Another paper I wrote lately taking further the concept of "Demystify-Remystify". Based on a chapter on mysticism in a book I was reading for my masters program in transformational psychology, this paper explores the concept of demystifying reality in overcoming spiritualism with a scientific (materialist) approach, and overcoming materialism with openness toward the mystic experience. Enjoy!
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable
from magic." - Arthur C Clarke
What is mystical experience? It is
typically defined as an experience having a spiritual significance that
transcends human understanding and inspiring a sense of spiritual mystery, awe,
and fascination. It is further defined as having a spiritual reality or import
not apparent to the intelligence or senses. A key component is that it is relating
to, or stemming from direct communion with ultimate reality or God. Oftentimes,
it is also considered enigmatic, obscure, unintelligible or cryptic, which in
part might be a result of its association with mystic rites or practices.
“Mysticism reaches its height in
spiritual experience. It is said that all individual religious experience rises
from mystical planes of consciousness. All the world religions have embodied
this in their teachings and inculcated it in their followers. Christians, Jews,
Hindus, Buddhists and Moslems all have done this.” (Harris, p.46)
All over the world, different
traditions have kept alive the idea of a mystical experience, of a union with
something beyond the ordinary human experience. Each has employed different
methods and techniques to do so. Each has used different metaphors for the path:
Christianity speaks of the Mystic
Way, resulting in “Orison”, union with God: “St.
John of the Cross said that in orison the soul is in a
union of love with God, reached by contemplation in which God pervades the
soul.” (Harris, p.47) “The Mystic way has been defined … as an ‘organic process
of transcendence’, which aims at a direct encounter with the Infinite and a
glorious fruition thereof” (Chaudhuri p.132)
A Persian Sufi philosopher in the
Eleventh Century wrote “that the end of Sufism is total absorption in God” (Harris,
p.49). Similarly the Yogi aims for union with the absolute reality, and the
Buddhist aims for complete loss of identity in the void:
“The Buddhist in meditation first
concentrates on the mind; next, the mind function ceases and unity remains;
then the sense of unity goes and indifference sets in; next, the devotee says
that nothing exists. There are no ideas and no absence of ideas. He goes on
until, in meditation, he comes as close as possible to annihilation, the void,
the silence, immersion in the impersonal Buddhist Absolute. The Hindu finds God
in meditation; the Buddhist finds the void.” (Harris, p.49)
Even though with slight variations,
it appears that the mystical experience is something common to the experience
of mankind. Even more apparent than in the big world religions this can be seen
in the Native American or African religions. Many of these are much more
closely in touch with the source. Their focus on interconnectivity and
ingrained traditions of transcendence clearly indicate their understanding that
beyond individuality there is a whole that unifies beyond this material world.
Natural man seemed more connected
with the source. But as humanity began to discover this material existence more
and more, it began to disconnect further and further from the source.
Most clearly this idea is expressed
in the myth of the fall from paradise: eating from the tree of good and evil
created dualism, and most apparently, the dualism between individual and whole,
God and man. In Christian mythology, the fall from paradise is typically
considered the original sin. It is curious to note that the word sin stems
from sinte, old German for “separation”.
The idea that natural man was more
closely connected to the source, and that future man might return to a state of
union with the source, corresponds to a variety of other models of reality. A
development process such as this also corresponds ideas such as Arthur Young’s
theory of process, Timothy Leary’s ideas on ego development, movements on the
Qabalistic Tree of Life descending into matter and ascending back into spirit, and
also Sri Aurobindo’s observations.
In human development it seems, just
as children leave the womb of the mother, we have further and further gone from
the source and with that further away also from the mystical experience of
oneness toward a state of total duality. Focus on this world led to the development
of science and ultimately scientificism – ignoring fully any spiritual force
beyond the apparent base materialism of Newton’s
physics. Modernist science is based on debunking the mystical experience. Since
Descartes liberated science and created dualism of body and soul, focus of
Western science has many times been to explain away rather than understand
mystical phenomena (fortunately, over the last century science has discovered
the model of Quantum physics, which has reconnected it to the source in many
ways indicating an integration in the field of science).
