Exploring Faith Through Music - Bishop Michael Marshall
Exploring Faith Through Music - Bishop Michael Marshall
Tuesday, 18th October, 2016
INTRODUCTION
I’m so glad to have been invited to give this particular talk this evening as part of your
series, because what I am going to talk about with illustrations from both the
piano and also from the musical contributions of Fr. Soon Han Choi is part of
my own continuing journey of seeking to bring together in one whole experience
two sides of myself, in what I believe to be the universal, human quest for wholeness and holiness – though many
would not use those words to express such a deep and inner yearning – a
yearning for what some of us call God.
SOON TO PLAY as an invitation to an
experience and not just a lecture!
‘Why
was I created,’ asks the Scottish Catechism? I was created in order to worship
God and to enjoy him for ever.’ Or, if you don’t like things branded Scottish,
then in Peter Schaffer’s play, - EQUUS – the psychiatrist says to the deeply
disturbed teenager,’’ ’If you don’t worship, you’ll shrink, it’s as brutal as that.’’
He might have said – ‘’If you don’t worship you’ll become less
than human – less than you were created to be – locked into a culture of secular
minimalism.
And, by worship I don’t mean simply worship as in Church (though I
would include that). No! – to use a more
wide-ranging vocabulary, I mean – wonder,
self-transcendence – even that precarious experience of ecstasy - springing the lock on the door of our
imprisoned self-consciousness – a going out of oneself to others and supremely and
ultimately to the one great Other whom we call God.
So transcendence, as
the poet Addison puts it – ‘’And man the marvel seeing, forgets his selfish
being, for the joy of a beauty not his own.’’
Schopenhauer – though himself not a Christian, - writes, of
transcendence as ‘this aesthetic mode of knowing is a mental mindset in which personal
desires and strivings are abolished because the subject has lost himself in the
contemplation of beauty.’
SO BEAUTY AS
A PATH TO TRANSCENDENCE AND TRANSFORMATION
Of that triad of the character of the one God – beauty, truth and
goodness – at various stages in our history, various Christians have been suspicious
of beauty, especially in the arts (unless it was particularly Christian art)
and preferred to put all their eggs in the basket of truth, (as dogma) and goodness (as morality and ethics).
Yet beauty, not least in music, has a transcendent, converting
power, indeed a transforming power realized and experienced in transcendence, or
in what Hans Kung, the theologian in his book on Mozart calls, ‘Traces of
Transcendence.’
He says, ‘There is a wafer-thin boundary between
music, which is the most abstract of all arts, and religion. For both, although
very different, direct us to what is ultimately unspeakable, to mystery.’
Let me give you an example of what I mean by the transforming
power of beauty, appropriated through the medium of music. In the movie ‘The
Pianist’, when the Nazi Officer finds the escaping Jewish pianist playing the
piano in a bombed out building in Warsaw, he tells the pianist to play. The
German officer stands behind the pianist as he plays Chopin’s 1st
Ballade with a pistol in his belt – with which, as you watch, you are certain
the German will shoot and kill the pianist. Yet, miraculously, it’s precisely the
beauty of that 1st Ballade of Chopin which transforms the German
Officer, who subsequently gives his uniform to help the pianist to escape and
subsequently his life for the Jewish pianist. The officer is transformed from
the destructive ideology of Nazi prejudice by the experience of a transcendent
beauty – Addison – ‘the joy of a beauty not his own.’
Play - CHOPIN
20TH NOCTURNE
Michael Mayne puts it like this, ‘I am challenged by the
transcendent mystery beyond me, and I can only make sense of what I feel about
myself and how my outer and inner world relate if, for this mystery, I use the
word, ‘God’, - God, as a kind of shorthand for that which is beyond, as well as
within. And I believe that it’s precisely this intuitive sense of the
transcendent, the muffled presence of the holy, that makes me human.’
So, Karen Armstrong in her remarkable book, ‘The Case for God:
What Religion really means,’ writes: ‘the desire to cultivate a sense of the
transcendent may be the defining human characteristic.’ ‘Music,’ she writes,
‘has always been inseparable from religious expression, because, like religion,
at its best, music marks the ‘’limit’’ of reason.’ Music goes beyond the reach
of words: it is not about anything.’’ And that of course is ‘The Road
Less travelled by contemplatives and the contemplative journey into God. (It’s
not so easy to project on to music your own subjective impressions: it requires
a ‘stretch beyond your reach,’ as Yeats says.
You see, I believe that everyone – whether they call themselves
religious or not, (and generally speaking these days they don’t) – everyone is
crying out for the release of self-transcendence and to experience the inscape of
a larger landscape. Of course, many attempt various shortcuts: the drug culture
with its false promise of ecstasy – the word literally meaning to stand outside
of oneself; or alcohol, erotomania, or even, as we say, the mind-blowing
experience of a football crowd – a dangerous cocktail of hysteria and
transcendence, if ever there was one, for there is darkness as well as light in
the beyond, as well as with that which is within.
So, I need that sixth sense of which D. H. Lawrence speaks when he
says: ‘The sense of wonder: that is the
sixth sense. And it’s the natural religious sense.’
And this is where poets and musicians, the theatre, ballet, opera
can be the keys to expand our limited human horizons, revealing the ‘inscape’,
as Gerard Manley Hopkins calls it, within and beyond the landscape of post
enlightenment reason, as the numinous beckons us, marking us for life, for the
divine life which is both within us and beyond us.
The strap line of the Enlightenment is only a half truth, which is
the most dangerous kind of lie! ‘’I think therefore I am.’ No! I worship; I
adore, therefore I am’ Yes, - I find my true self, by losing myself in
something or someone beyond myself.
‘’All
true art,’ wrote Thomas More, ‘points beyond itself to the Creator of
creators. For God is the supreme artist whose prolific works are all around us
for those with eyes to see. The arts give the spiritual life imagination,
softening its tendency towards rules and dogma and so deepening its
intuitions.’
Dennis Healey in his autobiography says something similar:
‘Without the arts, politics would before long have encrusted me in a horny
carapace (hard shell of a tortoise or
crustacean) my persona would have taken over from my personality, and the
mask would have become the man.’
BEAUTY &
GOODNESS BELONG TOGETHER, as Von Balthazar is at pains
to point out in his seven volumes of ‘A Theology of Aesthetics.’ For, in Greek,
there are two different words for good: one is good, as morally good, and the
other is good as aesthetically good, beautiful, attractive. When Jesus says, in
the Fourth Gospel, ‘I am the good shepherd,’ the word he uses in Greek for
‘good’ is not morally god, but aesthetically good – ‘beautiful’, ‘attractive’
or ‘winsome’ as one biblical commentator puts it. So, also, in the Septuagint translation in the Greek of
the Old Testament, in creation when God, contemplates his completed creative
work, it says,(AV) ‘And behold it was good,’ the word in the Greek is not good in
the sense of morally, good and true, but rather beautiful.’ God looks at his
creation – he looks at you and me and says – ‘you are beautiful.’ Go on hearing
that long enough and you might become ‘beautiful’ with ‘the beauty of
holiness,’ as the psalmist says.
Now the Church has always been cautious on this front. Why?
Because it sees the dangers of pantheism – limiting God to his creation, rather
than seeing God in it, but also beyond it, - hence the correct word, panentheism, for as Augustine rightly
insists: ‘God,’ he says, ‘whose centre is everywhere and whose
circumference is nowhere.’
As the prophet Isaiah discovered in his vision, much to his
surprise when he heard the angel asserting in song: ‘Heaven and earth are full of his glory,’
or as Elizabeth Barrett Browning puts it more poetically: ‘Earth’s crammed with heaven and
every common bush on fire with God.’
True, of course – the creation is ‘smudged’ – to use Gerard Manley
Hopkin’s poetic image, by our misuse and our abuse of it – but for those who
have found the God within, - the eyes of whose hearts have been opened, - everything
in creation reflects something of his glory and image – that same ‘beauty of
holiness.’
THE UNIQUE POWER OF MUSIC
It’s my claim tonight that, in all of
this, music has a uniquely powerful part to play.
Back to Schopenhauer, in whose vision, all ultimate reality is a
unity – all of a piece - in which everything ultimately belongs and is
inter-related - the unus mundus of
medieval philosophy, which is beyond our human categories of space, time and
causality.
