Economies of Merit at play in Qinghai

Last year, the Taer Monastery reported ticket sales revenues of 36 million yuan (US$5.48 million). The money was used to pay every monk about 10,000 yuan in living allowances and to maintain the monastery buildings.

In 2010, the per capita net income of farmers and herdsmen in Qinghai was 3,863 yuan, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

Besides allowances, the monks can earn extra income by chanting prayers for families of Tibetan Buddhist believers.

Link to Shanghai Daily

When I visited Chinese and Tibetan monasteries in 2003, it was clear that technology had hit, and that tourism was big business. I don’t fault these monks at all for owning cellphones or surfing the Internet. Or for earning roughly 1,500 US dollars a year, for that matter. Good on ‘em.

But it will be interesting to see how it shifts their relationship to the secular world. What do those herdsmen think?

There are patterns of economic growth and reform in so many traditions, from wealth to poverty and back again. The cause of this cycle–that vows of renunciation of wealth are be viewed as meritorious, and thereby become a source of profit–seems unsustainable.

Can monasteries justify continuing to operate in the black market of merit, pretending to dwell outside of the ecosystem of the “worldly”?

Rather than make claims to renunciation, maybe it would be better to pursue another merit strategy, or a source of revenue that doesn’t involve merit. Or maybe that just gets us back to the blind pursuit of profit–without values–that many monastics are trying to avoid in the first place.

Economies of Merit

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In many monastic and religious traditions, ethical and spiritual “merit” gets traded like a commodity.1

Nuns and monks agree to live a certain way, abiding by a certain kind of behavior (which their society has deemed the most virtuous or ethical), and in exchange they don’t have to earn their own money to stay alive, but can focus on loftier or more personally pressing matters. What the monastics bring to the bartering table is merit—a substance, not much more abstract than money, that your good deeds earn you and which earns you future spiritual favor (a trip to heaven, a better rebirth, decreased negative karma, etc.). How a monk or nun lives effectively earns them points, which, for their purposes, will be directly or indirectly useful in attaining whatever it is they are seeking. When monastics follow the rules and earn a surplus of merit, which they agree to share with each other, with laypeople (alive and dead), and other beings, they earn their worldly keep.

This merit benefits the surrounding society in a number of ways. Directly, lay folk ask the merit-rich monks, nuns and priests to pray for them and for their (living or dead) relatives, and to perform rites and ceremonies for them. Indirectly, the knowledge that the monks you give alms to exist as exemplars of (your definition of) purity and holiness, encapsulated in special buildings more beautiful than any, is a gift.

On a broader level, monasteries themselves agree to uphold and enforce merit-earning behavior, and are given land, buildings, and special rights. Monasteries are merit-engines.

So which came first in monastic traditions around the world: morality, merit, or money?

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  1. For example, the 15th and 16th century papacy’s practice of selling spiritual indulgences: “the Church drew from the the treasury of merits accumulated by the good works of the saints, and in return the recipient made a contribution to the Church. A voluntary and popular arrangement, the practice allowed the Church to raise money for financing crusades and building cathedrals and hospitals. At first applied only to penalties imposed by the Church in this life, by Luther’s time indulgences were being granted to remit penalties imposed by God in the afterlife, including immediate release from purgatory. With indulgences effecting even the remission of sins, the sacrament of penance itself was seemingly compromised.” (Richard Tarnas, in Passion of the Western Mind)

Rohan Gunatillake on the Social Life of Meditation

I just came across this video on the “Social life of Meditation” from Rohan Gunatillake of 21awake.com and the Here & Now Project.  After wrapping up a series of posts on monastic separateness and engagement a few days ago, it’s great to see these issues confronted from a different perspective. Rohan identifies “four major ways in which meditation is social—the positive effect the practice can have on people around us, how it can radically re-orientate the relationship of self to other, the value of a community to support one’s practice and lastly, the enabling of new practice modes through social media.”

Continue on to Buddhist Geeks to read on about the role of social media in meditation, and Rohan’s peer-to-peer meditation experiment.

Monastic Separateness & Engagement (part 4): a Challenge

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[This series of posts, "The Elements of Monasticism" asks the question, what exactly is monasticism? "Separateness & Engagement" will unfold in a series of 4 posts (links: 1234).]

