| 
       Everyday 
        Spirituality 
        by Phyllis Tickle 
         Delivered at St. Peter's 
        Catholic Church, Memphis, Tennessee, on January 13, 2002. This 
        talk is also available in audio. 
         
        I've looked forward to being with you. What we're going to talk about 
        is everyday spirituality. Forget all the bells and the whistles and the 
        gee-gaws, let's talk about the thing itself. 
         
        When we talk about spirituality in 2002, we're talking about a slightly 
        different animal from what we would have been talking about 10 or 15 years 
        ago in American culture. Basically, America was not given to spirituality 
        or to much conversation about spirituality from the days of our founding 
        until about 1970 or 1980, when we suddenly discovered it. American culture 
        is a child of the Enlightenment--those who formed us, those who shaped 
        us, those who settled us were Enlightenment thinkers. We are, in fact, 
        a great living testimony to the good political philosophy that the Enlightenment 
        blessed humanity with--may God preserve our form of government and see 
        it spread widely across this world.  
         
        But at the same time that the Enlightenment was producing very savvy political 
        thinkers and very informed and adroit politicians in terms of the social 
        unit, the social contract, it was not emphasizing--in fact, it was de-emphasizing--the 
        world of the spirit. It was also primarily Protestant, and Protestantism 
        lacks a certain sex appeal, or as my husband would say, "It has no 
        bells and smells." So coming out of a primarily Protestant and Enlightenment 
        tradition, spirituality was not something we talked about.  
         
        We began talking about spirituality in this country for a number of reasons 
        in the last part of the 20th Century. If you were going to be very simplistic 
        (and for the sake of time I suppose I have to be), I would say that the 
        one thing that tripped us over into an awareness of our lack of knowledge 
        about spirituality was the change in 1965 of the immigration laws. In 
        1965 we opened our borders primarily to Asians. We had closed those borders 
        to Asia very early in the 20th Century, because we became terribly concerned 
        about the influx of cheap Chinese labor at the end of the 19th Century. 
         
         
        By 1965, we had fought three world wars that involved some commerce amongst 
        American young men and young women with the Eastern area of the world. 
        We had fought the Second World War, much of it in Japan, and it had involved 
        some occupation of that area. We fought in Vietnam, and we fought in Korea. 
        Those three wars, for all their horror, did, at least, get rid of our 
        Asia-phobia and made it possible politically for us to open our borders. 
         
         
        When that happened, Eastern culture flowed in in a huge inundation, and 
        guess what? They were all Buddhists! Big surprise. What they came with 
        was centuries and centuries of comfort with and knowledge of the world 
        of the spirit. They came in talking as easily about that world as Enlightenment 
        folk talked about the world of politics. The problem was, we had very 
        little understanding of their comfort, very little understanding of the 
        disciplines that led to that comfort, and very little understanding even 
        of the basic agencies of the spiritual world.  
         
        American religion boomed and blossomed in the last part of the last century, 
        primarily as a result of this inundation of information about the other 
        part of human existence--the spiritual world. Those of you who are as 
        old as I will remember what a wonderful experience that was, what a blooming 
        out of possibility. Some of you who are younger, and who have come into 
        adult consciousness since 1965, will remember it in terms of history books. 
         
         
        But it was a wonderful thing, and all of a sudden, we discovered all over 
        again that as human beings we work in three spheres: We work in the world 
        of the body; we work in the world of the mind; and we work and walk in 
        the world of the spirit--mankind, humankind, female and male alike. To 
        be human is to have three areas to which the consciousness may attend. 
        That is, the consciousness may be focused in one of three places, and 
        life, as we understand it, is a weaving together of those three. We call 
        them body, mind, and spirit.  
         
        In the world of the mind, we come with all of the things that are emotion, 
        what Freud played with. We come with all of the things that are the body 
        and the spirit meeting together. In the world of the body, we know what 
        we have. What we are just beginning to understand is what we have in the 
        world of the spirit. The important thing is, however, that we human beings 
        feel, as we move in these three spheres, that somehow there should be 
        a union of them. There should be a coming together of them.  
         
        You may say, "I can take my deliberate intention, my consciousness, 
        and I can go over here into the world of the spirit, and I can do Buddhist 
        meditation, I can do Hindu meditation, I can do just plain old commonsense 
        pop psychology meditation and move in the world of the spirit; or I can 
        turn my attention to my psychologist or my counselor or just my own head 
        and live with what the Buddhists call the chatterer. I can think in the 
        world of my emotions all I want to. My attention can be focused here, 
        or I can go to a good movie, or I can go and get deeply involved in my 
        work. But somehow there must be a way to bring all of these things together 
        so that I am once more complete."  
         
