Women Mystics

April 12th, 2011 by Jean

I am in Garrison, New York teaching, along with my working partner of 25 years, Peggy Rubin, a 6 day course for Wisdom University on the great women mystics. For what is mysticism but the art of union with Reality, and a mystic, a person who aims at and believes in the attainment of such union. In its classical spiritual form it is a heroic journey, and valiant efforts are required to follow the path. Many of the spiritual teachers of the world have likened our lives to “a sleep and a forgetting.” The mystic path, rather, is predicated on awakening, on going off robot and abandoning lackluster passivity to engage cocreation with vigor, attention, focus, and radiance, characteristics we might note we often find in our animal friends.

Thus the mystical experience is perhaps the greatest accelerator of evolutionary enhancement. Through it, we tap into wider physical, mental, and emotional systems, thereby gaining entrance into the next stage of our unfolding, both individually and collectively. Once the province of the few, the mystic path may now be the requirement of the many—a unique developmental path for self and world.

In a lifetime of studying the art and science of human development, I have found no more powerful, practical, and evolutionary practice than what is known as the mystic path. When I have studied or talked with seekers who have had this experience, they have told me of a joy that passes understanding, an immense surge of creativity, an instant uprush of kindness and tolerance that makes them impassioned champions for the betterment of all, bridge builders, magnets for solutions, peacemakers, pathfinders. Best of all, other people feel enriched and nourished around them. Everyone they touch becomes more because they themselves are more. Perhaps we have needed the changes and accelerations of our time to put the flame under the crucible of becoming so that such inward alchemy could take place.

Mysticism seems to rise during times of intense change and stress. Add the sufficiency of current shadows and the breakdown of all certainties, and we have the ingredients for the current universal pursuit of spiritual realities. We live in a time in which more and more history is happening faster and faster than we can make sense of it. The habits of millennia seem to vanish in a few months and the convictions of centuries are crashing down like the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York on September 11, 2001. And yet, the deconstruction of traditional ways of being may invite the underlying Spirit of which we are a part to break through.

So how can we birth this miracle within ourselves? How can we foster our natural birthright of spiritual presence?

Many have written of the mystic path and tracked its myriad adventures and planes of development. I have found Evelyn Underhill, writing early in the twentieth century, to be one of the finest guides to the experience. In her great work Mysticism, she presents the mystic path as a series of eight organic stages: awakening, purification, illumination, voices and visions, contemplation and introversion, ecstasy and rapture, the dark night of the soul, and union with the One Reality.

In the first stage, “awakening,” one wakes up, to put it quite simply. Suddenly, the world is filled with splendor and glory, and one understands that one is a citizen in a much larger universe. One is filled with the awareness that one is a part of an enormous Life, in which everything is connected to everything else and it is very, very good.

The second stage of mystical development is called “purification.” Here one rids oneself of those veils and obstruction of the ordinary unexamined life that keep one from the knowledge that one has gained from awakening. One is released from old ways of being and recovers one’s higher innocence. In traditional mysticism it can take the form of a very intense pursuit of asceticism. It can also take other forms of trying to create purity and beauty in the world, as, for example, the path of Saint Francis of Assisi, who rebuilt a church as part of his purification, or Hildegard of Bingen, who planted a garden so that God’s nose might be engaged.

The traditional third stage is called the path of “illumination”: one is illumined in the light. The light of bliss—often experienced as actual light—literally pervades everything. One sees beauty and meaning and pattern everywhere, and yet one remains who one is and able to go about one’s daily work. The stage of illumination is also one that many artists, actors, writers, visionaries, scientists, and creative people are blessed to access from time to time.

The fourth stage is called “voices and visions.” One sees, hears, senses with more than five senses—an amplitude of reality including things one has never seen before, such as beings of different dimensions, angels, archetypes, numinous borderine persons, or figures from other times and realms. It is a state of revealing and interacting with a much larger reality—including those spiritual allies that lie within us and the unfolding of the unseen gifts that we all contain.

