May 3 – Virtues: Love, Part 3 – Love: From Attracting to Becoming

Today’s Post

Last week we moved from seeing love as it is seen in popular culture (as well as traditional religion) as emotionally  based, to seeing it through Teilhard’s insights as ontologically based.  To Teilhard, Love is much more than an emotional stimulus to procreation, the stability of society, or an act that qualifies us for the next life.  To him, Love was nothing more (and as he would add, “nothing less”) than the current manifestation of the universal energy of evolution as it rises in the human person.   Without denying the significance of Love as an ‘act’, Teilhard asserts that understanding it as an ‘energy’ with which we can cooperate to increase our wholeness, begins to recognize it in the context of the wellspring of cosmic evolution.

This week we will move on to address how such an energy can be seen to work among humans to energize our increasing ‘complexification’, both as a species as well as in our individual lives.

Love as A Force of Evolution

   In Teilhard’s unique insight into universal evolution, he notes that each step of evolution results from an action and a consequence which effects the increase of complexity in a product. He understands such increase as the primary metric of evolution.  Without this metric, as he points out, universal evolution would have been still born, stagnant, static.  Everything that we can see around us came into existence from such a process.

The action in each evolutive step going back to the Big Bang is simply the joining of two products of like complexity and the consequence is a new product of increased complexity.  Effectively, the two ‘parent’ entities join on a ‘two dimensional’ plane of common complexity, but the result occurs ‘vertically’, in a third dimension of increased complexity, turning what started out as a two-dimensional activity into three dimensions.  Teilhard sees this simple but profound process underlying the appearance of everything that we can see in the universe.

He notes, however, that Science is unable to account for this vertical aspect, even though without it, as we have seen, the universe remains static.  Next to the “vast material energies” studied by Science, this agent of complexity “adds absolutely nothing that can be weighed or measured”.  Hence there is no branch of science that acknowledges it, much less addresses it.

Teilhard spends a significant amount of his writing addressing this aspect of cosmology, and in it he notes that this dyadic activity, two entities joining in such a way as to produce a product of higher complexity, occurs at the very basis of cosmic becoming, as described in the best Scientific treatment of the Big Bang, and continues unabated all the way to the present day.  Therefore he sees this simple but profound activity still at work in human relationships and their resultant contribution to human evolution.  Our Love relationships aren’t unique to humans, they echo the rise of this dyadic activity through each wave of evolution.

How did Teilhard address how Love between humans can be seen to reflect such activity?

Excentration and Centration

We have frequently adverted to John’s classic assertion that “God is Love and he who abides in Love abides in God and God in him,” to address the nature of Love as a force rather than just an emotion.  As Teilhard understands it, this statement by John speaks volumes about God, about us and about our ongoing genesis as humans.

As we saw last week, Teilhard’s less metaphorical (and more correct) understanding of John is that God is the ground of being which manifests itself in the energy of love, and that when we love we are participating in our individual current of this universal flow of energy.  To Teilhard, as we saw, God is not a ‘person’ who ‘loves’, He (sic) is the ultimate principle of the energy by which the universe unfolds and by which it eventually manifests itself in the ‘person’.

    Teilhard articulates this dynamic further, seeing it in the light of cosmic evolution and in its continuation in the human person.  In relationships between persons, Teilhard sees the workings of love coming about through the dynamics which he refers to as “excentration” and “centration”.

“Excentration” occurs when we are able to grow beyond our biases, assumptions and thought structures and become aware of different and more meaningful concepts of life: the “aha” moments in which we realize this or that presumption which holds us back.  As this scaffolding of ego gradually falls away, excentration naturally leads to increased transparency, openness and honesty, which are necessary for a deep relationship.

Engaging in such a deep relationship, or deepening the relationship that already exists, enhances not only our selves but also the beloved, and contributes to their own ability to “excentrate”, and thus their increasing maturity and capacity for love.  As their level of person is enhanced and the love returned, this results in an increased level of self-understanding in both persons.

The Next Post

This week we followed Paul’s assertion that Love was the most important of the three ‘Theological Virtues’ by following Teilhard’s expansion of love from the traditional understanding as an emotional energy which connects us for procreation, social stability and ultimately salvation to a more universal perspective in which Love can be seen as the energy of universal evolution become manifest in the energy by which we become persons, and so continue the rise of complexity in human evolution.

Next week we will take a fourth look at Love, going a little deeper into how Teilhard’s mapping of ‘excentratkon’ and ‘centration’ as the principle actions of the dynamic of Love can contribute to our personal ‘complexification’.

7 thoughts on “May 3 – Virtues: Love, Part 3 – Love: From Attracting to Becoming

  1. Beth Smith

    This is such a clear explanation of then nature of love as de Chardin understood it. This makes sense to me and is such a relief to be freed from the focus on love as “emotion” and see that love is in fact an energy. I have felt this energy as a dominant force in my life but did not really understand that it was love. It does explain the deep peace I feel when I truly exchange this energy with another person whether it be a child, lover, or friend. How do I get a copy of this essay?

    Reply
  2. Steve Newton

    I like this very much and, for me, it raises an interesting question: In this context, what does it mean to love God? To Love Jesus? I have pretty much gone beyond any notion of an emotional love-relationship with God/Jesus, but am intrigued by the notion of loving God as an energy rather than an emotion. Any thoughts?

    Reply
    1. matt.landry1@outlook.com Post author

      If God is the sum total of all of the energies that come into play in universal evolution that leads to the human person, then to continue this evolution at the personal and societal level, it is necessary to learn to recognize this energy and cooperate with it. In a nutshell, if we are to become what we’re capable of becoming, we need to develop the skill of understanding and cooperating. Religion offers a wide plethora of clues on how to do this, but the one that seems to be the most common is the golden rule. Understanding and cooperating with this rule requires development of the skill of using our neocortex brains to modulate the instinctive stimuli of our reptilian and limbic brains: divesting ourselves of ego and thinking before we react.
      So, loving God consists of conscious participation in this energy in terms that were articulated by Jesus. Awareness of ourself (our feelings), those prejudices and mindsets that hold us back (our egos) and the intense effect of love that enhances both our selves and the selves of those we love.
      It’s not that love doesn’t involve emotion, but that the emotion needs conscious modulation: we need to be able to DECIDE to love.

      Reply
  3. Lloyd Tarte

    Howdy! Would you mind if I share your blog with my myspace group? There’s a lot of people that I think would really appreciate your content. Please let me know. Many thanks

    Reply

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