News, December 6, 2024).
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson’s Killing Shines Light on Health Insurance Denial Rates – Lukas I. Alpert (Market Watch, December 6, 2024).
“Deny, Defend, Depose”: Top Healthcare CEO Assassinated – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, December 6, 2024).
After Public Stood United, Blue Cross Blue Shield Reverses Greedy Decision – Kit Cabello (Hard Lens Media, December 6, 2024).
The Deep Roots of Americans’ Hatred of Their Health Care System – Dylan Scott (Vox, December 6, 2024).
A Murder on the Streets Has Fear Rising in the Suites – Sam Pizzigati (Inequality.org, December 8, 2024).
Healthcare in America: A Conversation with Dr. Steve Farber – Marianne Williamson (Firelight Chat, August 9, 2023).
The “Silent Violence” of Corporate Greed and Power – Ralph Nader (Common Dreams, December 8, 2024).
Butch Ware, Former Green Party VP Nominee, Announces Next Run for Office – Kaitlyn Kennedy (MSN.com, November 11, 2024).

UPDATES: Police Say Luigi Mangione, Suspected Killer of Insurance CEO, Had “Ill Will Toward Corporate America” – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, December 9, 2024).
Healthcare CEO’s “Unnecessary Care” Rant Prompts Another Tidal Wave of Fury – Zachary Folk (The Daily Beast, December 9, 2024).
The Hated U.S. Healthcare System Is Why Government Shouldn’t Be Run Like a Business – Thom Hartmann (Common Dreams, December 9, 2024).
ABC Anchor Rebuked for Claiming Popular, Cost-Saving Medicare for All Won’t Happen – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, December 9, 2024).
For-Profit Insurance Industry Rife with “Greed”: An Interview with David SirotaRising (December 9, 2024).
62% of Americans Agree U.S. Government Should Ensure Everyone Has Health Coverage – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, December 9, 2024).
Deny, Defend, Depose: UnitedHealthcare CEO’s Slaying Highlights Widespread Rage at Healthcare IndustryDemocracy Now! (December 10, 2024).
Healthcare Is a Right: CEO’s Killing Ignites Calls for Reform Amid Trump’s Plan to Privatize MedicareDemocracy Now! (December 10, 2024).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
The Green Party’s Jill Stein and Butch Ware Give Their First Post-Election Interview
Quotes of the Day – June 28, 2019
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Election
Jill Stein: “We Give Reasons for People to Come Out and Vote”
The “Green Smoothie” Option
We’re Witnessing a Liberal Meltdown Over Jill Stein
Jill Stein in the Twin Cities
Anti-Genocide Presidential Candidate Jill Stein Reflects on the First Anniversary of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
Green Party Vice Presidential Candidate Butch Ware in Minneapolis
Butch Ware: “You Can Actually Vote Your Conscience”
“This Is a Tragic, Heartbreaking Moment in the History of Humanity”: Butch Ware on the Gaza Genocide
Peter Bloom on the Unmasking of the “Democratic Charade”
When Democrats Undermine Democracy
“Americans Deserve Choices”: Jill Stein on Breaking Points – 4/30/24
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Progressive Perspectives On an American Coronation
Demolishing the False Narrative About Jill Stein and the 2016 Election


Saturday, December 07, 2024

The Guidance of Higher Forces



Here’s another excerpt from Julia Cameron’s book Transitions: Prayers and Declarations for a Changing Life. Like the first excerpt I recently shared, I find this one to be both meaningful and timely.

Life is often turbulent. The rapids and eddies of the day’s events may pull at our consciousness like tiny hands. Beneath the turbulence of daily living, there is a longer, slower pulse of perfect timing. It is to that rhythm that I give my soul. I listen beneath the turbulence of daily life. I open myself to the guidance of higher forces. I ask for and receive adjustments in my priorities. I allow myself to find the tempo most attuned to my personal unfolding.

Today, I act and respond with a sense of the larger view, the truer goals. I give myself assurance that God’s timing is my own and serves my own best interests.

