I've stared in the Jaws of Defeat so many times it thinks I'm its dentist!
Tuesday, 28 February 2017
Monday, 27 February 2017
Neuro-physical Factors in Religious Thinking - Redraft
Some time ago I was invited to a
conference entitled: Religion, Conflict
and Peace: Global Perspectives. These subjects have fascinated me for some
time and it was while studying for my post grad in Ecumenics that I acquired an
insight that forever changed my understanding of these issues. I have been
fascinated by the functions of the brain since I was a child. My interest
sprung from my mother’s struggles with mental illness. My interest in psychology,
personal development, and the functions and potential of the human brain has continued
unabated since those early days. I was particularly thrilled with the advent of
fMRI and other marvels of modern science that have allowed us to peer into the
working brain.
We have learned some remarkable
things from these investigations and the findings are fomenting tremendous
philosophical and spiritual debate. I wanted to do a Masters on the correlation
between neuroscience and spirituality, with the central focus being on how spirituality/religion
affects cognitive functions - more precisely, I was interested in the
correlations between the scientific paradigm of Emotional Intelligence and the
spiritual goal of the actualisation of the higher or divine self [the attainment
of spiritual maturity], with specific interest in exploring the spiritual and
bio-mechanical underpinnings of this endeavour. Sadly, I couldn’t secure the
support for this enterprise but while attempting to make this happen I
discovered something, arguably, more profound and unsettling about the role
neurological factors play in the evolution of religion, conflict, and peace.
We are all well aware that the
human organism is subject to the operations of several key drives that are
hardwired into the brain. The most well known ones would be the:
Fight-or-Flight Response, biological triggers/compulsions of hunger and thirst,
and of course FEAR. We understand that damage to the brain can impair us in a
variety of ways in terms of: speech, movement, reasoning, empathy, learning,
memory, mood, temperament, and that in the absence of a functioning brain we
are reduced to the status of vegetables.
Considered spiritually, the human
being can be understood as a type of triune entity – a being that exists in
three inter-related dimensions: material, intellectual, and spiritual, all of
which are unified through the function of personality – that volitional,
controlling, and uniquely identifying element that makes the three One.
Scripture viewed human being as a simple dichotomy: the Body/Temple/Vessel of
Clay and the indwelling and distinct Living
Being and this is a serviceable paradigm but it has its shortcomings.
These distinctions give rise to
questions: If the material body is an instrument for objectivising the will of
the supervening personality what factors should we be aware of in its
employment? Are there practices, conditions, or factors that enhance the will
or mitigate against its function? We know, for example, that physical and
emotional trauma can adversely impact cognitive function; sometimes in ways subtle
and sometimes in ways not so subtle. It is therefore reasonable to ask in what
way these factors might impact the formation or the spiritualisation [idealisation]
of our identity.
Given that neural dynamics play a
crucial role in healthy and efficient cognitive function the spiritual
implications of the brain appears to be inescapable. Can we be sure that the
brain isn’t tricking us into the belief that we are being guided by our
spiritual principles when, in fact, we are being guided by very subtle
biological inclinations? Isn’t it altogether possible for us to misconstrue
biological inclination for spiritual impulses? After all, haven’t the prophets
taught us that ‘the heart is deceitful above all things and even desperately
wicked,’ ever leading us astray? Is it possible to discern the yearnings of the
flesh from the ‘urging of the angels’?
I am reminded of an old saying:
‘the best trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t
exist’. It could certainly be argued that the greatest trick ever pulled off by
the brain is the belief that it doesn’t influence our thinking processes and decision
making.
The insights afforded us through
contemporary neuroscience tells us that such a belief is an illusion, our
neural wiring has a far more profound and extensive influence on the operations
of our cognitive functions than we realise and these facts present disconcerting
implications for theologians and will inevitably generate considerable cognitive
dissonance among religious thinkers – at least until we have fully metabolised
the implications of these facts.
My insight into how all this fits
together began during one particular class while studying for my post grad.
I’ll be first to admit that I have been shining my boots on the backsides of
the institutions of Rome since I could understand the word ‘Hypocrisy’. No one
was more vociferous in their condemnation of Rome and her servants than I.
However, I had an unusual reaction once while in a room surrounded by
individuals that were either not brought up in the tradition or had made an
open break with it. The speaker offered patronising commentary on Catholicism,
which was picked up and amplified by the group. I was suddenly and unexpectedly
seized by disgust and contempt and felt immediately defensive. I was shocked at
these feelings; shocked, not only that I wasn’t joining in and being the most
condemnatory voice in the group but, that I felt the urge to defend my
tradition [my people] from these naysayers. I was utterly paralysed
between what I was observing and what I was experiencing and so remained in
bewildered silence.
This stayed with me for some
time. I reflected upon it. I endeavoured to digest the experience by discussing
it with friends. I recognised this defensive feeling as a familial feeling. As an
example of this type of feeling I will use a hypothetical family member. I can criticise family members all I
want: X is lazy; X is stupid; X is a grasping, greedy, lying, selfish, money
grabbing, little so-and-so. However, the moment someone from outside the family says the exact same thing, even if it is
factually true, I get immediately defensive. It is acceptable to me and for me
and mine
[the In-Group] to make such assertions but not for anyone outside the family [the Out-Group]. The very fact of their
Out-Group status makes their assertions appear hostile, ill-advised, rooted in
ignorance, and maliciously intended. We feel this engage when someone from
outside our neighbourhood criticises our neighbourhood, when a daughter that is
critical of her mother hears someone else criticise her mother, as we watch our
team suffer defeat and have to endure the taunts of a pundit or some other
Out-grouper, we hear it in the speech of our fellows: We did this, We
lost, We were in trouble there. The ups and downs of the We
is a visceral experience regardless of the fact that the ‘I’ of this equation
had no material hand, act, or part in
the achievement of the asserted We.
The We experience is wired into a
simple philosophical inclination: All-for-One-and-One-for-All, such that if you
attack one – you attack us all, conversely – if you attack US ALL you attack
One, meaning that I personalise [internalise] the feeling – I feel this as an
attack on ME/US and react out of the inherent neural defence mechanisms.