So, ‘to appreciate art,’ he says, ‘ the observer must adopt a special
attitude of mind, the same attitude required by Plato, of detachment from
personal concerns, so that the work of art can be appreciated in contemplative
fashion uncontaminated by personal needs or preoccupations.’ Surely
that is what we mean when we speak of the contemplative life or contemplative
prayer – going beyond words and formula, dogma and doctrine – all these are
only the launch pads for take off – the scaffolding of a building – a means to
a greater end. And what is that end? It is self-transcendence and release from
that culturally conditioned ego which has to die, in order that the true and
unique self, recreated in the likeness and image of God can emerge like the
butterfly from the chrysalis - – when, in the words of Charles Wesley’s hymn,
we are ‘lost in wonder love and praise.’
THE HEALING
POWER OF MUSIC
And all this has a uniquely healing power. ‘Music is the medicine of the mind.’
Says John Logan, the eighteenth century writer. (1744-88).
King Saul, in the Old Testament, like so many, suffered from that
Black Dog of depression and at such times he used to summon the young David to
play his harp and to sing, during which times, Saul would experience release,
and healing. Similarly today, both visual art as well as music, are used in our
hospitals to release those imprisoned in the darkness of depression. (I wonder
if that’s the reason why art museums in o8ur post Christian world, have become
the quasi ‘cathedrals’, providing something of this transcendent experience
which in the past would have been found in churches?)
Indeed Michael Tippett suggests that ‘listening to music makes us aware
of important aspects of ourselves which we may not ordinarily perceive; and
that by putting us in touch with these aspects, music makes us whole again.’
So, ‘To sing is to pray twice,’ said Augustine. Today, we might
put it slightly differently – ‘to sing is to pray with both sides of the
brain’ – the intuitive and the reflective, together with the analytical
and discursive. It’s interesting that in the Eastern Orthodox Churches there is
no such thing as a Low Mass or that early 8.00clcok said Eucharist: all liturgy
from start to finish is always sung – indeed
you can’t be ordained if you can’t sing.
SOON HAN – to play
Speaking of linking the two differentiated hemispheres of the
brain, the late Oliver Sacks, possibly
the world’s best known neurologist in his book Musicophilia, subtitled, ‘Music
and the Brain’ speaks of another most intriguing neurological crossover in the
brain, which happens to some people on hearing music. It’s called synesthesia.
Some people, when hearing a piece of music in a particular key, literally see a
particular colour. Stravinsky, as a musician, claimed to have this experience
and it is well documented in our own day, when we know so much more about the
neurological wiring of the brain.
Different keys have different colourings and this is all because
sound doesn’t divide equally into eights or octaves. In fact sound stretches
infinitely higher and lower than our capacity to hear it – unlike bats!- (as indeed does light) But the only way we can
handle sound, is to do what we do with all transcendent greater reality: we impose
a restricted grid, in the name of reason as an overlay to reality. It is a compromise
which is what western music is based on, - the octave of the keyboard.
And the result is reflected in a story about Dr. Arthur Peasgood, when
he was lecturing in the Royal College of Music. Suddenly, he stopped his
lecture as a taxi passed by, sounding its horn. ‘What note was that?’ he
shouted. ‘G sharp’ replied one student. ‘No’, replied another, ‘A flat’. You
see, although they are the same note on the piano, in reality they are very
slightly different, which is why stringed instruments retune as an orchestra,
with the piano’s compromised A note before performing, because all other
instruments not tied to the keyboard’s octaves, can play and perform that
subtle difference between G sharp and A flat.
And then, when fifths and thirds or major and minor keys are
played, it gives a different colouring to the sound which some people can
actually name.
Just listen. (Illustrate this with Chopin’s ‘Raindrop Prelude’
with the repeated A flat/G sharp).
CHOPIN’S
RAINDROP PRELUDE
MUSIC AND
LOVE
‘Music, in its many expressions, is powerful for pointing us to that
self-transcendence of which I am speaking. It opens us to worship and
adoration, as well as being, in Shakespeare’s words, - ‘the food of love.’ For
to fall in love is the necessary result of this going out of oneself – it makes
a fool of us in the sense that it defies all analysis and understanding. I am no
longer in the driving seat, no longer in control, which for some of us ‘control
freaks’ is indeed both fearful and yet wonderfully liberating.
But what we have failed to understand is that all love is of a
piece. So called Platonic love is a contradiction in terms. And here again linguistics
help. While in Greek there are three or four different words for different kinds
of love, with so-called spiritual love sharply differentiated from erotic love,
in the Hebrew tongue and indeed in Jewish spirituality there is only one word
for love – ‘ahabh - for all kinds of love – I love food, I love my cat, I
love music, I love my wife, I love God, and I love making love – and in Hebrew there
is only one word for all of that, as love is perceived and indeed experienced
as all of a piece.
