Women Mystics
and the New Millennium
by Mary
Devlin
A
resurgence of female energy in this time of transition.
As
we approach the New Solar
Age, we read of a forthcoming dimensional shift. Earth, it is said, is changing
from a third to a fourth dimensional vibration, a higher plane of existence,
where boundaries between space and time blur.
Signs
of this shift are apparent. We can see the farthest reaches of the Universe.
True, technology has made it possible, but some wonder if such technology could
have been developed in a third-dimensional world. The Internet certainly seems
to provide a window into another dimension; what else is cyberspace?
Studies
of physics, biology, and the human brain have led enlightened scientists such as
Stanislas Grof, Fritjof Capra, Rupert Sheldrake, David Darling, William Keepin,
and Fred Alan Wolf to theorize on the scientific reality of dreams, past lives,
astrology, and other occult phenomena. Still, of all the phenomena associated
with spirituality, perhaps the least understood is mysticism.What
happens during a mystical experience? The mind becomes dissociated from material
reality, and one can experience revelations of supposed spiritual truths,
receive telepathic messages, see visions, hear music or voices, or feel as if
one is leaving the earthly plane.
n the words of St. Teresa of Avila:
One
sees nothing, either within or without, but while seeing nothing the soul
understands quite clearly who it is and where it is and sometimes even what he
means to tell it. How and by what means it understands it does not know, but so
it is, and while this is happening it cannot fail to know it. (St.
Teresa of Avila, Spiritual Relations, 6)
The
state of mysticism
Some
scientists see mysticism as a mental illness. Certainly some mystics have been
rather strange. Still, enough psychologists have accepted the reality of the
mystical experience, and have theorized extensively about it. The accepted
definition of mysticism involves (a) experience of unity with all beings; (b) a
powerful influence on the mystic’s way of thinking; (c) distinct knowledge
conferred by the experience; (d) time/space distortion, and (e) a sense of
sacredness.
Philosopher/psychologist
William James wrote that mysticism involved states of consciousness ranging from
the non-religious to the religiously profound. James believed that mystical
experiences are possible when our "field of consciousness" expands.
His ideas parallel those of Patricia Diane Cota-Robles, director of the New Age
Study of Humanity’s Purpose and author of several books on consciousness.
"Mystic is a word used to describe someone who is reaching a higher level
of our natural human potential." Author Carol Huffstickler, a yogini and
Kabbalistic scholar, concurs: "I find that visionaries, prophets, and
mystics have always been a vital albeit unacknowledged part of the human race.
Their business has been to know a ‘Truth’ ahead of others, and impart it in
their own unique fashion to the culture of their time."
Some
psychotic episodes bear an uncomfortable resemblance to mystical experience. We
hear about psychotics who slay their families because "God [or the Devil]
told them to." Schizophrenics sometimes see visions, hear voices,
experience time/space displacement. One difference involves the personality of
the individual. Is he able to function in everyday life? Does she use common
sense? By this standard, the ragged bag lady shuffling along the street talking
to unseen companions is probably psychotic, while my own mentor, Marcia Moore, a
renowned yogini, undoubtedly was not. She wrote books, gave lectures, organized
workshops and other events, while running a busy household. Still, there are
psychologists who distrust the mental state even of the Marcia’s of the world.
To them, anyone who reports experiences that cannot be verified scientifically
should be carefully watched—if not institutionalized.
A
large percentage of mystics are women. Neurological studies of male and female
brains reveal that women have better communication via the corpus callosum
between the left and right brain. Dreams and visions are the domain of the right
brain, while verbal communication is ruled by the left. This implies that while
men may have as many mystical experiences as women, women might have a slight
edge when it comes to remembering, making sense of and communicating their
mystical experiences.
In
Biblical times, Moses’ sister Miriam, the military leader Deborah, and the
tailor’s wife Huldah were revered as prophetesses. The mediums who served as
mouthpieces for the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi were all women. Recent
scholarship suggests that in the early Christian church, St. Mary Magdalene was
Christ’s most intelligent and well-loved Apostle.
Women
mystics of the Middle Ages have in recent years been given the attention they
deserve. Perhaps the most famous is Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179), from
Germany. Hildegard, a skilled artist who painted beautiful illuminations of her
mystical visions, wrote several treatises on what they revealed. She was also a
gifted musician whose songs are popular today among music and meditation
enthusiasts.
On
the other side of the world, in India, in the 1400’s, Lalleshwari, or Lall, a
devotee of the god Shiva, was pursuing her own spiritual path. Fleeing an
unhappy marriage, she searched for a guru, finally finding Shrii Siddhanath.
Under his tutelage, she attained God-realization, and became one of the most
celebrated of spiritual poets.
A
century later another great female mystic was born in India. Mira, called
affectionately Mirabai, was a devotee of the god Krishna. Also trapped in a
loveless marriage, Mirabai became a student of the female guru Jhala Rani. Later
Mira left her home and embraced the life of a wandering ascetic. She eventually
settled in Vrindvan, the legendary home of the child Krishna, where she is
believed to have attained self-realization. Her poems are the result of this
enlightenment:
O Krishna, O
All-Pervading One,
My love is for thee
alone.
When love has once
set in, my dearest,
Do not break it off,
But go on increasing
thy affection instead.
Joyful
visions
The
European witch hunts starting in the fifteenth century put an end to the western
tradition of female mystics. Yet in the nineteenth century another
spiritually-inclined woman, Helena Blavatsky—also fleeing an unhappy marriage—traveled
through Egypt, India, and possibly Tibet seeking answers to the meaning of human
existence. At some point she received the revelations that led to her famous
books, Isis Unveiled and The Secret Doctrine, and her founding of
the Theosophical Society. Though some have called her a fraud, there is no
question that her mystical revelations have greatly influenced the New Age
movement.
Later
came Alice A. Bailey, whose books, including A Treatise on White Magic
and Esoteric Psychology, were supposedly dictated telepathically by the
living Tibetan master Djwahl Khul. Marcia Moore, a student of Bailey, knew her
well. What Marcia says about Bailey demonstrates psychologist Robert Ornstein’s
view that some mystical experiences are filtered through the intellect.
"When you read these books," Marcia told me, "you have to be
aware of where Djwahl Khul leaves off and Alice Bailey begins." Some
passages reveal blatant religious prejudice and anthropocentrism. Yet most of
Bailey’s work expresses profound wisdom.
Even
though religion has, since recorded history, been patriarchal, we notice a
resurgence of feminine energy in spiritual movements recently. Many gurus from
Hindu tradition right now are women. Gurumayi Chidvilasananda, Mother Meera,
Mata Amritanandamayi and Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati are a few. In the West we have
an increasing number of female spiritual teachers: the Christian, Evelyn
Underhill; the Buddhist, Joanna Macy; the pagans, Starhawk and Vicki Noble; and
from western metaphysics, Marianne Williamson.
Tim
Rayborn, Ph.D., an initiate of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids and author
of several articles on religious chant, feels that the feminine energy is
especially valuable now. "When you study the women mystics," says
Rayborn, "you can see that their visions were joyful and ecstatic. Male
mystics, however wise, seem to focus more on suffering." He cites St.
Augustine, St. Jerome, and St. John of the Cross. Rayborn feels that during the
current transition, optimism will prove far more valuable than fear.
There
is no doubt that woman mystics are taking the lead during these transitional
times, contributing to the spiritual well-being of the planet, and to its
physical security as well.
According
to Carol Huffstickler, mystical practices are vital to our perception of the
whole truth during the current transition. "Our real job right now is to
understand that lack of (self-)awareness has caused, at the end of this century,
deep confusion, gang violence, government shenanigans and cover-ups, and the
out-of-control power of multinational corporations," she says. "The
most important ‘Truth’... is one that is absolutely and totally unprovable:
we are all sons and daughters of the Living God. We will not find this truth in
a particle accelerator. We can only prove it to ourselves by direct experience
of the other side."
Patricia
Cota-Robles agrees. "We lost our course of direction aeons ago," she
says, "and now we need to learn how to use our creative faculties of
thought and feeling to co-create the wonders of Heaven on Earth."
Perhaps
if we put our minds together, we can create the kind of world we want—a
peaceful world where everyone pulls together to promote not only physical
survival, but the growth of knowledge and awareness as well. Though intelligent
and sensitive men embrace the idea wholeheartedly, a unified Earth is a feminine
concept. "The greatest gift female Mystics can give to Humanity and the
World at this time," says Cota-Robles, "is to model the Truth of who
they are, and through example, blaze a Path of Love back to God for everyone to
follow."
The
Earth is, after all, our Mother.
Author/singer
Mary Devlin is well known in the fields of astrology, New Age thought and
medieval music and history. As well as writing many books, she is an
accomplished vocalist, directing the Sherwood Consort, a vocal ensemble
dedicated to medieval and Renaissance music of the British Isles.
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