On the other hand, spiritualism
developed upholding the mystical experience as the only desirable reality, oftentimes
shunning material existence altogether. Methods to achieve union with the
divine or absolute were often based on asceticism, denial, and (at least
metaphorically) self-flagellation: “To use the language of the Christian
mystics, the ‘ecstasy of deprivation’ issues in the ‘Orison of Union’ or the
glory of ‘Deification’.” (Chaudhuri p.134) While applying methods to connect to
the divine, a negative attention was placed on the physical existence: “The joy
of the meditation was dampened by the gloom of the theology. Ecstasy of the
spirit was pulled down by castigation of the world. It was as if God were loved
and glorified as the Creator, but not for what he created.” (Harris, p.48)
(Similarly, Buddhism also places at the core of the mystical experience
annihilation of self. Not just unity was the goal of the contemplative state,
but complete loss of identity in the void).
This negative Catholic theology was
one of the reasons Protestantism broke away from the Catholic Church and
“modern” forms of Christianity know little of the mystic state, the “Heaven on
Earth” of the soul. Protestants interpreted “Heaven on Earth” as a command to
be industrious which has given us our modern technological society.
At the same time, mysticism remained
ever present: “Mysticism has the aura of reality. There is no spectrum of life
into which its hues and colors do not reach like the rainbow spans the earth.
The tenor of all human activities reflects its potency and responds to its
veiled touch” (Harris, p.45).
While on the surface mystical
experience in our society is reserved for the appointed and the crazy, mystical
experience as such is alive in each and every one of us even though the
expression thereof might have been pushed to the fringes.
We find it first and foremost in intimately
personal experience. Even the most materialistic person has had at least
moments in childhood when a connection to the absolute was felt and lived.
Those memories might be buried underneath the dust of denial, or they might be
hidden for fear of being considered crazy – especially as unless appointed one
is not supposed to have mystical experiences; it might be deep down, but it is
there at all times: “In everyday life also, the individual has mystical
intimations by which he feels that he sees beneath the surface of events and
circumstances, and looks into the future. People have premonitions or receive
intuitions that compel them to prefer one course of action above another, to do
this and not that, to stay here or go there” (Harris, p.46)
One of the reasons the mystical
experience was removed from each individual and reserved only for the
appointed, was as a mechanism of power. By co-opting the mystical experience,
religious institutions created a layer between God and the people, and could
therefore direct people according to their desires. And, although written on
paper, the separation between church and state never seemed to really exist as
both use the mystical experience for motivation of the masses to this day.
This has been for “good” and “bad”
throughout history. While demagogues such as Hitler abused mysticism to
mass-hypnotize a whole country into atrociousness, other statesmen have used it
to motivate their people toward something higher: “The greatest statesmen of
the race have always been those who, like Lincoln, were able to instill the
overtones of the mystic into their operations, and thus to add to the rightness
of their cause the magic power of poetry” (Harris, p. 45).
“Poetry itself lives and breathes in
the mystical as its proper domain” (Harris, p. 45) – and so do the arts as
such. Born out of rites and rituals, art both at the time of production as also
at the time of consumption allow access to something higher, something beyond
egoic experience. Out of fertility rituals developed Dionysian festivals of
orgiastic communion, out of which later the arts of theatre, and ultimately
poetry developed. The transcendent experience is at the core of art. Goethe once
said that we can’t see God directly. But we can see God in a tree or we can perceive
God through a poem about a tree written by someone who saw God in the tree.
After splitting first into the 7
lively arts, and then into a variety of forms, it seems that today’s art to
some extent is returning to its sources in combining multiple sensory inputs at
the same time addressing all different neurological circuitry the traditional
art forms individually reserved. Modern “raves” sometimes remind of Dionysian
festivities, the locations and structures are interesting and decorated,
adorned with paintings or visual projections; they feature spoken word, objects
and sculptures, costumes and play are important features, and most importantly
the unifying beats of music, and the individual and collective expression
through dance.
Art has immense transformational
power. It is curious to note that many of the great artists who have passed the
test of time and are still appreciated today were connected to esoteric and
sometimes occult traditions, and definitely cherished the mystical experience
as a core element of their work. Uninterested in the clichés of exoteric dogma,
artists often left this side of religion to the common man, and turned to the wisdom
traditions of the world, the Perennial wisdom and the systematic teachings that
exist in all cultural realms, and studied the powerful knowledge of conscious
transformation toward union with the absolute, while using symbols and
archetypes in their works inspiring beholders to this day.
These systematic teachings again can
be found throughout different cultures. In the West, we find Gnosticism,
Alchemy, Qabalah, Theosophy, Magick, Sufism, we find organizations such as
Freemasons, Templars, Rosicrucians, The Golden Dawn, OTO and many others.
