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Spiritwalk Books
The Ways of the Mystic
Seven Paths to God
- The
Ways of the Mystic: Seven Paths to God
- By Joan Borysenko
- List Price: $12.95, Your Price: $9.06
Hardcover - 144 pages (September 1997)
Published by Hay House ISBN: 1561703923The Ways of the Mystic
- The Ways of the Mystic
by Joan Borysenko
The search for the Divine Beloved is as old as humankind. What is the nature of God -
Mother, Father, Great Spirit, the Tao, the One Who Is Many - and how do we live in harmony
with the Divine
Plan by using our unique gifts and talents? Why are we here, and what is the measure of a
life well
lived. What is happiness and what legacy will we leave behind?
Throughout history, mystics of every culture have lived these questions and left wisdom to
guide
others. Some people find God by living in harmony with nature, others by the practice of
specific meditations and prayers.Some define God by denying the body, while others
celebrate the physical vehicle. For some, the way is beauty, creativity, love, devotion,
study or service.
Just as many rivers lead to the sea, there are many paths to God. Each of the seven energy
centers of the human body - the chakras - corresponds to a specific path. In this book,
those paths are outlined, complete with spiritual exercises, giving you, the reader, a
sense of the most fruitful direction for your journey.
When the heart is open, we overcome the illusion that we are separate from one another,
and the Mystery of Divine Love wraps us in a cloak of security, unity, wisdom and joy. All
is right with the world. We are a mystic because we have seen the face of the Mystery, the
great paradox. Everything seems separate, yet we have just experienced oneness. Albert
Einstein once remarked that the illusion that we are separate is an optical delusion of
consciousness. Indeed, in holy moments, we are aware that there is only one mind in the
universe, a mind present in every thing and every one.
A mystic sees beyond the illusion of separateness into the intricate web of life in which
all things are expressions of a single whole. You can all this web God, the Tao, the Great
Spirit, the Infinite Mystery, Mother, or Father, but it can be known only as love.
Chapters
Introduction: From Alone to All One - The Experience of Union
1.The Rainbow Bridge - Seven Paths to God
2.Path One - Earth and Home: Everyday Mystic
3.Path Two - Creativity and Abundance: Generosity of Spirit
4.Path Three - How Can I Help? A Passion to Serve
5.Path Four - the Way of the Heart: Bridging Earth and Heaven
6.Path Five - Discipline, Ethics, and Will: Thy Will, Not mine, Be Done
7.Path Six - Opening the Wisdom Eye: Contemplation and Transformation
8.Path Seven - The Way Of Faith: Paradox and Grace
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The Rainbow Bridge
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Seven Paths to God
The rainbow has long been a symbol of hope, as white light passes through prisms of
raindrops, and seven distinct colors are revealed. I think of the rainbow as a metaphor
for the seven paths to God, which are likewise a part of what seems to be an indivisible
whole - each a precious reflection of one aspect of divine consciousness. The pot of gold
at the end of the rainbow is our relationship to God, happiness, gratitude, and the
knowledge that we have been given unique gifts with which to serve.
The number seven has special properties in most ancient traditions. Religious historian
Rosemarie Schimmel documents numerous references to the number seven in both the natural
and supernatural worlds : seven seas and seven heavens, seven planets of the solar system,
seven days of the week and seven notes to the musical scale. Creation was fashioned in
seven days - including the Sabbath or day of rest. Seven steps lead to Solomon's temple,
which was built in seven years. The Proverbs extol the Seven Pillars of Wisdom, and
throughout the old Testament, seven recurs as a power number. In the New Testament, Jesus
prescribes that we forgive 70 times 7. In the Book of Revelation, Christ held seven stars
in his hand, seven seals are opened, letters are sent to the seven churches, seven
trumpets announce the Judgment Day, and seven angels pour out seven bowls of tribulation.
There are seven sacraments, seven deadly sins, and seven charisms, or gifts of spirit.
