The Meadow Across the Creek
The following is an excerpt from Thomas Berry's seminal book The Great Work:
I was a young person then, some twelve years old. My family was moving from a more settled part of a Southern town out to the edge of town where the new house was still being built. The house, not yet finished, was situated on a slight incline. Down below was a small creek and there across the creek was a meadow. It was an early afternoon in May when I first looked down over the scene and saw the meadow. The field was covered with lilies rising above the thick grass. A magic moment, this experience gave to my life something, I know not what, that seems to explain my life at a more profound level than almost any other experience I can remember.
It was not only the lilies. It was the singing of the crickets and the woodlands in the distance and the clouds in an otherwise clear sky. It was not something conscious that happened just then. I went on about my life as any young person might do. Perhaps it was not simply this moment that made such a deep impression upon me. Perhaps it was a sensitivity that was developed throughout my childhood. Yet, as the years pass, this moment returns to me, and whenever I think about my basic life attitude and the whole trend of my mind and the causes that I have given my efforts to, I seem to come back to this moment and the impact it has had on my feeling for what is real and worthwhile in life.
This early experience, it seems, has become normative for me throughout the range of my thinking. Whatever preserves and enhances this meadow in the natural cycles of its transformation is good; what is opposed to this meadow or negates it is not good. My life orientation is that simple. It is also that pervasive. It applies in economics and political orientation as well as in education and religion and whatever.
That is good in economics that fosters the natural processes of this meadow. That is bad in economics that diminishes the capacity of this meadow to renew itself each spring and to provide a setting in which crickets can sing and birds can feed. Such meadows, I would later learn, are themselves in a continuing process of transformation. Yet these evolving biosystems deserve the opportunity to be themselves and to express their own inner qualities. As in economics so in jurisprudence and law and political affairs: That is good which recognizes the rights of this meadow and the creek and the woodlands beyond to exist and flourish in their ever-renewing seasonal expression even while larger processes shape the bioregion in the larger sequence of transformations.
Religion too, it seems to me, takes its origin here in the deep mystery of this setting. The more a person thinks of the infinite number of interrelated activities taking place here the more mysterious in all becomes, the more meaning a person finds in the Maytime blooming of the lilies, the more awestruck a person might be in simply looking out over this little patch of meadowland. It had none of the majesty of the Appalachian or the Western mountains, none of the immensity or the power of oceans, nor even the harsh magnificence of desert country; yet in this little meadow the magnificence of life as celebration is manifested in a manner as profound and as impressive as any other place that I have known in these past many years.
It seems to me we all had such experiences before we entered into an industrial way of life. The universe as manifestation of some primordial grandeur was recognized as the ultimate referent in any human understanding of the wonderful yet fearsome world about us. Every being achieved its full identity by its alignment with the universe itself. With indigenous peoples of the North American continent every formal activity was first situated in relation to the six directions of the universe: the four cardinal directions combined with the heavens above and Earth below. Only thus could any human activity be fully validated.
The universe was the world of meaning in these earlier times, the basic referent in social order, in economic survival, in the healing of illness. In that wide ambiance the muses dwelled whence came the inspiration of poetry and art and music. The drum, heartbeat of the universe itself, established the rhythm of dance whereby humans entered into the very movement of the natural world. The numinous dimension of the universe impressed itself upon the mind through the vastness of the heavens and the power revealed in thunder and lightning, as well as through springtime renewal of life after the desolation of winter. Then, too, the general helplessness of the human before all the threats to survival revealed the intimate dependence of the human on the integral functioning of things. That the human had such intimate rapport with the surrounding universe was possible only because the universe itself had a prior intimate rapport with the human.
This experience we observe even now in the indigenous peoples of the world. They live in a universe, in a cosmological order, whereas we, the peoples of the industrial world, no longer live in a universe. We live in a political world, a nation, a business world, an economic order, a cultural tradition, in Disneyworld. We live in cities, in a world of concrete and steel, of wheels and wires, a world of business, of work. We no longer see the stars at night or the planets or the moon. Even in the day we do not experience the sun in any immediate or meaningful manner. Summer and winter are the same inside the mall. Ours is a world of highways, parking lots, shopping centers. We read books written with a strangely contrived alphabet. We no longer read the book of the universe.