Looking back at some of the questions I asked in part 1, the assumptions I unpacked in part 2, and the different perspectives I explored in part 3, here’s a 10-part challenge to would-be secular monastics regarding separateness & engagement:

1. You can be isolated and still impact the world

2. You can be monastic and rarely be isolated

3. You can be a monastic and be more engaged than anyone else

4. It is no threat to your monkhood to be engaged with the world

5. Just because some monastics are missionaries doesn’t mean all (or even most) are.

6. Monastics can embrace social liberalism.

7. Monks can be activists, politicians, artists, scientists, tech-gurus and entrepreneurs (monks can even make money)

8. A monastery can be a role models of what a “quadruple bottom line” organizations can look like. As the world’s oldest economically viable, environmentally sound, socially responsible, spiritually active communities, they can exemplify what many businesses, nonprofits, and intentional communities are moving toward.

9. Your community can call itself a monastery.

10. You can call yourself a monk.

Now we’ve come back around to Dostoevsky’s Father Zosima:

“For monks are not a special sort of people, but only what all people ought to be.”

In his introduction to Benedict’s Dharma: Buddhists Reflect on the Rule of Saint Benedict, editor Patrick Henry writes:

In many places the population of monasteries is declining, but, ironically, more and more people appear to think that Father Zossima was onto something. Monasteries are crowded with guests; books that draw on monastic spirituality are best-sellers. If, as a student of mine once said, a monk or nun lurks somewhere inside each of us, then nuns and monks can teach us not just about their life, but also about ourselves—who we are and what we may become.

Monastic Separateness & Engagement (part 3): Monasticism in Society

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[This series of posts, "The Elements of Monasticism" asks the question, what exactly is monasticism? "Separateness & Engagement" will unfold in a series of 4 posts (links: 1234).]

A gem from Father Louis (aka Thomas Merton), in case you missed it a few weeks ago:

The monastery is neither a museum nor an asylum. The monk remains in the world from which the monk has fled, and the monk remains a potent, though hidden, force in that world. Beyond all the works which may accidentally attach themselves to the vocation, the monk acts on the world simply by being a monk. The presence of contemplatives is, to the world, what the presence of yeast is to dough … if the monk stands, in some sense, above the divisions of human society, that does not mean the monk has no place in the history of nations. The monk has always been, and always will be, by the vocation, sympathetic to any social and cultural movement that favors the growth of the human spirit.

From historical context to historical context, tradition to tradition, monastery to monastery, abbess to abbess, monk to monk, the truth is more complex than the assumptions in part 2 suggest. While Ariana Huffington’s casual critique (see part 1) of the idios kosmos of the monastery might more precisely be leveled at hermits (but seriously, can’t we just leave them alone?), one has to wonder:

What is the role of monasticism in society?

A correspondent of Thomas Merton’s, Discalced Carmelite hermit William McNamara (founder of the first Roman Catholic hermitic community in the United States), has written a fantastic piece on the “Prophetic Role of Monasticism“:

The monk is not a special kind of person; everyone is a special kind of monk, because the central and deepest human impulse is monastic. Monos means one, and the wayfaring human person finds oneness only by tracking Christ through deserts and dark nights into Glory. Nevertheless, a culture needs a sacred center, and the monastery provides an entry to that center, from which society derives essential clues to the mystery of its destiny.

Even if we’re not tracking Christ, per se, how can a secular monasticism serve as an entryway to the sacred center of an increasingly technological, interfaith society? Or can it?

When we talk about the value of a monastery to the society it’s a part of, there are a few different (though not mutually exclusive) possible perspectives:

Quietism: Monasteries have no direct value to society. The point of a monastery is to be disengaged from society. If society benefits from this (e.g. in seeing itself reflected somehow in the monastery), that is great for society, but it’s not the point.

Dying way of life: Whatever role they may have once played, monasteries have lost their relevance to the technological, developed, secular world. Nice while they lasted.

Asylums: Monasteries are homes for monks, mystics and other insane people [Sorry Father Louis].  See also “Mystic Storage.”

Survival of the Fittingest: Whatever monasteries may once have been, they are evolving, just as business has evolved, government has evolved, and the social sector has evolved. They fill a unique niche in society (e.g. the responsibly governed spiritual community niche), AND they are themselves a unique niche for certain people in society (they are home to certain people that would otherwise find it difficult to find a truly fitting place, and without which there would be many people deemed socially inept, deviant, useless)… a subtly distinct view from saying “monasteries are asylums”.