There are seven branches to the Tree of Life in Kabbalistic Judaism. Sufism, the mystical
aspect of Islam, states that the mind of God unfolds into the human intellect in a
seven-step process. The Buddha sought enlightenment for seven years and circled the Bodhi
tree seven times before settling beneath it for his final meditation prior to
enlightenment. Hinduism is also based on a system of sevens, including a
medical/philosophical understanding of the lifeforce energy, or prana, that powers the
human body. Prana circulates in nadis, similar to acupuncture meridians, that flow into
seven wheels of energy called chakras.
In the tradition of the Native American Medicine Wheel, there are seven sacred directions.
Beneath our feet is Mother or Grandmother Earth. Above us is Father or Grandfather Sky,
the direction of Wakan Tanka, the Great Sacred Mystery. To the East lies the power of the
rising sun. To the South lies abundance and creativity. To the West lies transformation.
To the North lies wisdom. The seventh direction, where all energies come together, is
within our heart.
In this book, we will consider how the seven directions and the seven chakras reveal seven
paths to God. Although we will discuss these paths in a sequence that may seem linear, one
path is no more "advanced" than another. They are simply different expressions,
distinct rays of energy that each of us embody. But before we examine the different paths
on the spiritual spectrum, let us turn to white light - the universal energy - from which
they spring.
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Light: The Energy of Creation
God's first creation in the book of Genesis was light. Many mystical accounts involve
light or luminosity, which may culminate in union with God, a realization of the unity of
all things, or a prophetic vision. The Hebrew prophet Ezekiel was absorbed in a glowing
cloud of fire that contained a luminous crystalline vault, guarded by winged creatures,
half man and half beast. He emerged with a prophecy concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem. The first century Rabbi Akiva ascended through the seven heavens and the seven
palaces in the highest heaven by means of passwords uttered to the angelic gatekeepers.
His meetings with God were again characterized by luminosity. St. Paul was blinded by a
flash of heavenly light on the road to Damascus and was transformed from a persecutor of
Christians into a servant of Christ. Near-death experiencers, a diverse group of
modern-day mystics from every religion, also speak of meeting with a divine light that
changes their lives and tutors them on the interconnectedness of all things.
When I accompanied my mother into the light at her time of death, the light accompanied me
back into the everyday world. When I opened my eyes, everything in the hospital room
seemed made of light. The floor, the air, the bed on which the empty physical shell of my
mother lay, and the very living body of my son, who had also been keeping the deathbed
vigil for his grandmother, was glowing. Everything was interconnected, densities in a
luminous whole. My son, his face filled with awe, tears streaming from his eyes, announced
in hushed tones that the room was filled with light. He asked if I could see it, too. When
I nodded that I could, he whispered that it was his grandmother's last gift to us, that
she was holding open the door to eternity so that we could have a glimpse.
For the most part, the divine light is hidden. Occasionally, through grace, the door to
eternity does open, and we catch a tiny glimpse of the inexpressible beauty of creation.
But in its most basic sense, the light is always with us. It is the lifeforce itself.
Through it, flowers grow, humans and animals live, and the universe continually
evolves. The lifeforce that enlivens living things is recognized by 49 cultures around the
world and is intimately related to physical health and healing. Western culture, however,
has no name for it or framework for its action. Chinese call this lifeforce energy chi,
the Japanese ki, the Hindus prana.
One of the best known systems of lifeforce energy comes from yoga science, which
identifies 72,000 subtle channels, or nadis, in the human body through which prana
circulates. These channels of energy flow into a major river, the susumna, which travels
the length of the spinal cord, and comprises two main branches. The right nadi, called the
Pingala, is also know as Surya-Nadi. It is the channel for male energy, Surya
meaning "sun." It generates heat and is reminiscent of the Chinese concept of
yang, or dry, hot, active male energy. The left, or female nadi, is called Chandra-Nadi.
Chandra means "moon," and its energy is cool, receptive, and passive, similar to
the Chinese concept of female yin energy. The balance of these energies is thought to be
critical for health, well-being, creativity, and God Union. When the male and female
energies come to balance, the latent energy at the base of the spine, called kundalini,
shoots up the susumna, opens the chakras and delivers the individual to God Union, which
is the actual meaning of yoga.
