Last year during the April General Conference weekend, I finally got fed up with my level of spirituality and decided there had to be a higher plane out there somewhere. I wasn't experiencing the kinds of things I felt like I should be experiencing, or feeling the feelings I felt like I should have.
It has been one crazy year.
I would say the biggest difference between me then and me now is the amount of knowledge I've gained. I've learned truths I never would have believed last April. I really feel like last April I was spiritually starving. I was going to church but not being spiritually filled. I didn't know I had to look beyond what was taught at church into the deeper truths of the gospel in order to feel satiated. I had outgrown the milk and needed to seek out the meat on my own.
1 Cor. 3:2 says, "I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able." The Greek word translated "with meat" is defined as "food (literally or figuratively) especially (ceremonial) articles allowed or forbidden by the Jewish law" (see here). You don't want to stay a spiritual baby forever. You need to move on to the higher doctrines, the deeper spiritual truths. That higher level of spiritual nourishment isn't something you'll find at church. You have to seek it out yourself.
It's not without a cost though. Eccl. 1:18 says, "For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow." (I kind of like the CEV version better: "The more you know, the more you hurt; the more you understand, the more you suffer.") I've increased in knowledge the last year, but I've also increased in sorrow. I'm a little more jaded than I was before. But it's still better, in my opinion, to know truth, despite the cost, rather than stay in ignorance.
I've become a little bit better of a person in the last year. I used to tell white lies to preserve my image and I tell them far less frequently now. I also try to be as honest as possible. I might be a little more patient. I am more positive than I used to be. I am a little more service-oriented. I could be better, but I've improved. I don't turn away beggars anymore (after reading this). I found a cause I'm passionate about and do volunteer work related to that cause, which has been one of the best things in my life.
But I still feel stuck on the same spiritual plane as I was a year ago. I still struggle to recognize promptings. My prayers are still monologues, despite all the effort I've put into improving them. I still don't recognize yes/no answers to questions asked in prayer. Those are the areas I wanted the most to improve in, but it didn't happen. So it's a bit of a bittersweet anniversary for me.
Showing posts with label spiritual stagnation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spiritual stagnation. Show all posts
Resource: Phil McLemore - Meditation
Two of the many search terms I used in my research were "Christian meditation" and "Mormon meditation." LDS Perfect Day's
blog showed up in the search results several times. I followed his instructions on several occasions but got frustrated because they didn't do anything for me. I had done some
mindfulness meditation in previous years but felt like I hadn't benefited
much. I wondered if there was some sort of Christian- or
Mormon-specific way to meditate, but eventually dropped the subject.
Months later I came across a guy named Phil McLemore. He wrote a number of very good articles in Sunstone1 and has been featured on many podcasts2. Some of the things he's taught really resonated with me. He talks about how some members of the church feel spiritually stagnant, like they're not making any progress, and feel underfulfilled by their religious practice. I could totally relate to that! That was exactly how I felt! He says we feel like we need to make the natural man a saint through willpower and checklists as opposed to "crucifying" the natural man by being spiritually reborn as a saint. (I'm also quite guilty of the checklists and to do lists.) He discovered years ago that practicing transcendental meditation helped him spiritually transcend the level he had been stuck on for years. Meditation allowed him to commune with God and learn for himself what kind of Being God is, and he found himself becoming a more Christlike person without checklists and willpower.
Phil has an online meditation course that he charges for.3 I felt like his website was kind of scammy, so I dismissed the idea of taking it. Then I came across someone who had bought the course and felt like it was helpful. I was intrigued and bought it ($49). I learned a LOT. He provides some guided meditations to get you started till you're able to do unguided on your own. I like using them once or twice a day and have liked his style of meditation better than mindfulness meditation.
I'm only two months in, so I can't say I've experienced anything profound. Phil said it took him many months. But I feel pretty certain that what he teaches is right and I will eventually have a breakthrough. I wish I had started meditating with Phil right from the beginning. If I had started last spring, I would have been much further along right now!
1 Hindering the Saints, Becoming the Beloved of the Lord, Mormon Mantras, The Yoga of Christ
2 Mormon Stories, Mormon Matters, there are also some MP3s of presentations he's given at Sunstone symposiums floating around the internet
3 I'm not shilling for him or getting any kind of kickback for the link. He gives the basics on how to meditate in the Mormon Mantras article for free.
