Saturday, December 29, 2007

Is that God Calling?

Exactly what is “will?” Have you noticed differences in your depth of intentionality on different occasions and at different times in your life? New Year’s resolutions, for example, are known for very often not being followed through with.

In contrast, it’s possible to feel ourselves turning in a new direction and giving assent to this at a profound level. Our lives can take on a new or renewed course and purpose. One example of this is the sense that people sometimes have of being called to their work. The will to perform work to which we feel called is indefatigable.

How do you account for life-altering changes in intentionality that feel less like we initiate them and more like we respond to something greater than our personal volition?

22 Comments:

Blogger firebird said...
"The Force is with us"-- as they say...
12:38 AM  

Blogger A.V.G.Warrier said...
May be you would like to few snippets from Hindu philosophy which I feel is related to this topic.

“All transactions should be directly with what one accepts as God”

“There are three states for each domain of one’s existence – the state of dormancy, the state of passive manifestation and the state of active manifestation. The contention between these states is put to rest only when one recognizes and accepts a fourth state that transcends the three states. The excellence in higher domain serves as the fourth state for the domain below that.”

Can we say that that the fourth state is “the spirit of enterprise”- as an approximation.

Is not the intentionality, which you are talking about, the same as the spirit of enterprise that manifest in different forms in different domains?

If so, the changes in intentionality in any domain are to be attributed to the subtle changes in the higher domains. And such impulses take the form of a “CALL” from within.
2:29 AM  

Blogger mistipurple said...
Happy New Year, Paul.
Wish you all things good for the coming year.

God's calling? Maybe when they come with a sense of peace. I do know that He always answers, if I try hard enough to listen.
I try not to second guess myself when the directives come from a priest or a sister.
4:45 AM  

Anonymous paul m martin said...
FIREBIRD: Along with other forces that have to be reckoned with, which explains all the laser swords and self-help books lying around...

AVGW: I really like that first quote. I find myself wondering if the context for the rest is more one of describing the workings of inner life, or a cosmological/metaphysical scenario - maybe the former within the latter...

MISTIPURPLE: That strikes me as major - that it's known by carrying a sense of peace.
10:29 AM  

Blogger Carrie Wilson Link said...
I think the will of "God" is that which brings us true joy. When we are doing that which brings us joy, we are following the will of "God."
11:05 AM  

Blogger Vincent said...
"Exactly what is will?"---I can't see a need to answer the question. Do you see a problem with the word?

"How do you account for life-altering changes in intentionality that feel less like we initiate them and more like we respond to something greater than our personal volition?"---I don't see it as "greater" but as coming from the unconscious. Some would say God acts from within. I don't find the term "God" at all helpful in these days when the religious context is not clear. It has too much baggage. I follow that internal voice because I have learned to trust it. I have no need to account for it at all. It's my intent to be its instrument as completely as possible.
1:36 PM  

Blogger crystal said...
I used to worry that God's Will, if he had one for me, would be to do something I didn't want to do, but a lot of people think that maybe a "calling" is at the same time both God's desire for you and what makes you the most happy.
2:16 PM  

Blogger kevin said...
account for life altering changes?

hmmm, interesting, I am not sure we have a choice, but only an opinion or an approach I suppose... imho :)

I envision Allah's will as what exists and human will as a striving to make "real" a condition or state we feel is necessary. When our "will" coincides with Allah's will then we are happy. I surmise there are all sorts of repercussions for that, but I am too lazy to take it further. Which also says a lot about my will...

Happy New Year!

peace - kevin
2:23 PM  

Blogger Paul said...
CARRIE W: I think so too – joy, and also the peace that Misti cited. Seems like often one or the other is more prominent.

VINCENT: The word "will" can be used to denote phenomena that are distinct though in some ways similar. This could be a problem, but not necessarily.

I agree - unless you use the word God in relation to a community or individual that already agrees with you on what the word means, or you clearly communicate what you mean, it’s problematic outside of suggestive or metaphorical contexts. (Some religious poetry, for example, transcends sectarian divisions.)

With regard to your “intent to be its instrument as completely as possible” – couldn’t this suggest that the internal voice that you’re not labeling "God" is in some sense greater than, say, the other voices of Vincent?

CRYSTAL: Seems that way to me. We’d probably want to be clear that by referring to work that makes us happy, we mean work that brings us joy in some contexts but can bring pain in other contexts, and yet still leaves us at peace.

Maybe we could say that work that “fulfills” us also fulfills God’s will for us.