The energies of Ida and Pingala flow through, and are balanced by a number of
transformers, the chakras, which literally mean wheels. The activity of these wheels is
related to many different inputs: the quality of breathing, food choice, constitution,
time in nature, prayer, meditation, attitude about life, and various psychological issues.
Yoga researchers have correlated the seven
chakras with specific nerve plexuses, endocrine glands, and medical conditions that relate
to disturbances in nervous system and glandular activity when chakras are blocked,
creating inefficient flow of lifeforce energy.
A number of contemporary Western healers and researchers work with the chakra system.
Annodea Judith is a therapist who has researched ancient yoga principles and was one of
the first to distill them into a cohesive spiritual, psychological, and physical healing
system. Barbara Ann Brennan is a former NASA research scientist who is also a healer,
teacher, scientist, and psychotherapist working with the human energy system and the
chakras. Caroline Myss, Ph.D., is a theologian and medical
intuitive. She wrote Anatomy of the Spirit.: The Seven Stages of Power and Healing, which
is a brilliant synthesis of the material on the chakras, the seven sacraments of
Catholicism, the seven branches of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, and the different ways
that people heal emotionally and spiritually.
In organizing the seven paths to God, I have drawn on the accounts of mystics from many
traditions, on ancient yoga science, on contemporary work on the chakras, and on the seven
directions of the Native American Medicine Wheel. The impersonal energy of each direction
is personalized in our bodies through the chakras, allowing us to respond to the cycles
and seasons -
to the use of energy that they represent. A brief summary of this correlation follows.
-
Path One - Earth and Home: The Everyday Mystic
Path One corresponds to the color red, the blood of the womb of our physical mother, and
to the fiery womb at the core of Grandmother Earth who nourishes us all. In the tradition
of the Medicine Wheel, it represents the Earth, the direction Down. In the language of
yoga, Path One flows from the root chakra, the place where the lifeforce energy is curled
like a serpent, waiting to unfold the creative process of life.
Path One is earth-centered, home-centered. It is the domain of what I call the everyday
mystic, who sees the Creator in every bush and tree, in the gifts of food and shelter, in
nurturing and in the fulfillment of the everyday needs of life. It is the path of
gratitude and caretaking of the earth and all her creatures. The Path-One mystic embodies
a trusting, powerful, earth-centered spirituality like that of First Nations People,
including the Native Americans. Their tribes had a strong sense of place and a history
rooted in a particular geographical area. At one with the physical world around them, they
perceived the interconnectedness of all things, the circular nature of the universe, and
the rightness of both birth and death in the overall scheme of creation.
-
Path Two - Creativity and Abundance: Generosity of Spirit
Path Two follows the direction South on the Medicine Wheel, the summer season of increase
and abundance when the earth bears fruit. This seasonal energy is related to the personal
energy of the second chakra: sexuality and birth. Yoga science relates the creative second
chakra to the Leydig cells that occur both in the ovaries and the testes. These cells
synthesize testosterone and mediate our ability to carve out territory for ourselves, a
niche in which we will bring forth the abundance of our soul, offering our gifts to the
world.
In this path of creativity and abundance, male and female aspects join. Our male aspect
provides the space in which our feminine aspect becomes the womb of creativity. In the
Hindu tradition, this is called tantra yoga, the sacred marriage of male and female. The
eight books I have authored, the mind/body program I helped develop, and the students I
have mentored are the fruits of combining my male and female aspects. Offering these gifts
to the world is pure joy, and the energy that comes back to me from those who receive them
keeps the creativity flowing. The key to Path Two is generosity of spirit - being secure
enough in ourselves that we can receive from God and give to others in a way that
encourages both of us to bring forth our creative gifts.
-
Path Three - How Can I Help?: The Passion to Serve
The third path follows the direction East on the Medicine Wheel, the spring season when
the lifeforce returns after winter. In yoga science, this seasonal energy is carried
personally within our solar plexus or adrenal center. East is the direction of the rising
sun, the new day that brings the energy and power to dream a new world into being.