Activism: Monasteries are a part of a society. On one level, the monastics residing within are often called upon, out of uncommon stillness, to extraordinary activism. On a deeper level, monasteries reflect the values and conscience of a society. McNamara writes:

…There is an intimate relationship between real, live monasticism and the socio-political world. Seen in historical context, the vows of obedience and poverty originally represented ways of transcending and criticizing a conventional loyalty to status quo power arrangements and the reification of people in servitude to an unjust economic system. In the past the monastic vows exemplified a quality of relationship and communal equity undreamt of by either, the oppressed victims or their masters.

Politics is, after all, the science of the possible. Monasticism should be a real alternative, and thus make an enormous contribution to the future direction of political and economic organization.

…We take vows to overcome the slavery of modern utilitarianism. Most of us are enslaved: we are workers instead of men and women. Monastic life ought to be the most dangerous, the most difficult and the most wonderful, exciting adventure in the world. What’s wrong with monastic life today? In great monastic orders there is no creative subversion, no counterculture. Monastic orders are, for the most part, locked into serving the petrified conventions and institutions of contemporary society that cause the disease and frustration that are sickening so many people and rendering them impotent. We cannot survive on banality; we need firsthand experience of primordial truth.

…[M]onkishness is an indispensable and ineluctable dimension of every human being.

Economic Actors: Monasteries are real economic actors in a real marketplace. They produce, consume, demand, and supply. They have a rational self interest, and serve the rational (and trans-rational) self interest of their inhabitants.

Antechamber to another life: “The power base of monasticism is other-worldliness,” says McNamara. Monasteries offer us a glimpse of another world (whether you interpret that to mean something recognizably spiritual, or merely a life where you’re more whole, compassionate, aware, wise, awake, communal, human, alive etc.), and the rites of passage to get there.

Intentional Communities: Whatever role monasteries may once have played, they are now just one of a handful of types of intentional community, which we might divide into communities of interest, communities of practice, and communities of place such as communes, ecovillages, student cooperatives, land co-ops, cohousing groups, ashrams, kibbutzes, and farming collectives, co-working facilities. As such, they train humans to live together in harmony,

Retreat Centers for Contemplative Creatives: The growing class of “Contemplative Creatives” needs a place to escape to, even for a week or two.

Universities of Practice/Museums: It is important that there be institutions devoted to spiritual/contemplative practice alone—what we might call “universities of practice”.  It is important that there be a repository of culture, texts, and debate outside of academia.  [Sorry again, Father Louis]

Time Capsules: Whatever relevance monasteries have to the technological, developed, secular world, we should keep them around in case civilization collapses. They may help us through a coming dark age, the way they helped us through the last dark ages.

Subtlism: Regardless of whether monastics are actively engaged in society, a monastery serves a valuable function in society merely by existing. It is important that somewhere in the world, there are humans devoted entirely to the attainment of stillness, awakening, peace, etc. and that their efforts ripple out to the rest of society: directly, in that we in society can draw inspiration and peace just from knowing that there are people out there doing this, and indirectly, through the indeterminate and subtle impacts they might make.

Fourth Sector Organizations: Monasteries in some ways gave birth to the growing fourth sector:

[From the website]: Over the past few decades, the boundaries between the public (government), private (business), and social (non-profit) sectors have been blurring as many pioneering organizations have been blending social and environmental aims with business approaches.

There are many expressions of this trend, including corporate social responsibility, microfinance, venture philanthropy, sustainable businesses, social enterprise, privatization, community development and others. As this activity matures, it is becoming formalized as a ‘Fourth Sector’ of the economy. To better understand the emergence of the Fourth Sector, it is helpful to study recent shifts in organizational behavior across the three traditional sectors.

Businesses are dedicating more resources to delivering social and environmental benefits. Cause-based marketing, the triple bottom line, and corporate social responsibility are a few of the buzzwords that have come into usage in recent years as part of this trend. Meanwhile, public and social sector organizations are attempting to operate in a more businesslike method.

Quadruple-Bottom-Line Corporations: People, planet, profit… & spirit? From society’s perspective, monasteries are corporations that responsibly maximize financial capital, human capital, natural capital, and spiritual capital.