Examples of the operations of
this dynamic abound and it is rooted in what I call the neurological entity of
the Host Identity/the US/the Blended Self [in the parlance of Social Theory it
is known as the In-Group]. A functional example to highlight this would be the
parent-child relationship. A child is nurtured in the womb for X number of
months but upon being born it is still dependent upon the nurturing care of the
parents. The Parents take over the role of the placenta/womb and, in the case
of caring parents, they become - in a very real sense - an extension of the
child’s immune system; they will vigorously defend their child’s well being and
go to great lengths to nurture it. Even though the child is a physically
separate entity, it becomes a living part of the hosts; a neurologically encircuited active
and integrated value within the Host
Identity of the In-Group called Family.
The nurturing In-Group expands
outward from immediate family to extended family, to the larger Community to
which we are attached. It has experiential roots in family, and it is therefore
unsurprising that the reality and concept of Family is primal in dignity and
power in the wider context of culture. The growing child is supplied with a
cultural matrix that nurtures and forms identity; while the adult [ideally] has
a cultural matrix that facilitates the actualisation of its highest self. These
matrices are absolutely vital to our well being. We acquire the essentials, and
a few luxuries, of life through group association; Group belonging is essential
to survival, especially so for children. The brain understands that it exists
and survives because of [owes its life to] the Group/Host Identity.
The Host Identity establishes the
Key-Note, the contextualising value, of a system. Just as the child is a very
real subset within a larger In-Group system the Host Identity likewise
exercises a determining influence in the operations of a system and of the
individual’s role within that system. It is worth bearing in mind that the things,
events, and forces that affect the H.I. positively or negatively can affect the
individual in-group member with just as much force as if those forces were
acting upon the members own child.
The fact that the sense Host
Identity is as visceral and evocative of emotionally rooted behaviour as is the
connection with one’s own child is easily proved.
The In-Group can comprise Family,
School, Team, Company, Religious Grouping, Profession, Political Affiliation, College,
Nationality, Race, ideological persuasion, you name it. The neural circuitry of
the In-Group is integrated into the deep brain [most likely the Limbic System],
much lower than our higher cognitive faculties, and can therefore solicit
aggression from otherwise peace loving individuals. Consider the gentle
grandmother who enjoys knitting booties for the grandchildren upon whom she
dotes; now consider this same grandmother pitch-side when one of her little
darlings is playing an important match and a member of the opposing team [an
out-grouper] fouls them. Her language and demeanour change. She becomes flush
with rage and screams obscenities at the offender, the referee, the opposing
team, and the whole area they are from. Were the offender close enough she’d
should him what a foul was! This is the same lady who, under ordinary circumstances,
wouldn’t say boo to a goose but through the operations of deeply rooted neural
circuitry is transformed into a vicious defender.
As another example, any one of us
may have been subject to aggressive or intimidating behaviour but we’ll most
often just talk our way out of it or find some way to defuse the situation with
a minimum of discomfort. We are not as motivated about ourselves as we are about
our In-Group because the brain sees the In-Group as more
important; it places a higher value on the In-Group than on individual. Our
In-Group loyalty can veto our instincts for self-preservation and give rise to
what we generally regard as selfless behaviour; that is
behaviour that seeks to preserve and enhance the In-Group regardless of the
consequences to the individual self. This particular type of behaviour is
universally regarded as the highest virtue; while the most heinous of sins is
to place the self ahead of or above
the interests of the In-Group; to enrich oneself at the expense of the
In-Group.
What is significant about this is
that the same neural Self-Defence mechanism
or circuit that operates to effect self-preservation engages when we
fall under the impression that the In-Group is under threat – the brain has no alternative mechanism.
The brain translates the ‘I’ into the ‘We’ - the Blended Self/Host Identity - and
acts with the exact same neuro-biological mechanics and power as it would when
the higher cognitive functions lose the upper hand to Panic. The potency of this dynamic is bound up with the fact that to the brain the In-Group has as a
higher value than just the self; the
needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few is a value that is hardwired
into the brain.
We should bear in mind that, in a
normal person, during times of Panic all higher cognitive functions become
subservient to the lower brain. It is older and, from an evolutionary
perspective, far more effective in getting out of dangerous situations. It is
non-reflective, instinctive [automatic or practically so], and therefore much faster than the higher cognitive
faculties in dealing with unexpected emergencies; more definite in decision and
therefore not prone to ‘freezing’; and absolute in its prerogative to survive
at all costs. However, when the individual feels that the In-Group has become
prey to perceived threat from an
Other the Panic experienced is of a different order: it is the survival of the
Group that is at stake and therefore the self vanishes in significance, the
self becomes utterly absorbed into the goal of defending the In-Group; the line
between Self and the H.I. is blurred and the full cognitive and physical
resources of the individual are put at the disposal of the H.I. Remember:
Under such circumstances it is not just you that is in danger but your entire
support network: your children, siblings, parents, country, your ‘way-of-life’,
your values, the memory and sacrifices of your ancestors, everything is in
danger of being effaced, and the profound urgency communicated by this sense of
danger exerts a tremendous mobilising effect on the cognitive capacities and
physical powers of the individual. Consequently, we could say that the presence
of the self is inversely proportional to the value of the perceived threat and
we can argue this position as the actions during times of such stress are very
highly automatic, pre-programmed, such behaviours result from pre-established
programs embedded in our neural circuitry and have little, if anything, to do
with our conscious [higher] minds.
Community is inevitable and
fundamental to our existence and identity. Its primacy is early programmed into
our sense being. We early learn to appreciate that our existence is an effect [a
function] of the existence of the Group. We reason, however poorly, that one
[I] cannot exist without the other [the In-Group] and this has profound
implications in terms of identity formation, one’s sense of duty, and the
horizon of your moral cosmos. After all, without the Group – what am I?
All In-Groups have their defining
characteristics. Membership of a group is dependent upon shared values, ideals, and beliefs. Outsiders are regarded with suspicion until
their orientation and alignment with group values become known. Membership
confers rights and responsibilities, privileges and obligations, opportunities
and protections; all of which have a cost, refusal to conform sets in motion a
series of progressive punitive measures culminating ultimately in the loss of group
membership [ostracism/expulsion/death].