Similarly, the third chakra is the powerhouse of action, the furnace of passion and
emotion whose fire fuels our dreams and gives us the stamina to fulfill them. Think of
Biblical prophets such as fiery Elijah, feisty martyrs such as Joan of Arc, or modern
orators and visionaries such as Martin Luther King. These charismatic people emanate a
kind of "fire in the belly," an undeniable passion that can either make people
sit up and take notice or run for cover.
The basic question for path three mystics is: "Whom do I serve?" If we serve
ourselves, to the exclusion of others, as do dictators and power-hungry zealots such as
Hitler, we fall into spiritual peril and are likely to add chaos, rather than creativity,
to the universe. If we serve the world, we use our potential as co-creators with God. Path
Three is what the Hindus call karma yoga, the path to God Union through service.
-
Path Four: The Way of the Heart: Bridging Earth and Heaven
The fourth path follows the seventh direction of the Medicine Wheel: Within, and the
fourth chakra, the heart or thymus center. The Path-Four mystic can truly say, "I
love the Lord My God with all my heart, soul, and mind, and I love my neighbor as
myself." The Hindus call this path bhakti yoga, the way of devotion. One may be
devoted to a personal aspect of God such as Krishna, Jesus, Buddha, or the Mother Mary -
or to the realization that, when we see with the eyes of the heart, we can
worship God within every person.
Yoga research correlates the heart chakra with the cardiac plexus and the thymus gland.
The thymus is an organ of the immune system, and the cells that develop within it are
called T-cells. The job of the immune system is to tell self from not-self. It is a
boundary organ. In Eastern thought, the thymus regulates the boundary between earth and
heaven. The heart chakra is the midpoint between the three lower and three higher energy
wheels. It is represented in Hindu iconography by the six-pointed star, which in Judaism
is the Star of David, or Solomon's Seal. It symbolizes the downward ray of God's energy,
which meets the upward ray of human energy. The heart chakra is thus considered the
meeting point of earth and heaven, karma and grace. Path-Four mystics such as Mother
Teresa bring about heaven on earth through love.
-
Path Five - Discipline, Ethics and Will: Thy Will, Not Mine, Be Done
The fifth path follows the direction North on the Medicine Wheel, the season of winter in
which stories are told and we reflect on the natural order of the universe and our place
within it. This impersonal energy of order is reflected personally in the fifth chakra,
the throat or thyroid center that represents discipline, will, and responsibility. In
Hindu philosophy, this is the path of
raja yoga - God Union by following the specific moral disciplines that preserve the
community, honor life, and lead to personal growth. For the observant Jew, it means
carrying out the letter of the law as prescribed in the Torah and the Talmud, with one's
whole heart and mind.
The Ten Commandments, like the Buddhist precepts for living and the Hindu system of raja
yoga, provide a template for using our human will to live in accordance with the divine
will. Those who take such commandments to heart struggle with moral dilemmas: Is war ever
righteous since it violates the commandment against killing? Is abortion a sin, and is it
any less of a sin to bomb an abortion clinic to stop it? Many Path-Five mystics walk a
narrow line between obedience to God and blind zealotry. Like St. Paul, they can be
dangerous when doing their own will, but inspired and inspiring when doing God's will. The
bottom line for Path Five mystics is whether their acts are kind and compassionate - not
in the abstract, but in the particular moment - and for the particular person with whom
they are interacting.
-
Path Six - Opening the Wisdom Eye: Contemplation and Transformation
-
The sixth path follows the direction West on the Medicine Wheel, the fall season when the
lifeforce energy withdraws and nature goes to sleep. The abode of the setting sun, west is
the direction of the ego death that makes room for rebirth into spirit. This is
often accomplished by undergoing a dark night of the soul, like the Buddha, when our old
life is left behind and we enter a period of wandering or searching before the sun of
enlightenment rises. When we awaken to our new life, we see things not through our
physical eyes, but through the wisdom eye. As Jesus said, "Your eye is the lamp of
your body; when your eye is sound, your whole body is full of light; but when it is not
sound, your body is full of darkness."
