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Getting on the ‘inside’ of faith and finding the ‘missing link’

After studying theology at Oxford, Dr Sarah Bachelard left the church. But then she encountered Christian meditation, which she says took her out of her head and into her heart. She went on to become an Anglican priest, and in 2012 began a new church in Canberra – Benedictus Contemplative Church, which incorporates silent meditation into its services. She spoke to Roland Ashby about her spiritual journey and her latest book A Contemplative Christianity for Our Time. You can watch the full interview here: https://youtu.be/nXqK3KU8Lzk or read an edited transcript below.

Science, religion, contemplation and imagination all keys to unlocking the universe

That the universe is ordered, and that such order can be perceived, and its inner structures imagined, has profound theological significance, according to theoretical physicist Dr Tom McLeish, Fellow of the Royal Society and Inaugural Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of York in England. Professor McLeish, a Christian, whose recent books include Faith and Wisdom in Science (OUP 2014) and The Poetry and Music of Science (OUP 2019), here argues that the ‘conflict’ between science and faith is an invented illusion that melts away when the history and present experience of scientific imagination are considered seriously.

Zen, Christian meditation and depression

UK author and long-time meditator Jim Green has worked for many years in the field of mental health, including at the Open University and the BBC. Here, in this extract from his latest book Giving Up without Giving Up – Meditation and Depressions, he draws on his extensive experience in both the Buddhist and Christian traditions to explore the relationship between Zen Buddhism and Christian meditation, and how meditation can be both crucifixion and resurrection, especially for those suffering from depression.

Reconciling opposites in a polarised world

In our polarised culture, when opposing sides can be so self-righteously entrenched in their views that reconciliation seems impossible, Dr Sarah Bachelard argues that hope can be found through meditation. It offers, she says, a transformative encounter in which the essential dignity of every person, even the perceived enemy, is revealed. Dr Bachelard, whose latest book is ‘A Contemplative Christianity for Our Time’, is the founder of Benedictus Contemplative Church, in Canberra, Australia.

Dadirri our greatest gift to Australia, says Indigenous elder and 2021 Senior Australian of the Year

Congratulations to Indigenous elder, artist and educator Dr Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr-Baumann AM for being named the 2021 Senior Australian of the Year. Apart from her artwork, and work in education, she is perhaps best known for her reflections on dadirri – “inner, deep listening and quiet, still awareness”. Dadirri, she says, “is perhaps the greatest gift [Aboriginal Australians] can give to our fellow Australians... dadirri recognises the deep spring that is inside us. We call on it and it calls to us. This is the gift that Australia is thirsting for. It is something like what you call ‘contemplation’”. The following reflection on dadirri, which is a speech she gave in 2002 when she was Principal of a Catholic primary school in Daly River in the Northern Territory, also seeks to integrate dadirri with her faith as a Christian.

Celebrating the love that ‘heaven cannot hold’

After a year of COVID-19, and what has felt like a long Advent of waiting and longing, “heart-sick with hope deferred”, it’s time to remember that “Love was born at Christmas”. Carol O’Connor* reflects on how the poetry of 19th century English poet Christina Rossetti can speak to us afresh at this time, and help us come alive to what is most precious and dear.

Meditation can transform our vision of work

Meditation connects us to a deeper sense of what it is to be human and to be in connection with others, writes author and retreat leader Dr Stefan Gillow Reynolds.* For this reason, he says meditation offers a bigger vision of work, and the possibilities that come from letting-go of ourselves and opening to ‘dynamic goodness and compassion in action’, something particularly important in a time of pandemic.

Advent – a time for rapture and giving birth to Christ within

Before Dorothy Day became the politically radical editor of the US newspaper The Catholic Worker, she was an atheist and a communist. She became pregnant during this time, and, theologian Matthew Fox says, “she was so overcome by the beauty of bearing a new living being inside her that she converted to Christianity. Why? ‘Because I had to give thanks to someone’, she said. God is the One to whom we render our thanks.”