The fifth stage is what Underhill and others call “introversion,” which includes entering the silence in prayer and contemplation. It is a turning to the inner life, wherein one employs some of the vast resources of spiritual technology to journey inward to meet and receive Reality in its fullness. It results in daily life as a spiritual exercise, bringing the inner and the outer life together in a new way.

The sixth stage is referred to as “ecstasy and rapture.” Here the Divine Presence meets the prepared body, mind, emotions, and psyche of the mystic, which, cleared of the things that keep Reality at bay, now can ecstatically receive the One. It involves the art and science of happiness.

But, alas, after all this joy and rapture, the next stage, the seventh, is what is termed the “dark night of the soul,” obeying the dictum that what goes up must come down. Suddenly the joy is gone, the Divine Lover is absent, God is hidden, and one is literally bereft of everything. Here one faces the remaining shadows of old forms and habits of the lesser self, preparing one to become more available to the final stage.

The eighth and last stage is called the “unitive life.” Here one exists in the state of union with the One Reality all the time. One is both oneself and God. For those who enter this state, it seems as if nothing is impossible; indeed, everything becomes possible. They become world changers and world servers. They become powers for life, centers for energy, partners and guides for spiritual vitality in other human beings. They glow, and they set others glowing. They are force fields, and to be in their fields is to be set glowing. They are no longer human beings as we have known them. They are fields of being, for they have moved from Godseed to Godself.

And yet, we discover that these stages are not just for the mystic, but have their everyday equivalence in a form that is recognizable to everyone. All of us have had experiences of awakening to the beauty and wonder around us. And we have known the rigor of releasing old habits, and even the creativity and joy that come from new ways of being and thinking. We cannot avoid the depression and psychic flatland that accompany the dark night of the soul, and we may even have glimpsed or possibly experienced moments of transcendent union.

In this course I began with Emily Dickinson and the stage of Awakening:

The little Belle of Amherst, wren small, with bright eyes the
color of sherry left by the guest at the bottom of his glass, coils of rich
auburn hair covering her wildly original brain rewove both
world and time and gathered Paradise. Rarely leaving her home
after the age of 30 she traveled the aeons as well as the acres
of the worlds further and deeper than anyone in her time. Her
life, as Alan Tate has remarked “was one of the richest and
deepest ever lived on this continent….All pity for (her)
starved life is misdirected.” No frustrated little frump was
she, but a poet of massive passion who took her power in her hand
and went against the world. Her love life was immense and almost
entirely taken up with the adoration and illumination of “this
remarkable world”. So intense is her
obsession with the world’s beauty –the slant of light on a
winter day, the still brilliance of a summer noon, the sound of
the wind before the rain-that she cracks open our perceptions,
the “half-cracked” poetess of Amherst and shocks ours insights into being.
She gives us new mind when we were content with our old one. she
forces us to value ourselves as givens – givens in brain and body
before and beyond any educational additions.

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3 Responses to “Women Mystics”

  1. Tanya Jones says:

    wHAT A WONDERFUL EXPLANATION OF THE JOURNEY….wISH I COULD BE THERE WITH YOU WITH MY FELLOW MYSTICS!

  2. Paula Barnett says:

    Thank you, Jean, for sharing the gift of Emily through this blog. Finding Emily at 10, I found my best friend; someone who viewed the world as I did. My love for her remains nearly 50 years later.

    Finding you, is a gift as well and I thank you, Jean, for ALL that you are offering the world.

    En+Joy

    Paula Barnett

  3. Rivka says:

    A poem was riggered by your inspiring description of the stages of the mystic path. About 1 of the stages:

    In the dark night of the soul
    Everything you have known and loved; that which was faithful
    Looks far, remote and small

    You are not yourself anymore
    The safe walls of your identity, protects you no more
    For they too, abandon what you’ve believed, was you
    Now to reborn where, as what, or who?
    Yet to be realized, come true

    “Have faith, yet again
    Not in what you lose or gain”
    A glimpse beckoning from a new domain
    Unknown, unseen, a faint sound calling your name
    “Come along my dear, your journey to attain”

    Rivka

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