Nor do we coordinate our world of human meaning with the meaning of our surroundings. We have disengaged from that profound interaction with our environment inherent in our very nature. Our children do not learn how to read the Great Book of Nature or how to interact creatively with the seasonal transformations of the planet. They seldom learn where their water comes from or where it goes. We no longer coordinate our human celebration with the great liturgy of the heavens.
We have indeed become strange beings so completely are we at odds with the planet that brought us into being. We dedicate enormous talent and knowledge and research to developing a human order disengaged from and even predatory on the very sources whence we came and upon which we depend at every moment of our existence. We initiate our children into an economic order based on exploitation of the natural life systems of the planet. To achieve this perspective we must first make them autistic in their relation with the natural world about them. This disconnection occurs quite simply since we ourselves have become insensitive toward the natural world and do not realize just what we are doing. Yet, if we observe our children closely in their early years and see how they are instinctively attracted to the experiences of the natural world about them, we will see how disorientated they become in the mechanistic and even toxic environment that we provide for them.
To recover an integral relation with the universe, planet Earth, and North America needs to be a primary concern for the peoples of this continent. While a new alignment of our government and all our institutions and professions with the continent itself in its deep structure and functioning cannot be achieved immediately, a beginning can be made throughout our educational programs. Especially in the earlier grades of elementary school new developments are possible. Such was the thought of Maria Montessori in the third decade of this century.
In speaking about the education of the six-year-old child, Maria notes in her book To Educate the Human Potential that only when the child is able to identify its own center with the center of the universe does education really begin. For the universe, she says, "is an imposing reality." It is "an answer to all questions." "We shall walk together on this path of life, for all things are part of the universe, and are connected with each other to form one whole unity." This it is that enables "the mind of the child to become centered, to stop wandering in an aimless quest for knowledge." Then the writer mentions how this experience of the universe creates in the child admiration and wonder and enables the child to unify its thinking. In this manner the child learns how all things are related and how the relationship of things to each other is so close that "No matter what we touch, an atom or a cell, we cannot explain it without knowledge of the wide universe."
The difficulty is that with the rise of the modern sciences we began to think of the universe as a collection of objects rather than a communion of subjects. We frequently identify the loss of the interior spirit-world of the human mind and emotions with the rise of modern mechanistic sciences. The more significant thing, however, is that we have lost the universe itself. We achieved extensive control over the mechanistic and even the biological functioning of the natural world, but this control itself has produced deadly consequences. We have not only controlled the planet in much of its basic functioning; we have, to an extensive degree, extinguished the life systems themselves. We have silenced so many of those wonderful voices of the universe that once spoke to us of the grand mysteries of existence.
We no longer hear the voices of the rivers or the mountains, or the voices of the sea. The trees and meadows are no longer intimate modes of spirit presence. Everything about us has become an "it" rather than a "thou." We continue to make music, write poetry, and do our painting and sculpture and architecture, but these activities easily become an aesthetic expression simply of the human and in time lose the intimacy and radiance and awesome qualities of the universe itself. We have, in the accepted universe of these times, little capacity for participating in mysteries celebrated in the earlier literary and artistic and religious modes of expression. For we could no longer live in the universe in which these were written. We could only look on, as it were.
Yet the universe is so bound into the aesthetic experience, into poetry and music and art and dance, that we cannot entirely avoid the implicit dimensions of the natural world, even when we think of art as "representational" or "impressionist" or "expressionist" or as "personal statement." However we think of our art or literature, its power is there in the wonder communicated most directly by the meadow or the mountains or the sea or by the stars in the night.
Of special significance is our capacity for celebration which inevitably brings us into the rituals that coordinate human affairs with the great liturgy of the universe. Our national holidays, political events, heroic human deeds: These are all quite worthy of celebration, but ultimately, unless they are associated with some more comprehensive level of meaning, they tend toward the affected, the emotional, and the ephemeral. In the political and legal orders we have never been able to give up invocation of the more sublime dimensions of the universe to witness the truth of what we say. This we observe especially in court trials, in inaugural ceremonies, and in the assumption of public office at whatever level. We still have an instinctive awe and reverence and even a certain fear of the larger world that always lies outside the range of our human controls.
