Tuesday, October 27, 2009

A Spiritual Place

Tonight I was watching Property Virgins on HGTV. Fantasizing about buying a home someday is one of our guilty pleasures. Our viewing tonight was especially interesting, because the prospective buyer was talking about finding a place that was "spiritual" for her. I found this interesting because her definition of a spiritual place was not anywhere near what any spiritual tradition would call a holy place. For the woman on the show a "spiritual" place was a place that was cozy, move-in ready, and at an affordable price.

This woman seemed to be a very flighty new-agey sort. But this snippet of her life showed her to be an example of much of contemporary America. I think many folks in the United States and the Western world are not that much different than this woman. We think of a place that ministers to our spirit as luxurious, comfortable, and aestetically pleasing. Christians build retreat centers in beautiful places in the mountains these days, or next to beautiful beaches to walk on. These places have wi-fi, laundry service, a cozy bed in a comfortable room, sometimes you even recieve a mint on your pillow.

Our contemporary idea of spiritual as comfortable, safe, easy, and cozy has nothing to do with what people have thought of as sacred spaces throughout history. The sacred places of Hebrew culture are barren wilderness one can die in, and remote mountains that most people were scared to climb. The Buddha left the comfort of the palace to embrace poverty and near starvation in order find spiritual enlightenment. Early Christian places of spiritual enlightenment were found in small "cells" in the desert of Northern Africa. The monasteries of Europe were drafty rooms in stone built structures, and beauty was only created in these places through the backbreaking work that accompanied monastic contemplation. Holy places throughout the world are dank and smelly barns and caves, in places that scared the average person, and made them overcome their longings for finer foods, temprate climates, and more jovial company.

In short, throughout religious history and tradition, from Islam to Christianity to the Native Spiritualities of North America, spiritual places were not comfortable places. They were places that required work and strength to survive in. They were places that inspired mystery and confusion. They required scarcity and relinquishment. Too bad we have redefined "spiritual places" as all-inclusive resorts, move-in ready homes with massive amounts of square footage, or a night at the Hilton with a bubble bath.

3 comments:

Steve said...

Interesting. We do seem to place an incredibly high premium on "comfort" in many facets of life, to the point where it may be our top priority as a culture.

Anonymous said...

We talked about why monastics in the early centuries of the church were drawn to the desert/wilderness and the spirituality that developed from them.

Concerning your post, here are some excerpts from my class notes that I saw saying the same thing about spiritual places. Something about a place that both challenges us and nurtures us brings us into the presence of God:

Two key aspects of desert spirituality:

1. A radical voluntary leaving of, disengagement from wealth of society

-- This is in order to abandon the compulsiveness of the will

2. A move towards the desert(Nouwen)
The desert is:

--Always a wilderness where we struggle with demons

--Always a paradise where we experience purity of heart, rest of soul


"We cannot avoid going to the desert if we want to make God our only concern." (summary of Nouwen)

Anonymous said...

What I meant to say is, these notes were from a lecture in my church history class... I didn't finish that thought in the first paragraph :)

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