Both Christianity and much of our western culture have fallen into
the trap of dualism of which I first
spoke –dividing human love and sexual love from spiritual love and the love of
God. (Sensual versus spiritual – but we are not angels!)This is best
exemplified by people’s reaction, to that book in the Old Testament Scriptures
– ‘The Song of Songs.’ To many it is just an erotic love poem and they are
puzzled by its place in the holy Scriptures. But, it is so important that it is
there. Read St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who preached eighty six sermons on the Song
of Songs; C. H. Spurgeon 52 sermons; Aelred of Rievaux or Richard Rolle in his
book The Fire of Love: all alike point us to that way of transcendence in which
the analytical and the aesthetic converge at a point beyond them both; the
human and the divine; the sacred and the secular finally converge and are
subsumed into a unity and greater reality beyond them both. It is at that point
of convergence, that by losing ourselves we are found; where in not knowing in
the sense of analytical understanding, we finally ‘know as we are known,’ (to
quote St. Paul from his ode to love Chapter 13), and where faith and hope are
raised into that love by which and for which we were created.
SOON TO PLAY
– ‘SET ME AS A SEAL’
AND FINALLY
So music can draw us beyond ourselves into worship and adoration,
not only in Church, but also in the beauty of the natural world around us, it
can also be the handmaid of faith as well as the key which unlocks the prison
of our self-consciousness, that false ego of self-made men and women, opening
us up to the transforming power of God to recreate us in is image and likeness.
And that’s the mission of the Church in every generation: to make
the connection between the God within all of us and the God everywhere beyond
us; helping people to recognise and indeed to name the God within them somewhere, so that they may as
‘’God’s spies’’ (to use Shakespeare’s phrase) go out and uncover and rediscover
him everywhere.
I’ve found that, it’s as I come to know the great mystery of God
somewhere within me - the Jesus of faith, that I’m
increasingly aware of his presence everywhere
as the Cosmic Christ, risen, ascended and glorified, calling me into
the divine embrace of the Trinity - increasingly aware of colour and sound, as
I’m opened up by grace, to wonder and worship at the glory of God in the face
of Jesus and in his profile reflected in the natural world and indeed in his
whole creation.
And yet, there’s also a kind of divine discontent, (a kind of
nostalgia) – even a frustration - in the knowledge that the arts, and
especially music for me, keep nagging at me that there is still infinitely more
and more and more beyond,‘beckoning’ me – that word numinous in its literal meaning
- yes, teasing me and beckoning me to go further and to let go of, rather than
endlessly trying to replicate, all previous and even great experiences of this
reality and presence hovering and resonating around works of beauty, whether in
art or especially in music – the Holy Spirit of creativity and love.
You see, the creation at its best is only a sign post, pointing us
forward and onward to our true resting place, (homesick for heaven like homing
pigeons) lest we make what are only icons into idols and means into ends. At
their very best, the arts are only signposts and must not be mistaken for
finishing posts – there’s always more. C. S. Lewis maintains that beauty – in
the arts or whatever - in this world, is but the ‘’echo of a tune we’ve not yet
heard, the scent of a flower we’ve not yet picked and news from a county we’ve
not yet visited.’’
PLAY THE E
MINOR PRELUDE OF CHOPIN, PLAYED AT HIS
FUNERAL with its sense of yearning and longing.
So I press on to make all this my own, in journey of faith,
singing of course as I travel, as all pilgrims always have, pressing on to make
all this my own, because Christ Jesus has first made me his own: not because
I’ve understood or comprehended
it all, here and now– no, far from it! But, rather because I’ve first been apprehended by the shere beauty,
truth and goodness of God, - traces of transcendence - supremely revealed in the person of Jesus and
who with the help of those sign posts
God has littered around his creation, including the arts, and by his amazing grace, so that, I will
finally be delivered from the shadowlands of this world to that finishing post - my true home in
heaven – the City of God, where, then, as St. Augustine says, ‘we
shall be still and we shall see; we shall see and we shall love, we shall love
and we shall worship. Behold what will be in the end, without end! For what is
our end, but to reach that kingdom which has no end.’