One can be born into a group or
adopted by it. Being born into a group inevitably entails involuntary subjection
to the consciousness/identity forming elements of group customs and conspires
to effect the fluency of the individual in the customs, values, ideals, and the
historical narrative of the group identity, all of which serve to contextualise
the individual’s identity [their origin] within the meta-narrative of the Group
– establishing a shared identity and destiny. The group, quite literally,
becomes our world in that it establishes the horizon of cultural experience [at
least in youth]. Adopted members must swear oaths of allegiance and undertake
to abide by the rules, live by the values of the host group, and, if necessary,
defend with their very lives the welfare of the group. All groups have their
creeds and their codes: Biker gangs, Freedom Fighters, Nations, Religions, even
the Boy Scouts.
The global community of
Christendom is divided up into many - [largely] mutually exclusive - ‘nations’,
whose borders are defined by their respective creeds and codes, many of whom
who have made salvation and passage into communion dependent upon the willingness of the prospective member to
subscribe to their particular variation of their respective creeds and
proscribe and reject everyone else’s; a salvation by right beliefs sort of
thing. The fact that these structures are found repeatedly in such endless
profusion [across all races and cultures] is not a coincidence– it has a
biological root. It is the stamp that indicates the operation of deep
neurological circuitry.
So, what can all this teach us about religion, conflict, and peace?
Let us take Catholicism as an
example. It is best that I do as I am a member of that family, [albeit that I am
one of the black sheep] and can therefore speak with relative impunity – as one
family member speaking about the others. For now, at least, they haven’t kicked
me out. Though, realistically, it’s only a matter of time really, and after
this article I doubt I’ll be welcomed anywhere else.
The Catholic Church, the
institutions and ideologies of Rome, all her servants high and low, and the
lowly flock she shepherds, is one enormous Host Identity. It has its defining
features that make it distinct from others but at heart it differs in words
only; structurally it is largely the same. Protestant groups have their creeds
and codes to which you must subscribe if you are to be adopted by their community.
The nation of Ireland or Russia presents their demands to any prospective
citizen. Citizenship is only a right to those born within the community, everyone else must earn the privilege; the means of earning this
privilege varies from place to place.
When one In-Group shares the same
living space with other and competing
Out-Groups, the neurological dynamics of Dominance
come into play. A key driving factor in this interplay between groups is the
process of internalisation of Group Identity through which ‘I’ becomes ‘US/WE’
wherein and whereby an individual learns to contextualise their existence by
means of the cultural instruments of the In-Group or, put another way, the
individuals identity becomes encircuited into the Host Identity such that their
fates are seen as identical. Dominance behaviour is rooted in our biology; it
is a key step towards securing unfettered access to the perceived limited resources
of an environment. Dominance is little concerned with things like: Fairness, Justice,
Karma, Morality, Ethics, Mercy, and Goodness. These ideals and values are discerned
by the higher mind. The biologically dominated brain is single minded, crude,
and brutal. Morality is a blessing bestowed upon the faithful [loyal] members
of the In-Group.
During the struggle for dominance
the bestial comes to the fore, albeit that it often appears in the habiliments
of self-righteousness – more than figuratively, the wolf of biological
inclination in the sheep’s clothing of the raiment of cultural sophistication.
When, for example, the Catholic Church is perceived to be ‘under attack’ from an
‘ISM’ of one form or another, the neurologically rooted self-defence mechanisms
engage [the exact same mechanism that engages when two people (or peoples) fight
or prepare to fight]. The brain immediately screens all knowledge of the
Other/Out-Group for weaknesses and amplifies the supposed ‘wrongs’ suffered at
their hands [the biological roots of prejudice, this same screening occurs when
two people argue] and concocts a multi-pronged plan of attack involving
rhetoric, invective, threats, intimidation, deception, aggression – exactly the
sort of behaviour that animals demonstrate when they find themselves in strange
territory and feel inclined to assert dominance for fear of appearing weak.
There is much bluster and locking of horns, albeit that this occurs on a much
higher intellectual plane.
Religious ‘nations’/In-Group
Identities/Host Identities like Catholicism or Protestantism do not war as
might England and France with weapons of steel and fire, their wars are fought
using different means but the desired result is usually the same – the
extermination of the diseased vermin that is the Other, and the mechanism and
values that drive this behaviour in both parties is identical. A brain engaged
in hostility naturally dehumanises the Other. The defensive brain creates
highly simplified and distorted characterisations of the Other [exactly as
occurs when two people argue]: this helps dissolve empathy and is the
biological root of institutional racism and sectarianism. Group Alpha’s set the
tone, inculcating group hate, group animosity, group acrimony, through
consciousness forming propaganda that demonises the other; covertly or implicitly
in times of ‘peace’ or overtly and explicitly in times of ‘war’. Like the Wasp Queen,
she sets the mood of the nest. If she’s stressed, everybody gets stressed. If she’s
at ease, everyone will feel at ease. If she says ‘FIGHT!’ everybody gets out and
fights.
The images of the Other concocted
by the stressed brain are stereotypes: simplified, shorthand symbols referring
to threatening entities or competitors for dominance [persons or groups].
Stereotypes emerge from within In-Groups, they require the over-arching context
provided by the Host Identities in order to be intelligible. Stereotypes are
usually highly simplistic and drift easily into gross misrepresentation. As
symbols their roots can be traced to the emotional functions of the Limbic and the
symbol making Right-Brain systems – the long and arduous path across the higher
functions of the pre-frontal and orbito-frontal cortex and language and logic centres
of the Left Brain means that logic and rationality are often not a part of these
exchanges.
Stereotypes are an attempt by the
subconscious of ‘one’ [some group Alpha] to effect the conformity of
consciousness, to co-opt or entrain the consciousness of an ‘other’ in the
In-Group and thereby seek to establish the behavioural standard of one
[favoured] group toward another [ill favoured] group. This is a key step in the
effecting of the dominance of one group over another. Dominance is not about
respect, it is about control of perceived limited resources, and is ultimately
rooted in fear of death/extinction. Such behaviours have their roots in our
biology, not our pneumatology. It is significant that we are emotional beings
long before we ever learn to be rational beings. The simplistic emotional
‘logic’ of the brain I term ‘Bio-Logic’ and unless we are specifically trained
otherwise bio-logic is the default operating system of most individuals.