        Much of human yearning is the need to find the union of these parts-- 
        that time of harmony from which we feel we have been severed, the time 
        in which all of these areas function together. When this happens, what 
        we really meet is the mystery, the mystery of the harmony that is the 
        unity of life. That's what we are really looking for.  
         
        When we talk about everyday spirituality in 2002, what I think we are 
        really talking about is the need to achieve some way of entering those 
        places of harmony where all the parts sing, where we hear the music of 
        the spheres and we engage God, that great luminous darkness that is complete 
        light and complete joy. We are looking for the way in which to take the 
        spiritual that we do not know and the corporal that we know so well, and 
        to bring them together.  
         
        From the beginning of mankind, certainly from the beginning of Judeo-Christian 
        religion, there have been a number of ways of creating those little interruptions 
        in normal life, those places where we can engage the mystery, those places 
        of harmony and integration. A good Jew two thousand years ago would have 
        known that one of the ways of interrupting life and meeting with the spiritual 
        was the Sabbath. We used to keep the Sabbath. We used to set it aside 
        and say, "Here is a time. Here is an interruption in one of the dimensions 
        that informs life in which we will stop, and we will honor the Spirit 
        of God." As a Christian we would take the host and say to ourselves, 
        believing it, "We're about to eat the body of our God." And 
        taking the chalice we would say, "We are about to drink the blood 
        of our God who dared come among us and assume flesh and blood in order 
        that that flesh and blood might spray out across all of human history 
        and enter each of us." We would honor the time before that consumption 
        and the hours after that consumption by an interruption of all other habits. 
        We would hallow the time around that event--the Eucharist or the Mass 
        or the Communion. That's what the Sabbath was, and it had built around 
        it time and place.  
         
        Because we are creatures of dimension, if we wish to integrate all of 
        the areas of experience into one place to meet the mystery, we must interrupt 
        the dimensions. We must carve out space within the dimensions of time 
        and place for that to happen. The other great way that we met the mystery--by 
        carving, if you will, a chaplet, created by interrupting time and out 
        of it building a whole different space--was fixed-hour prayer.  
         
        The History of Fixed-Hour Prayer  
        The mass is as the mass is. We participate in it, some of us as often 
        as once a day, sometimes twice a day, sometimes only once a week, but 
        we spread around it enough words and enough time to set it off. We have 
        lost the Sabbath wrap to it, unfortunately. It will come back, mark my 
        words. As sure as I am standing here, I see a regeneration, a rebirth 
        of an understanding of the Sabbath as a time that hallows that central 
        act which informs it. Also coming back, however, is fixed-hour prayer. 
        Both the mass and fixed-hour prayer come to us out of Judaism. Fixed-hour 
        prayer informs, to some greater or lesser extent, all of the monotheistic 
        faiths.  
         
        We know that the Psalmist says, "Seven times a day do I praise you." 
        (Ps. 119:164) We have no idea when those hours were, but we know that 
        from the time of King David or before, good Orthodox Jews were interrupting 
        their normal day at least seven times to stop and do fixed prayers--prayers 
        of praise, prayers of thanksgiving, prayers of adulation. They were not 
        prayers of petition. They are prayers in which the creature approaches 
        the Creator and says, "How privileged I am to be able to come before 
        you, my Lord."  
         
        That's what fixed-hour prayer is. We know that it was done seven times 
        a day. We just don't know in ancient Judaism when those hours were. We 
        know, for instance, that in one of the Psalms, King David says, "I 
        rise at midnight to praise you." Aha! The hour is called lauds, 
        and in the Roman tradition it becomes the prayer of lauds, the prayer 
        at midnight, the prayer of praise.  
         
        We know that good Daniel was thrown into the lion's den because he insisted 
        on going up to the second floor of his quarters in Babylon and opening 
        his window at nine in the morning and praying. Aha! The monastic hour 
        of terse! That's why he got thrown in the lion's den. That's what Daniel 
        was doing. That's what his insurrection was, he would not give up fixed-hour 
        prayer. He was up there doing it, and the King could like it or not.  
         
        By 100 BC, 150 BC, the entire Mediterranean world was under Roman command, 
        not necessarily serving Rome, but under the cultural and social and commercial 
        implications of Roman civilization, which translates at a practical level 
        to saying that every little town or village that wished to deal with the 
        Empire also had to deal with the Empire's daily schedule.  
         
