How to be a Mindful Christian
By Sally Welch
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About this ebook
Sally Welch
Sally Welch is a Canon at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. She is the author of several books on pilgrimage and the labyrinth, a conference speaker and leader of workshops on spiritual mapping, pilgrimage and other practices from the Christian spiritual tradition.
Read more from Sally Welch
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How to be a Mindful Christian - Sally Welch
What is mindfulness?
Walking along any busy city street, it is difficult not to notice how many people look worried and anxious. So many of us live a frantic way of life that brings little satisfaction, perhaps driven by past memories or concerns about the future. The consumerist culture that promises fulfilment with the next purchase highlights the gap between the world that we strive towards and the world as we experience it. Driven by habit and automatic reactions practised for years, yet never held up to objective scrutiny, our default thought patterns are in danger of controlling our approach to the events of our lives, leaving us tense in mind and body, unable to focus clearly on the world as it is, seeing instead a vision of what we fear it may become.
The practice of mindfulness invites us to see the world just as it is, without judgement. It invites us to view our thoughts simply as events that occur in the mind, not as reality itself. We may notice our thoughts and their nature, observing whether they are negative or positive without becoming engaged with them or caught up in them. Mindfulness enables us to step off the treadmill of the past, and engage fully with the present. We learn not to anticipate events with anxiety or fear as we learn not to play out possible outcomes, but wait instead for the reality to unfold. We are encouraged to step outside the activity of our thoughts, to view them with compassion without engaging with them, noticing stress or unhappiness without feeling driven to act upon these emotions, but simply observing them. When we can accept reality as it is, just at this moment, we will be able to approach it in a more balanced way, without argument, confusion or impulsiveness but with awareness and clarity. This is wholly compatible with Christian faith, which encourages us to see ourselves as God sees us – with truthfulness, compassion and love.
We are all aware of the close relationship between the mind and the body. When the mind is stressed or unhappy, this is reflected in the level of tension in the body, which may develop into actual ill health. An awareness of this link opens the way to an engagement with it; conscious relaxation of the muscles and sinews of the body can ease physical pain and mental pressure. This interested, detached approach, which is at the same time compassionate and yet freed from emotional associations, can be directed outwards, towards the physical world that surrounds us. Mindfulness invites us to encounter the physical world apprehended by our senses with curiosity and excitement, noticing the environment that we inhabit, approaching it with interest, directing our focus towards the everyday activities of our lives in a way that enhances our awareness of our surroundings and provides a sense of perspective which gives proportion and balance to our experiences. With renewed confidence in our judgements of the world around us, we are able to remember the past and plan for the future without being trapped by either. Our experiences are precious and provide a resource of wisdom and expertise; our imaginations enable us to dream and be creative, but these are merely tools for engaging with reality rather than reality itself.
A mindful approach to life enables us to pause, to step outside our own heads and engage with the real outside world with all its fascinating charm. We are invited to become more aware of ourselves and of others, to cherish our whole selves, and appreciate the rich variety of our inner life, our sadnesses as well as our joys, appreciating and accepting our emotions with compassion and acknowledging them without becoming defined by them.
The practitioner of mindfulness adopts a holistic approach to life, which enables them to receive with gratitude the kaleidoscope of experience which is available to those who are open to the present moment. Mindful meditation opens up spaces in our lives and heads which offer the opportunity to think and feel differently, which give the freedom to choose the best way to solve problems. Pauses, breaths and moments of stillness prevent us from becoming inseparable from our emotions, clearing our minds and enabling us to see reality. In this way we will in turn be able to offer compassion to others, patient with their faults just as we have learnt to be patient with our own, accepting our flaws while refusing to be defined by them, and sharing this empathy with others.
Christian mindfulness
It is a warm afternoon in July. A group of people has gathered on a terrace outside a cathedral on a hill overlooking a large city. Below them the city is set out like a child’s drawing, the straight streets filled with houses, tiny trees and traffic moving in fits and starts as it pauses briefly at crossroads before joining the flow again. The noise of the city is faint from the viewpoint of the onlookers – among them is a silence that is full of expectation. On the terrace a complicated pattern is laid out in beautiful stone slabs; it twists and turns around a central rose, and if the eye follows closely the curves and bends of the pattern, it will be seen to consist of just one path, beginning at the outer edge of the pattern and opening out into the central petals.
One by one the people approach the entry of the path, pause, then begin slowly to walk, following the line of coloured stones as they weave among each other. It is almost as if these people were dancing – a slow, graceful dance, full of thought and feeling. Some of the walkers pause when they arrive at the centre, standing still or sitting or kneeling, facing towards the cathedral or looking out over the city. Others simply turn immediately and retrace their steps towards the outer edge of the pattern. As they walk, the people appear to become calmer; their steps slow, their breathing deepens. Eyes carefully focused on the pathway ahead of them, some will pause to look up, others stop in their tracks, eyes fixed on the ground. Finally, each member of the group has walked the entire path from the outside to the central rose then back out again, and has taken up a position around the outside of the pattern. When all are still once more, a prayer is said, and the group disperses.