These factors highlight the
necessity of transcending biologically rooted self [the Ego] and one’s Host
Identity as a prerequisite for the apperception of truth and, furthermore,
indicates the value of the quest for the ultimate meta-narrative of the whole
of Creation and the super Host Identity of the Great Cosmic Brotherhood that it
promises.
Dehumanising and objectifying the
Other dissolves and dismantles any moral quandaries or apprehensions that may
exist about executing violence and injustice against the Other. The In-Group is
always seen as noble, pure, honest, brave, loving, worthy, while servants of
the Out-Group are depicted in opposite tones: ignoble, corrupt, cowards, hate
filled, wretched, poisonous, treacherous. They are said to ‘hate us and all we
stand for’, they are toxic, association with them is dangerous, their disease
is infectious, contact with them must be avoided at all costs.
The biological program of the Host
Identities is predisposed to suspicion of aliens and is naturally primed for defensive
behaviours upon contact with perceived potential ‘competitors’. Outsiders
create stress in a system because their alignment with the values and ideals of
the group is unknown. In the absence of information systems tend toward chaos,
and the absence of information on this issue fosters mistrust, suspicion, and
paranoia, and motivates the In-Group to establish a ‘polarising filter’ through
which the ‘outsider’ can only pass by projecting or assuming ‘shapes’ and/or
‘positions’ familiar to the interrogator [oaths of loyalty – tests of fealty].
Inability to meet the established criteria triggers an escalation in defensive
measures. Inability or unwillingness to conform may have fatal consequences. Political,
religious, and economic imperialism can trace its roots back to this biologically
rooted urge to dominance and desire to
establish conformity.
When the Protestant identity
first emerged from its Host the birth was brutal and bloody. The off-spring was
immediately perceived as an enemy – a competitor, a threat to dominance. The
Host being actually dominant spent considerable resources in its attempts to
destroy the child it gave birth to but to no avail. The child was found to be
vigorous, inventive, highly adaptable, and utterly indomitable.
Outside of the physical
implements of war employed by the servants of Rome there was considerable
theological rhetoric: justifications, defences, propositions, attacks,
apologetics, not to mention excommunication. The purpose of this was to bolster
the identity of the Catholic In-Group
with the intention of undermining the Protestant
Out-Group. A considerable amount of ink has been spilled in service to this
agenda. This fact proves that much of what passes for theology has its roots NOT
in our pneumatology [our relationship with the spiritual and things divine] but
in our biology [the bonds of the flesh that tie us to matter]. Our brains have
very successfully deceived us into thinking that our reasoning served a higher
purpose, that we were ‘doing God’s will’ but little did we realise how
profoundly true was the declaration ‘the heart is deceitful above all things’,
for in this insight do we discover that though people felt that they were
acting in service to God or a higher and noble calling the fact remains that
they were still servants of the flesh and not the spirit.
The animosity that exists between
the Religious Host Identities exists not in the Host itself but in the hearts
of its component members. Host Identities/In-Groups are not hot houses or
incubators of divisive and exclusivist theology, moreover these divisive and
exclusivist theologies are simply a testament to FEAR; the fear of the Other felt
by its members - which exists in direct contravention of the universal
brotherhood taught and lived by all spiritual masters. Religion did not invent
these things. Religion can’t. Religion is not a person. Religion has neither
reflective moral imagination nor free will. On macroscopic levels H.I. exhibit
animal like behaviour and the reason for this can be found in the beating heart
of the animal that gives life to the system.
So here we are. It was once said
that ‘That there’s only enough religion in the world to make us hate one
another but not enough to make us love one another.’ The line of reasoning that
I have herein outlined proves that the hate is not endemic to religion but is
sponsored by the fear dominated heart of the instruments of the Host Identity. It
is in our very own hearts that we find the roots of invective and aggression, the
will that facilitates and fosters institutional racism, sectarianism, and
imperialism.
In the fear driven human heart is
to be found the seed of many of the world’s troubles but it is equally in the
fear purged heart, the heart inspired and illuminated by divine spiritual
ideals – a will liberated from the bonds of the flesh, is to be found the cure
for all that ails her.
Under such conditions, as
evolving, self directing imperfect beings, conflict is inevitable but as the
race matures, and we come to understand ourselves more fully, peace will be
attained, first personally – on an individual, person by person basis, and
thereafter socially as these healthy beings come together to form healing
wholes.
This insight strikes, with lethal
force, at the biological root of theological arrogance. It does not kill
identity or tradition. It does not make them null and void. It contextualises
its role in our evolution and helps us distinguish between good [spiritually
infused] religion and bad [biologically rooted] religion. It allows us to
re-contextualise religious, political, and economic imperialism; allows us to
understand history anew and to envision a far better future than ever we could and
do so with the realisation that such a future is truly attainable.
There is much here that I have
not touched upon: the spiritual significance of Loyalty and how In-Group
loyalty sets the defining meta-narrative for sin; The phenomenon of the Internalisation
of Identity; The political, social, economic, and religious implications and
possibilities inherent in internalisation and self transcendence; Self:
knowing, understanding, directing; considerations in the synchronising of the
material self with the divine/higher self; Transcending Self, Host Identity,
and attaining membership of the Host Identity of the Cosmos.
Wednesday, 22 February 2017
Heavenly Things
In John
3:12 we read these intriguing lines: “I have told you of earthly things and you
have not believed; how much more so would you not believe were I to tell you of
heavenly things?” This sentence teaches us much about the Master’s mission on
earth. His mission can be summed up into three key revelations. First, was his
revelation of the Father: he showed us what God is like when he portrayed the God
of boundless love, limitless mercy, and endless devotion – declaring that ‘you
that have seen me have seen God.’ Second, he taught us that we are the children
of the God he came to reveal. And thirdly, he taught us how the children of God
live and conduct their lives: “Love one another as I have loved you.”