        There was in every village a forum bell, and the bell had to ring in accordance 
        with Roman time. The first bell (considered the first hour of the Roman 
        day, also called prime) was at six in the morning. It served as 
        the signal for everybody to go into the forum and open the stalls. The 
        second bell rang at nine in the morning. It was the third hour of the 
        commercial and social and business day, and it was called terse, 
        the Latin word for three. At that point, everybody was supposed to stop 
        and, I suppose, take the equivalent of a coffee break. And then you went 
        back to work. The bell rang again at the sixth hour, which would be our 
        noon, and which was called sext. It meant you closed the stalls 
        and went home for a three-hour break. You have lunch, you rest, and you 
        sleep. At three o'clock, the ninth hour of the day, none in Latin, 
        the bell rang again. You came back, and you opened the stalls and you 
        stayed there until dusk. Since dusk changes according to the sun and the 
        season of the year, instead of giving it a numerical assignment, it was 
        simply called vespers, the Latin word for evening.  
         
        Now, it didn't take long for the good Jews, who were being not only Hellinized 
        but also Romanized, to begin to attach their fixed-hour prayers to those 
        times. So by the time our Lord came along, those times were already established. 
        That was when good Jews went and did their praying. They either did it 
        at home at the domestic altar or they went into the Temple, according 
        to whether they were near the Temple or not. Everything seems to point 
        to the fact that if they were not actually in Jerusalem and fairly near 
        to the Temple itself, they simply did it individually, or they did it 
        as home units, but they observed those hours.  
         
        Now, we don't have a record of Jesus Christ keeping fixed-hour prayer. 
        We do know that the disciples were gathered in an upper room at nine in 
        the morning, the hour of prayer, when the Spirit came among them at Pentecost. 
        Those watching them said, "These people are drunk," and Peter 
        turned and said, "At nine in the morning? I don't think so." 
        Why were they there? They were there keeping the hour of terse. They were 
        gathered for prayer.  
       If you will 
        remember also, good St. Peter, when he was in Joppa, went up to the rooftop 
        of the house of Simon the Tanner at the hour of 12 noon to pray. While 
        he was up there, he saw the Lord lower a sheet before him, a sheet filled 
        with animals of all kinds, and the voice said, "Kill and eat." 
        He responded, "I cannot Lord, for I will not eat what's not clean." 
        Three times the sheet came down before Peter said, "Oh, he's telling 
        me something. He's telling me Gentiles are okay." That's why you 
        and I are Christians. But my main point was that it happened at 12 o'clock, 
        while Peter was on the rooftop observing the prayers of sext.  
         
        Remember the first healing miracle after the Resurrection? Peter and John 
        were on their way up the Temple steps for three o'clock prayer when they 
        see the cripple, and they stop and heal him. They were on their way to 
        the service of none because they were in Jerusalem and near the Temple. 
         
       The fact 
        that we don't read in Scripture about Jesus keeping fixed-hour prayers 
        does not mean that he didn't. I think it's quite obvious he did, because 
        he was a good, although unorthodox, Jew.  
         
        Christians and Fixed-Hour Prayer  
        The history of fixed-hour prayer, as it comes into Christianity, is something 
        that should be of concern to every Christian. First of all, we need to 
        remember that early Christians thought they were still Jews. It was not 
        until about 100 AD that we get folks who began to understand, especially 
        after the disruption of the temple in 70 AD, that they are not Jews, they 
        are Christians. That name laid on them in Antioch means something. They 
        are a fulfillment of Judaism. Their Lord is prophecy-realized. As that 
        happens and Christians become more and more self-conscious about themselves 
        as a different religion and of Christianity as not being a part of Judaism, 
        they become more and more involved with the fixed-hour prayer. They also 
        feel the need to move away from urban centers and dedicate themselves 
        more and more to God.  
         
        By the Third Century, we are introduced to what we call the Desert Fathers. 
        The Desert Fathers are, with all due respect to them, where we begin to 
        lose this part of spirituality. Christian spirituality, from its very 
        beginning, depended and focused on two things: the Eucharist with its 
        Sabbath wrap and fixed-hour prayer. We did serious damage to the Sabbath 
        wrap and we began to lose fixed-hour prayer with the Desert Fathers.  
         
        St. Paul wrote to the early churches, "Let there be prayer without 
        ceasing." (1Th 5:17) The Desert Fathers, in a fit of religious enthusiasm, 
        took him literally and decided that you needed to have a constant cascade 
        of prayer 24 hours a day, seven days a week. So they had a choir of fathers 
        who sang or chanted or recited the offices for three and four hours at 
        a time, and then they turned it over to the next little choir, and so 
        on. This became the Christian understanding of what fixed-hour prayer 
        should be.  
         