Monastic Separateness & Engagement (part 2): Assumptions

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[This series of posts, "The Elements of Monasticism" asks the question, what exactly is monasticism? "Separateness & Engagement" will unfold in a series of 4 posts (links: 1234).]

Source: http://goo.gl/Q7ees

The conflation I mentioned in part 1 represents one of a number of assumptions of how monastics exist in society. I will now attempt to summarize some other assumptions I’ve encountered in myself and others. While I’m sure that all of these are true for somemonk somewhere, they are all impoverished views based on romanticized images of what the monastic life is about. For each assumption, I offer another way to think about the issue.

Some assumptions about monastics in society:

Isolation = disengaged

Teresa of Avila

Assumption: Intuitively, you can’t impact the world when you’re by yourself. The only way to impact the world is to be vocal (and loud), to be a conscious consumer or an entrepreneur, to be producing, to be creative, to be social.

Counter: The isolation that most monks spend at least some portion of their lives in renders them even more capable of making bold, positive impacts in their communities and the larger world. The depth of practice afforded by solitude makes indirect (and subtly direct) impacts on the world.

Monastic = isolated

Assumption: Monastic means hermit for life, right?

Counter: Hermiticism is just one form of monastic living. Few monks are 100% hermit. Most monks move in and out of periods of solitude and silence throughout their lives.

Monastic = disengaged.

Assumption: It’s a truism that monks are disengaged from public life. If you’re engaged with public life, you can’t truly be a monk. The monastic venture is defined not by balancing activity and stillness, but by stillness or purity alone, and the extent to which monastics are called to activism is the extent to which society is fucked up.

Counter: Monastic can equal more engaged. Monastics, through contemplation, engage reality as it is. “The true meaning of spiritual is real,” says Emerson. They are the ones who have the hardest time ignoring the real plight of the impoverished, the destruction of the ecosystem, and collapse of systems of finance and governance.

Engaged monastics are an aberration.

Martin Luther and his theses

Assumption: The monks who have chosen to engage public life (Thomas Merton, Mother Teresa, Thich Nhat Hanh, monk-activists in Burma and CambodiaDada Maheshvarananda, Wayne Teasdale, Bede Griffiths, Martin Luther, Hildegard of Bingen, Catherine of Siena, Julian of Norwich, and innumerable other monastics making extraordinary impacts in a variety of ways) do so as exception to the Rule that binds them, often in response to overwhelming social pressures.

Counter: The examples above are among the most charismatic, outspoken or historically famous “engaged” monastics. It is true, these do not represent the majority of monastics, who work in ever subtler and more invisible ways, through small acts of unseen but not unfelt kindness and large yet unpublicized acts of self-sacrifice, passion and conviction. Famous monastics are an aberration, I would argue, but engaged monastics are much more common than they would have us know.

Engaged monks just want to proselytize.

Assumption: Monk activists are really just looking for a platform to spread their chosen faith, often by preaching to the most vulnerable members of society. Monk activism is a form of missionary work (cf. Mother Theresa).

Counter: Evangelism happens, I’m sure, but monastics also act out of the same impulses that drive the rest of us to engage the world: compassion, urgency, and a desire for wholeness.

Monastic activism rejects social liberalism.

Assumption: Monastics only engage the world in a way that reinforces or sanctifies poverty and rejects things like contraception and abortion.

Sister Chittester with Bono, Shriver

Counter: The Poverty that monastics vow doesn’t have to be the systemic poverty that religion reinforces (according to Marxism, though not according to one study). In Catholicism, feminism does seem to be the exception. There are examples: Hildegard, Teresa of AvilaSister Margaret McBride, Sister Joan Chittister, (and theologian Mary Daly, though not a nun). Now that the pope has stated that contraception is a lesser sin than knowingly spreading HIV, perhaps there’s more wiggle room for the monastic world to educate and empower women.

Social engagement for monastics = feed-the-pooractivism (≠business, art, politics, technology, scientific discourse, the market, philosophy, or activisms that involve these)

"Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem," said William of Ockham

Assumption: The only way for monks to be engaged publicly is through a traditional feed-the-poor/care-for-the-sick kind of activism. Anything else tarnishes a monk’s purity (and since being a monk is defined by purity, destroys one’s true identity as a monk). Politics, academia, the art world, technology, scientific discourse and (most of all) the market are inappropriate venues for monastic public activity. In addition to those engaged monks listed above, you’ll have to disregard the scientific likes of “Doctor of Wonders” Roger Bacon, William of Ockham, Gregor Mendel, etc. And disregard the Lasermonks. Disregard Sister Susan Mika, a shareholder activist.

