When the Celestine Prophecy, a spiritual novel by James Redfield, came out in 1993, it was widely read by spiritual types. I however somehow did not read it till 2006. I loved the various spiritual insights and truths he shared in the form of prophecies that the main characters were finding from thousands of year's old scrolls. But the most fascinating part for me was his encounter with a priest, Father Sanchez who teaches him about the 6th insight, and in so doing also helps him to identify his evolutionary question. For most people who have read this book when I mention the evolutionary question this has gone right by them and they don't remember it at all. For me it is the most important part of the book. Perhaps this is because I am also a therapist and I'm so impressed with how it weaves family of origin material with our being able to understand our spiritual purpose in life.
I have written elsewhere on this blog about the idea of chosing our parents. Redfield also works with this idea and in the encounter between the main character and Father Sanchez, the priest guides him at looking at the qualities of each his parents, their sort of motto in life or stance towards it, what he learned from each, and what was the unfinished business of their lives. From this broad over view the Priest helps him notice that he has woven these bits from his parents together into a spiritual question that he has chosen this life time to pursue and to work with. This is called one's "evolutionary question" (because when we pursue it we grow.) In a handbook Redfield wrote to accompany the book he has a series of questions designed to also help people identify these influences which shaped their journey. Interestingly in Joanna Macy's Work that Reconnects there is one exercise entitled: My Choices in this Life Time which coming from a Buddhist perspective of reincarnation also posits that we have chosen the conditions of this life time and that we have chosen them to prepare us for the spiritual work that we are here to do. I have in my practice developed a way to help people identify in two to three sessions what their evolutionary question is.
What a marvelous compass to have, to have a really big perspective on the events of our lives and the influences of our parents in shaping our spiritual purpose in life. What an amazing thing to walk conscious knowing that you indeed have a spiritual purpose and to be able to cleave closely to it. I have found that when one knows what it is, it is possible to ask on a daily or weekly or monthly basis where you are at with your question - to return to it a guiding force and a clarifier about the current experiences one is having and the decisions that you have before you. What is your evolutionary question?
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