Post on 30-May-2020
Celtic Spirituality – A Beginner’s Guide
Trevor Miller reflects on Celtic Spirituality.
I love ‘The Antiques Roadshow’ where all manner of ordinary household items from the ‘there
and then’ of years gone by are paraded in the ‘here and now’ of today, explained and valued.
There are often huge surprises for people, making me wish I had kept more things handed down
from my Grandparents. For younger people they were just things, novelties that they had not
seen before but for older folk they were the stuff of memories, a nostalgic rediscovery of the past
that had largely been lost. I recall handing down my prized Matchbox cars and Dinky Toys from
my childhood to my son Jonny which of course although new to Jonny were evoking all sorts of
memories for me.
This is what has been happening these last 35 years or so with Celtic spirituality. There is an
enormous interest still in all things Celtic, although it may well have peaked. Publishers were
falling over themselves to get book after book published while the interest was there. Some are
dry as dust academic works with hundreds of footnotes and others far worse, the ‘flavour of the
month’ popular romantic twee stuff. The Celtic themepark ‘Be a celt for a day’ experience, like
some sort of spiritual Disneyland.
For the Northumbria Community there was never any design or intent to be this or that,
including Celtic. It was and is a simple fact that as we struggled to obey the call of God on our
lives, as we attempted to respond to the questions ‘Who is it that you seek?’ ‘How then shall we
live?’ ‘How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land?’ as we researched an authentic
Northumbrian spirituality, we discovered (in the history and teaching of the Celtic church in
Northumbria) rays of light in the darkness, coherence in the confusion that made sense of the
nonsense within us and around us and gave us an understanding of our own spiritual journey in
God. The ‘here and now’ of our own journey began to make sense as the there and then’ of some
aspects of Celtic spirituality became a treasure chest of wisdom that gave us a language to
explain and express what God had laid on our hearts.
The greatest discovery was that the heart of Celtic spirituality was simply living the life,
following the Way, travelling the journey in the everyday ordinariness of life –the pain and the
pleasure, the heartaches and the hopes, the disappointment and the dreams. This is of great
importance because this is essentially what spirituality is.
WHAT IS SPIRITUALITY?
Dom John Chapman, the Benedictine Abbot famous for his ‘Spiritual Letters’ once said that all
spiritual writers disagreed with one another and that he disagreed with all of them. A healthy
reminder that spirituality takes many shapes and forms. It is also a much used word in most
traditions today and although historically it is a term that has developed and changed in its
emphases, put very basically its modern use is simply that which describes how we live out what
we most profoundly believe.
Spirituality then, describes our approach to life – what we think, what we do and how we do it,
what we see etc. Perhaps we get at least a similarity of its meaning when we talk about a
person’s mentality, or mind set or world view.
Sr. Benedicta Ward writing about the spirituality of St Cuthbert hits the mark when she says ‘By
spirituality then, I mean what Cuthbert himself thought and said and did and prayed in the light
of the gospel of Christ.’ Spirituality is how we live, what we think, what we say, what we do,
how we pray in embracing and expressing the gospel in our everyday roles, responsibilities and
relationships. For our Community this embracing and expressing of the gospel is through the
lenses of our Rule of life, Availability and Vulnerability.
Our personal history and spirituality is like a deep well of accumulated values and experiences
from which we can all draw wisdom and strength for the various tasks, decisions and
relationships we face in everyday life. In the good times and bad times, the joy and the sorrow
that make up the unfinished-ness of life.
In this we are all painfully aware that not everything we accumulate is helpful and good for us,
and we need to be clearing the well from time to time. It was Bernard of Clairvaux who said
‘Everyone has to drink from his/her own well’ so if the water becomes stagnant it can poison us
and we need (with the help of the Holy Spirit) to keep the water fresh and flowing, by keeping a
constant check to see if there is any rubbish blocking the flow of our growth in God.
This is why it is crucially important that our spirituality must not be seen as a separate
compartment marked sacred whereas real life is lived in all the other compartments marked
secular. To do this is to set limits and put boundaries on God. i.e. We only look for Him and are
ready to listen to Him when we are involved in those sacred things – prayer, singing of hymns,
meditation – and if for whatever reason we fail in our doing of these things then as a
consequence we don’t meet with God at all. (Or worse is the thinking that if God speaks only
through the Bible – then all we have to do is shut the Bible and this effectively shuts out God).
Worship is all that we are and all that we do, both inside and outside the structures of the church.