        It also became the death of fixed-hour prayer for laity. There is no female 
        in the world who can do that, because the baby is going to cry, or the 
        husband is going to complain. Even men aren't going to be able to support 
        it unless they are on celibate terms, because the wife is going to complain. 
        No, only a male devoted only to God, on some kind of supported situation, 
        could do it.  
         
        There are also conventions to fixed-hour prayer. There were in Judaism, 
        and there still are. One of those conventions is that there has to be 
        a cycle for the Psalter. Every Psalm in the Psalter has to be repeated 
        during the course of fixed-hour prayer on some sort of set regimen. Now 
        if you use The Divine Hours, which is the compilation I put together 
        a couple of years ago, the regimen is every six weeks. If you pray out 
        of that manual, every six weeks you will have used every Psalm in the 
        Psalter. For the Desert Fathers it seemed imperative that the Psalter, 
        the whole Psalter, be repeated at least once every day. So they had to 
        do the entire Psalter every day, they had to do the "Our Father" 
        at every office, and they had to do the "Gloria" twice at every 
        office. Before you know it, they had built this impossible thing that 
        bore about as much resemblance to spirituality as does the Empire State 
        Building.  
         
        At the same time that the Desert Fathers were doing their thing, the Roman 
        civilization began to erode. This allowed for an influx of more and more 
        folks from the country into the urban centers. These folks were basically 
        illiterate, and did not come out of the Jewish tradition. They did not 
        come out of the monotheistic tradition. They did not come out of any notion 
        of spirituality. They came out of paganism. Many of them were converted 
        into Christianity as illiterates with no liturgical background. They came 
        bereft of all the things that had made fixed-hour prayer work.  
         
        By the Third and Fourth century--especially after Constantine made Christianity 
        acceptable--the priests or monks we're saying, "Come to the basilica 
        [public church] at six in the morning, come at nine in the morning when 
        you take your coffee break, come at twelve when you take your lunch, come 
        at three when you go back to the shop, and the priests will say the prayers, 
        while, good children, you all sit and listen." You see? Now, you 
        are not praying. You're just doing the market list in your head while 
        the clergy is mumbling something you can't hear. We had developed the 
        lectionary and the liturgical year and were also integrating the offices 
        with all of this. This was a big difference. Spirituality had ceased and 
        had become religion. The ritual had ceased to be the chaplet and had become 
        the structure. The mystery was gone.  
         
        Then about 500 AD, there was a good man named St. Benedict, only he wasn't 
        a saint then. He was just Benedict, a vowed celibate and a monk. He left 
        the monastery in the morning, came in and ran the Basilica in Rome, and 
        went back at night and was a monk again. He walked two worlds: the world 
        of the laity who had no liturgical background, no religious heritage, 
        who were illiterate but devout Christians now struggling to follow their 
        Lord; and the cumbersome and monastic realities of the traditions of the 
        Desert Fathers. He realized there had to be some way to put these two 
        back together. By 525 AD he had fashioned his famous Rule that shows the 
        church how to continue to keep the offices. But then the Dark Ages happened, 
        and the laity lost the idea of fixed-hour prayer almost entirely.  
         
        Interestingly, Islam never experienced this decline. This has become much 
        more apparent to us in the months since 9/11. We've seen on TV the Muslims 
        praying their fixed-hour prayers on their prayer rugs in public settings. 
        Because it didn't exist at that time as we know it, Islam missed all that 
        period of Rome's decline, all that period of influx of paganism into a 
        religion with no prior preparation in any way, all that illiteracy, the 
        Desert Fathers. There was no interruption, and so the laity in Islam never 
        lost fixed-hour prayer. It's been there from the get-go. It's only the 
        Christian laity that lost it.  
         
        Spirituality Today  
        But times change. We became people of the Enlightenment, very heady, and 
        very sophisticated, sharp thinkers. We were good at figuring out things--a 
        people of science and rationality. But our spirits were starved, and we 
        began to realize we were hungry for more. We couldn't live just in the 
        world of the body and the mind; we had to get back to the spirit. Almost 
        presciently, one of the changes that Vatican II effected in 1971 was the 
        return of the liturgy of the hours, not only for the devout, cloistered 
        clergy, but also for the secular clergy and the laity, spawning the wonderful 
        four-volume Liturgy of the Hours.  
         
