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Jesus and the Kingdom of God

In a way that seems to go beyond the requirements of any other of the world's religious faiths, Christianity stakes its truth-claims on certain historical events – particularly the life, death and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth. As the event of God’s most explicit self-communication to human beings, Christianity is about something that happened in world-history, where the person of Jesus is the Christ – the “Logos made flesh”, the embodied story of God in time.

So it is this Jesus, the one who absorbs evil with love, that one whois radically present in the tangible depths of human suffering and death, that we must turn to if we are to speak about God from a Christian perspective.

And when we begin to peel back the layers of literal-mythic Christianity (amber), with the tools of post/modern critical Jesus scholarship (orange science, green hermeneutics) the most uncontested fact today is that Jesus of Nazareth is the one who announced the Kingdom of God (basileia tou theou).
References to “Kingdom of God” are found more than one hundred times in the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke), and so our ability to understand who Jesus is and the origins of his historical mission is intimately linked to his understanding of the Kingdom of God, a Kingdom that is disclosed to us today in the enigmatic twists and turns of his recorded parables.
So with the tool of post/modern critical-historical scholarship, I want to briefly re-construct here what Jesus may have actually meant by the Kingdom of God, in order to isolate the Founder of Christianity from what was Founded in his name (the Church) in the hope of getting a discussion started on what an Integral Christianity might look like…
 
The Parable of the Leaven - Luke 13:20-21 (also see Matthew 13:33, Gospel of Thomas)
 
“What shall I compare the Kingdom of God to? It is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into a large amount[i]of flour until it worked all through the dough.”
 
The parable of the leaven received the highest number of red votes of any parable among the participants of the Jesus Seminar, and is therefore considered (arguably) the most authentic of the sayings that have been attributed to Jesus in the gospels and handed down to us.
 
Leaven is made by taking a piece of bread and storing it in a damp, dark place until mould forms, and in the ancient world leaven was a well-known symbol or metaphor of moral corruption.[ii] So in 1st century Israel there’s an ancient association between leaven (moldy yeast) as “profane” and the un-leavened as “sacred”, e.g. the holy Jewish festival of the Unleavened Bread.
 
In this parable Jesus invokes a deliberate and unexpected reversal of the old standard, whereby leaven – which is held to be corrupt, is really the source of what is sacred. With Good News for those who are considered corrupt/sinful/degenerate by the established structures of power, the shocking reversal of expectation uttered with the simple word “leaven” would have thrown Jesus’ audience utterly off guard.
 
And just as the process of leavening is worked through until everything is corrupted[iii], those relegated to the outside of the Jewish socio-religious code would have been are astonished and overjoyed, while those inside the Temple would have been perplexed and confused, as Jesus overturns and abolishes and the boundary between the sacred and the profane and offends the deeply held religious sensibilities of the status quo.
 
For this itinerant Jew is essentially saying the last thing that people want or expect to hear about the Kingdom of God: it is in the concealment of something small and corrupt that the revelation of the Kingdom becomes manifest.[iv] The parable of the Leaven is typical of many of Jesus’ many pronouncements[v] and it provides a very good indication of precisely what Jesus meant by the Kingdom of God. It is a decidedly “un-kingly” kingdom, one that explodes our assumptions about the very meaning of Kingdom, and one that offers a permanent challenge to our religious and political convictions about precisely who or what is sacred and profane
 
The Parable of the Mustard Seed
Mark 4:30-32 (also see Matthew 13:31-32, Luke 13:18-19, Thomas 20)[vi]
 
30Again he said, "What shall we say the kingdom of God is like, or what parable shall we use to describe it? 31It is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground. 32 Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds of the air can perch in its shade.”[vii]
 
In this parable Jesus again reverses a 1st century symbol for the Kingdom, this time the mighty cedar of Lebanon, which was widely regarded to be a central guiding metaphor for Israel’s messianic hopes. However Jesus “lampoons the whole apocalyptic tradition”[viii] by comparing the Kingdom of God to a mustard seed, which is the smallest of all seeds while finishing with images of ‘trees’ where ‘birds made their home’ in the same breath to conjure up conventional associations with the mighty cedar of Lebanon (in Ezekiel and Daniel).
But it not simply that the mustard plant starts as the smallest of seeds and grows into a large tree for the birds of the air, it’s arresting impact is further witnessed in that the mustard plant is a relatively short lived shrub or tree that tends to take over domestic agricultural areas[ix] and grow out of control precisely where it is not wanted.
As Crossan describes it, the mustard plant is a “pungent shrub with dangerous takeover properties, something you would want in only small and carefully controlled doses - if you could control it”[x] while also attracting birds within these cultivated areas where they are not particularly desired.[xi]
Moreover the mustard plant is a weed, and in ancient Jewish times the planting of mustard seeds in a garden is prohibited by Mosaic Law (Leviticus 19:19).[xii] So the paradoxical shock of Jesus metaphor is not simply that the mustard seed starts small and becomes the largest of all garden plants (which is true enough) but that its bigness is dangerous, deadly and illegal.[xiii]
We can therefore see that Jesus again invokes an arresting reversal of his audience’s background assumptions regarding the Kingdom of God. With a comic inversion of traditional assumptions Jesus pokes fun at the messianic expectations of 1st century Jews by saying that the smallest seed – and that one which grows into the most unruly and undesirable of all plants - is really the new symbol of God’s Kingdom (Empire, Caesar).[xiv]
 
Of course, by the time the New Testament was written (100 AD), Jesus’ early followers had buried and domesticated the radical edges of these and other subversive teachings. But in it’s original context, it now seems that Jesus used the term Kingdom to express his paradoxical wit, to given added intensity to his provocative message, to pop open awareness with a new configuration of reality that discloses to us what the world would look like if God was running the show.... The fact that much of our current language on the Kingdom of God is no longer dissonant or paradoxical only shows us how we have domesticated it over the last few thousand years...
 
As an Integrally informed scholar/practitioner, the most perplexing aspect of the Gospel story for me is that the Kingdom of God is not for the best and brightest, not for those who meet the requirements of second-tear awareness, and not for those with turquoise qualifications and credentials, as Paul said of the early Christian apostles,
 
“Not many were wise according to worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth; but God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong, God chose what is low and despised in the world... to bring to nothing things that are.” (Cor. I:27-28)
 
In his privileging of those without privilege, Jesus of Nazareth was more of a Rebel than a King, and his parabolic discourse consistently challenges and overturns this implied structural network of associations between kingdom, power, sovereignty and God. As one recent Jesus scholar put it:
 
The Kingdom of God was made – 1st, for children, and those who resembled them; 2nd, for the outcasts of the world, victims of that social arrogance which repulses the good but humble man; 3rd for heretics and schismatics, publicans, Samaritans, and Pagans of Tyre and Sidon… The doctrine that the poor… alone shall be saved, that the reign of the poor is approaching – was, therefore, the doctrine of Jesus.”[xv]
 
The point here is that the story of Jesus is still a strange, foolish, awkward and dangerous story when read through an Integral (AQAL) lens... The love of God in the scandal of the Cross defies logic while subverting many of our religious, cultural and philosophical assumptions in ushering in a revolutionary understanding of God. For in Christ God is now fully identified with the god-forsaken - as Chesterton said: from all the religions of the world it is only in Christianity and Jesus’ cry of desolation from the Cross does it look like God, for an instant, became an atheist...
 
So the Gospel of Jesus Christ is a radical paradox – it does not make everything make sense, it disturbs and unsettles and throws everything off balance... So for me (and I would appreciate any comment on this thorny issue) there is this deep tension between the second-tier “elitism” of Integral - an excellence to which everyone is invited, and the undeniable privileging of the outcast, the afflicted, the powerless in the Gospel story of Jesus – who is for me the human face of God…
 
As Paul writes, those who find their righteousness in Christ “glory in their weakness”… where the love of God is freely given in suffering and the Cross – and where the boundless love of God is revealed to us in the form of an executed criminal, a despised and abandoned heretic...
So there is no getting around the fact that Christ shows up not at the top of the socio-cultural pyramid, but on the margins, as the menace at the Temple gates, or as the mustard seed that slip through the crack s of the established order and de-centers all fixed enters of power and privilege with good news for the poor and the permanent possibility of offense for the sanctified who put themselves on the throne of the divine…
 
In contrast to meeting the requirements of an ILP as one who follows the way Jesus, my main form of spiritual practice is to risk letting go of my confidence and eloquence, and to confess not the abundance but the exhaustion of my verbal, intellectual and spiritual resources... I am only really praying when I acknowledge that I do not know how to pray.
 
