"These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.'
-Jesus - John 15:11
What Jesus, and other masters of life, have taught and revealed, is that it is entirely possible to experience well-being regardless of life's circumstances. For most of us, who tend to equate happiness with outer conditions, such a teaching seems untenable. Because it's our natural tendency to look out at life situations before deciding how we feel inside, the notion that we could feel good despite the presence of unwanted stuff seems out of reach.
However, the good news is that the capacity for well-being is not out of reach; only beneath the radar of our ordinary awareness. Like many spiritual potentials, unconditional joy lies deep but is nonetheless accessible if we intentionally cultivate it. It does take intention. As much as we might want it to arise in us as readily as do our fears and doubts, which need no coaxing, our capacity to muster equanimity is not as instinctual.
There are sound evolutionary reasons that explain the latency of the peaceful response, versus the hair-trigger readiness of fear, worry, and "Oh my!" Too much to cover in this article, but suffice to say we've developed the capacity to protect ourselves from harm much better than we have developed our capacity to know the peaceful depths of our being. Though I feel the weight of this imbalance, I realize it is not a limitation to despair because my wholeness and wellbeing are worth cultivating, at whatever cost. As noted by the French author and philosopher, André Gide, "Know that joy is rarer, more difficult, and more beautiful than sadness. Once you make this all-important discovery, you must embrace joy as a moral obligation."
This "moral obligation" is no external mandate, no "should" from outside of us. Rather it is a responsibility to traverse the divide between your current state of awareness and the realm of the possible. This is the inward call to discover, uncover and reveal the depths of our true nature so that we might discover the eye in the storm, and reside there as often as possible.
This Sunday we will conclude our Untethered Soul series with the message, "Unconditional Happiness." Come for the joy* that we feel when we're gathered on Sundays. It's good for the soul.
With you, In the joy of the Truth,
Rev. Larry
* via Zoom live - use this link
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