It is
hard to imagine what must have been going through the mind of Jesus when he was
deciding on the portrayal of the Father he would make. We do know, however, that
he went with the conservative option. We know this because at key points in his
life - when faced with unbearably difficult decisions, when he was torn utterly
between his longing to help his fellow man and his aspiration to abide in all
things by his Father’s Will but couldn’t decided either way yea or nay, he
retreated into the Father’s Will and in pretty much every single case the
Father decided YEA! Jesus chose to portray the Father as solemn and devoted. I’m
sure he knew his audience well and figured that this portrayal would work best,
even if it wasn’t 100% replete. Over and over again in the life of Jesus the exuberant
nature of the Father would spill out over the image Jesus was crafting in his
life and teachings and make considerable trouble for him.
He
was, no doubt, bursting to reveal so much more but couldn’t. He knew the limits
of his people and therefore wisely restrained himself in his life and
teachings. In restricting his revelations he even admonished his followers and
the teachers of his gospel to let their light ‘so shine’ Matt. 5:16 such that
their lives would effectively illuminate and not blind their fellows…but even
at that, he told his closest friends: “I have yet many things to teach you, but
you could not bear them now.” John 16:12. Jesus craved to teach his followers so much more but they simply could
not bear it. It would have been utterly pointless to offer teachings that would
have been beyond their ability to understand. So, he must have decided to leave
those revelations for another day; a day when the gospel would have spread over
all the earth.
And so
we return to the first line of this article: “I have told you of earthly things
and you have not believed; how much more so would you not believe were I to
tell you of heavenly things?” John 3:12
The
life and teachings of Jesus served one great purpose: To make a revelation of
God to man. In doing this another revelation was effected, the revelation of
the ideal Man to the Father. He offered very little teaching on Heavenly things. There was much that was
implied or suggested but almost no clear cut and distinct revelations with
regard to Heavenly things. No doubt
there was wisdom in this decision, people would barely believe him on simple
and straight forward matters – even going so far as to murder him for his
teachings. Over-revelation would have alienated him entirely from even his
audience and he would have vanished from the history books as just another
quack.
Would
it be beyond the realms of possibility that even as the Son of Man came to reveal
the nature and character of the Father that another revelation would eventually
follow which might do two things: clarify the life and teachings of the Master
and provide a revelation of Heavenly things? I’m sure many today would
recognise that the gospel has been subject to a chain of Chinese Whispers two
thousand years long and could do with some authoritative correction of the
signal. I’m also fairly certain that a great many would be intrigued to learn
of Heavenly
things. I imagine that whereas in the past people refused his message
they would be more inclined to receive it today. The trick today would be
getting passed their prejudice with regard to Heavenly things.
What
if I told you that this revelation has occurred and is freely available to
everyone in the world? Would you dare to check it out? Would you dare to
believe this revelation? Or would you, like the spiritually blind souls of old,
declare such teachings to be ‘madness’?
If you’d
like to know more, click here
The Devil's MIlk
The Devil’s Milk is an expression
I use to symbolise that addictive and disorienting chemical soup that our brain
releases during times of stress. While there are many studies that highlight
the toxic nature of this Milk, its true danger lies not so much in how its long
term effects imperils the function of our organs but in its corrosive effect on
our connection with the spirit and, consequently, our connection with spiritual
realities; it may, therefore, be more correctly identified as a Pneuma-toxin; a destroyer of our
personal sense of and responsiveness to spiritual realities. We drink this Milk
at our peril.
This Devil’s Milk is a well known
guilty pleasure for most. It comes in a variety of flavours: anger, fear, greed,
hatred, jealousy, resentment, lust, spite, vanity to name but a few of the more
popular flavours but, regardless of which we prefer, the effects are always the
same: after a few sups our higher mind [the strong man of the house Mk. 3:27]
is bound and blinded and the beast within [our animalistic urges that rob us of
dignity and grace] gains ascendancy rendering us spiritually blind and leaving us
spiritually bereft. We awaken from these indulgences with the hangover of shame,
guilt, and despair. Without exception: all the traditions warn us of the
dangers of the Devil’s Milk.
The religions of the world have many
things in common, structurally in creed, code, and cult: and ethically in the
oft referred to Golden Rule: Treat all
others as you would like to be treated. However, they also share deeper elements
like the much exalted aspiration of Self
Control. Furthermore, each tradition offers their respective techniques for
its attainment: yoga, prayer, meditation, contemplation, study, mantra,
mindfulness, service, etc. The early teachers and seers understood that the
first step towards happiness is Self Control; peace is impossible without it.
The Torah teaches that it is easier to take a city than to take control of
one’s self; that to be without self-control is to be as ‘a city without walls’;
and asserted that no one has yet tamed the tongue. In spite of the fact that ALL
the traditions exalt self control and
proactively promote and teach methods for its attainment, bizarrely, secular Western
society – currently groaning under the health burden of gluttony, lust, and
vice – hasn’t bothered to consider the social implications of having an
education policy wherein self control is taught and nurtured, nor of fostering
a culture wherein that is the norm. Society has not yet realised the value of
the teaching that an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure; it has
yet to awaken to the genuine, even economic, value of the pursuit of wisdom.
The Ego is dependent on the
Devil’s Milk and will engage in myriad dramas, games, and schemes to ensure its
abundant supply but only the divine Ambrosia of Truth can free the Self of the
madness induced by the vapours of the boiling flesh: liberate the Self from its
moorings in the flesh and free it to realise the higher and more ennobling
realities of the Spirit.
Self Control cannot be had
without neutralising the Ego’s power to drive behaviour. The first step in
achieving Self Control, then, is Self Awareness. Self Awareness implies dispassionate
self observation and reflection which - eventually and ideally - leads to a
thorough understanding of one’s self; deep insight into the reasons [cultural,
historical, cosmic, biological and pneumalogical] that drive behaviour. Intelligent
and enlightened self understanding frees us to bring our will into harmony with
the dictates of highest wisdom: LOVE. Freedom, then, real liberty – is the
freedom to respond to the exigencies of life from a place of Love. Bondage,
even servitude to the flesh, comes with indulging in the Devil’s Milk.
Thursday, 16 February 2017
The Path
The fruits of the spirit are the stepping stones that pave the way from time to eternity. You must build your own path.
