Socially Engaged Mysticism to Heal the World

Where are the missing mystics of the revolution?

Mysticism can undermine the social and political order in fundamental ways.

Dorothy Day and Mother Teresa at the Maryhouse office in New York City on June 17, 1979. Credit: Bill Barrett/ http://www.onbeing.org.

Hermits in caves or yogis on mountaintops: that’s how mystics are usually depicted. What could be further from the transformation of society? But what if mysticism was crucial to successful interaction, a missing ingredient in struggles for social change?

By definition, mysticism requires ‘direct contact with the divine,’ but not necessarily a withdrawal from the world. And the mystics we’ve been studyinghave ‘found the divine’ not in solitary prayer and contemplation but through their interactions with other people.

For Dorothy DayMother Teresa and many others like them, God exists inside themselves and everyone they work with, and in the relationships that develop in the course of social action. We call this phenomenon ‘social mysticism,’ and we think it provides important lessons for how to combine the ‘personal with the political.’

What is it that makes mysticism socially important?

Firstly, it strengthens the resolve to live out one’s beliefs on a daily basis, right at the heart of social struggles. In the early 1930s, for example, Peter Maurinand Dorothy Day began the Catholic Worker newspaper. Shortly afterwards, they started to live according to the same tenets they were advocating in print—things like solidarity, humility and a commitment to share resources. “[T]he men see our poverty,” Day wrote, “They know we eat the same breakfast they do.”

In their newspaper, they recommended organizing one’s life around theCorporal Works of Mercy, and stressed the meaning of personal responsibility for the poor—arguing that people should live in community in poor neighborhoods and give hospitality to the homeless in Catholic Worker houses. The Catholic Workers believed that engaging the world by serving the poor created an opportunity to live both emotionally and spiritually closer to God.

Mother Teresa—a more controversial example than Day and Maurin perhaps—felt that she was personally called by Jesus into the slums of Calcutta to care for the poorest of the poor. She followed that call with a vow of poverty, and began her work with no resources or protection. She used her nursing training to care for the sick and dying, and taught all those who served with her that each person who came to them was “Jesus in his most disturbing form.” As with the Catholic Worker movement, to serve others was to have direct contact with the divine—or as Mother Teresa explained it:

“Once there came to Shishu Bhavan a man who was…so bitter and so angry when he spoke to me, because he had to eat that kitcheree. [a rice and lentil dish] And then…I could look him straight in the eyes and I could tell him: “Every day I eat the same food—kitcheree. As soon as he heard that, he seemed to feel a great consolation, and he went away at peace. I thank God that at least one person was saved from despair because I share the food of the poor.”

Second, living in equality cultivates shared experience with, rather than pity for, the poor—a sense that ‘we are all in the same boat.’ A commitment to poverty offered the potential for shared perspectives to develop across strict social divides. Both Mother Theresa and Dorothy Day were deeply, personally religious, but they served anyone who asked for their support, regardless of their faith or lack of it.

In their published papers, both women wrote that they experienced Jesus directly in serving the poor. This is not to say that all of their interactions were mystical, but rather that the capacity to generate mystical experience through working with others was important in sustaining their activities. This capacity kept them motivated and emotionally buoyed up while doing such demanding work over the long course of a lifetime.

The sociologist Randall Collins argues that people are motivated by emotional energy, which manifests in feelings like confidence and enthusiasm. When social interactions go well, all those involved increase their emotional energy. But in order for this to happen, such interactions need to have what Collins describes as a “shared mood, bodily co-presence, and a shared focus of attention.” When these conditions are not present, people actually loseemotional energy—as when they are positioned as the less powerful person in a power-based interaction.

The sense of ‘shared mood’ that social mystics cultivate is particularly important in social action, because so many conventional ‘helping’ relationships are distant and unequal. So they tend to become interactions in which emotional energy is siphoned away from less powerful people by the more powerful. But face-to-face interactions motivated by shared experience can generate emotional energy for everyone involved. That’s because—despite differences in status—they are grounded in a sense of unity and equality which are characteristic of mystical experience.

Third, socially-engaged mystics exemplify the other attributes that Collins singled out as key to a healthy emotional dynamic: ‘bodily co-presence and a shared focus of attention.’ Even as Dorothy Day and Mother Theresa grew in fame and influence, they never stopped serving people directly.  “[T]o be present, to be available to men, to see Jesus in the poor, to welcome, to be hospitable, to love! This is my need” was how Day put it in her book “The Duty of Delight.” Mother Theresa expanded on the same theme like this:

“I never forget the man I picked up from an open drain—except for his face…worms were crawling on his body…I took him out, took him to our house…By the time we finished cleaning him, he died. But there was such a radiating look on his face, I’ve never seen that kind of joy—real—the joy that Jesus came to give us.”

Both women emphasized prolonged contact with the poor, and sometimes quite intimate bodily care that ranged from attending to seeping wounds to washing the damaged feet of homeless people. Neither of them lost this sense of ‘co-presence’ as their work expanded—a critical aspect of solidarity-building relationships.

By focusing their gaze intensely on the needs of the people who came to them for help, they also created opportunities for a ‘shared focus of attention.’ As Mother Teresa explained:

“I believe in person to person. Every person is Christ for me, and since there is only one Jesus, there is only one person in the world for me at that moment.” Day expressed similar sentiments when she wrote that“We must remember the importance of giving even a drink of cold water in the name of Christ.”

Hence, by doing their work in a very particular way, both women fulfilled the requirements laid out by Collins for successful solidarity-building interactions. In turn, this increased the potential to generate shared emotional energy across divisive social lines.

As these examples show, social mysticism can shift the ways in which people interact with one another by providing opportunities for solidarity to develop in the face of profound differences in power and resources. In such interactions, a sense of self-worth, dignity and equality is cultivated in and between those who are served and those who are serving them. These relationships upend the typical order of things—the hierarchies that characterize human interactions even when they are supposed to be aimed at social change.

Because it imbues human relationships with the power of the divine, social mysticism generates great potential for change and creativity. It supports the formation of new perspectives, builds communities that embody them, and nurtures a particular style of interaction that’s capable of doing something quite profound: redistributing emotional energy from those who have more resources to those who have less. In these ways, mysticism can play a crucial role in creating critiques and sustaining active resistance to the prevailing social order.

Social mysticism is a seed that can grow to a much larger scale through communities that live out their commitment to work in solidarity with one another. Day did this through the Catholic Worker movement, and Mother Theresa through the Missionaries of Charity. Both demonstrate how mystical practices that engage with the world can create meaningful social change on the foundation of face-to-face interaction.

To the extent that opportunities for these interactions are spread through larger communities, social mysticism has the potential to undermine the wider social order in truly radical ways. Those who are used to looking up to see if collective action is successful should also look out and in to understand the power of change that’s inherent in mystical experience.

Erika Summers-Effler is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Notre Dame. Her bookLaughing Saints and Righteous Heroes is published by the University of Chicago Press. Deborah Kwak is a PhD Candidate in Sociology and Peace Studies at Notre Dame. Her dissertation examines how peace groups in Mindanao, Philippines, interact in deliberative spaces and mediate tensions.

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