Counter: Monastics are the world’s oldest social entrepreneurs.  Monasteries were the first For-Benefit corporations. Monasticism was the birthplace of scientific method. Literally and figuratively, the monk and the artist are one.

These are just a few of the simplistic assumptions I and others have made regarding monasticism along a certain line of inquiry. There are, of course, the wide range of myths and images about monastic life, monastic history, the relationships of monasteries and organized religions, etc. But these are for another day.

In the next post in this series, I’ll look at the role of monasticism, broadly speaking, as an institution in civil society, the market, and the wider world.

Monastic Separateness & Engagement (part 1): Problematizing Separateness

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[This series of posts, "The Elements of Monasticism" asks the question, what exactly is monasticism? "Separateness & Engagement" will unfold in a series of 4 posts (links: 1234).]

Why put on the robe of the monk, and live aloof from the world in lonely pride? —Kabîr

For monks are not a special sort of people, but only what all people ought to be. —Father Zosima in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov 1

The world is a rare case of selective asymmetry./ The capitol is redolent of burnt monk. —From “Mad Lib Elegy” by Ben Lerner 2

This is a post about how monks are and are not “aloof from the world.” I will hypothesize that our idea of monastic life need not be limited to the ways in which it stands apart from the worldly. There are many flavors of separateness, and the one that is often associated with monks and nuns is just one way of being monastic, and not even the most essential or most useful aspect.

But first, some meta-jabber.

One of this blog’s hidden tasks is to undermine some assumptions (mine and other people’s) about monasticism.

Of course, there is no one monasticism. If I aim to untangle some of the simplistic ideals about monasticism from what is actually shared among monastic traditions, I have to be willing to end up holding nothing (except for robes and beads, maybe).  If I want to boil down monasticism to some kind of essence that we can mix into the secular brew, I have to be willing to admit that “monasticism” may be the phantom name we use for various aggregates of many different strains of culture, and that we only have a word for it because of the resemblance of its external forms.

At the same time, I have another hidden task: to suggest that monks can feel empowered to be identified as “monks” however they choose, whether by their community, by society, or by themselves. Some will self-identify the way an artist may (e.g. before ever acting on it, or only after years of hard work), and some will be credentialed the way doctors and academics are. Some will take vows, follow rules and live or work in communities. Some will be monks only in their minds.

It is perhaps with this task in mind that this post will unfold the way it does. I must feel like I’m defending someone. Maybe it’s just me, and maybe it’s everyone who feels like “a monk in the world.” Whatever the source of the voice in my head that says “if you’re not a hermit, you’re not monk enough,” I suspect I’m not the only one that hears it.

Monks are not special people. “We are all ordinary human beings working with ordinary problems,” says Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche. Monasteries likewise are not special; they are just communities. They deal with the same problems that all communities deal with. Monasticism is not a special institution. The whole monastic mystique (Monastique™) and the air of privileged access to or closeness to the Divine are in need of a good airing out.

Separateness

There are as many ways of relating to separateness as there are traditions (or even as many as there are monastics). There are monasteries perched on the tops of mountains and monasteries in the middle of cities. There are traditions where monastics live their entire lives behind cloister walls, and there are traditions where monks spend just a period of their life in the monastery. Some monastics live in community, some live in isolation, some live off what is handed them on the streets.

I think there’s a fourth class of monks operating incognito in society, with families or communities or alone, with careers and wealth or in poverty, with political leanings or in oblivion. For these people too, there is separateness.

I aim to tease out a few of the different flavors of separateness, and to see of which forms monasticism is essentially guilty. Which forms of separateness have something to offer the contemporary secular world?

Tibetan Buddhist scholar and teacher Reggie Ray, of Dharma Ocean, says:

We are a very extroverted society. Even though within the Western tradition the practice of seclusion and retreat are very much a part of our own spiritual culture—the contemplative practices of Roman Catholicism, for example—most people are not aware that they are part of our heritage.