Wednesday, 15 February 2017
Unfinished Meandering Ramble
Among
my associates in Cyberland there are the few that revel when they see an
atheist giving a believer [I prefer the term Faither] a good kicking. I have
witnessed them yelp in gleeful delight as the revered Soldiers of Scientific
Light strike yet another blow for common sense against the villainous Peddlers
of Darkness - the deluded Minions of Religious Superstition. I’ve refrained
from commenting on this for a long time but, as time passed, it had been
proving more and more difficult to remain silent. Like Jeremiah, I found myself
thinking: ‘The word of the Lord burn’s within me; like a fire shut up in my
bones. I am weary of holding it in. Indeed, I cannot!’ Eventually, I felt
compelled to respond to these malodorous pieces of virtual flotsam and jetsam.
I
was discussing this subject recently with a colleague at work and he related
how a brother of his felt his faith was shaken following an exchange between
some Celebrity Atheist and a well respected New Age Guru [it may well have been
this exchange here].
My friend is spiritually accomplished and, to his credit, was able to allay his
brother’s concerns. This got me thinking about how often this thunder among the gods [public debates
between the luminaries of science and religion] sometimes strikes fear in the
heart of the meek and compelled by the urge to offer comfort, reassurance, and
guidance to the faithful I wrote a piece. You can read it here.
This
article drew the interest of many. Some were thrilled, some not-so-thrilled.
Questions were asked about how I approach debates/exchanges/conversations with those
that contend for the merits of atheistic beliefs and out of these questions
came a request that I collate my responses into a coherent whole for the
benefit of interested parties. So, here we go.
My
approach to friends and associates of an atheistic[1] persuasion is, firstly, to LISTEN CAREFULLY to their assertions.
I would usually follow this by acknowledging the nonsensical nature of the
concept of God that they are examining, offer general agreement with their
position and concede the validity of their claim. If I can, I endeavour to
further illuminate the inadequacies of the concept they put forward but assert
that such concepts do not represent the God of my faith. I invite them to
reflect on the fact that a description
of a flower is not the flower. A description of a dinner is not the same as
eating a dinner. A description of a foreign land cannot be equated with the
experience of living in it. A description of love is not the same as falling in
love, being in love, and staying in love. A description of a person is not that
same as meeting and knowing the person. I contend that the same holds true when
we speak of God; a description of God is not God; that there’s a big
difference between the IDEAS about
God and the personal EXPERIENCE of knowing God.
Generally[i]
[but not always], ideas are to experience what effect is to cause – they are correlated
but they are not the same. Individuals that contend for the atheist
interpretation of the data of existence can only speak about God second hand as
they have never experienced God, they
do not know God, they must therefore rely
on the accounts of others [flawed
though these may be]. They are acquainted with various theories about God but they are not acquainted with the source of these theories. It is easy
dissect a theory but it is impossible contend with an experience. One cannot
know God and argue against His existence. However, without the personal
experience of knowing God every other account, or claim to such knowledge, is mere
hearsay which has not been confirmed by the disputant’s personal experience. An
individual might assert in truth that they have ‘not found God’ but, to be
consistent, they must add ‘YET’, and as anyone that has ever found God knows –
God can be found; however, in this enterprise of finding God there is one
essential without which He cannot be found, the seeker must first sincerely,
and with a whole heart, want to find Him, and that was one
of the key points of my original article. You cannot claim that there is no God
if you have never truly searched for it and you can never find God unless you
search with all your might, in the end your journey will never exceed your
faith.
The
various ideas, conceptions, and notions of God that are to be found among the
world’s religious traditions are known to be erroneous to one degree or another
even by the respective traditions that seek to preserve such concepts. This
teaching is a cornerstone of most of the Abrahamic traditions: that all images
of God are distortions of truth and should be zealously avoided. Every image of
God create by us is, to one degree or another, largely: flawed, false, a
distortion, a misrepresentation, a lie, an error, an illusion, a mistake: an
imperfect material, temporal, and finite construct attempting to reflect the flawless
grandeur and indivisible unity of the Spiritual, Eternal, and Infinite Source
from whence all realities are derived; as the Buddhist teach, such creations
are merely ‘fingers pointing to the Moon’ but they are not the Moon. Such
constructs may be useful but should never be taken too seriously. Our concepts of that which we call God
will be ever improving, evolving, and ever enlarging but never can they be
wholly adequate – only the personal experience of knowing God can gratify the
spiritual needs of the individual.
Individuals
that advocate the Atheistic interpretation of the data of existence often claim
great mileage out of picking apart the flaws in and tearing up images of God
and exult that they’ve killed God. This is an illusion. Tearing up a photograph,
portrait, or description of me cannot destroy me. The representation is NOT the
thing represented. Frankly, it requires no great talent to pick at the flaws in
any man made concept; and when it comes to the objects of religious devotion all
finite concepts eventually collapse under the weight of the infinite. Such
images may be organically linked to their source but they are not the same. The
Creation REFLECTS the mind of the Creator; it is a
revelation of ITS Will, Purpose, and
Technique but it is not the Creator.
The Creation is an EFFECT conditioned
by an antecedent Cause, the Creator [The Primal Source CAUSE]; the Effect is DEPENDENT and CONDITIONED but the Source
is the INDEPENDENT CONDITIONER.
Paul
spoke of our experience of knowing the Divine as ‘perceiving through a glass –
darkly’. He meant that our understanding of the divine is, at best, a terrible
muddle but that our lack of understanding should in no way impede the
expression of our love, devotion, worship, and service. The fact that we
perceive things divine as ‘through a glass – darkly’ should inform the
philosophy of all religious thinkers. Religious thinkers have no right to be
arrogant about things we perceive ‘darkly’ and it is arrogance on the part of religious
thinkers [falsely so-called] that has so irked the intellectual classes that
they have risen up to put such characters in their place and they are right to.
Arrogance is a spiritual poison that is toxic to the soul and fatal to any
religious system it infects. One cannot be both arrogant and sincerely
spiritual – they are mutually exclusive attitudes of being. Arrogance has its
roots in our biology, humility in our pneumatology. The only true attitude of
the sincere religionist is one of Humility. Religion without humility is an
illusion. It is this sinful attitude on the part of many so-called religious that has drawn the ire of our intellectual
brethren and has led them, and the flocks under their influence, to forsake the
treasures of their spiritual heritage and thereby have spawned the great
spiritual tragedy of the post-modern age.
