My interest in the ancient Egyptian worldview is that for
them, their gods and goddesses had a quality of being visible in the world and were
embedded in their spirituality through their symbolism. Many of the Egyptian
hieroglyphs were of hawk or crocodile gods or cow goddesses who were believed
to embody the particular form, characteristics and attributes of these animals.
There is a common perception in our present day age to view
myths as simply stories, but an ancient worldview would have perceived them as
being parables and symbols of being able to see the divine as embedded throughout
the natural world. The ancient Egyptians called the divine ‘NTR’ and the
ancient Greeks may have picked up on that usage in their word for ‘nature’.
Meister Eckhart, a 13th century Christian mystic
wrote:
“Apprehend God in
all things, for God is in all things. Every single creature is full of God and
a book about God. Every creature is a word of God. If I spent enough time with
the tiniest creature – even a caterpillar- I would never have to prepare a
sermon. So full of God is every creature.”
I am contemplating the shifts of thinking and spiritual
practice that has emerged throughout our cultures, particularly those which
have had an effect of diminishing the perception of the divine as being present in
the natural world. It could appear to an observer as if the divine was present
and then it wasn’t – so where did the divine go, what consequence did that have
and who or what stepped in as its intermediaries or replacements?
In this respect, it
can be helpful to navigate through the twists and turns of the differing religious
and spiritual philosophies to offer insight.
There is ‘animism’,
a view that all creatures, places, objects such as rocks, the weather and even
words are alive and possess a distinct spiritual essence.
Or ‘polytheism’, a
belief in and worship of multiple deities along with their own associated
rituals. These gods and goddesses are representations of forces of nature or
ancestral principles and can be viewed as either autonomous or as aspects or
emanations of a creator god which manifests immanently in nature.
There is ‘monotheism’
which is the belief in the existence of only one god that created the world, which
is all powerful and intervenes in the world.
Then along comes the 17th
century philosopher Baruch Spinoza, whose book ‘Ethics’ was an answer to
Descartes’ famous dualist theory that the body and spirit are separate. Spinoza formed
the concept of ‘pantheism’ as a view that everything is part of an
all-encompassing and immanent god and that all forms of reality may be
considered either modes of that being or identical with it.
'Panentheism’ was coined by the 19th century philosopher Karl Krause to
distinguish between the ideas of Hegel and Schelling about the relation of god
and the cosmos from the supposed pantheism of Spinoza. Panentheism being an idea
that the divine pervades and interpenetrates every part of the universe and
also extends beyond time and space.
Depending on the
extent to which one identifies with any one of these philosophies or spiritual
practices, what are the implications in terms of behaviour – how does our view
of the world and of who we are offer us a sense of purpose, meaning and shape
our relationships with one another, particularly those of a differing
philosophical, religious or spiritual belief and practice?
One of the ways
which comes to mind is that it invokes a sense of competitiveness of whose
logos or accounting of creation is demonstrably more valid than another. Words
of ancient scripts and texts become fiercely guarded and fought over, as if in
a spirit of animism, it is the words themselves which are alive with a
spiritual essence. There is a similarity of relationship but a difference of how the
logos or word of god is being perceived.
For instance, the ancient
Egyptians in the Land of Khem, communicating through their practice and language of
hieroglyphs conveyed an intentionality of manifestation through the medium of
sound and being. This had to do with an understanding of the divine being
immanent.
A religious or
spiritual world view which identifies with being a guardian of any ancient
relics, land or texts is perceiving not so much that the divine is immanent but
that certain protocols have to be implemented, i.e. a pathway prepared, before
the divine will return.
Difference in perception or world view can create a sense of dischord and
dissatisfaction at the same time as it can present a path for being able to
perceive and experience unity in the world. An opening of being able to observe
this paradox is in accordance with a level of willingness of an individual to discover
the nature of what they are (which is not the same as an indigenous or cultural
identity or of any practice).
This 'knowing' is
picked up on in the tale of an old Hindu legend…
…. There was once
a time when all human beings were gods, but they so abused their divinity that
Brahma, the chief god, decided to take it away from them and hide it where it
could never be found.Where to hide
their divinity was the question. So Brahma called a council of the gods to help
him decide. “Let’s bury it deep in the earth” said the gods. But Brahma
answered, “No, that will not do because humans will dig into the earth and find
it”. Then the gods said, “Let’s sink it in the deepest ocean”. But Brahma said,
“No, not there, for they will learn to dive into the ocean and will find it”.
Then the gods said, “What about the highest mountain top, out in the farthest
corner of the earth?” But again Brahma replied, “No, that will not do either,
because they will eventually climb every mountain and search every cave and
once again find and take up their divinity”. The gods gave up and said, “We do
not know where to hide it, because it seems that there is no place on earth or
in the sea that human beings will not eventually reach”.Brahma was quiet
for a time. He thought long and deep. Finally, he looked up at the rest of the
gods, a knowing twinkle in his eye. “Here is what we shall do. We will hide
their divinity deep in the centre of their own being, for humans will never
think to look for it there”. All the gods agreed that this was the perfect
hiding place and the deed was done. And since that time humans have been going
up and down the earth, digging, diving, climbing and exploring – searching for
something that is already within themselves.Author unknown
There are some
passages contained in the Gospel of Thomas which are sharing a similar
message:
3. Jesus said, "If your leaders say to
you, 'Look, the (Father's) kingdom is in the sky,' then the birds of the sky
will precede you. If they say to you, 'It is in the sea,' then the fish will
precede you.
Rather, the (Father's) kingdom is within you and it is outside
you.”
18. The disciples said to Jesus, "Tell
us, how will our end come?"
Jesus said, "Have you found the
beginning, then, that you are looking for the end?
You see, the end will be
where the beginning is.
Then to refer back to
the poem by T S Eliot which I closed yesterday’s blog with, it contains
these lines which stand out in particular for me:
“Through
the unknown, unremembered gate
When the last of earth left to discover
Is that which was the beginning;
Through
the unknown, unremembered gate
When
the last of earth left to discover
Is
that which was the beginning;”
All of these messages are conveying a similar theme
for me, in that they are suggesting that whilst any messages or words that are being
conveyed in an outer world can offer differing interpretations of reality ~ any
wisdom that they are speaking of is not something that can be learnt but has to
be experienced viscerally through a willingness to open the mind into receiving
and this takes place in an atmosphere of stillness.
There can be a negative association with any
concept of surrender, which has arisen out of an experience of mistaken ideas
about an authentic embodiment of power. Receiving is different from obedience
and for that matter, supplication, as there is already a filter in that stance.
Remember what I shared yesterday, in that the mind resists seeing its own
reflection and is unwilling to perceive its own nature?
The birthing pains of awakening into a new reality
would seem to be that of cognitive dissonance; of being capable of holding two
seemingly conflicting truths at the same time and of allowing them to dialogue
in order for new information to emerge. There has to be the willingness to release the mental patterning of either/or before being able to embrace both/and, just as a scientific world view has had to shift from its understanding of particle or
wave and into a quantum world of both.
Certainly, quantum mechanics is revealing much with regards to
the nature of reality and it would seem that we are going to need to devise a language
that is capable of describing it experientially and that does not collapse
through the weight of its limitation. Mathematics alone is not sufficient
because whilst it can offer a glimpse, it does not readily translate into
action. We have been exploring reality from a perspective of individuations and
are going to find it necessary to master the complexities of relationship as
are being revealed through nonlocality and of a collective in order to know ourselves
as quantum beings.
Niels Bohr’s breakthrough in quantum mechanics has
revealed to us that at the subatomic level and to understand where an electron
is, we have to look at it and to do that, we have to shine a light upon it. But,
to shine a light upon it disturbs where the electron is, meaning that the very
act of observing an object changes its location and creates uncertainty.
Earlier in the blog, I mentioned that I was ‘contemplating the shifts of thinking and spiritual practice which have emerged
throughout our cultures, particularly those which have had an effect of
diminishing the perception of the divine as present in the natural world … It could
appear to an observer as if the divine was present and then it wasn’t…’
In this respect, the differing expressions of our
philosophies and religious practice have all served through their being ‘snapshots’
of how we view ourselves as individuations, organise ourselves and try to
govern our behaviour whilst sensing the presence of an ineffable world which creates
uncertainty. Human beings generally don’t like uncertainty. This is understandable,
given the perception of being one individuation in a world of many and with seemingly
finite resources, shifting environmental patterns, deterioration of the body
and of death.
Stories are a combination of observations, perception
of events and experiences and our imaginings of what could be in a climate of
uncertainty. They are the mind’s endeavours to weave together all the differing
ways in which we are able to see and to experience our own nature. We
experience them emotionally, which is why they are so powerful. Whilst an ineffable quality of a quantum world is being perceived as something ‘larger
than life’ and being adorned with the most powerful attributes that we can
conceive, the stories that we create around that will have power over us
until such time as we are curious enough to explore further and to allow our perception
and its images to transform.
In the early part of the last century, the German
philosopher Martin Heidegger’s work attempted to recover the most fundamental
philosophical question concerning the quality of being-ness and of what it
means for something to be. He said that since the ancient Greeks, philosophy has
ignored that question and has turned towards an analysis of particular beings. He
sought to identify the criteria or conditions by which any specific entity can
show up at all.
With Niels Bohr's work in the quantum world informing us that the very act of observing an object changes its location and creates
uncertainty and Heidegger’s explorations into the nature of being – of consciousness
- as primary to how we can know ourselves at all, it would appear as if humans
are irrevocably encountering a convergence of science and spirituality. Never mind
a ‘Big Bang’ this feels more like an implosion of consciousness – a vortex –
the Einstein Rosen Bridge or the Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen (EPR) Paradox?
"Paradox"
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