Cameron


[i] The Greek here is “three satas” which is about 22 liters – a very large amount and enough to feed about 100 people. It also reminds Jesus’ listeners of the story of the angels who give a prophecy concerning Issac’s birth in Genesis 18, among the items Sarah prepares for them is cakes made from “three satas” of flour...
[ii]For more see Bernard Brandon Scott, Hear Then the Parable: A Commentary on the Parables of Jesus (1989)
[iii] Scott 2001, p.27-34
[iv] The leaven is “concealed” krypto (Luke), enkrypto (in Matthew) is a much more negative word for hiding (it means to keep secret) than the more neutral kalypto. The phrase “by a woman” is also an unexpected reversal and a problematic representative of the sacred. Woman as the un-favored gender role in the Roman Empire, subject to fathers and husbands and at a disadvantage when it comes to purity codes, so Jesus’ use of woman as a symbol of the sacred is again arresting and provocative
[v] Funk 1996, p.157
[vi]Thomas has ‘falls on disturbed ground’ which is absolutely right, botanically. Mark has ‘is sown’ which is absolutely wrong... it's a weed... but this fits with Mark's chapter 4 'sowing' theme. Matthew and Luke (who used Mark) also have ‘sown’.
[vii]Only the version of this saying in Thomas refers to the herb as a "plant". Mark 4 refers to is as a "shrub", Matthew 12 as both "shrub" and "tree" and Luke 13 as a "tree". In actual botany, the plant is called SINAPI (Greek) and in this parable it was an annual wild herb that never grew to a size that any Mediterranean person would ever call a tree. (Mahlon Smith CrossTalk - 14 Jun 1998)
[viii]Crossan 1991, p.277
[ix] Funk 1996, p.157
[x] In putting the distinction between insiders and outsiders into question, the mustard seed is “is a startling metaphor, but it would be interpreted quite differently by those, on the one hand, concerned about their fields, their crops, and their harvests, and by those, on the other, for whom fields, crops, and harvest were always the property of others." - John Dominic Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography (1994)
[xi] Crossan 1991 as Roman natural historian Pliny the elder (23-79AD) writes, mustard “with its pungent taste and fiery effect is extremely beneficial for the health. It grows entirely wild… when it has once been sown it is scarcely possible to get the place free of it, as the seed when it falls germinates at once.” Pliny (the Elder) in Natural History 29.54.170 (LOEB), p.170-171 quoted in Scott 2001, p. 37
[xii] Douglas Oakman, “It is hard to escape the conclusion that Jesus deliberately likens the Kingdom of God to a weed.” (1986, p.127 quoted in Crossan 1991, p.278)
[xiii]Crossan 1991, p.278 In further establishing the mustard plants (Brassica Nigra) subversive meaning, it has been likened by Smith to “a colonizing annual that appears in disturbed ground and, often, after sturdier plants appear in a few years, disappears. This might have parabolic implications.” (CrossTalk - 14 Jun 1998)
[xiv] Funk 1996, p.157
[xv]Ernest Renan, The Life of Jesus 1972, p.194-196
 

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"Off balance" = Figure/ground reversal= Flipping to the right brain?

Dear Mark, 

 As I read your comments about the vital role of getting off balance sometimes during the spiritual journey, I kept thinking of what the Gestalt psychology camp called "figure-ground reversal". I believe the awareness of the ground is the realm of a right-brain sort of consciousness (more accurately, a type of consciousness which happens to reside more in the right brain hemisphere).

The right brain studies were in vogue during the late 60s and early 70s, but science, being prone to intellectual fads, seemed to simply avert its attention elsewhere. Now, research psychology was not my specialty. I went onto clinical, applied, forms of the science of the mind (Although, in the case of clinical applications of that "science", it was more like "art" than "science".). Nonetheless, I never encountered studies that refuted the overall validity of the brain hemisphere findings. It was as though there were not enough new ways to talk about it anymore, so experimental psychology moved on. 

Recently I have heard anecdotal evidence of the the validity of those brain hemisphere specialization studies, in the form of folks losing partial left brain functions (to strokes, etc.), only to find a whole new spiritual or creative or dynamic sense of self and life. One researcher out there even has claims of temporarily improving "automatic processing" functions of the minds of his experimental subjects by zapping their left brain hemispheres with some mild electricity, in order to temporarily shut it down or attenuate its functioning, relative to the un-shocked right hemisphere. 

It is as though an unfinished scientific truth is trying to emerge its head again. When in vogue, there was quite a bit of reasoning about the implications of hemisphere specialization to "modes of consciousness", etc. An anthology by Robert Ornstien (sp?) called The Psychology of Human Consciousness, published in the early 70s, has several papers referring either to brain hemisphere studies or to theories based on the findings of those studies. 

