Gurdjieff and A Spiritual path in the World
by Richard Harvey on 07/20/18
Early last century
Gurdjieff expounded his approach to personal and spiritual development—the
Fourth Way. He explained that spiritual practice has been followed
traditionally in one of three ways. The physical way: to struggle with the body
and develop the will by practicing physical exercises to develop attention. The
emotional way: to struggle with affection through working with feelings,
developing faith and unity, and exercising the will over emotions. The mental
way: to struggle with mental habits and capabilities, developing knowledge and
the intellect. Gurdjieff called these three ways the way of the fakir, the way
of the monk and the way of the yogi. The goal of each way is to “master
attention”, which is synonymous with realizing the True Self.
Today the way of the
fakir is followed in the Alexander technique, Hatha yoga or Tai Chi; the way of
the monk in meditation, spiritual renunciation and monastic life and the way of
the yogi in psychoanalysis, spiritual study groups and Advaita Vedanta (in which
the mind is used to transcend itself). Each of these approaches has been
incorporated into the transpersonal work or mystical approaches of modern
times.
But Gurdjieff
considered each approach incomplete, because developing the body neglects the
emotions and the mind; developing the emotions neglects the mind and the body
and developing the mind neglects the body and the emotions. According to
Gurdjieff, spiritual attainment through any of these ways leaves aspects of our
humanness undeveloped. So how do we fulfill ourselves spiritually without
discarding any aspects of our humanness?
Gurdjieff proposes
that we can pursue our spiritual path outside of the traditional ways by taking
responsibility for our spiritual development, organizing our practice and finding
our own way. Rather than accepting spiritual truths, we have to find them for
ourselves. We must live our own lives and become our own inner authority.
The Fourth Way was
prophetic. Today more people than ever experience a call to follow a spiritual
path in the world, rather than outside it. For many the spiritual journey is no
longer formally prescribed by an outward authority or pursued in an
institutionalized setting; each individual discovers it for his or her self. It
is an expression of the emerging intimacy between our humanity and our
divinity. We accept responsibility for how we lead our life by choosing the
path to our psycho-spiritual unfolding. But, although the contemporary
spiritual journey may not conform to a prescribed definition and is practiced
outside of established religious tradition, we can still draw on mystical
traditions and spiritual wisdom for help, clarification and deepening.
Since much of our
understanding of spirituality has come to us via the East, confusion has grown
in our minds about adopting the trappings of Eastern religion. While this may
be useful and appropriate for some, the reality is that the Eastern mind is
very different from the Western mind. This is reflected in the increasing
number of individuals seeking liberation through a self-directed path. In spite
of our attraction to personal surrender and guru worship, the Western mind is
insistent that our spiritual path is our own.
This is more than ever
true when you consider the maturation of spirituality today. Western
spirituality has been retrieved from its other-worldly associations; the
fantastical, magical high of its counter-cultural associations, its love affair
with altered states and escape from reality, when Nirvana became confused with
Shangri-La. Spirituality has begun to mature in the Western mind and is now
understood as an essentially inner process producing individual and collective
effects.
Leading a spiritual
journey in the world means that we don't have to withdraw and “die to the
world”. It may be difficult to have a job and a family, and be part of a
worldly community and deal with the profound questions of human and divine
nature, time and eternity, love and fear. Traditionally people who wanted to
lead a spiritual life retreated to monasteries, convents or ashrams to practice
within a prescribed structure of discipline. Since the divine call comes
individually, people seek an individual, self-directed path of the spirit.
Today the predominant way to practice spirituality is through individual
integration, personal wholeness and inner renunciation in the
world, rather than retreat and withdrawal from the world. The
heart has become the new temple.
BLOG entry #157
This article by Richard Harvey was originally published at http://www.therapyandspirituality.com/articles/ and it is part of an ongoing retrospective series of blogs. ‘Gurdjieff and A Spiritual path in the World’ was first published in 2012.