In the East, we find a variety of
refined methods such as Zen or Tantra. Although varying in their current forms,
many of the Eastern religions stem from the same roots. Even though they might
slightly differ in their philosophical frameworks, and in the difference
between self-denial in the void or identification with the Godhead, they have
in common the rigorous approach of self-transformation toward a mystical state:
“In Hinduism, the object of meditation if union with God. This system is a
detailed spiritual discipline requiring special exercises, posture, diet,
mental concentration and ethical purity. By these means the devotee, using what
might be called a scientific thoroughness of process, attains ultimate
union with God.” (Harris, p.48)
It is this scientific thoroughness
that distinguishes these systems from the mystical notions of natural man or
even early Christian mysticism. Very similar in their nature, they are based on
different premises: “The Mystic Way thus bears very close resemblance to Yoga
which is the art of attaining living union with the ultimate Reality though a
process of gradual self-transcendence. There is, however, this difference that
Yoga is more psychological and philosophical, whereas Christian mysticism is
more religious and devotional.” (Chaudhuri p. 132)
It does seem appropriate that there
are different paths to this union. In Yoga alone there are a variety of styles
to account for the variety of different personality types. This allowed people
to develop a strong sense of individuality. In light of the concept of
departure and return to the source, this makes perfect sense. Similar to the
separation of art into manifold forms of expression, the mystical process as
such also needed to find all its different forms as the descent into matter
continued to further and further develop the materialistic ego: the bigger this
ego the bigger the vessel for the Divine to flow through.
“Methods for inducing meditation
also vary widely… The important thing, however, is to open yourself to the
Divine Force, so It can descend into you constantly, posses you entirely, and
express Itself in you completely. You will then feel the Divine Force settling
in you, becoming more and more established. It will replace with Itself the
lower motives of the nature which formerly held back your progress.” (Harris, p.
50)
Last century Sri Aurobindo began the
integration of the different styles of yoga and also opened the doors for the
integration with the Western wisdom traditions and modern Western science: “Purnayoga
carries to perfection both the psychological approach and the religious
approach, and gives them a synthetic fusion” (Chaudhuri p. 134)
Today, we have the opportunity to
integrate even further and continue his work. Through continuous globalization,
through the Internet, through interconnected libraries of the world, through a
movement of sharing information, we today have available to us the knowledge
and wisdom of all ages. If we choose to care, we can learn from them and begin
to reintegrate. Through the integration of all the different wisdom traditions and
science of East and West and through maintaining a scientific and thorough
approach rooted in discipline, we can begin to empirically and personally deduct
and experience “universal laws” of existence. Through examining parallels we
can begin to demystify the mechanics of reality and become conscious creators
in this world.
Anchored in our material existence,
we can also begin to communicate with the divine. And while having refined
individuality on the one hand, on the other we have union with the divine.
While being at the bottom of the Tree of Life, we can look up and rise toward
the divine, while allowing the divine to flow down and work through us. The
dual path Sri Aurobindo suggests is also based on the idea of raising the
material toward the spiritual and at the same time pulling down the spiritual
into the material.
The reason for the need for both
lies in different functions. To apprehend this sensual reality we require the
mind, to apprehend the divine, we require the soul: “…we cannot see the Divine
Light through the senses and the mind; but we can discern it through the soul.
“ (Harris, p. 51)
Through connecting with our souls,
our view set on the infinite, we can achieve a new state of humanity. As St
John of the Cross put it: “A single meditation may be sufficient to abolish at
a stroke certain imperfections of which the soul, during its entire life, had
vainly tried to rid itself and to leave it adorned with virtues and
supernatural gifts.” (Harris, p.47)
We can cleanse and purify our
material attachments and rise toward a state of super-humanity as Aurobindo
suggests. Such a state of union with the divine while fully exploring our
individuality within this material reality would be marked by utter delight, as
so many of the world’s traditions describe in their own beautiful metaphors. “The
Baal-Shem-Tov found joy and holiness in all things and God everywhere. Rise
early in the morning, he said, and seize joy with might, for you are sanctified
and a new man, and like God, create the world in your own image.” (Harris, p.50)
It is through this delight that we
remystify the experience of life itself and experience its magic. Through eating from the Tree of Life,
we shall reenter paradise, this time, though, not as natural man, but as
conscious co-creators in the image and in loving union with God.
Haridas Chaudhuri, Sri Auribindo:
Prophet of the Life Divine, Cultural Integration Fellowship, American Edition,
1973
Obadiah Harris, The New
Consciousness, The Philosophical Research Society, 2004 |