The Twelve Principles of Spiritual Leadership ......... back
Printed in Timeline (www.globalcommunity.org) by Will Keepin who is president of the Satyana Institute in Boulder, Colorado......a provisional set of "principles of spiritual leadership." These are neither definitive nor authoritative ...but rather the beginning of a collective inquiry into how we can apply spiritual teachings in social change work.
First: The first
principle is that the motivation underlying our activism for social
change must be transformed from anger and despair to compassion
and love. This is a major challenge for the environmental movement,
for example. It is not to deny the legitimacy of noble
anger or outrage at injustice of any kind. Rather, we seek to
work for love, rather than against evil. We need to adopt compassion
and
love as our foundational intention, and do whatever inner work
is required to implement this intention. Even if our outward actions
remain the same, there is a major difference in results if our
underlying intention supports love rather than defeating evil.
The Dalai Lama says, "A positive future can never emerge
from the mind of anger and despair."
Second: The
second principle is a classical spiritual tenet, though challenging
to practice. It is the principle of nonattachment to
outcome. To the extent that we are attached to the results of
our work, we rise and fall with our success and failures, which
is a path to
burnout. Failures are inevitable, and successes are not the deepest
purpose of our work. This requires a deepening of faith in the
intrinsic
value of our work-beyond the concrete results. To the extent that
our actions are rooted in pure intention, they have a reverberation
far
beyond the concrete results of the actions themselves. As Gandhi
emphasized, "the victory is in the doing," not the outcome.
In our workshops, we have had several environmental
leaders react strongly to this principle. As one lawyer put it,
"How can I possibly go
into court and not be attached to the outcome? You bet I care
who wins and who loses! If I am not attached to the outcome, I'll
just get
bulldozed!" His words underscore the poignant challenge of
implementing these principles in practice. Yet he keeps coming
back to our retreats,
and he actively seeks ways to love his adversaries. He acknowledged
that, although it is difficult to love some of his adversaries,
one way he can do it is to love them for creating the opportunity
for him to become a strong voice for truth and protection of the
natural environment.
Third: The third
principle is that your integrity is your protection. The idea
here is that if your work has integrity, that will tend to
protect you from negative circumstances. For example, there are
practices for making yourself invisible to the negative energy
that
comes toward you in adversarial situations. It's a kind of psychic
aikido, where you internally step out of the way of negative energy,
and
you make yourself energetically transparent so it passes right
through you. But this only works if your work is rooted in integrity.
Fourth: The
fourth principle is related to the third: the need for unified
integrity in both means and ends. Integrity in means cultivates
integrity in the fruit of one's work; you cannot achieve a noble
goal using ignoble means. Some participants in our workshops engage
regularly
in political debates, testimony, and hearings. We have them experimenting
with consciousness techniques for transmuting challenging
energy into compassion and love-right there in the hearing room.
Early indications are that this is helpful in defusing charged
psychological
situations, and reducing tension in heated debates.
Fifth: The fifth
principle is don't demonize your adversaries. People respond to
arrogance with their own arrogance, which leads to
polarization. The ideal is to constantly entertain alternative
points of view so that you move from arrogance to inquiry, and
you then have no
need to demonize your opponents. This is hard to do, as we often
feel very certain about what we think we know, and the injustices
we see. As
John Stuart Mill said, "In all forms of human debate, both
parties tend to be correct in what they affirm, and wrong in what
they deny." Going into an adversarial situation, we can be
aware of the correctness of what we are affirming, but there is
usually a kernel of truth-however
small-in what is being affirmed by our opponent. We need to be
especially mindful about what we deny, because this is often where
our blind spots will be.
Sixth: The sixth
principle is to love thy enemy. Or if you can't do that, at least
have compassion for them. This means moving from an
"us-them" consciousness to a "we" consciousness.
