We Are Contextual Beings

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Here is one of my central inquiries: If our spiritual and religious practices are not expanding our circle of empathy, compassion, love and care, what is their purpose? If they are not preparing us for our physical deaths, what ends are they serving? Part of the reason that institutional religions have lost their way in this regard is that the praxis of a once-enlightened human cannot be calcified and universalized. As humans, we are contextual beings. The context of Jerusalem 2100 years ago or Mecca 1500 years ago or India 4,000 years ago, or even the Amazon 100 years ago, does not translate into a relevant code-of-ethic or moral philosophy in the messy, entangled world of modernity. In fact, the context of Jesus or Mohammed (may peace be upon them) could not translate from the moment they left the material realm.

This is not to say that practices and traditions and aspects of culture should not be preserved and perpetuated. Rather, they should be openly shared and discussed with a contemporary critical lens and the loving embrace of the evolutionary impulse that lies within all of us. Does your spiritual practice make you a better student of the impoverishment of your time? Does it allow you to be in deeper service to the transformations that are happening now? Does it connect you more deeply to the body you inhabit? Does it root you more profoundly to this generous planet that serves as your home and your mother?

We have all chosen to incarnate in troubled times. You may describe our context as the Anthropocene or the Kali Yuga (the dark ages in the Vedic cycle) -- a context that rewards short-termism, greed, extraction. We must all be good students of our culture in order to be conscientious objectors. This is the path of the mystic.  [...] Some may call that heretical, I would describe it as being contextually relevant.

Part of our spiritual practice is to study our cultures in order to understand the antidote logic. In our culture of modernity, the antidote is to cultivate reciprocal relationships, to live in dialogue with a living planet, to act in solidarity with all Life, to build power and oppose oppression, and to live in the gift, without usury, speculation or accumulation. We know that our souls will continue coming back to this planet until we create heaven on Earth. Non-dualistically, we also understand that heaven on Earth is already here. We source our political power from the simultaneous truths of multiple realities. This is divine will.

I can do no better than to borrow from our siblings who wrote the Talmud:

Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief.
Do justly, now.
Love mercy, now.
You are not obligated to complete the work,
But neither are you free to abandon it.

Seed Questions for Reflection

What does being contextually relevant mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to act in solidarity with all Life? What helps you engage in the work without feeling the obligation to complete it?

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11 Past Reflections
ES
Esha Sharma
Nov 19, 2024
The first question reminds me of something I read:
"There are as many routes as there are individual souls."
I read this in the book called "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"
FI
Aug 1, 2024
This reading requires deep thinking. It has always been my problem with religion, that many texts are written during or for the times in history that are not as relevant today. My sister is an Anglican Priest and I struggle to be in the language that does not relate to my life or context of today. I literally cringe and have to deepen my connection with God (that is not attached to religion) while I sit amongst the worthy people in her church, feeling like an imposter. I’m not a follower of any rules made in the past. I am for humans having a human experience, and always wonder how I can make a difference. Every story and context is unique. Every culture suffers their past and informs the current feeling tone of that community. I try to be respectful of the past but work with the present moment of all that is my current reality.
ST
Jul 31, 2024
Being a word nerd, I look at contextually and feel that I am with the texture of an ally. And natures web of life is the textured ally that guides me most so I am almost always in "solidarity with all life". However, I am unfortunately "realistic" also. So, I view the consciousness raising work as if I were delivering a tanker truck full of water to a precious flower in the desert, aware that I alone can not make the whole desert bloom, yet with a vision that WE WILL ALL WAKE UP soon.
TA
TN Args
Jul 30, 2024
Seeking answers to the question of one's purpose, is an illusory application of the spiritual path or practice.
JP
Jul 26, 2024
The foundation of all religions is spirituality. If our religious practices are not expanding our circle of empathy, compassion, love and care , what is their purpose? We need to join hands with each other to create Heaven on Earth. Living in Heaven is living a spiritual life here and now. Being contextually relevant means being relevant to the present times, people, and events, and the world at large.. Past is gone, future has yet to come. Living spiritually is practicing spirituality in the here and know.. According to my understanding spirituality is responsive, not reactive to what is happening. Reactivity breaks bridges. Responsivity builds bridges. I daily do self-examination to be aware of my inner world: How am I responding to people different from me in many ways? Am I reacting or responding to people with different religious and cultural orientations? With different political ideologies? The world we live in has been divided into different and opposite worlds generating... View full comment
DD
Jul 26, 2024
Being contextually relevant means being relevant to the present context I am in, that is, relevant to the present times, people, and events. I act in solidarity with Life when I am open to and listen to others and to myself, when I am in solidarity with my truth, that is with what I am experiencing, thinking, feeling, and when I am responsive to and not reactive to what is happening. What helps me engage in the work without feeling the obligation to complete it is my belief in doing the work, which I have some control over, and not in outcome, which I don't control. What also helps me is my belief in what I am doing and my belief that there is always more that can be done. What helps me not feel obligation is that I've pretty much given up operating by obligation in regard to anything. I do what I do out of believing it it and believing it is the right action.
GU
Jul 25, 2024
One contextually relevant practice many of us engage in, in these times, is having these nourishing interactions over the World Wide Web. The experience of daily physical life anyway continues to be there as the laboratory. And i see a shift away from organized religions with narrow viewpoints to a more personal, at the same time, universal basis in striving.
One personal example of "acting in solidarity with all life" was to get my neighbours in my housing community to let the beehive in my apartment balcony to thrive as long as it lasted. Some grumbled but, overall, there was acceptance.
I reckon "completing the Work" is not fathomable. One lives from moment to moment, day to day and the spiral of awakening moves on magically.
ST
Jul 25, 2024
If a friend seems to ask what u seem to know .. Know that they may not appreciate you telling them what you think they are asking... Ensure you are clear about what it is that you truly know.... and what it is.... that they are asking
CA
Caroline Jul 30, 2024
I embrace your message . We must all be kind . Thoughtful practice and listening is more than you speak is important to digest and learn and value from experience.