I haven't really formed my thoughts too well yet to this, though I have pondered it for some time. Is spiritual development a line of development like music, or math, or athletics, where you have those with exceptional aptitudes towards those? Is this true of spiritual development as well?Not everyone has the same spiritual gifts; St. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 12,
29 Are all apostles? Are all prophets? Are all teachers? Are all workers of miracles? 30 Do all have gifts of healings? Do all speak with tongues? Do all interpret? 31 But earnestly desire the best[d] gifts. And yet I show you a more excellent way.
Just as you can have a four-year-old who can play Tchaikovsky, whereas a forty-year-old who was never good at piano can barely play Mary Had a Little Lamb, and some other adult can also play Tchaikovsky after years of practice. Each person was made differently, and we each have our own aptitudes, affinities and abilities.
On the one hand, everyone is spiritual by default. It is not an ability. To be spiritual is really simply to be aware. It is an awareness that sees through the masks to the soul of what is its basic essence. It is an existential thing, and therefore common to every human that exists. But not everyone opens to that. It really is more a matter of something that happens that makes one willing and compelled to look.
If that something happens and the person is drawn to pursue this inner knowledge, then I suppose we can begin to talk about 'skill's. And this really is where it absolutely comes down to the individual. It is a process of self-discovery that you alone have to walk. There are those that can guide us to different practices, but ultimately you have to find that within yourself through that process. I see that as a combination of firstly, a deep desire for that Unity that compels us to seek with all our hearts, willing to pour ourselves out to drink of that Water. Secondly, a deep commitment with which we bring our intention to this path, keeping ourselves on it to listen, to learn, to seek, and to grow. With those, we draw from the knowledge of others to open to ourselves to hear what needs to be done. I think that skill is something that comes through consistent practice.
Does someone easily know how to do everything in reverse of what we normally do (which is what the spiritual path is, actually)? Are there those born saints, born sages? I would say not, but I would say there are those who have that 'call' at an early age, and perhaps a mind more well-suited for the highly non-linear reality of spiritual knowledge. Very concrete-literal thinking is very difficult to put this "new wine" of spirit, in the old skins of worldly thinking. This does not mean that cannot have spiritual experience, but to think spiritually does require breaking out of the box, to say the least! Those boxes are created by our mind, and spirit transcends the mind.
One thing that came up in conversation with my friend yesterday in fact, was that one thing that seems common with the more spiritually developed, or advanced, is that of creativity. It doesn't have to do with intelligence. But it seems those who 'hear' and 'listen' to spirit, are more intuitive, fluid, and creative both in thought and in living life. There is a certain freedom of movement. And that comes as little surprise considering the verse, "Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty". That liberty is Freedom itself.
Anyway, thanks for letting me throw out these musings. It's helped me a little just putting it into words to look at, at least.
What do you think of these thoughts my friend?
Last edited: