Showing posts with label transfigured cosmos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transfigured cosmos. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2012

#110. Mandala of Religious Experiences


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This post is the 10th in a series of blog entries beginning with #101-- a collection of notes and essays from my files all dealing in one way or another with the emerging new religious consciousness. They are mostly things I've written over the last decade to clarify my own thoughts but which I now want to make available for anyone who might be interested.

Post #110 is about the basic kinds of religious experience we may have when using one or other of the four-fold functions of our conscious minds. I'd promised friend Mary C. to write a one-page summary of these ideas; it ended up closer to 20 pages. It dates from February, 2005. 

If you have questions and think I might be of help, you're welcome to send me a note: sam@macpeno.com

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Dear Mary,

Here are some thoughts about Jungian functions in connection with religious experience.

Some background first. I was originally hired at St Joseph's University in Phila to teach a course called Nature of Religious Experience. I can not remember now whether there was any kind of course outline available. There must have been some write up in the course catalogue but I can't remember it. I was on my own. The basic text I selected was called Ways of Being Religious, by Frederick J. Streng (about whom I remember now only that he taught at Southern Methodist U). 

I remember well when I first discovered that book. I was looking at texts in the U of Penn's bookstore. I knew almost instantly that it was valuable. I can not remember when I first saw the book, but it was, I think, a number of years before I was teaching the course. I even remember thinking something along the lines of, "If I ever had a chance to teach a course about religion, this is one book I'd use." (That's a good example of the kind of long term guidance we sometimes get in pursuing our path.)

I do not think the author said the four ways of being religious as he described them were based on Jungian functions; but that they were clicked with me instantly. Streng's information was more along the lines of accumulated anthropological data but specifically oriented toward religious experience. I used the first edition every time I taught the course. Over the years, two or three additional editions appeared, but each one seemed to contain more and more data, and the clarity of the first edition got more and more blurred.

I just looked at the Amazon web site to see if the book is still available. They offer only a facsimile (from 1996, for $61!). Several additional authors are given and it's listed as 600+ pages! That's about three times what the original contained. I had the impression that the author continued to add more and more info in order to make everyone happy and in the process lost the basic outline of his thought. Something like the way politicians try to leave nobody out and so water down what the might have stood for that they eventually become totally ineffective.

In any case, here's some introductory thoughts about it all....

It's clear that we can't talk about ways of being religious without having some minimally clear working definition of religion to make use of. Streng's working definition was accepted by none of my responsive students at the beginning of the course, but each time I did the course, the attentive ones always ended up saying it was a good working definition.

Streng's wording isn't even very clear: "means for ultimate transformation.' He doesn't mean a transformation that's ultimate (as in death and resurrection) but a change for the better in terms of what a person considers to be of significance. Whatever helps a person change to in the direction of ultimate concerns, that is religion. You may feel as negative about that working definition as my students did; all I can say is, if you give it a chance you'll eventually see it's got some value.

Here's a trivial example that's helpful. There are all kinds of people in the world; and there's probably someone, somewhere, who really likes to grow marigolds to such an extent that they get a sense of their identity from growing marigolds. "I'm a person who grows marigolds." To the extent that growing marigolds gives that person a sense of meaning and purpose, it is a means of transformation in the area of ultimates [meaning, purpose, significance] and so is (at least an important aspect of) that person's religion. 

I heard a good example just recently on TV: Steve Erwin, the baby-faced Crocodile Hunter from Australia, was being interviewed; he said he believed that he was put on earth to help people learn to love crocodiles. He has a (divinely given) vocation; at least a significant aspect of his religion is being the Crocodile Hunter. Religion for him, then, is whatever helps serve as means to that end (for him). Streng's definition is obviously not exhaustive (there are, of course, hundreds of definitions floating around), but as a working definition is does in fact "work." It's useful.

A few words about the four functions in connection with one another. The perception pair, Sensation and Intuition, are apparently older by far than the judgment pair (Thinking and Feeling); we share the perception functions with 'higher' animals.

Sensation sees details, Intuition the whole picture: the trees or the forest. It seems we cannot do both at the same time; one excludes the other (just as sitting and walking are both operations of the body but exclude one another; we can't do both simultaneously).

The other pair is much later, apparently, in terms of the evolutionary development of the brain; they are evaluative or judgmental activities in the sense that they don't see (perceive) anything but react to what's being perceived. (People with a strong Feeling function often don't seem to like that Feeling is described as a judgment function, but it is.) Once something is in our consciousness we respond to it: Is it good? Useful? Helpful? Pleasant? Nice? I.e., Do I like it?

We also ask whether it conforms to reality as we understand it. The Thinking function says, Is this image valid? Is what I perceive correct? is it right? Is it true? And again, we apparently cannot judge both the truth (or validity) of a perception and whether it's pleasant (or not) at the same time, just as we can't see both the forest and trees simultaneously.

These are fundamental ways the human conscious psyche works. In modern religious-scientific terms, they are ways in which the Implicate Order operates via (or in) the human person as an emergent self-organizing system within the cosmos.

Jung says that all this may be based on the four-fold valence of the carbon atom. We know in any case that the mandala image is fundamental to the human mind and shows up everywhere in innumerable cultural forms. I don't doubt that the mandala is the image in which the primordial God-consciousness of the 3-month-old emerges in our brain, since the mandala seem to be inherently healing, as is that primordial Self-image. (An idea which you spell out so nicely in your book.)

The four directions, the four elements, the four seasons, the four times of day, even the four aspects of time itself (past, present, future and the sequence or flow of it), all seem to be connected with our minds' four ways of operating. So it doesn't seem surprising (at least to some of us) that if we can be human in four different ways, we can also be religious in four different ways.

That's enough introductory comments. Here's some specifics....

Opps... One more comment.... Just as we can't sit all the time or walk all the time, since in either case we would cease functioning altogether after a while, so we can not judge the truthfulness or the likeability of something all the time without doing the other, too, sometimes; and the same is true about perception: always looking only at details or always looking only at the whole picture quickly results in a lopsided view of things. We can only be balanced persons dynamically, not statically. Very much like the basic ideas of tai chi: we can only go with the flow of the cosmic chi when we are in balance within.

Native Americans say, with regard to the medicine wheel (if they talked Chinese they would call it the "chi circle") that we always have to keep moving around the wheel. We start out at one direction (one location on the circle), but we have to keep moving or we lose a major part of our reality. In Jungian language, Don't stay only with your primary functions or you will be a partial, incomplete, person. And, Most especially, work with your inferior function in order to become whole.

Now to those specifics.... I'll go through them in the usual order they're mentioned: Thinking, Feeling, Sensation and Intuition. "Fools rush in...." (I wouldn't do this if I didn't feel it was a valid response to a leading!) One more thing to keep in mind is that we are not religious in only one of these ways; just as we usually operate from one perception and one judgment function, so we usually are religious in one of each of these pairs of ways at once: "One from column A and one from column B."

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Being Religious via the Thinking Function

Thinking asks (or judges) whether something which has been expressed conforms to the facts. It looks at things from a distance, always making separations, divisions and logical distinctions. The Native American animal for this function is the Golden Eagle of the Dawn, who flies high, sees from afar but over a large area; the direction is East, the time of day morning, the season spring.

The isolated Thinking function results in the rationalism of science and philosophy, especially, and more generally, of patriarchal dualism. It is heavy on law and order, institutional and organizational rules. Positively, the Thinking function's energy is oriented toward newness, growth and development: the evolution of the cosmos, of life, and of the person (via the individuation process). Its time-focus is neither past, present nor future but the sequential flow of time. The Thinking function really would like to be outside time, the way the eagle is high above the earth.

The primary way of being religious via the Thinking function is effort, doing all that one can to become who/what we feel we are called to be; the emphasis is on uniqueness (differentiation, individuation). This effort is asceticism in the classic sense. (In Greek, a trainer or someone in training is an ascetic. Today's gyms are filled with modern secular ascetics; and they jog through our streets daily.)

Autonomy, taking responsibility for one’s actions, doing what's difficult, is a key religious trait. Practices like fasting, being celibate, going without comfortable clothing, living without comfortable companions, following dietary laws, are known in almost every religion. Aberrations abound; for example the Hindu holy men who go about with knives in their tongues; the old Russian monks who stood naked in swamps at dusk to be bitten by mosquitoes; and, alas, Islamic suicide bombers.

It is very much ego-centered, and when unbalanced tends to identify itself as masculine. At its best, however, it drives persons to be all that they can be: to become, at whatever cost, one's true self. The emphasis is on change, movement, improvement, going with the flow, moving with-- not against, the way the world works-- incorporating into oneself the powers of the cosmos. It includes being an explorer or pioneer.

The clarity of the air at dawn on a spring morning is a good summing-up image, keeping in mind that "air" is breath in its profoundest sense (spiritus, pneuma). The divinity tends to be only-transcendent but there is also a major guiding aspect, too, which tends to have a trickster component: the need to face evil, death and tragedy as aspects of the cosmic flow, learning to accept one's vulnerability and even of being "befriended" by the divine trickster-guide.

A strong value for the Thinking function is courage: to be creative, to do everything, to go everywhere, to try every new thing, to leave nothing unexplored, to become all that one can be-- all seen as a response to the will of God for us. Probably its most fundamental practice is simply being attentive: "Pay attention." "Let us attend." "Be sober and watchful..." "Stay awake!" "Keep vigil." "Wake up and smell the coffee." As Swimme says well, being aware of what the present moment is, is the kairos.

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Being Religious via the Feeling Function

The energy of the Feeling function is in total contrast to Thinking; here the emphasis is not on distancing but on relating, not separateness but togetherness, not isolation but "belonging to the universe," being part of it all.

The Native American animal is the Green Mouse. (The Celtic Green Man also belongs here.) The mouse is very close to the earth, has to jump to see distant mountains, and like all rodents is a pack-rat, saves everything, focused primarily on the past, not letting anything go. Conservatives generally, and the Jewish prophets especially, are good examples: "You have betrayed the past, you have gone against the agreement (covenant), etc."

The element here is not air but fire, the summer season with its noon-day warmth. "Connectedness" might be a good one word summary of what the Feeling function is all about.

What we call "devotional activities" (bhakti in India) are its primary way of being religious. A secular example of a devotional activity from one of my classes: a woman described ironing her husband's jockey shorts, simply out of love for him. A common traditional devotional action is leaving flowers in front of a statue of Mary or Buddha, or on one's mother's grave. Examples are innumerable. Anything done out of love, to express a loving relationship, would fit this category: saying long prayers, doing little acts of charity, whatever. Thérèse of Lisieux talks about picking up a piece of thread from a rug as a act of love for God.

All those activities are "symbols" in the literal sense of connecting devices. The divine is always imaged in some kind of personal terms: God is a Loving Father or Mother, but it could be Lover, Spouse, Sibling or Friend. Streng's name for this was something like "The way of the Holy Presence."

The key here is relatedness. So for the Feeling function, divinity is not transcendent but present, "God with us." And religion is social and down to earth; it's all about connecting with others and relating to all things, whether in terms of sexual love, friendship, or cosmic love for All. As Native Americans say often in prayers and speeches, "All my relations!"

This emphasis on sharing and belonging is exactly the opposite of the out-of-control Thinking function's need for manipulation, exploitation, competition, oppression of others. At its best, the emphasis here is on standing with all and ignoring no one. That's the Feeling function's balance to the hierarchal mind-set of the Thinking function. Similarly, the Thinking function's emphasis on clarity, distance and separateness is a balance to the Feeling function's tendency to degenerate into sentimental schmaltz and cuteness.

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Being Religious via the Sensation Function

Sensation is the perception activity which sees the trees, but not the forest; it is primarily concerned with details. Its energies are oriented to the details needing attention in order to sustain life: providing food, shelter, protection, whatever is needed so that life can continue and perpetuate itself. The focus is details, but all of them: not leaving out or overlooking anything of significance.

The Native American animal here is the White Buffalo of the North . (All the parts of the buffalo are used in some way for food, shelter, tools.) Its element is earth; its season; winter; its time, night.

People with strong Sensation function commonly tend to become nurses or engineers, but they are attracted to any kinds of jobs and tasks that involve close attention to details. They love to keep moving, and so with some talent can become good musicians and/or athletes (because they don't easily get bored with repetitive practice). They're also good in emergencies.

The Sensation function's time-focus is the present, the fullness of life here and now, leaving out nothing. Streng calls it "the way of cosmic harmony." More accurately, it probably should be called something like the way of service, as an expression of cosmic harmony. It is social action, taking care of people in need of help, simply because that's the right thing to do.

Drug rehabs, hospital emergency rooms, food banks, houses of hospitality and soup kitchens, for example, are staffed by such people. They see God "in every hand and face." As Martin Luther said, "Ever, ever goes the Christ in stranger's guise." Mother Theresa describes a leper dying in the streets as "Jesus in a distressing form." As a way of being religious, Sensation takes literally the gospel's words, "A cup of cold water given in my name... is given to me." But it includes service to any and all who are in need, including animals, plants, the earth itself. We see much better in our day that ecological concerns take their place right next to work for social justice, peace and equality.

This way of service is also a redemption of patriarchy (in the original positive sense of using one's powers on behalf of the community): not only taking responsibility for others but also and especially tutoring and mentoring the young; specifically, providing them with a sense of affirmation that they are in fact able to ‘make it’ in life. All of this contrasts strongly with the Thinking function's tyrant (who lacks self-worth and thrives on power over others) and the puer (the “nice boy” who can’t commit, can’t lead, can’t accept responsibility for others).

Being religious via the Sensation function also has a powerful cosmic aspect; as Native Americans say in the sweat lodge, "We do this so that the people might live." The Byzantine liturgy says, "On behalf of all and for all." Although it seems simple and straightforward in its focus on the present, it attempts to see "the present-now" in its full-blown glory, in all its details. So it sees the whole universe as one cosmic-human-divine reality, with absolutely nothing left out. Teilhard expresses this well with his comment that, "In the end, nothing good will be lost." Other examples of this total inclusiveness are the Jewish Succoth image of the In-gathering of all things in God's Succoth Shalom, and the ancient Byzantine images of Pantocrator, the All-Embracing Lord of All.

It's here, with this emphasis on fullness, that primal Christianity's eschatological concerns make good sense: the Transfigured Cosmos or New Creation as completion and fulfillment of the first creation, the ultimate Omega, the goal of "God all in all." And it also includes the consequent religious stance of not being afraid of anything that threatens us. And, finally, this is also what traditional ecclesiology is all about: the church community as sacramental expression of "the very meaning and reality of our existence as persons brought forth out of the nothingness and darkness from which we come, to our manifestation and glory." (Given the pervasiveness of dualism, we have to keep reminding ourselves that "person" here means body no less than immaterial spirit-soul-consciousness.)

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Being Religious via the INTUITIVE FUNCTION

Via Intuition we see the whole, the forest rather than individual trees. The focus is the "big picture," the future, the meaning of things, personal identity, the significance of the whole cosmos.

Its element is water, its Native American animal the Black Bear (the medicine animal, who digs up healing roots and herbs). The direction is West; the season, autumn; and the time, evening.

Jung says Intuition is a direct pipeline to the unconscious. Healing, wholeness, possibilities, the future, creativity, co-creative activity, being culture-bringing heroes as in the old stories-- all has to do with our meaning (significance, identity, purpose). So the primary emphasis in this way of being religious is on access to empowerment via those things which Merton, in his notes on Inner Experience, calls "common materials of the ancient cultural traditions with a religious and sapiential nature." He names them: "archetypal symbols, liturgical rites, art, poetry, philosophy and myth." Streng calls this way simply "Myth and Ritual." It is a way of seeing in the broadest, widest, most comprehensive sense. In Christian language, it is seeing the universe as sacramental (grace-filled); that "the world is a wedding" and that we're the invited guests.

This is the realm of not only of artists, musicians, and poets but of all creative individuals. It seeks to have an authentic ("wholistic") perception of reality, truth, and the meaning of life beyond the conventional. It is the very opposite of the institutional churches and governmental and educational organizations seeking to censor and silence creative individuals who depart from the conventional establishment norms in order to explore possibilities for the future.

Intuition is the capacity to be in touch with the good energies of the earth (especially in the form of animal powers and spirit ancestors, who are, as Native Americans say, "out there, wanting to help." It includes the shamanic power to “call in” those spirit-powers and archetypal energies, to make them available to others. As a way of being religious it especially includes a harsh antagonism toward all enemies of life and so includes an emphasis on the shamanic healing ability to get rid of destructive 'vibes' and replace them with positive life-giving energies of the cosmos.

In classical religious terms this is the unitive, contemplative realm where, in stillness and silence, we enter into the mystery of our non-duality with the Ultimate. It knows each human person to be a supreme creation and living portrait of God. We can’t put much of this into words, but we can in fact taste it, like food; we can know it by experience. And it's that tasting-knowing which is where religion and religious life starts and what it is moving toward in the end. This is religion's alpha and omega.

Jung calls Intuition "the religious function." Since Western culture's rationalistic emphasis hardly allows it to even acknowledge the reality of Intuition, this-- the most basic way of being religious-- is probably the most difficult for contemporary people to understand. Patriarchal religion favors ascetic effort or, in its fundamentalist forms, blind loyalty to a holy presence; and while it certainly includes service to others, it reduces such service to "good deeds." (And patriarchy would definitely not include plants and animals or the earth itself as legitimate recipients of such good deeds.) Religious ritual, in contrast, is generally considered nothing more than the superstitious practices of unevolved peoples. And yet, being empowered by the universe for participation in its life was known through most of human history as the very essence of what today we would call "religion." It is so basic to human life in surviving pre-patriarchal cultures that they don't even have a separate name for it.

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I can hardly believe that I was dumb enough to say, a few weeks ago, that I could "fairly easily" do a one page summary! Anyway... as a final note, I just want to emphasize how critically important a recovery of the neglected perception functions is for the New Cosmology, since harmony with, and empowerment by, the cosmos is essentially what the New Cosmology is all about. -Sam


Sunday, January 30, 2011

#86. Global Consequences of Recovering Reverence


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At the end of the previous post I mentioned a fifty-year-old book of essays, recently reissued, with the title The Transfigured Cosmos. I said that for me the title is a wonderful summary of the consequences of what Thomas Berry calls the "new mode of religious understanding" that's ours thanks to modern science. Because of the new cosmology we are, as Berry says, "recovering reverence." And when we do, our world is indeed transfigured.

I see three big areas of the global situation where the consequences of recovering reverence are especially significant: our environmental problems, our on-going concern for social issues such as gender and racial equality, and the seemingly insolvable question of ever-deepening religious conflicts. It's not that these areas of human need are being ignored-- they are discussed daily in the media-- but in this post I want to share my thoughts about them specifically in terms of the recovery of reverence.

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One of my main points in the previous post is that we are genetically coded to the Cenozoic era-- to the Earth's "lyric period," as Thomas Berry calls it. Primal religion is in our genes. I think it's especially important for us to appreciate the fact that this fact has been established, as Berry emphasizes, not by any of the religious traditions but by the efforts of modern science to understand humanity and the world we live in.

From the point of view of "Big History"-- the longest long-range perspective available to us, starting with the Big Bang and ending only with the present moment-- the major religious traditions as we know them today began quite recently.

Judaism, Christianity and Islam in the West, and the spiritual traditions of the Eastern world such as Buddhism and Hinduism, all appeared around the same time in human history-- about 25 centuries ago.
In contrast, primal (Cenozoic) religion was the religion of our earliest human ancestors, and for countless centuries was the religion of all humanity.

Those early humans and to a great extent indigenous peoples still today, says Berry, are attuned to the natural world and the numinous nature of the cosmos spontaneously. For them, "Mountains were spiritual modes of being. Sunrise and sunset were sacred moments. Animals were spirit presences."

And it's from this spiritual communication with the natural world that all "religious ritual, prayer, poetry and music were born."
The important point here is that the ability of our ancient ancestors to be attuned to the numinous nature of the cosmos is still in our genes today.

We are no less capable of experiencing communion with the Earth-- the sacred, the holy, the mysterium tremendum et fascinans-- than were our very earliest human ancestors a million years ago.

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In Western culture, that sense of communion with the Earth was, as Berry says, "lost for a time." We became "doubly estranged"-- by both religious dualism and scientific rationalism. But thanks to the new cosmology provided by contemporary science, we are discovering again the story of our origins and of our place in the universe.

Berry emphasizes that we learn to hear this story by listening to the voices of nature: "the stars at night, songs of birds at dawn, the smell of honeysuckle on a summer evening."

He says those experiences of "wonder for the mind, beauty for the imagination, and intimacy for the emotions" are experiences of "that numinous reality whence the universe came into being and by which it is sustained in its immense journey."

Especially important for us today is appreciating that these voices of nature are "dimensions of the human soul, revelations of the divine being communicated to us, and inspiration for our spiritual life." Berry sums it up nicely by saying that because of the new cosmology, we know today that "Evolution is our sacred story."

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Despite the strong unitive and sophiological perspectives in the scriptures of the Western religious tradition, Judaism, Christianity and Islam could hardly avoid adopting the patriarchal and dualistic attitudes of the culture in which they arose. And early science, with its tremendously practical successes due to its focus on physical matter, greatly enhanced that loss of communion with the natural world.

But it was the Industrial Revolution, with its extraction technologies such as coal-mining and oil-drilling in the 18th and 19th centuries, which put an apparently definitive end to Western culture's sense of unity with nature.

"With extraction," says Berry, "the planet lost its beauty, wonder, majesty, grace and life-giving-ness. It became an object to be used." The engineers took over, he says-- "the mechanical, the electrical, the chemical and now the genetic engineers." The result is that in our contemporary world "the radiant presence of the divine is no longer recognized."

The most important point here, once again, is that our unique human ability to experience the numinous is still in our genes. We remain "genetically coded" to recognizing "the radiant presence of the divine" by listening to the voices of the Earth. And thanks to the new scientific cosmology, we are in fact recovering reverence.

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With regard to the consequences of our recovery of reverence, I think the most important practical result has been global humanity's growing awareness of our responsibility to take care of the Earth from which we have emerged.

When we see that "evolution is our sacred story" and that we are participants in the evolutionary process, we recognize immediately that, as Berry says, "Every geological, biological and human component of the Earth is bound together." His point is that "what happens to one happens to all."

He quotes a Native American speaker who expresses these thoughts with simplicity and power: "We live with all that lives and is, and it calls us to take care of it."

I learned a chant along these lines many years ago, on my first vision quest. It's sung to a steady drumbeat, with the last three words getting two beats: "The Earth is our mother; she will take care of us. The Earth is our mother; we must take care of her."

When we know our life to be a participation in the cosmic process, then our numinous experience of communion with nature calls us take care of Mother Earth.

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In the same way, it becomes clear that we are called to take care of one another.

Berry says that this sense of being responsible participants in cosmic evolution is now the context for every kind of social action. No "good works," he says, "will succeed in our time apart from the larger context of the natural world; it is the only effective context for survival."
"We live or die," he says starkly, "with this world."

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I'm sure that most readers agree with the thoughts I've shared so far in this post. They are relatively familiar. But it's the importance of the recovery of reverence specifically in terms of global religious conflicts that may be new for many readers. That's what I want to give more space to here.

One of the most immediate and significant results of recognizing that our numinous experience of the sacred goes back to our earliest human ancestors is that we recognize, in this larger context, that "primal" or "Cenozoic" religion is the basis of all humanity's religious traditions.

In light of the unitive perspectives of the cosmo-the-andric unity-- whether we call that numinous awareness "contemplative" or "mystical" or "spiritual"-- we can readily see that all the religions of the Earth have the same fundamental source.

It is our inborn genetic sensitivity to the numinous in the natural world that allows us to see-- not via any external authority but from our own personal experience-- that all the religions of the Earth are expressions of the sacred.

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In an earlier post (#84), I quoted Thomas Berry's remark about how hard it is for those of us in Western culture to believe that science that has established the fundamental spiritual aspects of human nature:
"Secularism, materialism and rationalism have prevailed for so long that we can hardly believe (Sam's italics) that the long course of scientific meditation on the universe has finally established the emergent universe itself as a spiritual as well as a physical process and the context for a new mode of religious understanding."

I think it's just as difficult-- maybe even more difficult-- for those of us in Western culture to believe that our personal experience establishes the validity of all religious traditions. But it's the essence of our new mode of religious understanding.

This new understanding was expressed well by the British monk Bede Griffith, who went to India in the middle of the 20th century to live in the style of Hindu ascetics.

In an essay published in 1994, Bede speaks of the need for a universal wisdom "which can unify humanity and enable us to face the problems created by Western science and technology." It is, he says, "the greatest need of humanity today." And he stresses that the "religions of the world cannot answer this need. They are themselves part of the problem of a divided world."

Bede notes explicitly that even our ancient religious traditions need to be reinterpreted in terms of the new scientific cosmology:
"The different world religions-- Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam-- have themselves to recover the ancient wisdom, which they have inherited, and this now has to be interpreted in the light of the knowledge of the world which Western science has given us."

The especially important point Bede is making here is that there is a much earlier wisdom which the present religious traditions of the Earth have inherited. The "wisdom" he is referring to is of course precisely the experience of the sacred-- the holy, the numinous-- which is still in our genes and which is the basis of all humanity's religious traditions.

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In terms of the numinous experience of our early ancestors, Thomas Berry spells out nicely this essential idea of the validity of all the Earth's religious traditions: "From these primordial indigenous experiences have come the diverse scriptures of the world, the various forms of worship, and the variety of spiritual disciplines."

Speaking to a Western audience specifically with regard to the world's religious scriptures, Berry says that it would constrict rather than expand our understanding of divine-human communication if we were to consider "only the Western Judeo-Christian Bible as revelation and eliminate the Koran of Islam, the Vedas and Upanishads of India, Buddhism's Lotus Sutra and China's Tao Te Ching."

"It would not be an improvement on our understanding of the numinous but an impoverishment," he emphasizes, if we were to eliminate "India's Shiva and Vishnu, Asia's Kuan-yin, or Native America's Manitou and Wakan-tanka."

In words that I hope will bring to readers' minds my earlier posts on the two mavericks C. G. Jung and Wolfgang Pauli, Berry makes an especially important point with regard to the validity of all the world religious traditions. "While every archetype needs multiple realizations," he notes, "the sacred [needs] more than any other."

Asian cultures seem to understand, better than Western people do, that the idea of the holy needs multiple expressions, that the numinous-- the Tao, the Great Mystery tremendum et fascinans-- cannot be limited. If it's in our genes to experience the sacred, we can expect that our cultural experiences will differ.

The point is that in our day we can trust, as our grandparents would never have been able to, that we don't demean the Mystery of God by recognizing-- via our recovery of reverence for the world of nature-- the validity of all humanity's religious experience.