Even when we recognize the psychic world of the human we make everything referent to the human as the ultimate source of meaning and value, although this mode of thinking has led to catastrophe for ourselves as well as for a multitude of other beings. Yet in recent times we begin to recognize that the universe itself is, in the phenomenal order, the only self-referent mode of being. All other modes of being, including the human, in their existence and in their functioning are universe-referent. This fact has been recognized through the centuries in the rituals of the various traditions.
From paleolithic times humans have coordinated their ritual celebrations with various transformation moments of the natural world. Ultimately the universe, throughout its vast extent in space and its sequence of transformations in time, was seen as a single multiform celebratory expression. No other explanation is possible for the world we see around us. Birds fly and sing and perform their mating rituals. Flowers blossom. Rains nourish every living being. Each of the events in the natural world is a poem, a painting, a drama, a celebration.
Dawn and sunset are mystical moments of the diurnal cycle, moments when the numinous dimension of the universe reveals itself with special intimacy. Individually and in their relations with each other these are moments when the high meaning of existence is experienced. Whether in the gatherings of indigenous peoples in their tribal setting or in the more elaborate temples and cathedrals and spiritual centers throughout Earth these moments are celebrated with special observances. So, too, in the yearly cycle the springtime is celebrated as the time for renewal of the human in its proper alignment with the universal order of things.
The proposal has been made that no effective restoration of a viable mode of human presence on the planet will take place until such ritual rapport of the human with the Earth community and the entire functioning of the universe is reestablished on an extensive scale. Until this is done the alienation of the human will continue despite heroic efforts being made toward a more benign mode of human activity in relation to Earth. The source of Norden's confidence that the present is not a time for desperation but for hopeful activity he finds in the writings of indigenous peoples such as James Welch, N. Scott Momaday, Leslie Silko, and David Seals, all authors with profound understanding of the ritual rapport of humans with the larger order of the universe.
In alliance with such authors as these I would give a certain emphasis here on the need to understand the universe primarily as celebration. The human I would identify as that being in whom the universe celebrates itself and its numinous origins in a special mode of conscious self-awareness. That spontaneous forms of community ritual, such as the All Species Festivals inaugurated by John Seed, have already been developed gives promise for a future with the understanding, the power, the aesthetic grandeur, and the emotional fulfillment needed to heal the damage that has already been wrought upon the planet and to shape for Earth a viable future, a future with the entrancing qualities needed to endure the difficulties to be encountered and to evoke the creativity needed.
Here I would suggest that the work before us is the task, not simply of ourselves, but of the entire planet and all its component members. While the damage done is immediately the work of the human, the healing cannot be the work simply of the human any more than the illness of some one organ of the body can be healed simply through the efforts of that one organ. Every member of the body must bring its activity to the healing. So now the entire universe is involved in the healing of damaged Earth, more especially, of course, the forces of Earth with the assistance of the light and warmth of the sun. As Earth is, in a sense, a magic planet in the exquisite presence of its diverse members to each other, so this movement into the future must in some manner be brought about in ways ineffable to the human mind. We might think of a viable future for the planet less as the result of some scientific insight or as dependent on some socio-economic arrangement than as participation in a symphony or as renewed presence to the vast cosmic liturgy. This insight was perhaps something that I vaguely experienced in that first view of the lilies blooming in the meadow across the creek.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllSome friends of mine introduced me to Thomas Berry thru their movie www.whatawaytogomovie.com/. I have been a student ever since. The documentary includes other greats as well - Chellis Glendinning, Jerry Mander, William Catton, Daniel Quinn, and others.
I have sent this excerpt to my family and friends, most of whom havenever heard of him.
What a gift.
Come to New Mexico and you will see the moon and the stars wending their way across the deep darkness of a rural night. You will see sunrise and sunset, the first morning call of a dove or a meadowlark, a coyote or deer tracks on the trail you are walking, scarlet barrel cacti flora in June, juniper and pinon on every mesa. Sudden storms of lightening and thunder that quickly vanish leaving a double rainbow at dusk.
All this is still here in this world that still has its beauty, if only we would take time to breathe, listen, look, touch and feel. Thank you Thomas Berry.
Go to Arizona, it's sooo much BETTER than New Mexico. New Mexico is just too crowded, besides and the stars over there are just as bright!
Thomas Berry really had a talent for simplifying something so complex to talk about! I almost passed this article up, except I saw it in the "most read" and took a second look at it. I'm glad I did.
Beautifully stated.
We need not be a priest to walk the evening gardens with the Gods.
Anyone can do it but few can tell of it like Thomas Berry.
Thomas Berry was my teacher at Fordham University many decades ago and has been a lifelong influence. It is with great sadness that I learn of his passing, and also with great appreciation for the gifts he has given us.
Every year I am asked "where did you go on Holidays...?". My co-workers will speak of Mexico, London, Portugal , Italy , Hong Kong and the like and think it all rather boring when I say that I just went into the COUNTRY and hung out there for a few weeks.
I find that so very relaxing and nourishing.
There this little spot on the farm where I grew up on right near where our old house used to stand. It was man made to be sure but some 40 years later nature has made it her own.
It a wee dugout we had made to water cattle collecting runoff from the spring melt which used to always wash away the road to our place.
Its one of the most peaceful places I have been to in my life.
Each and every spring we could hardly wait for the winter to end and that snowmelt to start. The land where the dugout is was low lying and would flood virtually every year and we would put on our rubber boots and make any excuse to go out and wade in the water, It was all so very magical.
That dugout now teams with ducks and frogs. Willows grow all around its banks interpersed with trees my mother and father planted as a wind break on one side. On a sunny summers day you can lie on your back and watch the white clouds overhead, listen to the ducks quacking and see the occasional deer come down for a drink while hawks soar overhead.
Who needs Rome? I sure do not.:)
Those vacations feel like you never left work, you might as well go to Disneyland. You can find getaway vacations in other countries, but there are so many getaways close to home. I agree, it's a clear state of mind and you can't find it at Disney World.
from Daniel Ladinsky's "Love Poems From God"... a poem of St.Francis of Assisi:
When I returned from Rome
A
bird took flight.
And a flower in a field whistled at me
as I passed.
I drank
from a stream of clear water.
And at night the sky untied her hair and I fell asleep
clutching a tress
of God's.
When I returned from Rome, all said,
"Tell us the great news,"
and with great excitement I did: "A flower in a field whistled,
and at night the sky untied her hair and
I fell asleep clutching a
sacred tress..."
make your way to the meadow
(I wrote this poem much too long ago. But this essay reminded me of it, so I dug it out)
stand alone in a meadow
listen and wait
from above and below ground
the meadow will talk to you
where did you come from
what god made you
are you of us (so many questions)
could I die and become you
stand alone in a city
listen and wait
for the souls ear nothing
or perhaps a curt
who the hell are you
never stand alone in the city
cultivate your friendships
and
as often as possible
make your way to the meadow
That is a good post, it reminds me of how science has become more of a commercial tryst to find a big money maker from plain theory or maybe better put, 'convert scientific theory and discovery into marketable enterprizes', not really for any beneficial hoopla for the good of the planet and the people.
And ah, the people, unless the 'unfettered' growth of the human population is not checked and reversed, then there is little doubt of avoiding the ugly consequences that will come because of the over populated human ecological footprint on our 'poor' planet, which will really be the only winner in this fool's game that humans are acting out in our insanity or indifference.
beautiful.
life as
"participation in a symphony or as renewed presence to the vast cosmic liturgy."
sigh.
thank you t.b. and whoever thought to post your words and remind us of your 94 wondrous years and how they connect with our own years on this amazing earth we've shared.
Thomas Berry was a great soul. Like Rachel Carson a visionary environmentalist. He will be dearly missed for his wisdom, depth of understanding the cultural problems of our day, and insight on how to move in a manner consistent with the healing of the planet. His prophetic voice shaped the current environmental movement.
Berry authored some of the most profound books on the environment and new paradigm thinking including:
The Dream of the Earth.
The Universe Story, co-authored with Brian Swimm
Evening Thoughts
The Great Work as noted, and many others.
