Doubt

Jones: Spiritual Direction and Doubt

“The opposite of faith is not doubt, but certainty.”—Alan Jones.

I first heard this quote attributed to Alan Jones, former dean of Grace Cathedral, San Francisco, at a Trinity Wall Street conference at Kanuga in 2001. It warmed my heart when I heard Jones affirm this, and I have shared it with many others. Anne Lamott is also a writer and speaker to whom many attribute the quote. Theological friends tell me it is actually from Paul Tillich’s work, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, pp. 116-117! I will stop tracking it down, but I am confident the sentence is scriptural in its wisdom. I share it with many who come for spiritual direction regarding their doubts.  

In his book, Soul Making: The Desert Way of Spirituality, Jones writes about doubt and the finding and nurturing of the soul according to the spirituality of the Desert Fathers. The spirituality of the desert involves encountering God but subsequently feeling God’s absence, and then experiencing the divine joy of God’s presence again. Jones describes this threefold experience of soul-making after awakening with the first conversion, which entails self-knowledge, often with tears; the second conversion, in which things seem to fall apart; and the third conversion, which occurs when we enter the life of contemplation.

These awakening periods have recurred for me so many times: at church camps, when I suddenly decided to go to medical school, during my discernment process for the diaconate, and at Cursillo. The conversion of self-knowledge with tears came to me, and the falling apart when I decided my only hope was to enter a 12-step program. It also came when people close to me: my grandfather, my mother, my father, and my brother died—and it applies now, as my mobility becomes increasingly limited. 

Often only at the death of a loved one do we clearly recognize the nature of genuine love, as many of us did with the death of our dear friend and deacon, Linda Brown.

 Jones describes those tears as like the breaking of waters of the womb before the birth of a child.

 The task of love as it is experienced in the “desert” is to free us of our well-built-up exoskeleton.

Soul-making is paying attention to things invisible that do not lend themselves to manipulation and control. It requires receptivity to the life of the mystic, rather than being the problem solver. Too often, we instead spend most of our energy building up our frail ego by setting before it dozens and dozens of minor situations—while the life of the soul is aborted. If the world is to change, then we must change first; and that happens when we live more deeply into our questions and doubts. Sharing our doubt can sometimes bring us together more effectively than sharing our faith, as our faith then becomes stronger. It is a paradox.

Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/