All of our lives is a search for God so that everything we are and everything we do is an offering
of worship to God. Spirituality is the whole of our lives because it is not about doing but about
being. So that whatever we ‘do’ – we do it as the person we are, our personhood (mind,
emotions, body, spirit, will) is an integrated whole. This is our being – the same person going to
work, cooking a meal, reading the Bible, mowing the lawn, shouting at the kids, saying our
prayers, watching the TV, laughing, crying, bored, excited, angry, sad whatever – spirituality
touches and influences every part of our lives and every part of our lives touches and influences
our spirituality – the life of the whole person in relationship with God. Relationship is not static
but dynamic, it is alive and growing, developing, ‘reaching out’ in a constant movement toward
change and transformation.
This is why it is messy, because it is always in process and any building site is messy and it is
messy until it is finished but there is a goal, a purpose which makes it (in our better moments) an
exciting adventure filled with mystery or to put that in the vernacular ‘we don’t know what on
earth we are doing or where the hell we are going’ but God does!
CELTIC SPIRITUALITY
One of the great discoveries for us was that we don’t ever make this journey on our own. Not
only do we have many travelling companions today, we are also aware that many have trodden
these paths before us, and that we are ‘treading where the saints have trod’, connected by faith to
‘the great cloud of witnesses’ who urge us to go farther on and further in. Hebrews 12:1-3.
So although we freely acknowledge that spirituality takes many forms, has many streams, we are
connected by a common spirituality to the desert, Celtic, Monastic, Contemplative stream. This
is where we are rooted, where we belong and where we are most comfortable. That does not
mean that we do not draw great help and inspiration from the many other streams and traditions
that make up the rich tapestry of God’s Church. We do!
All we have ever taught is that God has shown us, as he has shown many others ‘a way to
express The Way’. God forbid any arrogance or stupidity that says we have ‘got it all’, that is the
language of cults and sects.
Nor are we are seeking to replicate an era long past and we have sometimes struggled with the
free use of the word ‘Celtic’ because it is much misunderstood, often misrepresented and
misused by popularism. e.g. The ‘weirdies and the beardies,’ the trendy latest fad, the ridiculous
nostalgia that romanticises about ‘wild waves crashing on misty shores’ as expressions of Celtic
Christianity.
All that we are saying (and very tentatively at that) is that some of those biblical and ethical
emphases that were central to the lifestyle and teaching of desert and Celtic monasticism have
real similarities to the emphases that God has laid on our own hearts. The discovery of some of
their emphases in our search for a Northumbrian spirituality, gave us a language to understand
ourselves, and helped us to tell our story.
WHO WERE THE CELTS?
In the centuries BC, the northern neighbours of ancient Greece and Rome were known by the
description KELTOI = strangers or hidden ones. The word CEILT = ‘an act of concealing’ from
which the word Kilt, the short male skirt of traditional Celtic dress comes and we all know what
a kilt conceals under it!
A southern flank of these peoples had come South of the Black Sea and had settled in that part of modern Turkey known as Galatia in biblical times. The Celtic peoples and languages were also
to be found in much of Europe including Brittany, Gaul and the British Isles. Then, following the
invasion of the Anglo-Saxons the Celtic people were largely pushed to the western extremes
settling in Cornwall, Wales, Isle of Man, Cumbria, SW Scotland and the whole of Ireland. So
from the earliest times almost all of Britain and Ireland was, culturally at least, Celtic. So that the
word Celtic covers a whole culture which included pagan and pre-Christian elements as well as
the so called Celtic church.
They were rural, tribal, always on the move people, ‘pagani’ and as such they were different to
the Roman church which identified with the dominant power of the cities. The Roman church
was unsure how to respond to these people as they were relational rather than rational,
inspirational rather than institutional.
Ireland (unlike Britain and Gaul) was untouched by the Roman Empire, thus it was from Ireland
that Celtic spirituality had its roots and passion and expansion. The primary missionary
movement across Britain which became a hinge in history as much of Europe was evangelised
e.g. Patrick to Ireland 432, Columba 560 Ireland to Iona, Aidan 635 to Lindisfarne. Columbanus
591 to France, Italy and so it goes on. There are ancient sites/crosses all across Europe of Irish
and Northumbrian saints bearing witness to the monastic mission.
So then we want to learn from history not live in it. We are not out to replicate a period of time
as many do in their expression of faith. So that we have17th century language, 18th century
hymns, 19th century morality, and 20th century middle class values, rather than a contemporary
21st century expression of life in God. So although there is no doubt at all that we have been and
are greatly informed and greatly inspired by aspects of Celtic spirituality, we are not a Celtic
Community. That is not our ‘Reason to Be.’ We are ‘a new monastic’ Community in that we are
simply among those who are trying to carry the baton that has been handed on to our own
generation, so that in some very small way we may fan the flame, continue the tradition and be
part of the prayers of the Desert Fathers and Mothers, the Celtic Saints and Missionaries for our
own generation.