I think the other reason is that not only has the typical Western person spent little or no time alone, but many of us have an underlying fear of solitude. Possibly driving some of the misunderstanding of retreat is a deep-seated fear of being alone without distraction, without entertainment, without “work,” without other people around to constantly confirm our sense of self. We live in a culture driven by consumerism. Many of us feel, perhaps without realizing it, that unless we are “producing” in some sort of external, materialistic way, our legitimacy as a human being is somehow in question. We don’t really see where retreat fits in.

Flavors of Separateness

Monastic vs. Worldly Dualism

To kick things off, a (rather casual) remark by Arianna Huffington in an EnlightenNext interview:

I have chosen both to be on a spiritual path and to be politically engaged, and I don’t see any tension between the two, provided I remember to “render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.”

There are a lot of religious traditions that require isolating oneself from the world and praying—the monastic traditions. My form of spirituality is not a form of withdrawal but of engagement, personal and collective. And that comes partly from my own Greek tradition. The word idiot comes from ancient Greek—an idiot was someone who was not engaged in public life. So there is a deep Greek tradition of engagement. It’s part of what has shaped me. For me, engagement in the world is an extension of my spiritual life.

Huffington’s view—isolation is the same thing as disengagement, monastics are isolated, therefore monastics are disengaged—is among the more benign of a handful of assumptions about monasticism I’ve encountered recently. Yet it stands for a simplistic perspective, which happens to be the very a straw man I’m so intent on hacking apart here: the Monastic versus Worldly dualism.

There is the world over here, and there are monks in monasteries over there. To be a monk, you must dwell in permanent separation from society. You leave it alone, and it might leave you alone.

The fact is, monks and nuns are as entangled as anyone else in the web of mutuality that defines our world. Even if they live their whole lives behind walls, monastics are still “engaged” with the world.  As I will argue later, they are economic actors, subject to laws, morally involved and politically influential/influenceable. The world is as constantly molded by their actions as it is by anyone else’s.

Neither monks, nor monasteries, nor monasticism as an institution are actually separate from the world, nor has separateness ever been the dominating point of the monastic endeavor. It is only a means among many means (and a limited meme among more useful memes). The goals of monasticism are as varied as the monks that enter monasteries, and (I would speculate) running away from the world is rarely a long-lived one. The world keeps rushing back at you.

The view that the monastic and the worldly are wholly discrete (the one dwelling forever in transcendence or in mockery of the other) is one that both opportunistic monastics and politically-minded laypeople have taken advantage of for thousands of years. I wonder if behind this view is a fear that monks are up to something special in there, as well as an anger that monks are just trying to avoid the difficulty that all of us have to live with from day to day. I’m sure the Monastic vs. Worldly dualism has served many people well over the centuries, keeping greedy or abusive monks in check and scaring off anyone who would be inclined just to escape the world. Even today, in places where monks can still make money off the superstitious, or where life is so bleak that the monastery is seen as a viable escape, a degree of skepticism toward the institution is justified.

The monastic vs. worldly dualism exists in large part, I would posit, because of a conflation of the other types of separateness in which monasticism more genuinely participates. It somehow manages to subsume all other, more nuanced separatenesses.

Physical Withdrawnness

For example, the most basic, obvious form of separateness: physical withdrawnness. This is a temporary state of being, a relationship to certain kinds of sensory experience, and to people and institutions. It’s nothing special, and we do it every day. When I leave a roomful of people and step into the bathroom, I’m physically withdrawn from them. For minutes, hours, days, weeks, months or years, monks or lay people become physically withdrawn. Hermits may become physically withdrawn for decades. “For example, today, in all of the Theravada countries, in addition to the classical and conventional monasticism, there is a forest tradition. Within the forest tradition, monks live in isolation in the jungle, where they devote themselves to meditation all day and all night long.”

One of my main points here is that being physically withdrawn from people, society, or sensory input is just one aspect of a monastic’s life, and it exists in a wide spectrum from tradition to tradition. More radically, being physically withdrawn from the world isn’t necessarily being disengaged from it. While you are in retreat, you are engaged, and when you come back, you are more engaged. Ray again:

What solitary retreat practice provides that I don’t think is possible in any other way is freedom from the distraction and the reinforcement and confusion of interpersonal relationships, so over a period of time your mind is able to open up to a much greater depth than would otherwise be possible. We talk about living in the moment, but it’s just a concept for most people. In retreat you actually learn how to do it. In fact, it occurs naturally.

