Showing posts with label existential intimacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label existential intimacy. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2013

Psychology and Theology: The New Integration


To some, it is a scandalous position; for others, even worse…it is unreasonable. To propose, as compass psychotheology does, that psychology finds its purpose when grounded in the Trinitarian God. And that theology is distorted unless examined under the lens of psychology.

Further, compass psychotheology proposes that it is possible to summarize the God-human relationship with a two-word equation. An equation developed from the Biblical salvation narrative, asserting that human beings derive their essence as persons within the loving interpersonal field of the triune God. An equation which assumes that human beings, distinct from all other creatures, are created in the image of God and called to become persons in communication and communion with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

The Existential Intimacy Equation

Compass psychotheology proposes that the following paradigm illustrates both the meaning of existence of persons and the existential intimacy possible between God and every human being.

 
Existential Intimacy

What does it mean, that God desires existential intimacy with each person? We would suggest that God’s most identifying trait is his existence as infinite Subject (represented by the upper case “I AM”)—a divine center of uncreated personal awareness designated by the ontological title, “I AM” (Ex 3:14, Jn 8:58). 

And that it is through God’s eagerness to share his essential Being that he urges each person (represented by the lower case “i am”) into a relationship of love and reciprocity. Such loving participation in God is not pantheism, for God is the ever-transcendent Creator, while humans are finite, non-divine creatures and never cease being so. People depend upon God’s Being as the ontological foundation of life and truth, while God depends upon no one. “God lives in creation in a God-like way, and the world lives in God in a world-like way,” as Jurgen Moltman says.

God desires people to participate in communion with the Trinity and others. People are fulfilled to the extent that they do. This notion of God’s one-on-one participation in intimate dialogue with individuals presupposes that God is not only an immutable essence, but also a living person whose nature defines the meaning of personhood (cf. Nah 1:4-5 NICOT).

God initiates relationships with individuals that grow over time, modulated to the person’s level of maturity and God’s own desire for affiliation. One can see this in Yahweh and his bond with Abraham. Hagar. Hannah. Samuel. David. Solomon. With the prophets. Each relationship is different; each has its own rhythm of communication and communion.
 
But above all, God demonstrates his personal fidelity to individuals. When Jeremiah receives his call from the Lord, he is told: “Before I formed you from the womb, I knew you intimately” (Jer 1:5). The Hebrew word yada, “know,” expresses God’s longing for relational closeness, for it means to know intimately, as a man and woman know each other in marriage (Gen 4:1).

Fellowship of Mutual Indwelling

On the right side of the equation, the “I AM” nestled within the “i am” represents God’s infinite love that dwells in the core of each person as potentiality, but requires voluntary cooperation for actualizing. This means that individuals are infinitely significant to the triune God, who has extended a personal invitation to share the eternal blessedness of his inner life. God is in persons in a divine way and they are called to live in God in a human way, a way of intimate fellowship and indwelling.

Jesus expresses this reality in his prayer for existential intimacy between the Father and those who will believe in him:
“As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me” (Jn 17: 21-23).
On the left side of the equation, “i am” is invited to abide in loving reciprocity with “I AM,” a communion that echoes the intimacy of the divine triune community, for “your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col 3:3). This relationship encompasses the whole of one’s personality and human nature.

"i am" in Relationship with "I AM" 

Because God is their common Origin, all people possess the potential for responding to God and for carrying the fruit of that relationship into their daily lives (cf. Acts 10:34). But accepting God’s invitation to intimacy requires action. It means embracing responsibility for one’s part in a growing and dynamic bond in which one initiates and pursues, expressing authentic feelings and heart’s desires. In this endeavor it is “i am” who risks emotional vulnerability when building a relationship with “I AM.” 

Habakkuk

Habakkuk was such a person. Confused and troubled over what he viewed as oppression of the Israelites, he risked expressing these concerns to Yahweh. Readying himself for rebuke, Habakkuk found instead that his “dialogue of protest” resulted in God’s gentle disclosure of a larger picture (Hab 1:12-2:1; 2:20). Habakkuk’s risk of emotional honesty yielded greater existential intimacy with his Creator, forming in turn a deeper bond of trust from the human side.

For more, read: 



Saturday, January 12, 2013

Compass Psychotheology and the Spiritual Core

At the center of the Self Compass lies an inner circle called the spiritual core. Compass psychotheology interprets the spiritual core as the “I am” center of awareness and free will

The Self Compass

The spiritual core also finds expression in personality theory as a person’s:
  • center of gravity (Horney)
  • inner locus of control (Rogers)
  • nucleus of the total psychic system (Jung)
  • inner supreme court (Maslow)
  • core of personality (Shostrom)
  • higher self (Assagioli)
  • spiritual self (Frankl)

For compass psychotheology, the spiritual core is the sacred center of personality, the equivalent of a nucleus within a living cell. The spiritual core symbolizes the depth dimension of personality from which people find self-identity and develop intimacy with others and with God, whom William James calls “the Great Companion.” 

From the spiritual core arises the “I am” quality of personal existence, endowing human beings with the capacity for self-awareness and free choice, a capacity imparted by God in the creation of humankind. The Lord is the transcendent “I AM,” a name that signifies eternal self-existence and personality. By contrast, the human person is a temporal and finite “I am,” a limited interpersonal being created in the image of the Trinity, whose spiritual core needs God’s indwelling for completion

The Holy Trinity

The spiritual core is what differentiates Homo sapiens from other mammals, bestowing a sense of responsibility for behavior and receptivity to inspiration from the Holy Spirit. Jesus spoke of the Holy Spirit when he said, “As the scripture has said, ‘Out of the believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water.’ Now this he said about the Spirit, whom believers in him would receive” (Jn 7:38-39).  

Jesus' metaphor of existential intimacy conveys the dynamic flow of the spiritual core, for God is in the hearts of his people. It is the personality of the believer that is the residence filled with God’s living presence. That place of the Holy Spirit where Jesus tells the Samaritan woman, “the water I will give them will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life” (Jn 4:14). 




The wellspring of the Holy Spirit provides a fountainhead of existential intimacy between God and individuals, and between persons. God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us (Ro 5:5), through whom we actualize the love of God in Christ.

The Holy Spirit is the one called alongside to help. Parakletos. Comforter. The Companion who inspires transformation in the personality by accepting and understanding people, while spurring them on to their full potential.  

The Holy Spirit

When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth” (Jn 16:8,13). When individuals open themselves to believe and trust in Christ's Holy Spirit, their spiritual core becomes the vehicle for healing and transformation.