Amish youth riding bicycles in central Ohio |
Decades ago Thomas Merton wrote:
"Let us start from one admitted fact: if prayer, meditation, and contemplation were once taken for granted as central realities in human life everywhere, they are so no longer. They are regarded, even by believers, as somehow marginal and secondary. What counts is getting things done." (Contemplation in a World of Action)
"Getting things done" - that is the quantitative life; discerning what one ought to do and what should get done - that's the qualitative life. The former is the "doing" life, the latter is the "being" life.
Merton says that the Jesus-life "aims at a certain quality of
life, a level of awareness, a depth of consciousness, an area of transcendence
and adoration which are not usually possible in an active secular
existence." The authentic Jesus-follower seeks to be free from what
William Faulkner called "the same frantic steeplechase toward nothing
which is the essence of "worldliness" everywhere." (Ib., 9)
In the qualitative life there is awareness and perspective, "an authentic understanding of God's presence in the world and his intentions for man. A merely fictitious and abstract isolation does not provide this awareness." (Ib.) In such a life we "escape in some measure from the senseless tyranny of quantity." (Ib., 10) Relate this to the metricization of the Church.
To live this way is not to escape from the world or be against the world. It is to be for the world in ways the world cannot understand.
Reading Merton is breathing fresh woodland air in a polluted, quantitative, doing-culture.
In the qualitative life there is awareness and perspective, "an authentic understanding of God's presence in the world and his intentions for man. A merely fictitious and abstract isolation does not provide this awareness." (Ib.) In such a life we "escape in some measure from the senseless tyranny of quantity." (Ib., 10) Relate this to the metricization of the Church.
To live this way is not to escape from the world or be against the world. It is to be for the world in ways the world cannot understand.
Reading Merton is breathing fresh woodland air in a polluted, quantitative, doing-culture.
What is most needed today for lovers and embracers of Jesus is
to discover the inner life in such as a way as to make all of life something
that is lived out of a solid, deep, aware, discerning center, which is the
human heart morphed into greater Christlikeness.
***
Leading the Presence-Driven Church (January 2018)