The full benefit is not really realized in retreat itself. The whole point of retreat is to develop your mind and your state of being so that when you’re living your ordinary life you are more present to yourself and to your life and to other people.

You can look at retreat as a practice to develop compassion for other people. …Far from being an antisocial practice, retreat practice frees you to love people in a uniquely powerful way.

Most of us would love to be kind to others, to be compassionate, and yet we are so tied up with our own hope and fear, our own emotions and our own preconceptions, that we just can’t do it; not really. Through retreat practice, we learn the pathway to the person we most long to be.

Social Transcendance: Apart from the “Default”

Another form of separateness is exemplified by the Burning Man festival. I’ve been a few times, and routinely find it an enriching, transformative experience. What is perhaps most transformative, and also most annoying, about burners [that is, people who frequent Burning Man] is the extent to which they consider themselves apart from the “default” world.

This is something that burners share this with a lot of nascent monastics: a sense that the path of least resistance afforded by the modern world (simplistically put: well-paying jobs, shopping, mortgages and cars…) is not sufficient to meet many human needs. Burners and monastics begin to seek out other ways of meeting those basic needs.

This is similar to what Marsha Sinetar, in Ordinary People as Monks and Mystics, calls “social transcendence”: “Emotional independence or detachment from societal influences, even from other people when necessary.” For Sinetar, a monk is “the person who, due to an inner prompting, turns from familiar, secure patterns of social custom, relationship and community life toward something altogether unknown.”

In the end, though, I would consider this just one stage of the path of the monastic. Any transcendance of the social is an illusion. Any standing in relation to the “default” cannot but occur in a way that is a part of, and has an impact on, the very default world that is being transcended.  Another post for another day, perhaps.

Contemplative Absorption

A more monastic-smelling separateness is that of contemplative absorption, a more or less temporary state of mind in which the outside world, space & time seem to fall away, subject and object blur, and the individual experiences the unconditioned, timeless, formless nature of reality. This often occurs in certain types of meditation, but has been reported in other activities, such as artistic or aethletic flow states, sexual activity, drug trips, near death experiences, or even randomly while waiting for the bus. Monastics and mystics who abide in this state for months or years at a time, tapped into something deep and formless, can’t possibly consider themselves “engaged with the world”, right? There are a couple perspectives on this. My own is closer to that of Reggie Ray:

You can look at retreat as a practice to develop compassion for other people. …Far from being an antisocial practice, retreat practice frees you to love people in a uniquely powerful way.

Another perspective I’ve heard goes something like this:

[Mystics] hold the invisible fabric of the world’s transformational energies together in a coherent field that supports the upliftment of those of lesser attainment and of the whole of humanity. In some ways, this is even more important than the visible spiritual teaching.

As this latter perspective seems tough to prove, and as the depth of practice this kind of absorption requires occurs both within and without monastic tradition, I’ll leave it to others to argue about.

Non-dual, Alone in the Crowd

Integrating this experience of the unconditioned with the world she has chosen (whether it’s a community of monastics, a family, a life alone in the forest, or among friends and coworkers.), the monastic begins to see that the unconditioned is not something apart from the conditioned. The absolute includes the relative. She finds “this blessed reality,” in the words of Lama Surya Das, “spontaneously present and perfectly manifesting every moment unimpededly.”

Regardless, when a monastic finally chooses to descend from the cloud of unknowing, she finds herself in many ways alone in the crowd. Still apart from the constructed world, but engaging it with a mixture of equanimity and urgency. Rather than feeling a need to de-identify with the the “default” world, or to remain absorbed in oneness with God or the ground of being, the monastic is fully integrated (perhaps more so than ever before) into the world at large.

Problematizing

It becomes problematic when society conflates one of these types of separateness with another. The ultimate conflation, which I described above as the monastic vs. worldly dualism, causes boundaries to appear where there are none and masks the subtleties of monastic life, benefitting no one.

Yet the monastic vs. worldly dualism is just one out of a cluster of assumptions about the relationship of the monastic person and the world. I’ll explore some others in the next post. In the third post in this series, I will look at the larger role of monasticism in society. And in the fourth post, I’ll pose some counter-declarations to the assumptions we’ve explored.

