This is the fourteenth Liturgical Sunday in Ordinary time. My reflection on the Gospel kept reminding me of an
interesting conference I attended recently. The reading from the Gospel of Mark
6: 1 - 6 explained the exchange between Jesus and his townspeople. Jesus came
to his hometown ready to cure, heal and restore people back to God. The towns
people listened as he preached, taught and explain the scriptures. They observed
his zeal, enthusiasm and passion for proclaiming the coming of the reign of
God. They even acknowledged that Jesus had extraordinary powers, and were
astounded with the miracles they witnessed. But they were not convinced that there
was more to Jesus than the village carpenter who lived down the street. They closed
their minds to the truth which they witnessed and which their hearts affirmed
and instead questioned how a mere carpenter could possess the type of power that
Jesus had.
Unlike Jesus' townspeople, my eyes
were significantly opened by the insights from Sr. Ilia Delio’s presented during
the Conference of Women of Providence in Collaboration conference I attended
with some of our CDP sisters in June 2015.
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With Ilia Delio |
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CDP Sisters and Associates |
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Liturgical Dance |
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With other Liturgical Dancers |
Delio gave an expansive understanding
of evolution and elaborately explained why we need to reimage our traditional notions
of God and creation. Delio explained that
evolution has come to be understood
not as some narrow theory explaining biological phenomena, but a cosmic process
that challenges the plausibility of a static and unchanging notion of God and
God’s relationship to all of reality. She claims that evolution, the
meta-narrative of our age, implies that all being is whole and is advancing in
complexity and unity through time. This cosmic process she said, is and has
always been at work, is accelerating, and has implications for religious
systems and for theology
In the Conference, Delio began by detailing the medieval
Ptolemaic worldview with its theological and cosmological implications and then
explores Copernicus’ heliocentrism, which challenged existing notions of the
hierarchy of being. With God no longer the source of unity, a disconnect
emerged between God, the human and the cosmos. By the 18th century, said Delio the divide between science, especially
cosmology, and theology widened further, relegating theology to fixed
speculation and allying science with dynamic change. Delio said that evolution,
at first interpreted narrowly, came to be understood as the dynamic process
that generated novelty, change, complexity and convergence, a process that
impelled and attracted all toward the future.
But for her, the preoccupation of science with objectivity gave only a
partial understanding of this process. What was needed according to Delio, is some
way to capture its wholeness and explore its force of attraction, its
energy. Delio then borrows heavily from
the mystical Teilhard, who suggested that the evolutionary process, with its
orientation toward unity, complexity and consciousness, is driven by the
fundamental energy of love. Delio proffers that love is the means by which
global wholeness will emerge.
What are the implications for Christian life?
Delio described how the medieval understanding
of the unity of being unraveled and the devastating consequences for
intellectual life and human well-being. She explored the synthesis of evolution
and its ramifications for many aspects of inquiry, and then using the insights
of Teilhard she attempts to show through contemplative understanding the
meta-narrative of evolution how the Christian might re-imagine how to live.
Delio said that religion must grow and redefine itself. She is also convinced
that the kind of religion that humanity lacks cannot be found in the religious
traditions of the past which are linked to static categories. What is needed she
said, is a new religion full of dynamics and conquests. One that can use all
the free energy of the earth to build humankind into greater unity. Delio believes
that today people are looking for a religion of mankind and of earth, because
faith in God in this world are a source of great spiritual energy in human
being. Quoting Teihard, Delio explained that Christianity is a religion of
evolution, why is why Christ cannot be limited to any one religion. So the “stasis of religion, is the stifling of
religion” convergence of all religion is possible said Delio when we harness
the energies of love for the forward movement of evolution. So as humans, Delio
believes that we are a process and unfolding, we evolve to never stop evolving.
We experience inner evolution by letting go in other to let flow, by leaning
into suffering, by recognizing our deep relatedness to all of creation and by
openness, kenosis. Since now is all we have, Delio advised that we should learn
to live in the now, mind body, heart and create structures to fit the moment,
structure that change as needs change. She also said that we should remain open
to new ideas, new patterns and not to allow ourselves to be fixated because we
are still been created. As dynamic becoming, we also need to recognize that we
live in an unfinished universe where everything is connected. We have to accept
the truth of our nature which is incompleteness. This enables us to live in the
primacy of love as well as recover the capacity of wonder and awe. For Delio, we
evolve to never stop evolving, to be alive is to ceaselessly beginning, every
end is a new beginning and every arrival, a new departure. We can change the
world only when we change the way we think. Unless we change the way we think
we cannot change the way we act said Delio. God is the power of the future who is within
us and up ahead. So we must advance all together in a direction in which all
together we join and find completion of the earth – that all may be one.
I learned a lot from all that I heard, and the passion with which Ilia
Delio talked about her prophetic message for the world. I defiantly agree that
we need to change a lot of how we have been oriented to think and act. I hope
that as you read this, you will take this message to heart and act as God’s spirit
moves you.