Open Mind Open Heart
The Contemplative Dimension
of the Gospel
by Father Thomas Keating
Chapter 12
Methods of Extending the Effects
of Contemplative Prayer Into Daily Life
Centering prayer is the keystone of a
comprehensive commitment to the contemplative dimensions of the Gospel. Two
periods a day of twenty to thirty minutes--one in the early morning and one
halfway through the day or in the early evening--maintain the reservoir of
interior silence at a high level at all times. Those who have more time at their
disposal might begin with a brief reading of ten or fifteen minutes from the
Gospel. For those who wish to give a full hour in the morning to interior
silence, start with ten minutes of Gospel reading and then center for twenty
minutes. Do a slow, meditative walk around the room for five to several minutes;
sit down and do a second period of centering. You still have ten minutes for
planning your day, praying for others, or conversing with the Lord.
To find time for a second period later in
the day may require special effort. If you have to be available to your family
as soon as you walk in the door you might center during your lunch hour. Or you
might stop on the way home from work and center in a church or park. If it is
impossible to get a second period of prayer in, it is important that you
lengthen the first one. There are a number of practices that can help maintain
your reservoir of interior silence throughout the day and thus extend its
effects into ordinary activities.
Means of Extending the Effects of Centering Prayer into Daily Life
- Cultivate a basic acceptance of yourself. Have a
genuine compassion for yourself, including all your past history, failings,
limitations, and sins. Expect to make many mistakes. But learn from them. To
learn from experience is the path to wisdom.
- Pick a prayer for action. This is a five to
nine-syllable sentence from scripture that you gradually work into your
subconscious by repeating it mentally at times when your mind is relatively
free, such as while washing up, doing light chores, walking, driving,
waiting, etc. Synchronize it with your heartbeat. Eventually it says itself
and thus maintains a link with your reservoir of interior silence throughout
the day. If you have a tendency to scrupulosity and feel a compulsion to say
the prayer over and over or if frequent repetition brings on a headache or a
backache, this practice is not for you.1
- Spend time daily listening to the Word of God in lectio
divina. Give fifteen minutes or longer every day to the reading of the
New Testament or a spiritual book that speaks to your heart.
- Carry a "Minute Book". This is a series of
short readings--a sentence or two, or at most a paragraph--from your
favorite spiritual writers or from your own journal that reminds you of your
commitment to Christ and to contemplative prayer. Carry it in your pocket or
purse and when you have a stray minute or two, read a few lines.
- Deliberately dismantle the emotional programming of the
false self. Observe the emotions that most upset you and the events that
set them off, but without analyzing, rationalizing, or justifying your
reactions. Name the chief emotion you are feeling and the particular event
that triggered it and release the energy that is building up by a strong act
of the will such as, "I give up my desire for (security, esteem,
control)!"2 The effort to dismantle
the false self and the daily practice of contemplative prayer are the two
engines of your spiritual jet that give you the thrust to get off the
ground. The reason that centering prayer is not as effective as it could be
is that when you emerge from it into the ordinary routines of daily life,
your emotional programs start going off again. Upsetting emotions
immediately start to drain the reservoir of interior silence, that you had
established during prayer. On the other hand, if you work at dismantling the
energy centers that cause the upsetting emotions, your efforts will extend
the good effects of centering into every aspect of daily life.
- Practice guard of the heart. This is the practice of
releasing upsetting emotions into the present moment. This can be done in
one of three ways: doing what you are actually doing, turning your attention
to some other occupation, or giving the feeling to Christ. The guard of the
heart requires the prompt letting go of personal likes or dislikes. When
something arises independently of our plans, we spontaneously try to modify
it. Our first reaction, however, should be openness to what is actually
happening so that if our plans are upset, we are not upset. The fruit of
guard of the heart is the habitual willingness to change our plans at a
moment's notice. It disposes us to accept painful situations as they arise.
Then we can decide what to do with them, modifying, correcting or improving
them. In other words, the ordinary events of daily life become our practice.
I can't emphasize that too much. A monastic structure is not the path to
holiness for lay folks. The routine of daily life is. Contemplative prayer
is aimed at transforming daily life with its never-ending round of ordinary
activities.
- Practice unconditional acceptance of others. This
practice is especially powerful in quieting the emotions of the utility
appetite: fear, anger, courage, hope, and despair. By accepting other people
unconditionally, you discipline the emotions that want to get even with
others or to get away from them. You allow people to be who they are with
all their idiosyncrasies and with the particular behavior that is disturbing
you. The situation gets more complicated when you feel an obligation to
correct someone. If you correct someone when you are upset, you are certain
to get nowhere. This arouses the defenses of others and gives them a handle
for blaming the situation on you. Wait till you have calmed down and then
offer correction out of genuine concern for them.
- Deliberately dismantle excessive group identification.
This is the practice of letting go of our cultural conditioning,
preconceived ideas, and over identification with the values of our
particular group. It also means openness to change in values, openness to
spiritual development beyond group loyalties, openness to whatever the
future holds.
- Celebrate the Eucharist regularly. Participate
regularly in the mystery of Christ's passion, death, and resurrection, the
source of Christian transformation.
- Join a contemplative prayer group. Set up or join a
support group that meets weekly to do centering prayer and lectio divina
together and to encourage one another in the commitment to the contemplative
dimensions of the Gospel.3
BASIC TOOLS FOR TIMES OF TEMPTATION
- Determination to persevere in the spiritual journey.
- Trust in the infinite mercy of God.
- Continuous practice of the presence of God through prayer
and openness to His inspirations.
_____________________________
1. Cf. Appendix A: The Active Prayer.
2. Cf. Keyes, Handbook to Higher Consciousness, Chapters 14 and
15.
3. Cf. Appendix B: The Weekly Support Group.

More information can be obtained by reading the
book Open Mind Open Heart by Fr. Thomas Keating. It is offered in
our Book
Store.
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