Indeed, if anything does demean the divine mystery, it's religious conflict. I see this realization on the part of the Earth's religious traditions to be an especially significant global consequence of our recovery of reverence.

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I also see that this global consequence of recovering reverence comes just in time.

In February of this year (2011), data is scheduled to be released of the observations made by NASA's space telescope "Kepler" about the number of nearby planetary systems containing Earth-like planets.

Early word is that the data will include tentative identification of several hundred planets similar to our own. The implication is that our whole Milky Way Galaxy may contain tens of billions of planets roughly the size and mass of the Earth.

And there are billions of galaxies besides our own Milky Way Galaxy!

[Added 31 Jan 2011: An introductory background report appeared in today's New York Times: see Gazing Afar for Other Earths, and Other Beings.]

[Added 3 Feb 2011: See today's Astronomy Picture of the Day for a good diagram comparing the newly found 'solar' system containing six planets to our own solar system.]

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If "the cosmic process has a human dimension from the start," as Berry emphasizes, we can expect that biological life and reflective-- self-aware-- consciousness eventually will have emerged on some, if not many, of the billion-billion planets in the universe.

And so we can look forward to someday learning of the many forms of religious experience that have appeared on them.

Won't it be exciting to see how religious ritual, prayer, poetry and music find expression on planets other than our own!

Won't it be exciting to see how "that numinous reality whence the universe came into being and by which it is sustained in its immense journey" has shown itself to our cosmic cousins.

Surely the most significant global consequence of recovering reverence will be this truly cosmic perspective. We'll see better than ever that, as Berry says, "the universe is a vast celebration," that "it is our role to enter into it," and that "this is the purpose of all existence."

I think that will be quite literally a "transfigured cosmos."

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

#83. New Comments Collected


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ARCHIVE. For a list of all my published posts: 
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This is the third collection of comments I've published since I started this blog in December, 2006. (The two previous collections are posts #32 and #64.)

Because I often get comments on a specific post long after that post has been published, the comments can easily be missed even by regular readers. For a teacher-- this one, at least-- success is measured not by whether readers understand what's being said so much as whether they are spurred on to think more about it and to share their thoughts with others.

My hope for this post is that after you read these comments, you will keep the discussion going by sharing your suggestions and questions about them with readers. You can use either "Click here to send a comment" or click on "Post a Comment" (both at the bottom of this post). Or if you prefer, send your thoughts to my email address. (And do let me know if you want to be "Anonymous.") With my THANKS to all!

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Re: #66 (Arlene's Questions), Anonymous said: Thank you very, very much for post 66. Thank you for putting together the first complete definition of evolution I’ve ever had the pleasure to ponder. As one of those who calls myself ‘spiritual, not religious’ I’m grateful to know that my study of Jung and newly inspired religious study and practice are not just for me! As I understand it, the ‘stuff’ and images of ritual bridge our conscious and unconscious mind, put us in touch with the archetypes of the universal unconscious within each of us and empower us to be creative. I look forward to reading more on ‘useless’ ritual activities in a future post. “…everything we do can be creative participation in the world's evolution.”

I appreciate reading your personal examples. They tell me that even some of my cooking, finding nearly painless ways to get knots out of my Persians’ long hair, the haikus that I write when I ‘take personal delight’ in something, all of these are creatively participating in the evolution of the universe. My very ordinary life has found new meaning, and I’m grateful; grateful to be part of this “world-transformation awareness.” April 25, 2010

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Re #37 (What's Next) and #38 (Exodus), gloria said: Hi Sam. What food for thought! This is wonderful material to be digesting in this season of Easter/Spring when everything old is new again. Thank you so much. April 30, 2010

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Re #68 (Sam's Tao Te, Intro), Stardust said: All through this post I couldn't wait to get to the Tao Te Ching. But this was just an introduction -- a teaser. Can't wait to see what it's all about. From "babysitters to Emporers" caught my attention as did being a balanced person. I can see how it fits into the New Cosmology from the terms
 anthropos, cosmos, and Theos. Much to look forward to. May 14, 2010

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Re #69 (Sam's Tao Te, 1-27), Kathleen said: This is the kind of blog where each person reading it will relate personally to certain segments of it. I like the phrase, "Mystery behind the Universe". The analogies between physical aspects of the world and the way we live our lives are powerful. I particularly like the one about water being low to the ground, but nourishing all. Throughout there is the constant refrain of not living a pompous life. May 20, 2010

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Re #70 (Sam's Tao Te, 27-54), Anonymous said: Knowing that the power and presence of the Great Mystery are ours when we live in harmony with the way the Universe works is an amazing and comforting concept. We see everywhere the basic balance that is an underlying characteristic of the Universe. How worthwhile to develop that balance within ourselves based on these simple, yet profound "wisdoms" of the Tao Te. May 27, 2010

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Re #72 ("Great Mystery" in the Tao Te), Stardust said: I just finished an unusual novel that I think you would like: The Towers of Trebizond by Rose Macaulay. The story takes place mostly in Turkey and you will appreciate the references to Sophia, Sam. It was written in 1956 which makes it interesting to read now, more than 50 years later when we can get a historic perspective on it. June 11, 2010 5:30

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Re #72 ("Great Mystery" in the Tao Te), Anonymous said: This blog actually “explains” God. It is amazing for its Beauty, Truth, and Inspiration. I have bookmarked this page for my daily spiritual reading. Thank you, Sam. June 16, 2010