Images
of Deity are useful because they help us envision that which is invisible but it
is the failure to distinguish the materially derived concept from the living
spirit that inspired it that has bedevilled the exchanges between atheistic philosopher-scientists
and philosopher-faithers. When faithers fail to distinguish between the Source
reality re-presented in the image
they are understandably disconcerted when atheists come along and perform a
vivisection on their long cherished, albeit materialistic, notions of God but
the faithful should take comfort in the fact that the creature cannot use the
Creation, or even parts of the Creation, to disprove, much less destroy, the
Creator. Nimble minded so-called atheists may give an impressive display but, in
the end, it is all smoke and mirrors. God is Truth and you cannot use truth to
disprove Truth. Faithers need not fear the rumblings of the men in their White Coats
anymore than they needed to fear the rumblings of the men in their White
Collars; as the Master said: ‘Fear not, believe only.’
It
is the very inadequacy of our conceptualisations that summons our faith; the daring
hope that the beauty, majesty, truth, and love that our spirit reveals to our
souls not only has a substance but is alive, is rooted in a reality that far
exceeds our greatest imagination; that the conceptualisations that we have
envisioned are animated by and have their roots in the very substance of life
and love we call the Spirit, Law, Divinity, God, the Source.
The
indwelling spirit whispers to our souls of truth, beauty, goodness, hope,
majesty, love, mercy, forgiveness, justice, righteousness, perfection; it somehow
communicates to the hungry soul the sublime spiritual assurance that faltering
though our image of the divine may be, dimly though we perceive these glorious
spiritual realities, that there is a substance to them, that the truth behind
these concepts is rooted in a majestic reality that far exceeds our greatest
imagination – even our fondest hope and that we are empowered to make immediate
contact with this reality through faith. This reality has many names according
to race, custom, and culture: Spirit, Law, Divinity, God, the Source, all of
which – one way or another – endeavours to relate a reality of unequalled
intelligence and benevolence, the knowing of whom inspires hope, banishes fear,
and illuminates destiny.
Scientists
have failed to distinguish between the two key realms of Universal Reality.
Broadly stated, we can say that there is the dimension of matter: the
inanimate, non-volitional, passive realities; marked by such things as mass,
speed, direction, the sum of which we call momentum. Then there is the
dimension of Spirit, which is comprised of the animate/animating, volitional,
active/reactive/proactive, and is marked by such things as awareness, insight,
and will – the sum of which we call Life. Between these two there ever intervenes
the dimension of mind but as mind transcends matter I have [for convenience]
categorised it with the realm of spirit.
Atheistic
scientists impute to inanimate and non-volitional realities the attributes of
the animating and volitional. These domains are correlated but they are not the
same. The failure to distinguish between these two fundamental dimensions of
being is at the root of much of the disagreements between science and religion.
Different logic applies to each realm, with realities apparent to reason that
are not apparent to the senses and truths apparent to faith that are not
apparent to reason – each supervening one over the other.
It
is a fundamental law of science that inanimate objects cannot initiate change,
that if a force is applied to an object in a vacuum it will continue to move in
the opposite direction to the applied force until another force acts upon it.
Chairs do not move by themselves. Rocks don’t move by themselves. Guitars do
not play themselves. Tables do not set themselves. Nor do inanimate things
react when they are moved. They are utterly passive and non-reactive. They are
NON-VOLITIONAL. This is a key distinguishing feature of that level of reality
we designate as Matter.
LIFE,
the reality of Living Energy, is a
whole other kettle of fish. Living beings possess inherent powers of locomotion
and move both themselves and other objects according to their own will in
response to stimuli external or internal. Once an intelligent and creative
being is placed in a position of dominance over matter that matter will act in accordance
with the will, intelligence, understanding, and purpose of the Agent of Change.
However, while the behaviour of the vehicle of life may reflect the will,
purpose, and even insight of the dominant being – in and of itself it [the
material life mechanism] does not reveal very much of the essence of the
controlling being[ii]. In a sense, the being
could be likened to the Black Hole: it cannot be observed directly but its
presence can be inferred by how it affects the behaviour of objects within the
range of its gravity. Similarly, the living being cannot be observed in matter
only inferred from its behaviour. We can discern relatively instantly when the
vivifying spark of life departs from the body; without the living being the
body quickly resolves back into its constitutive elements – it returns to the
dust from whence it was hewn. We know what happens the body upon the departure
of the vivifying spark of life but only spiritual revelation and faith can
reveal what happens to the Living Being
that once dwelled in the Temple of the body.
Because
the SOURCE OF LIFE is so much higher than the material effects [from whence its
presence is inferred] it is not quite so easy pin down in a lab. Matter is,
more or less, predictable[iii];
Life less so. The more the living being is governed by its material nature the
more predictable it is; the more it yields to its spiritual nature the more
spontaneous and creative it becomes – progressing towards ever higher logic,
reason, and motives. As the living being matures spiritually it becomes personally
responsive to and driven by progressively higher and higher spiritual values.
Just
as gravity is fundamental in the material universe, so duty/justice is
fundamental in the mind realm, even as love is fundamental to the universe of
spirit. Gravity is both inescapable and indispensible in the organisation of
the material universe, likewise is Justice both inescapable and indispensible
in the organisation of the social/moral universe. No social system can long
endure if injustice prevails: injustice, corruption, inequity, imbalances
complex social systems causing them to collapse into simpler, more stable,
forms, just as prevails in the material order of existence. Without due
consideration of the dynamics and stresses created by gravity, mass, and
density, buildings collapse into more stable forms [piles of rubble]. We can
build with a certain amount of corruption/weakness in the system; we just can’t
build very high – well, we can try but not without catastrophic consequences.
The
indispensible function of social, economic, and political justice is soon to be
impressed upon the planet as the disenfranchisement of the ordinary man has continued
one apace as a result of the shameless foisting upon the world policies that promote
inequality while at the same time seeking to undermine and thwart justice, and
therefore continue to increase uncertainty and instability into a system with
limited capacity therefore.