KEVIN: From your cursory thought there, I’m thinking you’d make a pretty good accountant, so to speak, and that it must be sheer “laziness” that kept you from going on to draw the important distinction between willpower and will, lol.

Happy New Year to you too, and all -
10:32 PM  

Blogger Vincent said...
"...couldn’t this suggest that the internal voice that you’re not labeling "God" is in some sense greater than, say, the other voices of Vincent?"

I value that internal voice more than other influences, and prefer it to my will. But this is some distance away from calling it "greater".

If it told me to bomb Iraq and torture captives, and I were arraigned for war crimes, I would still say it was an inner voice, one which I preferred to listen to, rather than God's voice calling me.

In other words, I take responsibility for the choices I make.
1:17 AM  

Blogger mistipurple said...
Happy New Year, Paul, and to all your readers too!
I love being here. Just wanted you to know. :)
I wish you good days and better ones at least. You are in my thoughts often.
8:40 AM  

Blogger Helen Burton said...
Hi Paul:

It is amazing how somethings things happen and I did not have a part in planning them. What I am learning is just be open to possiblities and if if feels right take advantage of them.

Good Luck with your book.Helen
12:55 PM  

Blogger Paul said...
VINCENT: To "value something more" and to view it as "greater than" sound nearly equivalent to me; it may be that there's something about the connotations of "greater than," rather than the denotation, to which you're disinclined.

"I take responsibility for the choices I make." Still, your choice among the voices isn't arbitrary. Some voices are weightier than others, and I'd even say that we can "hear" a voice that isn't subjective. And that this doesn't mean having to conceive of it as the opposite of subjective, i.e., externalized and objective.

MISTI, I really appreciate that.

HELEN: Yes, it seems to me as well that our capacity for opportunism is a major force in creating a life.
1:29 PM  

Blogger Enemy of the Republic said...
Happy New Year to you, Paul.
6:57 PM  

Blogger Paul said...
E of the R, thanks and you too -
11:09 PM  

Blogger Don Iannone said...
Paul: Wishing you bright stars, sweet dreams, deep laughter, peace in the middle of a snowstorm, and warm sunny mornings sittin' in the sun. Happy New Year! Don
7:47 AM  

Blogger Pauline said...
There are always such interesting conversations going on here. Could it be that those voices we hear, some weightier than others, are just aspects of our own minds helping us survive? What we choose to call those aspects is arbitrary and often socially instilled - who told the first person who dared name God about God? God?
11:37 AM  

Blogger Pauline said...
Happy New Year, Paul! My return button finger is too quick for me...
11:38 AM  

Blogger Alexys Fairfield said...
Hi Paul,
Just wanted to wish you a HAPPY NEW YEAR.

May the new year bring you a sense of renewal, invigoration of spirit and lots of love. All the best for 2008.
3:39 PM  

Blogger Paul said...
DON, PAULINE, ALEXYS: Best wishes and Happy New Year to each of you too; thanks for dropping by -

PAULINE: That everything that goes on in our own minds goes on in our own minds doesn't preclude important distinctions.

For example, some things that go on in our own minds, emotionally as well as cognitively, connect us to the wider world, the beyond-self, helping us - and others, and, at this point in human history, our species as a whole - survive.

Other mental phenomena close us in, shut us down - disconnect us from larger spheres of reality and interest.

And thanks for your contributions to the interestingness of the discussion...
5:00 PM  

Blogger Vincent said...
Paul, I'd like to give you special thanks for your responses to me in these comments. You have helped me see that my virulent dislike of the term "God" and my refusal even to accept the term "greater", because it sounds like a God-like power, is just that - a repugnance against the Christian religion so strong that I run a mile from its terminology.

And part of my repugnance for Christianity is its imperialism, annexing spiritual experience and moral virtues as if it had invented them.
5:49 PM  

Blogger Paul said...
VINCENT: And thank you for hanging in there. I can't really do more than suggest where I'm coming from in desultory blog posts.

A huge obstacle to writing something in the area of religion and spirituality that's based on experience, not doctrine - in an effort to point out that there's some important non-doctrinal ground that hardly anyone seems to be looking at - is that religious language comes with so much baggage.

And yes, there's clearly considerable lunacy connected with religion, as well as some great truths. Your reference to far right claims that there's no morality or spirituality outside of Christianity is a good example.
8:37 PM  

Post a Comment

Post a Comment


Religion Blogs - Blog Top Sites Blog Directory Top Blogs Spirituality Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory