YouTube: Active Imagination: Open the Door to Spiritual Unrest
“ Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any one hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me” (Revelation 3:20).
Most people are familiar with this passage from the book of Revelation. Its purpose was to convey the idea that the second coming of Jesus was imminent, encouraging the wise to live as though he was already at the door and that significant changes were about to unfold.
This verse represents an important principle for anyone genuinely interested in spiritual awakening. The person standing at the door and knocking is not Jesus, but rather you—your higher self, your complete soul. The desire for more arises because we are inherently more. This greater part of ourselves stands at the door of our consciousness, persistently knocking.
Imagine being in your house while someone knocks at your door. With a “No Solicitors” sign posted, you choose not to answer. The knocking continues, so you block your ears with cotton, turn up the music, and sing along to drown out the sound. Yet the knocking persists.
Eventually, you are compelled to open the door and address the situation. Metaphorically, this reflects what happens at the spiritual level.
In her book Lessons in Truth, Emilie Cady writes:
With a restlessness that is pitiful to see, people are ever shifting from one thing to another, always hoping to find rest and satisfaction in some anticipated accomplishment or possession.
This restlessness originates in our soul. Being complete, it continually pushes at the door of our consciousness, patiently waiting for us to cease shifting from one thing to another and simply open the door.
To do this, we begin by understanding that fulfillment is not found in accomplishments or acquisitions. The spiritual unrest we feel is our wholeness seeking expression.
Today’s lesson introduces a technique developed by Carl Jung, where we envision a dialogue with the one—ourselves—who stands at the door and knocks. Jung called this method Active Imagination. I think you’ll find it helpful in addressing your own sense of spiritual unrest.