– Julia Cameron
From Transitions: Prayers & Declarations
for a Changing Life

Jeremy P. Tarcher / Putnam, 1999
p. 117


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Seeking Higher Perceptions
Your True Source
The Dance of Life
Love’s the Only Dance
Finding Balance in the Presence of the Beloved
The Soul of a Dancer
The Art of Dancing as the Supreme Symbol of the Spiritual Life
A Prayer for Dancers
We All Dance
Not Whether We Dance, But How
And As We Dance . . .
Aristotle Papanikolaou on How Being Religious is Like Being a Dancer
A Kind of Dancing Divinity
Divine Connection
Aligning With the Living Light
Mystical Participation
The Source Is Within You
A Season of Listening – Part I | II | III | IV | V | VI
Move Us, Loving God
“Then I Shall Leap Into Love”

Image: “Dancer” (detail) by Riccardo Martinelli.


Thursday, December 05, 2024

Inayat Khan on Selflessness

My exploration of – and walking on – the mystical path known as the Sufi Way continues with a focus on Inayat Khan (1882-1927).

I start with the words of Ram Dass, who in 1970 said the following of Khan, one of the twentieth-century’s most influential Sufis. (Note:Hazrat” is an Arabic and Turkish honorific title used to show respect to a righteous person, prophet, and/or teacher. It is commonly used in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan. The word literally translates to “presence, appearance.”)

Hazrat Inayat Khan was an Indian mystic, musician, and spiritual teacher who is widely recognized for bringing Sufism to the West. Born into a family of musicians in Baroda (modern-day Vadodara in the Indian state of Gujarat), Inayat Khan belonged to a musical lineage that valued both spiritual and artistic traditions. His early life was deeply influenced by music, which he regarded as a divine art, connecting the soul to the infinite. He mastered classical Indian music and became a celebrated musician in the court of the Nizam of Hyderabad.

Despite his success in the musical field, Inayat Khan felt a calling towards a deeper spiritual path. He became a disciple of a Sufi master, Syed Muhammad Abu Hashim Madani, who initiated him into the Chishti Order, a Sufi tradition emphasizing love, beauty, and harmony. After receiving his training, Inayat Khan was instructed by his teacher to share the message of Sufism with the West. In 1910, he left India for the United States, beginning a journey that would later take him to Europe.

In the West, Inayat Khan taught a universalist form of Sufism that transcended religious and cultural boundaries. His message emphasized unity, peace, and the awakening of the human spirit through love and harmony. He saw the essence of all religions as one and believed that spiritual development was a personal journey that could take many forms. His teachings drew on both Sufi wisdom and universal spiritual truths, making them accessible to people of all backgrounds.

Inayat Khan also founded the Sufi Order International, an organization aimed at promoting spiritual understanding and self-realization. He wrote extensively on spirituality, mysticism, and the nature of the soul, leaving behind a vast body of teachings that continue to inspire spiritual seekers around the world.

Hazrat Inayat Khan passed away in 1927 in Delhi, India, but his legacy lives on through his writings, music, and the Sufi Order he founded, which continues to flourish globally.


In the video below, Ram Dass reads the words of Inayat Khan on the art of selflessness. This reading is accompanied by the music of Universe Divine.





Related Off-site Links:
Recalling Hazrat Inayat Khan and His Universalist Sufism – James Ford (Patheos, February 5, 2022).
Inayat Khan’s Legacy: Music, Sufism, and a Celebrated Spy Daughter – Nishtha Gautam (The Quint, February 6, 2019).
You know British spy Noor Inayat Khan who Hitler Executed. Her Father Has a Story Too – Raghav Bikhchandani (The Print, July 5, 2022).
How an Indian Sufi Teacher Left an Imprint on Claude Debussy (and Western Classical Music) – Luis Dias (Scroll.in, April 19, 2016).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
In the Garden of Spirituality – Inayat Khan
Inayat Khan: “There Must Be Balance”
The Sufi Way
Sufism: Way of Love, Tradition of Enlightenment, and Antidote to Fanaticism
Sufism: A Call to Awaken
Sufism: A Living Twenty-First Century Tradition
In the Garden of Spirituality – Kabir Helminski
As the Last Walls Dissolve . . . Everything is Possible
Clarity, Hope, and Courage
“Joined at the Heart”: Robert Thompson on Christianity and Sufism
Doris Lessing on the Sufi Way
In the Garden of Spirituality – Doris Lessing
Awakening
An Extraordinary, Precious Gift
The Task at Hand
Guidelines for the Advent of a Universal Mysticism: An Introduction | Part 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8
Adnan and the Winged Heart


Wednesday, December 04, 2024

Happy Birthday, Mum!