It means recognizing that I am the logger: when I write these
principles of spiritual
activism and publish them in this newsletter, I give the command
to the logger to fell the trees, to produce the pulp, to produce
this paper so
that I can publish these spiritual principles about how best to
save the trees. It is seeing the full circle of our interconnected
complicity,
and discovering all the problems of humanity in our own hearts
and our own lives. We are not exempt and we are not different.
The "them" that
we speak of is also us. The practice of loving our adversaries
is obviously challenging in situations with people whose views
and methodologies are radically opposed to ours, but that is where
the real growth occurs.
Seventh: The
seventh and eighth principles are a bit contradictory. The seventh
is that your work is for the world rather than for you. We serve
on behalf of others and not for our own satisfaction or benefit.
We're sowing seeds for a cherished vision to become a future reality,
and our
fulfillment comes from the privilege of being able to do this
work. This is the traditional understanding of selfless service.
Eighth: But
then the eighth principle is that selfless service is a myth.
Because in truly serving others, we are also served. In giving
we
receive. This is important to recognize as well, so we don't fall
into the trap of pretentious service to others' needs and develop
a false sense of selflessness or martyrdom.
Ninth: The ninth
principle is: do not insulate yourself from the pain of the world.
We must allow our hearts to be broken-broken open-by the
pain of the world. As that happens, as we let that pain in, we
become the vehicles for transformation. If we block the pain,
we are actually
preventing our own participation in the world's attempt to heal
itself. As we allow our hearts to break open, the pain that comes
is the
medicine by which the Earth heals itself, and we become the agents
of that healing. This is a vital principle that is quite alien
to our usual
Western ways of thinking.
Tenth: The tenth
principle is: what you attend to, you become. If you constantly
attend to battles, you become embattled. On the other hand,
if you constantly give love, you become loving. We must choose
wisely what we attend to, because it shapes and defines us deeply.
Eleventh: The
eleventh principle is to rely on faith. This is not some Pollyannaish
naiveté, as many "realists" would interpret it.
Rather it
entails cultivating a deep trust in the unknown, recognizing the
presence of "higher" or "divine" forces at
work that we can trust
completely without knowing their precise agendas or workings.
It means invoking something beyond the traditional scientific
world view. It
implies that there are invisible forces that we can draw upon
and engage, firstly by knowing they are there; secondly, by asking
or
yearning for them to support us-or more precisely, asking them
to allow us to serve on their behalf. Faith is understood not
as blind adherence
to any set of beliefs, but as a knowing from experience and intuition
about intrinsic universal principles beyond our direct observation,
and
relying upon these principles, whatever they are, to support us
in creating what we aspire to create. This actually brings great
relief
when we realize it really isn't up to us to figure out all the
steps to manifest our unfolding vision, because we are participants
in a larger
cosmic will. Nevertheless, it is our job to discover what our
unique gift is- our unique role-and for each person to give their
gift as skillfully and generously as possible, while trusting
that the rest will all work itself out.
Twelfth: Finally,
the twelfth principle is that love creates the form. As Stephen
Levine says, "The heart crosses the abyss that the mind
creates." It is the mind that gives rise to the apparent
fragmentation of the world, while the heart can operate at depths
unknown to the mind.
So, if we begin imagining with our hearts, and work from a place
of yearning as well as thinking, then we develop an unprecedented
effectiveness that is beyond our normal ways of understanding
because it doesn't have to do with thinking. When we bring the
fullness of our humanity to our leadership, we can be far more
effective in creating the future we want.
In closing, as we enter the third millennium,
we are urgently called to action in two distinct capacities: to
serve as hospice workers to a
dying culture, and to serve as midwives to an emerging culture.
These two tasks are required simultaneously; they call upon us
to move through
the world with an open heart-meaning we are present for the grief
and the pain-as we experiment with new visions and forms for the
future.
Both are needed. The key is to root our actions in both intelligence
and compassion-a balance of head and heart that combines the finest
human
qualities in our leadership for cultural transformation.