Months later I came across a guy named Phil McLemore. He wrote a number of very good articles in Sunstone1 and has been featured on many podcasts2. Some of the things he's taught really resonated with me. He talks about how some members of the church feel spiritually stagnant, like they're not making any progress, and feel underfulfilled by their religious practice. I could totally relate to that! That was exactly how I felt! He says we feel like we need to make the natural man a saint through willpower and checklists as opposed to "crucifying" the natural man by being spiritually reborn as a saint. (I'm also quite guilty of the checklists and to do lists.) He discovered years ago that practicing transcendental meditation helped him spiritually transcend the level he had been stuck on for years. Meditation allowed him to commune with God and learn for himself what kind of Being God is, and he found himself becoming a more Christlike person without checklists and willpower.
Phil has an online meditation course that he charges for.3 I felt like his website was kind of scammy, so I dismissed the idea of taking it. Then I came across someone who had bought the course and felt like it was helpful. I was intrigued and bought it ($49). I learned a LOT. He provides some guided meditations to get you started till you're able to do unguided on your own. I like using them once or twice a day and have liked his style of meditation better than mindfulness meditation.
I'm only two months in, so I can't say I've experienced anything profound. Phil said it took him many months. But I feel pretty certain that what he teaches is right and I will eventually have a breakthrough. I wish I had started meditating with Phil right from the beginning. If I had started last spring, I would have been much further along right now!
1 Hindering the Saints, Becoming the Beloved of the Lord, Mormon Mantras, The Yoga of Christ
2 Mormon Stories, Mormon Matters, there are also some MP3s of presentations he's given at Sunstone symposiums floating around the internet
3 I'm not shilling for him or getting any kind of kickback for the link. He gives the basics on how to meditate in the Mormon Mantras article for free.
An introduction
I am nobody special.
I have never served in a presidency as anything other than a secretary.
I have never had a stake calling.
I never served a mission.
I have never had a dream or seen a vision.
My patriarchal blessing refers to "great plans" but doesn't specify anything about the nature of those plans. Nothing remotely "great" has happened in my life to this date.
I was born to "goodly parents" who raised me in the church. I was always a "good" Mormon. I went to seminary. I didn't date till I was 16. I asked permission to leave class instead of watch R-rated movie clips. I went to BYU. I never went inactive. I was married in the temple. I always had a temple recommend. I didn't swear. I read my scriptures (most of the time). I wasn't fantastic at praying because I never felt like it accomplished anything. I attended all my meetings. I watched General Conference. I kept the Word of Wisdom.
In April 2017, while watching General Conference, I grew frustrated with my spiritual state. The leaders of the church talked about how we should be the happiest people on earth. We should be living amazingly joyful lives.
That was not my experience. I felt, if anything, spiritually stagnant, despite being "active." I didn't feel like I was any happier or better off than people who weren't members of the church. I felt frustrated, like there must be a higher spiritual plane than the one I was living on, because my life experience was not what the church leaders said it should be.
That started my spiritual awakening.
Up till that point, I was, in other words, just your average spiritually-asleep Mormon girl.
I have never served in a presidency as anything other than a secretary.
I have never had a stake calling.
I never served a mission.
I have never had a dream or seen a vision.
My patriarchal blessing refers to "great plans" but doesn't specify anything about the nature of those plans. Nothing remotely "great" has happened in my life to this date.
I was born to "goodly parents" who raised me in the church. I was always a "good" Mormon. I went to seminary. I didn't date till I was 16. I asked permission to leave class instead of watch R-rated movie clips. I went to BYU. I never went inactive. I was married in the temple. I always had a temple recommend. I didn't swear. I read my scriptures (most of the time). I wasn't fantastic at praying because I never felt like it accomplished anything. I attended all my meetings. I watched General Conference. I kept the Word of Wisdom.
In April 2017, while watching General Conference, I grew frustrated with my spiritual state. The leaders of the church talked about how we should be the happiest people on earth. We should be living amazingly joyful lives.
That was not my experience. I felt, if anything, spiritually stagnant, despite being "active." I didn't feel like I was any happier or better off than people who weren't members of the church. I felt frustrated, like there must be a higher spiritual plane than the one I was living on, because my life experience was not what the church leaders said it should be.
That started my spiritual awakening.
Up till that point, I was, in other words, just your average spiritually-asleep Mormon girl.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)