CHARACTERISTICS
1] Monasticism
In the Celtic Christian world every ‘church’ was monastic. So when we talk about the Celtic
church it is synonymous with the monastery, with people living in Community. It wasn’t simply
a matter of just declaring truths but living out the gospel in community. They would have
identified with Elisabeth Goudge in her paraphrasing of Francis of Assissi; ‘Francis went
everywhere preaching the gospel and sometimes he used words.’ (Preach the gospel, if
necessary, use words).
It wasn’t so much a central emphasis on GNOSIS = to know, resulting in a rational,
propositional presentation of gospel facts. This can lead to the arrogance of a ‘we’ve got it all’
attitude and if there is a rejection of the propositions, it often means a rejection of the person too.
Rather it has a central emphasis on ACSESIS = to live, which is relational and personal. It is the
‘come and see’ of John 1.43. It is seeking to be ‘at Home with Jesus’. It is asking the questions,
‘Who is it that you seek?’ and ‘How then shall we live?’
Magnus Magnussen put it well when he observed that Roman Clergy said ‘Do as I say and expected to be obeyed, the Celtic clergy said ‘Do as I do’
and hoped to be followed.’ That’s why Soulfriends were encouraged – Anam chara.
The monastery was a monastic school where the seeking of God was ‘the one thing necessary’ –
the very foundation of life. ‘Teaching what we live by living what we teach’ is a lifestyle we do
want to replicate. This is why (as a Community) we talk about ‘a new monasticism’ because we
believe that God has called us together as a contemporary expression of the desert, monastic
tradition, which draws from and is inspired by our Celtic heritage.
2] Sacramental Principle
This is a celebration of ordinariness and an earthed humanity. They believed that nothing was
secular because everything was sacred. Nothing is outside of God’s love and grace. David Adam
writes ‘The vision of the Celts was sacramental rather than mystical. They saw God in and
through things rather than direct visions. The Celt says we must take time to learn to play ‘The 5
stringed Harp’ = the 5 senses.’ What we hear, see, smell, taste, touch all speaks of God. It is
incarnational living as the Apostle John wrote ‘That which we have seen from the beginning..’
1John 1
It was a “holy worldliness” to use Bonhoeffer’s phrase where a holistic approach to life was
expressed daily in the real incarnational ordinariness of life as it is. There was no false divide
between the sacred and secular. Where an integrated life, of body and soul, work and worship,
wonder and ordinariness; prayer and life are the norm. A sacramental outlook that because it sees
God in everything, encourages a reverence for God’s creation and a respect for the care of his
world. An everyday spirituality of ordinariness accessible to all. Never anti –intellectual it was
an earthed spirituality that met people where they were. People did not have to climb
ecclesiastical walls or learn ‘holy God speak’ to encounter ‘a thin place.’
Esther De Waal puts it well; ‘The Celtic approach to God opens up a world in which nothing is
too common to be exalted and nothing is so exalted that it cannot be made common.’ They
believed that the presence of God infused daily life and thus transforms it, so that at any moment,
any object, any job of work, can become a place for encounter with God. In everyday happenings
and ordinary ways, so that we have prayers for getting up, lighting the fire, getting dressed,
milking the cow etc.
3] Contemplation and Mission
A commitment to Mission (meaning ‘being sent/obedience to the task’) as connecting with
people, community on the road, building relationships, exploring spirituality; living in the story
and living out the story. For the Community it is engaging in mission out of a context of being in
the monastery.
It is consciously putting personhood before productivity; it is acknowledging that ‘I’m a human
being not a human doing’. It is freedom to be, to embrace intentional uselessness and waste time
with God. Thomas Merton describes this well, “The monk is not defined by his task, his
usefulness; in a certain sense he is supposed to be useless, because his mission is not to do this or
that job but to be a man of God.”
This is exemplified by the Ebb and Flow of the tides of Holy Island. It is significant that Aidan,
coming from Iona chose Lindisfarne as his mission centre because it’s closed off from the
mainland for half the day. Aidan chose Lindisfarne because it reminded him of Iona but also
because it reminded him of the need for the cell and the coracle, being and doing, monastery
fuelling mission, seeking God in the heart in order to better serve God in the world. It is seen in
the blessing from our Morning Office, ‘May the peace of the Lord Christ go with you wherever
he may send you… may he bring you home rejoicing at the wonders he has shown you…’
The Nether Springs spoke of the tide coming in, enclosure, seeking God and facing self in the
cell.