Well, I am an old fart who wears his clothes until they are worn out, as long as they function. Likewise, I have never encountered a compelling enough reason to throw out the right vs left brain research implications. They are like a pair of old shoes that I have been wearing long after they went out of scientific style. In fact, lately I have been wearing them more than usual. 

I see similarities in the right brain proficiencies and perception of the "ground" (background) in a "gestalt" (whole picture). The left brain probably excels in attending to the figures of a gestalt, and in "focalized" attention. The right brain is more proficient at depth recognition, at perceiving whole patterns, and at sensing things in a de-focalized, peripheral, sort of way. Its "kingdom" seems to be more of the background emerging into the foreground of consciousness.  As the "non-dominant" brain hemisphere, it even seems at times, to somehow parallel outer non-dominant entities, such as victims, social have-nots, underdogs, etc., in such a way that the voices of these entities are the voices emerging from the background "wilderness" of a collective right brain which has been ignored too much for our own integral good. 

What I (think) I am getting at, is that your statements about unbalance sound like both a figure-ground reversal and a sudden shift from a left brain mode of consciousness to a right brain perspective, similar to the lady who emerged from a stroke to find a more spiritual sense of self and life. I also speculate that the right brain thinks more like energy, or energy fields, than the matter-based logic of the left brain. Of course the healthy goal is integration of both, as well as integration of lower and upper brain functions (Although I think the non-dominant, right brain is more in touch with lower, more "natural" and "automatic", brain functions, so as to somewhat kris-cross the upper/lower dimensions, and that the natural wilderness self actually has a different voice than the neatly civilized and "knowing" self of the left brain).

Don't get me wrong, I dearly love left brain analyzing (as you can tell!). But I also love the poetry of life. I believe that some of Ken's "Marriage of Sense and Soul" (one of his books) is a projection of a sensed need we all have to get the complimentary (left and right brain) modes to integrate. We are all neurologically and spiritually challenged to re-integrate the metaphoric Garden of Eden (intuitive, impressionistic, matching/appositional, right brain consciousness) with the metaphoric Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil (analytic, defining, judging, contrasting/oppositional, left brain) into a third way of neuro/spiritual integration - the Tree of Life. Interesting to note that the symbol psy looks an awe-fully much like a tree, as does the bushy, leaf-cluster, brain atop a tree trunk of a brain stem.

I think we are somehow more or less constantly projecting inner shapes, forms, formats, and conflicts onto the "gestalt" called "life" and "reality". Becoming aware of those shape-form-formats and using them for integration is part of the integral life dream. And I agree with your premise that keeping everything neat and symmetrical (the right brain purportedly handles and craves asymmetry much more than the left, while the left craves symmetry) is often not the "kingdom" or realm we need to pursue in order to achieve that integration, that wholeness, that (higher level of) spirituality.  

                                              Whew, I am worn out now (like the old shoes I am wearing), so I will say good-bye! 

                                                      Darrell

 

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NLP

 A friend of mine is somewhat of an NLP expert. He is even writing a novel using the basic framework (or so he says! All I know is that the story line involves the main character living out an internal sort of psychodrama, similar to what I call "acting through", and Mark, the author, claims he is mindful of helping his character heal by forming new neuropathways as the character lives out his dream/drama.).

Mark has shown and told about some of the NLP techniques and concepts. NLP uses a more complex map than right and left. But if you and I are right, or mostly right, then the left and right sides of the brain account for more of the variance than other dimensions.

In my earlier comment, I forgot about front and back. Luria, a Russian neuropsychologist, mapped out "functional systems" that seemed to lean more to front and back, the front being intentionality and staying on track, on task, and being involved primarily with motor output, whereas the back more devoted to perception, taking in information, or, perhaps Piaget's "accommodation" (as opposed to "assimilation"- making perceived stuff fit into existing "schema"/concepts).

But in comes a fellow named Diekman (in Ornstein's 70s anthology, The Psychology of Human Consciousness) who I think was onto something when he discerned two basic modes that sounded like a western version of Yin and Yang, "action mode" vs. "receptive mode". Although Diekman never ties the receptive mode to the right brain hemisphere, the implication is certainly there when you consider the context of the offering. There are many articles in that book about implications of brain hemisphere studies, and Diekman's paper is titled "Bimodal Consciousness". 

