LOGOPRAXIS: A NEW WAY OF BEING & SPIRITUAL LITERACY- FROM THE LOGOPRACTIONERS’ WORKBOOK

A New Way of Being

Logopraxis is Practical Christianity and offers a way of relating to Sacred Texts that is focused on the examination of our mental life with a view to repentance and applying them to life. Since Logopraxis is an experiential understanding of the relationship between the Word and the inner processes involved in the regeneration of the human mind, understanding our practice is essential; and hopefully this Workbook will be helpful to those actively involved in doing this work. The Logopraxis approach for engaging with the Word is process-orientated and continues to be an experiment for each of us, in how to be in spiritual community through shared, lived experience of how the Word works in our minds and lives.

Logopraxis seeks to reorientate our relationship with the Word, and invites us to take the Lord’s principles and work with them with a view to confirm their truth in our own experience. The individual practise of gathering material from personal application of the Word is not something done for ourselves alone, but always with a view to supporting our Logopraxis Life Group, each of us offering a direct experience of practicing the Word which creates conditions that open the possibility for the ‘collective human’ of the Church to come into being, in whom the Lord dwells. In this way, working creatively and interactively with the Workbook can be another form of prayer – allowing for the Word to broaden our awareness of the Life it contains, and how it lives in others.

This new way of being relies on a method of work that is outlined in detail in the following sections, where the practice of placing the Word at the centre of our individual and collective spiritual life is supported; where spiritual literacy is developed and enhanced; where we accept that everything that arises in our life does so under the Lord’s Providence, offering material for work; and where the method asks us to submit to the authority of the Word as the Lord, in order to identify, guide and direct our inner work.

 

Spiritual Literacy

Thinking spiritually, or practising spiritual literacy skills, underpins all of our Logopraxis work, and relies on the tools detailed throughout the Workbook, particularly in Step 3, How to Meet and the Appendix. It refers to the ability to ‘read ’what presents into our conscious awareness, in the light of what the Word teaches is true. In cultivating these skills, we seek to observe the spiritual principles within the literal meaning of the Text, and from these to then recognise states of thought or feeling that arise in us while engaging with the Word, or while people in our Life Group share their experience with the Word.

Our day-to-day activities and relationships are the field in which our inner reactions and responses can be observed, and seen to illustrate what the Word teaches regarding the nature of self and the nature of the Divine, of the Lord. Natural or material thinking is dominated by worldly concerns that involve people (including ourselves), places, events, memories of the past, or projections regarding the future – and in general terms, this mode of thought functions from the belief that what the senses perceive are ‘real ’things. Spiritual thinking is not concerned with that but rather is focused on those things that belong to our states of mind: the relations of goods and truths, thoughts and affections, motivations and intentions, beliefs and attitudes, shunning evils and falsities, and the activity of the hellish proprium and the hells versus what is of the Lord and heaven.

So, the practise of spiritual literacy skills involves working to remove the natural material world elements of person, place, time, and space from the content of what we are reading or listening to, and to hold the intention to see how what’s being offered might be framed in a way that captures the universal aspects of spiritual process. This divided attention of observing both internal and external states while engaging with the Word is a valuable tool in stilling the mind and helps us to be consciously present to what arises both in ourselves and in our Life Group. When universal aspects are shared, others are then more easily able to resonate with them in relation to their own work with the Word, and to see how it is true for the processes they personally experience. When this is seen, it more fully supports the Lord’s end – which is the regeneration of the human mind. In this way, the good of the Word as the Lord is made more visible in our midst.

 

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