Shalom Place Community
24. Spiritual Pathways

This topic can be found at:
https://shalomplace.org/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/168101322/m/797103207

18 August 2005, 10:02 AM
Phil
24. Spiritual Pathways
Every world religion recognizes that different individuals have different ways of traversing on the spiritual journey. No doubt this is due, in part, to the different ways that people with different psychological types pray, worship and serve. It’s also related to the types of charisms that individuals are blessed with.

Learning to identify your primary spiritual pathway can be helpful in many ways, as it’s most likely that you will be happiest and find the closest possible relationship with God if you are true to yourself, here. Obviously, this topic is also a good one to discuss and discern in spiritual direction.

At this point, the term, vocation, needs to be introduced. The online dictionary, http://thefreedictionary.com, defines the term as follows:
1. A regular occupation, especially one for which a person is particularly suited or qualified.
2. An inclination, as if in response to a summons, to undertake a certain kind of work, especially a religious career; a calling.
Obviously, there's a relationship between vocation and spiritual pathways, although vocation implies a more specific call.

What follows are a few ways that different writers and spiritual traditions have described spiritual pathways. These are merely sketches, of course. More extensive discussion on any of these can take place on the forum, if there's interest.

Classical Christian Pathways

Throughout the course of Christian history, there have been various approaches to naming and describing spiritual pathways. For example, one can often find in the literature contrasts between the active life and the contemplative life, with various religious orders, in particular, working out of one or the other. There has also been a contrast drawn between religious and lay life, though these distinctions do not hold as clearly in Protestantism with its strong emphasis on the "priesthood of all believers."

A good synthesis of the classical approach taking into consideration contemplative, active, lay and religious possibilities has been formulated by Judith Roemer and George Schemel, SJ, in their training manual, Ignatian Spirituality and the Directed Retreat. Roemer and Schemel identify three broad pathways.


As you can see, except for the monastic option, the other two consider both lay and religious vocations.

Hindu Yogic Pathways

Great attention is given to spiritual pathways in Hinduism, especially in its yogic disciplines, where attempts are made to correlate temperament and spiritual practice. The following four pathways are commonly described; I have left the references to Jung's psychological types for those of you who are aware of these.

Matthew Fox’s Four Pathways

Whatever might be said concerning Matthew Fox's falling out with the Dominican Order and eventually the Catholic Church, it doesn't follow that his many writings should be considered unworthy of consideration. Personally, I'm not a big fan of his, but I do find his "four pathways" to be helpful. You fill find resonances between them and some of the classical and Hindu descriptions.

Fox notes that we all travel all of the above, but we generally tread one more significantly than the others, and may shift our emphases at different times during life. There's something to this, I believe.

The Enneagram

In recent decades, the Enneagram has also been embraced by many as a helpful way to understand spiritual pathways. This approach cuts across all the classical distinctions, but does seem loosely correlated with personality types. I'll not go into its 9 types here, but, instead, will recommend a few links below for those who wish to learn more. One hesitation I have is that the Enneagram doesn't really present itself as a way to grow in union with God, which is in contrast to the others listed above. Indeed, it seems to be more a way of working with one's psychological issues, but as we know, there can be spiritual growth liberated from doing such work.
- http://www.enneagraminstitute.com/
- http://www.9types.com/
- http://www.enneagramcentral.com/


Reflection and Discussion

1. What questions or comments do you have from this session?

2. What spiritual pathways do you most identify with? Share some of your experiences in discerning your pathway.
22 April 2013, 07:25 AM
georgina
When I was 14, many years ago, someone said to me "this above all, to thine own self be true, then it must follow, as night follows day, that thou can only be true to other people" from Shakespeare, Hamlet I believe. This has always stayed with me and I continue to learn how to be true to 'myself' where God is to be found. "The Kingdom of heaven is within you" and "I am with you always, even unto the ends of the earth".
I am a natural introvert and this is my way.