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Re #73 (Two Important Books), Michael Dowd said: Thanks, Sam! Best,
 Michael. June 26, 2010

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Re #75 (Three Post-modern Movements), Kathleen said: This blog is very enlightening, giving us the broader background of where we are now. It is also challenging -- integrating it all. As I was reading it, I kept thinking of Thomas Berry and how he would like this expansion of the second of his three basic characteristics of everything: "differentiation, subjectivity (interiority), and communion. He and Chardin were significant contributors in the "chain' of our understanding. And new individuals keep emerging to further expand the story, particularly the two you have selected here: Wilber and Michael Dowd. July 21, 2010

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Re #76 (Modernity's Gains), Stardust said: Sam, I don’t feel Wilber’s ideas really advance the telling of the Story. I don’t find them particularly inspiring or enriching – in contrast to so many of your previous blogs. However, I am looking forward to your over-view of Michael Dowd’s book. August 3, 2010

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Following #77 (From Theory to Practice), Sam said: Back in 1978 I was a member of the inaugural group of the Guild for Spiritual Guidance. It is still going strong and currently meets in Ossining, New York, north of NYC. It provides a two-year ecumenical, interfaith certificate program "designed to prepare its members for a ministry of spiritual guidance within the diverse contexts of contemporary life." Its core curriculum strands are the Western Mystical Tradition, Jungian Depth Psychology, and the Vision of Teilhard de Chardin. The 18th two-year program is beginning in January 2011. If you're interested, information about programs, dates, fees and faculty is available at www.spiritualguidance.org. August 22, 2010
Re #76 (From Theory to Practice): Anonymous said: I believe you are right completely. October 8, 2011

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Re #78 ("Thank God for Evolution"), Kathleen said: Michael Dowd’s book fill the niche we have been waiting for. It reinterprets mysteries of the Christian faith in light of the evolutionary story. His explanation of original sin is a masterpiece. He speaks throughout as a pastor, with compassion and understanding of human frailties as part of our deep ancestral heritage. This book is an inspiring and unique insight into what the Great Story means for each of us in our daily lives. August 29, 2010

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Re #78 ("Thank God for Evolution"), Johnson said: Took me time to read the whole article, the article is great but the comments bring more brainstorm ideas, thanks. September 13, 2010

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Re #79 (A Dowd Sampler), Michael Dowd said: Thanks, Sam!! September 17, 2010

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Re #80 (Two Mavericks), Todd Laurence said: The letters between Jung and Pauli
were published under title, "atom and archetype" - 1932-1958....
Their conclusions about "acausal 
reality" include the idea that number is the most primal archetype 
of order in the human mind."

As Jung said, in part: It is generally believed that numbers were invented, or thought out by man, and are therefore nothing but concepts of quantities containing nothing that was not previously put into them by the human intellect. But it is equally possible that numbers were found or discovered.. In that case they are not only concepts but something more-autonomous entities which somehow contain more than just quantities. Unlike concepts, they are based not on any conditions - but on the quality of being themselves, on a "so-ness" that cannot be expressed by an intellectual concept. Under these conditions they might easily be endowed with qualities that have still to be discovered.

I must confess that I incline to the view that numbers were as much found as invented, and that in consequence they possess a relative autonomy analogous to that of the archetypes. They would then have in common with the latter, the quality of being pre-existent to consciousness, and hence, on occasion, of conditioning it, rather than being conditioned by it.


Quotes: "man has need of the word, but
in essence number is sacred." Jung.

"our primary mathematical
 intuitions can be arranged before
 we become conscious of them." Pauli
(entelekk-numomathematics) October 4, 2010

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Re #80 (Two Mavericks), Mary Hicks said: Sometimes when I read these posts, I get so moved and excited that I feel close to wetting my pants. Not only because such huge ideas humble me but I know it is likely I will leave the planet without understanding them... 
I feel impatient at my limitations and almost unable to swallow because their hugeness begins to suffocate me, stops me from breathing.
 Having written that, it seems silly to say thanks for this post. No thing in my life right now provides me with this amount of intellectual challenge. Wish to God that she would inspire me to find the way for more individuals on the planet to receive your efforts. Keep going, Sam. I can always change my pants. I am sure there are many of us who don't always respond, but realize their lives are forever changed. Thanks. October 19, 2010

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Re #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"), Mary Conrow Coelho said: Hi Sam: I like your phrase "there is nothing that's not non-dual with the Mystery." Being cumbersome and stated in the negative somehow makes one read it carefully so that it is a strong statement. And it certainly speaks to your deep interest in ritual as you write in the blog. You did a great job putting it all together. I'm glad my cumbersome reflections helped bring forth some valuable integration. October 20, 2010

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Re #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"), Kathleen said: This is, indeed, a profound essay delving deeper yet into the unity of all with the Great Mystery. To speak of everything as part of the "divine incarnation" opens up a whole avenue of enlightenment for Christians who have limited that to Jesus. And "sacraments" and "ritual" make sense as any things or actions that deepen our relationship with the Mystery. With Karl Rahner we have reason to hope. October 24, 2010

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Re #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"), Stardust said: To Mary Hicks... I just have to tell you how much I liked your comment on Sam’s blog. I’m chuckling every time I think of it. I know just what you mean. I feel like I’m absorbing maybe a fourth of what’s being said, but it is the most enriching stuff I’ve ever read. 