They have just walked the labyrinth, and, in the midst of a busy city, have encountered the stillness and calm that comes from focusing simply on the moment. Letting go of memories of the past and anticipation of the future, they have concentrated simply on the physical and mental experiences of the moment itself, content to allow it to be what it is, without judging or criticizing. For a brief time, the walkers have ceased their mental commentary on the events that surround them and allowed themselves purely to exist, noticing internal and external feelings and sensations without giving them energy, being aware of their bodies as they move through the labyrinth, noticing how this movement feels and its effect on their emotions. Freed from the baggage of the past and a preoccupation with the future, the walkers have found the space they need for creativity and imagination, for interaction with the moment itself as it happens, in all its preciousness. In the moment of the now, God is to be found. God, who exists outside time, who is eternity itself, allows us to encounter eternity in the immediate.
Throughout the Bible, we are reminded of the fact that we will never encounter God if we are so preoccupied with ourselves that there is no room for anything else. We are taught to set aside our thoughts and feelings to make space for God, to allow the love of God for us to fill our hearts and minds so that we are no longer preoccupied with the past or afraid for the future, but simply content to dwell with God in his love through his grace. Jesus, in his struggle in the desert, does not argue with Satan, simply sets what he says aside. He does not allow his thoughts and feelings to be kidnapped by a preoccupation with his reaction to the temptations of wealth and power; he acknowledges them, but treats them merely as the passing of an inconvenient weather system over the mountain of God’s eternal and unmoving love. In Martha’s resentful busyness, her need to be needed and appreciated, we see the perils of not being present to the moment, of allowing expectation and past experience to cloud the appreciation of the moments of companionship and the presence of Christ. In Mary’s calm enjoyment we observe the joy of the ‘now’, the relishing of precious moments, freed from clouds of obligation and past patterns into the open space of the new. When our attention is removed from the necessity of anticipating every event, of plundering the past to provide new sources of anxiety for the future, we will be able to see things for what they are, in the intensity of their beauty, in the perfection of their creation. Emotions will no longer enslave us, and in the freedom into which we have been released, we will encounter God. Once we have ceased to allow our thoughts to be shaped by patterns from the past, they can be transformed (Romans 12.2). Christian mindfulness enables us to move away from negative ways of thinking and adopt new habits of thought, ones that enable us to focus on the moment, to derive strength from the knowledge that good or bad, the experiences of the now are the ones that shape us and reshape us, enabling us to see and hear again. The sacrament of the present moment is the doorway to the eternal and universal; an acknowledgement of our physicality leads to an appreciation of ourselves as embodied people, whose lives have been transformed by the Word made flesh. When our minds connect with our environment, we can make the whole of creation part of our prayer, recognizing that God can be found in every detail of the landscape, his unique loving signature within every living creature.
Once we can appreciate each moment, each object for what it is, we will cease to become burdened by our judgements upon these things. Pure enjoyment in all things, in all moments, will liberate us from a preoccupation with having, gaining, achieving, possessing. Mindful prayer releases us simply to reflect upon the moment, not relying on our possession of it to validate it or ourselves but simply to experience it, free from the chains of thoughts that habit drapes around the most commonplace actions. ‘We are God’s children now’ (1 John 3.2), and it is in the now, and only in the now, that we can truly serve God because it is in this moment that we are met by him. Freed from the past and the preoccupations of the past we can forgive the past and allow ourselves to be forgiven. Open to future events we can cease our hopeless attempts to protect ourselves from it in the shape of possessions, status or power. We will not be able to avoid the storm, perhaps, but we will no longer be threatened by it, because we face reality in the strength we are given by God. The ‘sign of Jonah’ found in Luke 11.29 is perhaps the knowledge that is the fruit of the acceptance of suffering with a calm mind, unafraid and clear of purpose. Willingly giving up our defended state, we join Christ at the foot of the cross, prepared to face suffering but not to be overwhelmed by it, observing it detachedly within the love of God.
Mindful prayer enables us to be receptive to the whole world because we refuse to be captured by it. No longer fearful for our own safety, we are secure in our knowledge that Jesus took our place on the cross so that we could take his place in the kingdom. From this security we can reach out to others, no longer labelling them but loving them, free to serve because we no longer need to be served or to be defined by the judgement of others. Honouring ourselves, with our flaws and faults, will free us to honour others, seeing them objectively but with compassion, our clear-sightedness not masked by our own insecurity. Honouring God within us will enable us to honour God beyond us.
The space that mindful meditation releases within us reveals that this space is shot through with Christ. We are the deep that we call to (Psalm 42.7), as Christ dwells within us. Once we are aware of the infinite outside ourselves, we will be aware of it within:
To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour.
William Blake, ‘Auguries of Innocence’
Soul you must