The Upper Springs spoke of the tide going out, encounter, the initiatives of the Spirit in the
coracle.
The inner journey – the landscape of the heart and the outer journey – the landscape of the land
are both part of the same life embracing/expressing availability to God and to others. Life was
seen as a pilgrimage.
Frederick Beuchner wrote ‘Faith is a journey without maps’ and part of our availability to God
and to others is a willingness to walk in the paradox of life’s uncertainties; to be content with
living the questions without having to know all the answers.
Moving into the unknown as well as the known, wandering for the love of Christ (wondering for
the love of Christ too) aware that our God is a God of surprises. Our life may involve pilgrimage
and peregrinati in a physical sense and this is certainly part of our Community’s vision but for us
all – the tide is in, the tide is out, the coracle is on the sea – speaks of the inner journey of faith
expressed differently for all of us in obedience to the Spirit’s nudges. Mission is a mixture of
going, staying, moving on, doing, being, excitement, mundane in the home and market place.
Finding God at work in the everyday ordinariness of life as it is.
4] Hospitality
Hospitality of Heart. Welcoming God into their hearts each day but also welcoming others
because that person could be Christ.
When Cuthbert went to his Inner Farne solitude he built a guest room for God. It is being aware
of the teaching of Matthew 25 ‘Inasmuch as you did it to the least… you did it to me’ and of
Hebrews 13 which speaks of our ‘entertaining angels unaware’.
Hospitality was seen in care for the poor. King Oswald gave many gifts to Aidan but he in turn shared them with the ordinary people, including a horse given away and a silver plate melted
down, broken up and distributed. ‘Aidan stopped and spoke to whoever he met, both rich and
poor. If they were heathen, he invited them to embrace the mystery of faith and be baptised. If
they were already believers, he strengthened their faith.’
It was seen in an all embracing welcome of people as people, not seeing labels or sex or
denominations as we often see today. They were committed to love of God, love of neighbour
and love of one another, and this meant that although solidly under a Trinitarian banner, ‘to love
the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength’ it did not mean a narrow
parochialism, insularity or separatism but a desire for a true ecumenism where all streams and
traditions of God’s rich diverse Tapestry called the Church, are seen as an enrichment, and where
all those who seek are welcomed. Women were truly equal and were often valued leaders e.g.
Hild, Brigid, Ebba. A further example is that in this period inheritance law came through the
maternal line.
5] Creation Affirming
Love of nature. An awareness of the unity of creation. Columbanus ‘If you wish to understand
the Creator, first understand His creation.’ Not pantheism, which is a worshipping of the stones
but an affirmation of the wonder of the One who made the stones. Not New Age extremes that
substituted Mother Earth for Father God but love for, respect for the physical environment. They
were aware of the Cross over Creation. That God was to redeem the whole created order. This
was seen in the quiet care of all living things and a special affinity with animals that preceded
Francis of Assissi.
They had a strong sense of place and knew the importance of the Land, of roots and identity.
They spoke of thin places, holy ground. Many of the problem spots in our world are all about
land, roots, identity, holy places.
This is one of the reasons for Celtic spirituality being so popular. In a world of pending
ecological disasters of over population, global warming, food shortages, pollution, Aids, traffic
gridlock and industrial chaos, little wonder Celtic spirituality appeals.
6] Spiritual Warfare
Perhaps coming from their Druidic, pagan culture they had a very real sense of the spiritual
world. They understood spiritual warfare as an everyday reality – the Sign of Cross was Trinity
affirming and Cross exalting. A saving sign of protection to keep away evil, not superstition but
a statement of fact.
Liturgical Prayer was seen as a confronting of the Powers in the heart (cell) as well as in our
place of mission where Bede’s history records countless episodes of Signs and Wonders, and the
erecting of High Crosses at the crossroads.
It was the equivalent of Exodus 17 where Aaron and Hur held up the hands of Moses so that
God’s people would prevail in battle. Liturgical prayer was a form of spiritual warfare by
holding up the hands of the Church through prayer
The use of the ‘sign of the Cross’ is a powerful symbol still! As is the Celtic CAIM prayer of
encircling. As is the use of blessing = thinking and wishing well on others (benediction) as
opposed to cursing = thinking and wishing ill on another (malediction). Our own Midday Office
– Theresa’s Bookmark is another good example ‘Let nothing disturb thee.. alone God suffices’..
7] Trinitarian Belief
The emphasis on the Trinity cannot be understated. It’s always good to remind ourselves as
Christians, that Community began in the heart of God. That the self sufficient God who is love,
is Community within Himself. And that all Community flows from this.
God is Trinity, that is, Persons in relationship and the profound truth is that we are made in His
image and likeness. Our Christian faith and tradition tells us that it is God’s purpose in and
through Christ to work towards fully restoring that image and likeness in every expression of His
Church.
The early Celtic Northumbrian spirituality had a profound understanding of this. One of their
prayers stated, ‘God is Father, Son and Spirit. Therefore God is Three in One. Therefore God is
Community. If we are made in the image of God, Then we will find our fulfilment in
Community (in relationships of love).’
We can affirm every day the beginning of Patrick’s Breastplate hymn. ‘I bind unto myself this
day the strong Name of the Trinity.’ It is a living awareness that God the Father is FOR us, God
the Son is WITH us, and God the Holy Spirit is IN us. ‘Greater is He who is in you, that he who
is in the world’ wrote the Apostle John.
8] Love of Learning
A deep love of the Scriptures as God’s memory book of relationships and encounter. To listening
& learning from the Scriptures, with both the prayerful reading of Lectio divina and studied
research of the Bible encouraged. They had a great love of learning but it was a yearning for
wisdom not necessarily knowledge. They had a wonderful balance and were known as Saints and
Scholars. They wanted to learn how to live, how to follow Jesus as Lord as a way of life.
Monasteries were centers of learning and education where the embracing of the Arts were
encouraged – music, story, calligraphy, jewellery were all ‘windows on Heaven’ and creative
gifts were encouraged. They had poetic imagination, creative artistry (Book of Kells etc) and
used dreams, imagery, symbols and storytelling to pass on what they had learned about life in
God.
9] Understanding of Time
Not western filofax mentality of ‘every second counts’ in 100 mph living. Time was a sacred
dimension and had to be used wisely and well. They understood that when God created time he
made plenty of it. We all have all the time we need to do anything we want to do – the problem
is not ‘I don’t have the time’ because we all (Prime Minister, Pope or pleb) have all the time
there is – 24 hour day, 60 min hour etc. The problem is in what we truly value which of course
can be see in our prioritising.
They didn’t see time as chronological only i.e. one
historical event following on from another but God was, is and is to come, the Eternal Now God,
whose name is always I AM! Jesus is the same Yesterday, Today and Forever.
So the past, present and future are all linked to God’s Now. So Columba, Brigid, Hild, Aidan are
all our spiritual contemporaries. Read again Hebrews 12 with this is mind. See the relay Race,
the passing of the Baton as the ongoingness of the Communion of the Saints and the continuity
of the Church Militant and Triumphant.
CONCLUSION
This is the spirituality we attempt to embrace as a Community. It is a discipleship still under
construction, full of complex, paradoxical, ‘don’t know what we are doing’ disorder but it is life.
Incomplete, aspiring, getting better, a ‘let us live up to what we have already attained’ Phil 3:16
as well as ‘pressing on’ Alone and Together.
To discover and explore our spirituality, our way of life is a journey. Not as is often depicted as a
straight line from A to B but a maze of criss-crossed lines beginning at W or P or C and going
via X and S. It is dynamic, moving, changing, often mundane and routine, often scary and
uncertain and most of all messy. Mike Yaconelli put it well in stating that ”Spirituality is not a
formula, it is not a test, it is a relationship. Spirituality is not about competency, it is about
intimacy. Spirituality is not about perfection, it is about connection. The way of the spiritual life
begins where we are now in the mess of our lives. Accepting the reality of our broken flawed
lives is the beginning of spirituality, not because the spiritual life will remove our flaws but
because we let go of seeking perfection and, instead, seek God, the One who is present in the
tangled-ness of our lives. Spirituality is not about being fixed, it is about God being present in
the mess of our unfixedness.”
The decisions and choices we keep trying to make (aspiration) say a lot about our values, our
attitude to life – to God, to others and to ourselves. It’s not only what we say but what we show
that reveal our true priorities and the real meaning we give to relationships and to material
things. I’m talking here about desire not competence; the desire expressed so well in ‘Children’s
Letters to God’. “Dear God, I’m doing the best I can. Love Frank aged 6”
Let me finish with a quote from a great hymn from the past. ‘My goal is God Himself not joy nor
peace nor even blessing but Himself my God. Tis His to lead me there, not mine but His, at any
cost, dear Lord, by any road’.
(Cf. http://www.northumbriacommunity.org/articles/celtic-spirituality-a-beginners-guide/ November-
15-2016 (Date of Access))