The way this one ended really does leave us a little uncertain. My obstacle to a next “life” is that we are earthlings. This is where we came from and where we belong. But, who knows, there could be another whole evolution awaiting us. I do hope! October 25, 2010

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Re Stardust's comments to Mary Hicks (above), Sam said: I think Stardust's reservations about a next life are very healthy. It wouldn't be much of a future if we were to be separated from the Earth, and it wouldn't be any future at all if it were static. Thinking along the lines of a "transfigured cosmos" as the Eastern Church tradition does (rather than the dualistic and static perspectives offered by the Roman tradition) helps a lot. I shared some thoughts about these ideas in posts #20 and #39. October 27, 2010

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Re #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"), Anonymous said: Sam, I read this post on the eve of All Hollows and felt impatient that there wasn't more, that you didn't keep going and link consciousness with the cosmos through specific rituals at 'key' times of the year when the doors are opened for the unitive experience. Then I remembered how stupid of me. You've done that all your life and taught many of us to turn the daily key of ritual to step through to the numinous non-dual experience/presence of the unknowable Unknown, as the Gnostics would say. I will look forward to the next postings with more patience. November 1, 2010

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Re #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"), Anonymous said: This is a thanks for your blog which i've started reading again - read post 81 twice - it felt wonderful, like standing on solid ground rather than the shifting sands i've been experiencing. November 1, 2010

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Re #82 (Moving Up the Ladder), K.A. said: Sam, This is terrific! I love the idea of sensing and feeling, among all of it. November 4, 2010

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Re #82 (Moving Up the Ladder), Allen said: Enjoyed your latest post. It made me wonder whether you are implying or leading up to the very useful conclusion that participating in ritual enhances one's wholeness by potentially activating, like art, the four functions or operations of the psyche. November 8, 2010

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Re Allen's comment on post #82, Sam said: I tried to do something along the lines Allen is suggesting in post #26. That post, "Help From Uncle Louie," is a followup to the three preceding posts about ontogenesis-- a fancy word for the developmental process by which we become who and what the universe is calling us to be. Yes, ritual-- so neglected in our time-- seems to be precisely the age-old means by which we tune in to the cosmic process for what Allen calls "the enhancement of our wholeness." Thanks, Allen! November 9, 2010

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Re #82 (Moving Up the Ladder), Stardust said: Well, I finally got to the blog (82) today. I also wanted to re-read 20 and 39 in reference to my comment on the question of a next life. They were very helpful. Everything I go back to now gets reinterpreted through a new filter. 

That off-hand remark I made about maybe the possibility of a whole different evolution of some kind after death may actually be on the mark. The evolutionary process seems to be in the “DNA” of the universe and the way it works.

I like Bulgakov saying: “Each of us will have the entire transfigured cosmos as our own risen body. It will be held in a way that is personal and unique to each of us.” What a beautiful thought! November 15, 2010

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Re Stardust's comment on #82 (above), Sam said: Stardust is referring to her comments on the previous post, #81 (The Deep Roots of "Person"). Her point is a good one; it expresses well that, as I'd say it, every traditional Western religious teaching has to be now reinterpreted in terms of the New Cosmology. AND that the result is an even deeper, richer and more beautiful understanding than was available earlier. November 15, 2010

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Re #82 (Moving Up the Ladder), Mary Coelho said: With regard to what you write about Jung's four functions, I hadn't thought of them as being part of moving up the ladder, "up" the great chain of being.


You suggest that feeling is related to soul and that intuition can know the unitive life. I had thought of the four functions as being on the same ontological level, so to speak, just different ways of taking in the world. 

Maybe in a nondual world one should not think of ontological levels, although levels need not imply a dualism or loss of unity, of course. So you are suggesting that the intuitive can help restore in the culture recognition of the chain of being.



It is wonderful that you have been excited about being able to articulate a good understanding of why ritual can be so significant. To me it is very exciting that there are rituals that can evoke the unitive experience i.e. enable us to know "that we humans and all reality are non-dual with the Mystery behind the universe." November 23, 2010

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Re Mary Coelho's comment on #82, Sam said: Mary's comment is, as usual, stimulating! When we're talking about the functions of consciousness at the human level I think it makes sense to think of them as ontologically equal; that's the whole point of the Medicine Wheel and Tibetan mandalas: it's a circle, not a ladder. No matter where we start around the wheel, we have to develop all four ways of being conscious if we are to be whole/complete persons. But if we're talking about the evolutionary emergence of consciousness (from reptiles to mammals to primates to humans), then the ladder image works well. My point in "Moving Up the Ladder" is that something similar seems to be happening in Western society as it moves beyond the gross materialistic consciousness brought about by Modernism and the take-over by science. A big topic! November 25, 2010

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Re #82 (Moving Up the Ladder), Anonymous said: I have been fascinated by the ways various cultures have looked at the functions of consciousness, and enriched by these descriptions. I have been waiting to see how ritual would have a role, and now feel some glimmers of understanding of its importance. 


Your words "So where does ritual come in? In terms of the way our minds work, ritual obviously belongs with both Intuition and the unitive perspective. Intuition is what allows us to see the Big Picture of cosmo-the-andric unity; sacred ritual is what allows us to enter into it" are clear and concise-- and yet give me much to ponder!


I look forward to more. November 27, 2010

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Your feedback is welcome.

To send a comment: use either "Click here to send a comment" (below) or click on "Post a Comment" (at the bottom).

If you prefer, send your thoughts, suggestions and questions to my email address (above).

To email a link to this post to a friend, with your own message, click on the little envelope with an arrow (below).

If you would like to be notified when I publish a new post, let me know; I'll put you on the list.

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