        With that, people began exploring once again what it means to govern their 
        day by interrupting it every three hours with a moment of prayer--prayer 
        that is not of their invention, not their petitions, not their intercessions, 
        not their words, but the words that have informed the faith to which they 
        have appended themselves. The words are fixed by the lectionary; they 
        are the same words prayed by everyone. The words are being said simultaneously 
        by every Christian who is keeping the hours in a single time zone. When 
        Christian after Christian stops and reads the lessons in Psalms and the 
        prayers appointed for that office at that day at that time, they read 
        those words together. What we have once more is the Communion of Saints 
        from the very beginning--King David and before--the same words that passed 
        through the lips of Jesus Christ and the apostles and the Desert Fathers 
        and of all of those who came after them.  
         
        Fixed-hour prayer gives us the opportunity to have one brief moment where 
        the mystery is there--where the worlds of the body, the mind and the spirit 
        stop together, however briefly, and enter a dimensionless place in which 
        time is interrupted and space is interrupted. I don't know a Christian 
        who has practiced fixed-hour prayer for many years who is not acutely 
        aware, first of all, of the privilege given the creature to be able to 
        enter into the presence of the Creator. They are also aware of the presence 
        of those other speakers' voices, spirits, souls, gathering in that little 
        uninterrupted space. There is the Communion of Saints in a felt awareness, 
        in a felt presence.  
         
        As the push from '65 to '75 to '85 in this country came along, we began 
        to explore generic spirituality. We talked for years about ooey-gooey 
        God, God by Wendy's, or generic God. Those were perfectly legitimate labels 
        because once this thing, this cat was out of the bag, this wildfire was 
        sweeping across the country, anything that looked like spirituality was 
        wonderful.  
         
        By 1994 and 1995, however, increasingly the question in Christian communities 
        was: Where is my spirituality as a Christian? I understand Buddhist principles. 
        I got that, you know. I can meditate. I can do yoga out of the Hindu tradition. 
        I understand how to go into the world of the nothingness where there is 
        no desire. But where is my spirituality as a Christian? Where can I take 
        this and find what it was that informed my Lord? Where is mystery for 
        me as a Christian? These questions led a number of publishers to begin 
        to ask the question, "Can we put together a prayer manual that allows 
        folks who are not liturgically sophisticated to begin to lay claim to 
        the fixed-hour prayer tradition?" My book, Divine Hours, was 
        the product of Doubleday's attempt to create that.  
         
        Now there are whole organizations, Tapestry being one that comes to mind, 
        dedicated to teaching Protestant men and women how to keep the hours using 
        Divine Hours or other manuals that have been published. Any of 
        them will work for you. One of the things that has given me the greatest 
        joy concerning the publishing of Divine Hours is to see my growing 
        stack of e-mails from Baptist and Church of God and Church of Christ members, 
        all beginning to keep the hours, which is amazing.  
         
        Spirituality Tomorrow  
        If I could envision the next ten, twenty, thirty years in Christianity, 
        I believe there will be an increasing awareness of the time wrap around 
        the Eucharist that is the Sabbath. I also believe there will be the continuing 
        growth of keeping of the offices. There's no question about that. If you 
        look at most of the fixed-hour prayer manuals now, they are in first person 
        singular. That is, they assume that you are going to be praying them alone. 
        Hopefully, and I see evidence of this as I talk to people around the country, 
        the pronoun will change back to we, and we will be seeing the growth in 
        the domestic altar. 
         
        The home altar has got to come back, and I'm not talking about a physical 
        spot with an icon or two on it. I'm talking about that sacramental business 
        of religion within the home. It's especially important as we become more 
        multi-faithed in this country. We are going to have to develop a religion 
        of the public square or a civil religion that allows us to do business 
        as people of many faiths and communions.  
         
        Interestingly enough, the Muslims are going to give us the courage of 
        our convictions, Jews and Christians alike. As the Islamics demand the 
        interruption of the day to throw down their prayer rugs and pray, we'll 
        start praying our fixed-hour prayers. There's eventually going to be some 
        space in every major plant in America that says, "Abrahamics here, 
        only please don't all come at the same time." As that happens, the 
        importance of the domestic altar is going to increase, and one would hope 
        that the pronouns of the fixed-hour prayers will indeed change back to 
        the plural. It will be parents and children praying together.  
         
        Fixed-hour prayer is a discipline. Like any spiritual discipline, it can 
        be very hard at times. It can be very demanding. But the point of this 
        talk is that everyday spirituality requires the ability to integrate experience 
        in the physical world and the spiritual world and the mental world into 
        an act of worship and engaging the mystery. For Christians, the way to 
        do that, traditionally, has been through the Eucharist and fixed-hour 
        prayer. Those are the places in which, like the gateposts, we can open 
        up space and time and meet our God. They are where we can bring the experiences 
        of both realms into this realm, creating out of them a place of worship. 
         
         
      Copyright 
        2002 Phyllis Tickle  
      Return 
        to Top 
       |