Berry was an authentic elder and mentor to younger environmentalists, and always shared his insight and encouragement. You will be sorely missed Sir, God Speed!
Thank you Thomas Berry for The Great Work you articulated so well—work which we will carry on with respect for your vision of hope.
Godspeed, Thomas Berry, and many thanks. And blessings to the many he inspired who live and share his message, such as Sister Miriam Theresa MacGillis who has been doing so for many years ( http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC24/MacGllis.htm ).
Sioux Rose
What an amazing and beautiful article! Thomas Berry, a shaman-mystic in his own right defines the relationship between the larger cosmos and those living on earth with great insight and clarity.
He said, with "the rise of modern sciences we began to think of the universe as a collection of objects, rather than a communion of subjects." This is one reason I love astrology and mythology because they help us to maintain a larger recognition of the expansive ties that infuse our world with its rhythmic structures, and remind us that we are living on a planet that dances within a celestial sea of great wonders.
He says, "We no longer read the book of the universe." The lawyer love of my past used to refer to astrology as "the book of the night," and I found that a wonderful poetic way of defining the subject matter. Until, as Mr. Berry related, people moved indoors and thanks to a commercial media, found their sense of awe redirected from natural wonders to those of pay-per-view manmade experiences (like Disneyland), they truly gazed into the heavens and wondered about the big questions of existence. Our times are so materialistic that souls have become so encased in matter that they forget they once had wings.
Mr. Berry's reminder that the universe act as our chief referent sets a template whereby we would acknowleded our shared world and become more aware of the communal nature of our relations within it. In other words his vision is based on a fundamental unity among all the diverse participants of life's processes. Unity based on diversity is the premise inspired by Venus, the cosmic counterbalance to Mars. When instead societies bow down to the rules of Mars, then self-interest always trumps the greater good, and violence/aggression are used to force policies that support the false contention that "might makes right." They also allow for weapons to proliferate, armies to march everywhere leaving a legacy of dead zones, and for LOVE to go missing from the human equation. The only remedy for America as a society completely under thrall to Mars, is by a direct infusion of far more Venus (which is to say: art, beauty, harmony, gardens, sculpture, massage therapies, romance, poetry, public theater, community landscape projects, etc) into our lifestreams.
I will read this article again and again as it mirrors my own vision of life, our world, and the many players on its many stages.
"I was a young person then, some twelve years old. My family was moving from a more settled part of a Southern town out to the edge of town where the new house was still being built."
Easy to appreciate that beautiful meadow before another house was built.
I grew up at the Jersey shore. My parents had their first house built near wetlands on a dirt road. The bay was dredged to fill in the wetlands. Giganic elevated McMansions built on small parcels line the road now to wrest every cent of profit from limited space. The homes must be elevated due to the risks associated with climate change and over-development. In this country,p eople build ever bigger more pretentious homes and abandon old neighborhoods to decay until they are gentrified by corporate interests--seeking to capitalize on grassroots efforts at community organizing and renewal. Capitalism always seeks to commercialize at the expense of all else.
As I understand it, "simply human" is actually all our work truly is. Our biggest and most effective way to separate from the natural world was to think we were responsible for it. As though the earth were a baby and us it's mother/father.
The universe, of it's nature, is self care taking. The specifically human belief that we must care for it pushes us exactly where we choose to be, lost in what is not ours and out of balance. All our answers are simply human, and beyond us and our projections exists the universe and the earth as it always has been before us, we of it, not it of us.
The biggest thing we have lost in my opinion is not the simple joy of birds singing at a meadows edge, but of the simple joy of seeing and hearing from another human that same beauty that we all hold within, and nature holds without at the meadows edge. When we see nature as lost and needing to be found, we forget through this veil that it is we the people and our nature that is simply lost and any of us and that nature may simply be found again.
The only thing we have damaged and can damage is ourselves, and nature and the universe will allow that to go on as long as it is what we choose as the sentient and free beings we are.
That was beautiful Leea. I was just reading the words here, getting carried into their woven beauty, and upon concluding I looked up to see that it was you who wrote this. So beautiful and so true.
Nature, brutal and beautiful, wonderful and indifferent, will "heal" earth.