Terry Pratchett once pointed out that if you have simple tools you could make more sophisticated tools and with sophisticated tools you could do anything. Social systems are very similar. We start out simple and the simple makes more intelligent and effective groupings possible. Each step forward is dependent upon the integrity of the previous step. However, with the evolution of ever more powerful and sophisticated tools eventuates the need for greater individual restraint and necessitates the function of greater and greater wisdom. Power cannot be controlled without wisdom, power without wisdom carries the seeds of its own destructive dissipation and in its vanishing consumes the fool that unwisely sought to control it.
[1]
I understand that there are a lot of subtleties associated with the word
‘Atheist’ so, for the sake of clarity, I will delineate the expression as
meaning: those that do not subscribe to the idea of a personal God and who
believe that religion is, by and large, superstitious hokum.
[i]
All three dimensions of experience are correlated with primacy residing in the
spiritual dimension and descending in order from there through the mind/psychic
realm to the material order of existence. A certain form of feedback loop
operates between these dimensions, e.g.: an idea/information may be
instrumental in effecting a cause, while material momentum is always a factor
in the forward motion of any plan.
[ii] Just as the ‘Creation REFLECTS the mind of the Creator, it
is a revelation of his Will, Purpose, and Technique but it is not the Creator’
so our bodies reflect our minds, will, purpose, and even our level of insight
but our bodies are not these things.
[iii] This scope of this paper
is necessarily restricted, however, the relationship between Cosmic Matter and
Cosmic Mind – that matter is always a substance that is acted upon, or held
[however imperfectly] under the sway of some mind finite or Infinite.
Friday, 3 February 2017
The Great Leveller
I watched a great documentary a few years back called: The Great
Leveller. It was an exploration of Death and Life. It focused on the two most
studied primates in the world: the Baboon and the Civil Servant. It drew fascinating
parallels between the lives of the two: both lived in a hierarchical civil
structure, with a Dominant Alpha at the top. Interestingly, your value in the
food chain extended from the Top - [the highest in perceived value] the Alpha and
his immediate family [the royal court] - on down to the lowly peasant at the
bottom of the food chain [the lowest in perceived value]. The Alpha of the
Baboons was echoed in the Secretary General of the Civil Service but this hierarchical
structure is found throughout our culture – indicating the profound influence
our genetics on our social structures.
In the Baboon clan the Alpha decided who ate. The close bond of family
guaranteed easy access to food but the further out from the royal family you
were the lower your perceived standing in the community and the greater the
difficulty in securing the necessities of life; with some enduring profound
humiliation in order to acquire food.
There was a ceaseless struggle to get further up the ladder, to get
higher up the tree – to establish some
security for oneself.
As part of the study, the Baboon diet consisted in a daily dose of burgers
and fries and so the health of the clan members was regularly checked. Curiously,
while one might expect their poor diet to have adversely impacted health across
the clan this did not turn out to be the case. In fact, health levels were more
accurately correlated with the individual’s position on the social ladder
than could have been corroborated based on diet alone. It was noted that the cell
walls of the Alpha’s heart were the thickest and strongest, with the communities
getting progressively thinner and weaker the further down the social ladder the
individual stood; until we came at last to the bottom of the food chain and the
heart of this poor soul was treacherously weak to the extent that a bad fright
could cost them their lives. Interestingly, these elements were found to be
reflected in the lives of the civil servants; with the rates of heart attacks
and quadruple by-passes significantly higher among the lower clerks than among
the highest levels in management. Among the lower clerks life was a relentless
shit-eating contest; respect was at a minimum while demands were at a maximum –
remarkably similar to the lives of the baboons.
Stress then, it seems, was the deciding factor in good physical [even
mental] health.
Near the end of the study it was noted that there was one baboon that
had escaped the attention of the researchers. This baboon didn’t play the games
the others did; possessed no obvious inclination to climb the ladder; seemed to
socialise for its intrinsic worth and value rather than as a manipulative play
in a game for social advancement and seemed, generally, to just act as a sort
of observer of events. Intrigued, the researchers ordered this individual to be
assessed and, against all odds, it was discovered that the cell walls of the
heart of this baboon were every bit the equal of the Alpha’s – just as strong
and healthy, despite the diet.
What conclusions did they draw from this? That pulling out of the Rat
Race and living a quite life in the country would be better for you than
engaging in this relentless and poisonous game of social advancement; which is
exactly what one civil servant had to do before life in the city killed him.
As I reflected on this over the years, the term Alpha struck my
imagination. I thought about the Almighty being referred to as the Alpha and
Omega and reflected on the significance of the thought that Deity is the Prime
Alpha. The gospel teaches that we are the children of God – the Prime Alpha.
That this Prime Alpha is motivated by profound love; who hears the prayers of
the humble and who declare “before you have asked, behold, I have answered”, “who
knows what you are in need of even before you do.” I thought about the
emotional and spiritual value of internalising the experience of being a child
of the Prime Alpha – of realising that you exist under the loving watch care of
the God of all resources and how this sense of cosmic/spiritual belonging could
impact your health and decisions; how it could free you from the ‘Game’, free
you of the need to engage in the degrading game of jockeying for social
advancement. That you could place all your real needs before your Almighty
Father and rest in confident assurance that they would not go unmet; no more
would you need to humiliate yourself or ‘sell your soul’ to those who wish to ‘push
you down’ just to get by.
I found it intriguing to reflect on the thought that the price of
remaining a child of the Prime Alpha [God] is to live as a child of God, to
bear the fruits of the divine that dwells within us, to manifest our potential
for God-likeness, – that we “Love one
another as I [Jesus] have loved you.”
While Baboons are perfectly obedient to their animal natures, the free
will children of the God of Free Will have a true choice: we can give in to the
inclinations of our material and animalistic nature and abide by the brutal
ethics of the jungle; where cruelty is the norm and pitiless competition the
rule, where Might makes Right, and where the strong are free to prey upon the
weak and the vulnerable; or we can aspire to live as the children of the Prime
Alpha – to live without fear and inspired by love, where kindness is the norm, Brotherhood
the foundation, and co-operation the rule, where Right makes Might, and where strength is wedded to compassion and
tenderness of heart leads us to enfold the vulnerable and weak in our arms that
we might nurture, strengthen, protect, and ennoble them. By so choosing we can make
our animal natures subservient to our spiritual natures and thereby begin the
process of removing the ‘mark of the beast’ from our characters and thus will
the Kin-dom be established on Earth.
I know my choice.