  1. via p.1, Benedict’s Dharma, edited by Patrick Henry, 2001.
  2. From Lerner’s collection of sonnets, “The Lichtenberg Figures” (2004) Link

Alan Chapman » Monasticism and Lay Practice Open Enlightenment

Some sound advice from Alan Chapman at Open Enlightenment:Monasticism and Lay Practice.

“The division between monastic and lay is a cultural division. I’m more interested in how you can experience awakening as a human being… None of the [monastic] frameworks have a monopoly on your experience of enlightenment.”

Chapman’s advice seems to be that, if you’re called to monasticism or curious about it, go for it, but don’t think that monasticism is the only way, and don’t expect it to eliminate any of your problems. Further, monasticism is problematic in as much as it doesn’t give you a chance to integrate your experience into life (money, sex, relationships, work, etc.).

Monasticism and Lay Practice from Alan Chapman on Vimeo.

Links for August 29th 2010

Monos,

  • “a non profit organization that is concerned with the current engagement between monastic culture, spirituality and contemporary society,”
  • “an attempt to offer a facility for the on-going dialogue between monastic spirituality, society, culture and church, and to begin to ask serious questions concerning the relationship between Secular Monasticism, Church and society, both historically and contemporarily. Monos also provides a facility for individuals and groups to explore monastic spirituality in terms of a lived Christian experience.” Offers retreats.

Monastic Matrix -

  • “A scholarly resource for the study of women’s religious communities from 400 to 1600 CE”

A History of Monastic Spirituality

  • from a Benedictine perspective, gives a primarily western account, but includes a pre-history and discussion of eastern traditions
  • A discussion of the some of the elements of monasticism
    • [Separateness] “The first thing that stands out is that these various forms of para-Christian monastic life have a tendency to set themselves apart, to separate themselves from the world in isolation from the rest of men. This isolation often has an exterior sign, a wall, a reserved enclosure, access to certain buildings being reserved to the ascetics. Yet frequently they insist rather on the cloister of the heart.”
    • [Celibacy, Renunciation] “We also find ascetic practices such as celibacy, at least temporarily, and poverty understood as detachment. These practices are meant to encourage interior vigilance.”
    • [Spirituality] “Finally, the third essential element: mystical aspiration that is to say a profound sense of the Absolute and a desire for communion with this absolute reality. This is perhaps the deepest foundation of the monastic life, for it is the source of a keen awareness of the radical insufficiency of this changing world. It is the driving power of the two other elements: separation from the world and ascetic practices.”

Benedictine Oblates

  • “While the Oblate does not take vows and is not bound to take up new religious practices, being a Benedictine Oblate brings about a very real, living relationship with the monastery of oblation. It will always involve a sharing in prayer with the community and usually entails more practical assistance in one way or another. The Oblate will seek to live a life that is marked by a certain balance of prayer and work, a striving for peace and a commitment to others in charity. It is a call to holiness and to witness to Christ by word and example as a member of a particular monastic family.”

Separateness: “Outdoors and Out of Reach, Studying the Brain” (NYtimes)

In a recent New York Times article, “Outdoors and Out of Reach, Studying the Brain,” a reporter followed a group of brain scientists as they went out into nature to experience first-hand what being separated from technology does to our brains.

This plays into one of the Elements of Monasticism that I’ll be exploring here: Separateness, or the choice to remove oneself to varying degrees from society, from civilization, or from social contact, and what the benefits might be for interfaith and secular seekers.

The results at the end of the trip are predictable. The scientists are more relaxed; they feel a more expansive sense of time; they can give their ideas more attention and pursue them with more depth.

How has it changed them? One reports that,

[w]hen he gets back to St. Louis…he plans to focus more on understanding what happens to the brain as it rests. He wants to use imaging technology to see whether the effect of nature on the brain can be measured and whether there are other ways to reproduce it, say, through meditation

One interesting new finding the scientists discuss during their journey: even the “expectation of e-mail seems to be taking up our working memory.”

Working memory is a precious resource in the brain. The scientists hypothesize that a fraction of brain power is tied up in anticipating e-mail and other new information — and that they might be able to prove it using imaging.

“To the extent you have less working memory, you have less space for storing and integrating ideas and therefore less to do the reasoning you need to do,” says Mr. Kramer, floating nearby.