IJHC
    Subscribe to the IJHC for FREE!

    Name
    Email
     
    Home
    Donations for IJHC
    Current Issue Preview
    IJHC Contents
    Subscribe To IJHC
    Search Site
    About IJHC
    Editorial Panel
    Links
    Appreciations
    Submissions
    Volunteer
    Contact Us
     
     
     
     
     
     
    Returning Subscribers

    Name
    Email
     
     




    Dan Benor's Wholistic Healing Blog Awesome Wholistic Healing Blog Wholistic Healing Research facebook page WHEE facebook page International Journal of Healing and Caring [IJHC] facebook page Sands of Time eZine facebook page Paintap twitter Daniel J. Benor - LinkedIn
    The International Journal for Healing and Caring
    Spirit Relationships Mind Emotions Body # #
     

    Creativity: Where the Divine and the Human Meet

    by Matthew Fox
    Dowload PDF Download PDF
    Master Book Reviews Table of Contents Return to Master Book Reviews Table of Contents

    New York:  Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, 2002.  ISBN 1-58542-178-2.  246 pp. $21.95.

    Matthew Fox, an Episcopal priest and author of more than 20 books, believes that human beings are born to co-create with God.  In his words, “the work of the artist in all of us is to be in dialogue with our hearts, for God dwells therein.  And the work of the artist is nothing less than to ‘put divinity into things.’” (p. 52-53) The ultimate goal of this holy artistic communion is service.  Fox weaves together beautiful and poetic excerpts from different spiritual traditions that are rich in depth and symbolism, and point to one unifying truth – that creativity is both our fundamental essence and responsibility.  In this age of colossal self-destruction 
    and multiple crises in ecology, global-warming, terrorism, and energy, the author urges us to recognize our individual impact on the rest of the world and begin manifesting our creative purpose with more compassionate consciousness.  Fox calls us to reassess our approach to the planet, emphasizing that it is through our imagination that we can launch the necessary change.   

    The author offers various ways for integrating creativity into life, including through learning to praise, embracing both joy and darkness, welcoming our child-like and playful innocence, practicing intimacy, meditating and developing spiritual routine, and opening to gratitude.  Fox further elaborates on improving society and transforming the systems and dynamics in education, relationships, politics, and worship.  As an example, he encourages us to reinvent the way our schools are currently organized with growing drop-out rates and to return to the ancient teachings of diverse cultures that “valued creativity as being the heart and soul of education.” (p. 201)  Making this shift will motivate children to study because it will be fostering in them reverence for existence and more profound understanding of sustainability.

    Fox believes in living simply and with appreciation.  This can be achieved through art, for it brings us into the present moment, filling us with gratefulness for the harmony of nature and re-connecting us with Sophia, our inherent wisdom.  He observes that because we are not ready for liberation as a species yet, we tend to get absorbed in cynicism.  However, instead of succumbing to pusillanimity, or fear of our own creativity, and sinking deeper into negativity, we have a choice to begin cultivating a more healing environment, where we are being honest and maintain a holistically-oriented view of life.  Embracing creativity leads us to begin to worship the universe in awe and to gather the courage to alter reality.   

    Fox supports the idea put forward by psychologist Rollo May that Greek and Judeo-Christian myths have led us to associate creativity and consciousness with guilt.  Fox states that in both the Prometheus and the Adam and Eve stories, the punishment of humans is “for an act of learning and creative consciousness that comes close to Divinity’s ways.” (p. 89)  As a result, today, too many of us are afraid of our divine co-creative abilities.  Fox further notes that there is a deep need within each one of us to create. To reject this yearning is equivalent to “a soul-death.  A concealment of one’s truth.  Hell.” (p. 128)  The author reminds us that we are not machines and are meant to be uninhibited because being wild is the sacred spirit of life.  Through art, we can reclaim and free our souls. 

    Fox highlights the importance of being comfortable in solitude and listening to our inner voice in full concentration.  Meditation can assist us in finding the stillness and spiritual centeredness necessary in developing the inner artist and thus, in “birthing Divinity.” (p. 67)  In this regard, art “can be meditation itself:  It is a discipline that opens us up to the joy of Divinity at work.” (p. 139)  When we are unrealized as artists in life, we are also joyless.  Freedom is about authentic self-expression of our total being and is reflective of the ecstatic union with God.  While creating from our very core, we connect directly with God and co-birth together as partners.  If we deny ourselves this organic companionship, we experience loneliness associated with isolation. 

    Throughout the book, Fox is calling us to awaken to our purpose and transcend the collective amnesia to our inborn and infinite capacities.  The author is prompting us to be more aware and to love life rather than take it for granted.  He shows the way for re-discovering joy and observes that “to know joy, we must know the heart.  We must live where the heart lives.” (p. 167)  Fox is optimistic, yet he acknowledges that suffering is a fundamental part of creation and urges us to learn from pain rather than either deny or dwell on it.  The author considers that there is no reason to be intimidated by the darkness and furthermore, it is part of our mission as artists in life to communicate to others the insights we gain during difficult times.  Fox compels us to delve deeper into our souls mirroring the entire universe and seek that which is beyond the ordinary senses, to connect with the cosmos and bring the wisdom back to share and uplift humanity. 

    Fox inspires us to live in the now and focus on the artistic process rather than on outcomes, in order to empty our minds and experience contemplation or “unity of forgetfulness of separation and duality.  And then creativity surely flows.” (p. 196)  Our minds are imbued with the remarkable power of intention and imagination because they reflect God’s own mind, allowing us the capability to create any form and therefore, redesign the entire world.  Essentially, Fox emphasizes that all the structures upon which our modern civilization is built have to be re-imagined because as he states, “they all lack feminine energy, wisdom energy.  They lack cosmology and creativity.” (p. 229)  It is time to infuse them with our integral artistic power.   

    The book is pulsating with newly emerging life.  It is well-articulated and full of enthusiasm and empowerment to immediately start to initiate a personal change.  I found it to be a wonderful resource about the intersections of creativity and spirituality and highly recommend it to other artists-pilgrims walking towards creating Heaven on Earth.  

    Review by Veronica Shipilov, Doctoral Student
    Holos University Graduate Seminary
    http://www.HolosUniversity.org

    Master Book Reviews Table of Contents Return to Master Book Reviews Table of Contents

    We hope you enjoyed the article and welcome your comments and feedback in our new Forum.

    If this article has spoken to you and has been helpful, we would appreciate your support by:

    1. Making a donation to the IJHC
    2. Forwarding this article to others who might be interested
    The IJHC is supported through donations.

    Thank you for your help in making it possible to publish the healing articles in the International Journal of Healing and Caring on line.

    Blessings

    Dan

     
     
    Join the WHP Affiliate Program | Existing Affiliate Login
    Service Agreement | Privacy Policy | Download Agreement | DISCLAIMER