Holding on to hope in a disintegrating world

Times are dire, but the Christian hope is that God is not just with us and for us, but also ahead of us. Advent, which started on Sunday, is a time of holding on to this hope, a space in which we are invited to be transformed, and begin to dream about and create a future that is of love, writes Dr Cath Connelly. Dr Connelly is author of Handbook of Hope: Emerging Stories Beyond a Disintegrating World and co-director of the Living Well Centre for Christian Spirituality*.

Nouwen classic led to turning point

For Anglican priest Dr Colleen O’Reilly, who is chaplain to Trinity College at the University of Melbourne, Australia, reading Henri Nouwen’s ‘Reaching Out: The Three Movements of the Spiritual Life’, first published in 1975, was a turning point, leading her to a “reaching inwards of the kind that transforms”, and into a relationship with God “which becomes the great adventure... that defies our predictions and calculations”. Nouwen, (1932-1996), a Dutch catholic priest and theologian with a particular interest in psychology, was one of the greatest spiritual writers of the 20th century.

My mystical path to love, joy and peace

Roslyn Harper has had a deep spiritual inner longing from the age of five, but it is only recently that she has found a contemplative church service that provides “balm for her thirsty soul”. Here Roslyn, who lives in Melbourne, Australia, reflects on her life’s spiritual journey, including a life-changing mystical experience at the age of 33, and how, when she was a teenager, she saw the words LOVE, JOY, PEACE on a sticker, her heart yearned to know what they meant. And even though as an adult outwardly she had the perfect life, inwardly she knew something was missing.

Compassionate consciousness the driving force behind the universe

Quantum physics suggests we are all part of one great universal consciousness, which brings about reality, and in which all matter originates and is sustained. The Rev’d Don McGregor, author, retired Anglican Priest and former science teacher, argues that this new scientific understanding supports the Christian view of God as the compassionate consciousness from which everything emanates and which holds everything in being, and that we can awaken to this through meditation. This is the sequel to his earlier Living Water article ‘A new era dawns as mystical and scientific insights converge’.

Ignorance abounds in a world in crisis, but an ‘ocean of love’ awaits

The world is “in a place of tremendous crisis... [and of] incredible ignorance, compared to the truth that the mystical life has been trying to share over the centuries,” believed one of the greatest spiritual teachers of our time, Trappist monk Fr Thomas Keating OCSO. However, he also believed it is a time of tremendous opportunity, because “we are on the edge of another axial period,” moving to a higher, reflective consciousness “that leads us ultimately into divine consciousness”, and becoming one with an “ocean of love”. In this interview, one of the last he gave before his death in October 2018, he talks to author, psychotherapist and teacher of meditation, Loch Kelly. See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAy2X-8vgrM

Freefalling in the love of God

COVID-19 has imposed solitude on many, but Anglican solitary Maggie Ross has chosen this as a way of life. From the age of five, she knew she was destined to live a life “preoccupied with God”. Now 79 and living in Oxford under vows to former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, she spoke to Roland Ashby before the pandemic about her two profound and magisterial books on silence,* and what she calls “deep mind” and the “beholding” of God.

A new church grounded in meditation and committed to radical transformation

Anglican priest, theologian and author Dr Sarah Bachelard*, who studied under Rowan Williams at Oxford University, leads a new ecumenical church community — Benedictus Contemplative Church — which seeks to be a blessing to the world around it. A leading member of the World Community for Christian Meditation (WCCM) and keynote speaker at the WCCM’s annual John Main Seminar in Vancouver in August 2019, she reflects on what it means to be a church committed to transformation through the practice of silent meditation.

A new era dawns as mystical and scientific insights converge

Humanity is at the beginning of a great awakening as new science catches up with the ancient wisdom of the mystics: that we are all part of the One Consciousness which holds everything in being, permeates everything and is the Oneness ‘in which we live and move and have our being’. So argues the Rev’d Don MacGregor, retired Anglican Priest, former science teacher, and author of ‘Blue Sky God: the Evolution of Science and Christianity.’