In Australia today my Mum celebrates her 86th birthday.

Happy Birthday, Mum!


I’ve said it many times before but it’s always worth repeating: My brothers and I are very fortunate to have Margaret Anne Bayly (née Sparkes) as our mother. She is a beautiful, wise and strong woman who extends care, kindness and love to everyone she encounters.

I love you, Mum, and can’t thank you enough for who you are and for all you continue to be and give to me, my brothers, our family, and so many others whose lives are fortunate enough to be touched by yours. Wishing you the happiest of birthdays, and looking forward to next year and my next visit home! 💗


Above: Mum at the look-out in our hometown of Gunnedah, New South Wales, Australia – May 10, 2024.

Gunnedah and its surrounding area were originally inhabited by Indigenous Australians who spoke the Kamilaroi (Gamilaraay) language. The area now occupied by the town was settled by Europeans in 1833. Through my maternal grandmother’s family, the Millerds, my family can trace its connection to Gunnedah back to the town’s earliest days. For more about the town’s history and my family’s connection to it, see the previous Wild Reed posts, My “Bone Country” and Journey to Gunnedah.

In celebrating Mum’s birthday over the years at The Wild Reed, I’ve shared quite a number of photos from the Bayly family archives. In fact, I’ve pretty much exhausted my supply. So if you’d like to take a wonderful “trip down memory lane,” as they say, then click on any of the links below. You won’t be disappointed!

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Thanks, Mum!
Happy Birthday, Mum (2023)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2022)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2018)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2017)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2015)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2014)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2013)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2011)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2010)
Happy Birthday, Mum (2009)
Congratulations, Mum and Dad!
Catholic Rainbow (Australian) Parents
Remembering and Celebrating Dad

Opening image: With Mum in Guruk, aka Port Macquarie, New South Wales, Australia – May 8, 2024.


Monday, December 02, 2024

Marianne Williamson on the Kind Mind Podcast – 12/2/24

Earlier today author, activist, and former Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson was a guest on Todd Fink’s podcast, Kind Mind.

It’s a great interview with a woman who I consider the “Cassandra of U.S. politics,” and who philosopher and social critic Cornel West says is “one of the few in the higher echelons of public life and public conversation who understand the intimate relation between the spiritual and the social, the personal and the political, and the existential and the economic.”

Continues West: “It’s very rare that people have this synoptic vision, [one that ensures that] spirituality, morality, and integrity sit at the center and at the beginning of any serious discussion about the relation of a self and a society.”

This “synoptic vision” is greatly needed in today’s fractured world, and it was on full display throughout both Marianne’s presidential campaigns of 2020 and 2024 during which she never wavered in changing the conversation from symptoms to root causes in a way that the political and media establishments routinely avoid. She also talked about the need to fundamentally disrupt the political and economic status quo so as to initiate a “season of moral repair.” Her “politics of love” was informed by both her love for democracy and her decades-long work with and for people in crisis, especially spiritual or meaning-making crisis.

In her hour-long conversation with Todd Fink below, Marianne reflects on the deeper lessons of 2024 and her campaign. She also discusses a vision of hope for the future.





See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election
Marianne Williamson: “A New Chapter of the Democratic Party Needs to Begin”
“We’re Living at a Time of Spiritual Evolution”
“We’re Living in Very Serious Times and We Need to Be Very Serious People”
“My Gratitude Is as Deep as the Sea”
Yes, Just Imagine
“We Don’t Need More Data Analysis. We Need More Courage”
The Mystic Jesus: “A Name for the Unalterable Love That All of Us Share”
In the Garden of Spirituality – Marianne Williamson