Yoga science relates the sixth chakra to the pineal gland, a vestigial third eye complete
with light receptors, which the French philosopher Rene Descartes called the "seat of
the soul." It has long been linked with higher intuition, "medicine," or
teaching dreams and visions. The dark night of transformation calls out the question:
"Who am I? Am I just this body, or I am something more?" In answering this
question, the Path-Six mystic is called to deep meditation and contemplation. These
practices help her to shed the ego's attachments to praise and blame, tragedy and triumph.
Through them she develops the contentment, equanimity, and compassion of one who has
communed with God and knows the beauty of life, beyond the appearances of suffering and
limitation. In the Hindu system, Path Six corresponds to jnana yoga, the path of insight.
-
Path Seven - The Way of Faith: Paradox and Grace
The seventh path follows the direction Above in the Medicine Wheel, representing the
action of Wakan Tanka, the Great Sacred, or the Great Spirit, as it is often translated.
In yoga science, it correlates with the seventh, or crown chakra, where the lifeforce
energy enters the body and God becomes manifest in physical form. Our faith is an
important determiner of openness to Spirit. The nature of our faith develops and changes
throughout the lifecycle, through the dark nights of the soul when we are challenged to
transform, and through the work we do on the different spiritual paths. Eventually we have
the faith to recognize that grace is a paradox; apparently wonderful events can curb our
growth, while devastating events may spur it. We then receive the higher grace of
nonattachment.
If we follow our spiritual path and do the required psychological healing along the way,
we set the stage for God Union. But we will never get there through works, for ultimately
God Union is a grace, the unearned gift of a generous parent to her child. Whether it
occurs while we are in this body or when we have been reborn to the Spirit World is not
important, nor within our control. And since the state of union is sometimes beyond the
capacity of our perceptions, its truest measure is in the kindness, creativity, charity,
and compassion that are the fruits of Spirit made manifest in our life.
-
Your Primary and Secondary Path
We are each working with the energy of all seven directions, all seven chakras, but in my
experience each of us has one primary and one secondary, or supporting, path on which we
concentrate the majority of our energies. Our primary path is the one through which our
major contribution to the world will be made. It comes naturally to us. For instance, Path
Two - creativity and abundance - represents my work in the world. My greatest joy is to
write and teach and to help others recognize
and use their gifts. I love to study - as a doctorate, three postdoctoral fellowships at
Harvard Medical School, writing eight books, and being a lifelong learner - demonstrate.
These are natural talents necessary to fulfill my soul purpose. While I had to develop
them, the raw material was already there.
My secondary path relates to the seventh direction, Within, or the heart chakra. Our
secondary spiritual path is often based on a wound whose healing will develop qualities
that we need in support of our primary purpose. All my life I could easily give love, but
for reasons stemming from my childhood, felt unworthy to receive it. So the love I gave
was of a limited type, calculated to get people to like me. I had trouble giving people
honest feedback about behaviors that hurt me, for fear they would be angry with me. I also
had to learn that giving people everything they want may disempower them, rather than
helping them bring forth their gifts. In order for me to use my gifts as a Path-Two
teacher, I had to learn about love, a process that continues to unfold.
In addition to our primary and secondary paths, we also learn to use the energies of the
other paths as they are needed to fulfill our purpose. With time you will recognize how
working with the different paths can help you develop skills and attitudes that may not be
innate, and which you will need at different times in your life and work.
Read the entire book before you zero in on your primary and secondary paths. Since several
paths may have elements that appeal to you, it can take time and reflection to settle on
the best fit.
Consider trying the practices of the secondary path first, for a full 28-day cycle. Since
this is the path that may correspond to the healing of old wounds, following the
suggestions for that path may help free blocked energies and open up new understanding.
Your natural, primary path will then be easier to follow. When you feel ready, follow the
suggestions that accompany your primary path.
Why follow a 28-day, or lunar cycle? Every seven days the moon enters a new phase.
According to Lakota wisdom, each of us is accompanied through life by 48 guardian angels.
Twelve are with us at any given time, and the shift changes every seven days with the
phases of the moon. In 28 days, then, we have experienced the entire angelic guard
assigned to us by Divine Providence, and they all know, and can support, our intentions.
- Order
The Ways of the Mystic: Seven Paths to God
-
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