It looks like you and I are in a camp that believes that a lot of neural roads lead to right vs. left brain specialization. We have to be careful not to simply replicate the 60-70s counterculture by idolizing the right brain, receptive (in that mode we can acid trip without acid!). But we are legitimate in feeling it is grossly underutilized in our current action-mode, left-brain, biased culture. Using all the gifts, left-brain and right, is our goal. Unfortunately one of the brain/mind "marriage" partners has been ignored and dominated, almost like a form of domestic violence. A right brain is a terrible thing to waste. 

So what? So, we might be able to promote brain integration and, in turn, "intregal life" by finding mind experiments which give the neglected and abuse marriage partner a voice. I am excited about doing a kind of hybrid of psychotherapy using poetry mixed in with left brain analysis as a kind of brain integration intervention. 

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Tolerance of ambiguity...

In regards to the figure/ground gestalt mention above, I just wanted to post this well-known Face-Vase image... As far as I can tell this image corresponds exactly with the (right-brain)  reversals in perspective that Jesus gives voice to in his Kingdom teachings... and reminds us (as Roger Walsh says) that the tolerance of ambiguity is a good marker of psychological health...

 

 

 

 

Cameron

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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A man spits on the ground...

 on the way to an important meeting. He hopes no one saw him spit. That would be a social fopaw (sp?). He moves on down the sidewalk, quickly approaching the intended destination, 4321 E. Mound. He opens the door, thinking only about what issues he plans to bring up in the meeting, having forgotten entirely about the sensation and perception of spitting on the ground just moments before. 

That would be a normal left brain, conscious mind (and I think "action mode", Diekman) scenario.

Cameron, I liked your implication that the contrasting right-brain mode may be better at shifting from the above figure-dominant scenario to, say, writing a poem about the spit seeming to sizzle as it hits the hot concrete on a very sweltery day, such that the whole world seems swimming in that hot spit, slimmy and oozing with realization that we are here and gone not much longer than the life of a single blob of saliva in the hot summer sun! and then reverse back to the meeting at hand. 

You attributed better shifting to the right brain, and I suspect you are correct. I was only zooming in on the right-brain (shadow "kingdom"? where only the shadow knows the shadow?) as "knowing" the ground/background. Both premises (ground sensitivity, and shift-ability) are, I suspect, on track (that is, if the right brain ever stays on track!).

Below is a "happy accident". As I was looking to see if I had imported an excerpt from Deikman's paper about action mode vs. receptive mode, I ran across a Zen-like poem that is also haiku-like. Come to think of it, the recent IL discussion about up-creation seems to fit this poem as well. Instead of spit, the man in the poem is tossing a soggy cigar onto the ground. This is a totally inconsequential act, as far as the left brain is concerned. But the right brain may "be there" somehow as the cigar hits the ground, and, as you say, it may pull (for a moment, and perhaps later that night as the man dreams) attention away from the neat and normal. But this awareness which is like a Seinfeld episode about nothing, tends to up-create a much greater awareness, in an almost sizzling, smoldering, unfolding sort of way (Way?). From a disgusting bunch of nothings comes an almost eternal now epiphany. 

 

The Time Being

 

 

Walking along a jagged green gray stone fence,

he drew hard on the soggy butt of his cigar.

Smoke drifted across the barrier.

 

Wisteria vines draped tightly over some stones

as if trying to pull the structure down, 

but it stands for the time being. 

 

He labored the last puff.

A smoldering mass

falls freely to the ground.

 

  

 

 

 

 

                                                 © 1999 Darrell Moneyhon

 

 

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The logic of Grace...

Hi Mark,

Thanks for responding to my question here, it's one I've been grappling with for a while now... Basically, I agree with you. Yes, the parables of Jesus are a kind of Non-dual pointing-out instruction for Grace, and KW basically employs the same paradoxical reversals as Jesus in the last chapter of "Eye of Spirit": what looks like the Great Search for Spirit is really the lie of the self-contraction, while what seems to be absent (ever-present Spirit), is really radically present right now: i.e. Spirit not hard to find but impossible to avoid...

So yes the parables of Jesus give voice to what Bob Funk calls the "logic of Grace" and can be used as a kind of Non-dual pointing out instruction, shifting the co-ordinates of presence and absence, and ushering in the profound peace of unconditional Grace...

And yes, the paradoxes of Jesus are only really perplexing or offensive to those who live and move within a world of artificial dualities.... That's why Christ was considered a stumbling-block to the wisdom of the ancient Greeks... The aim here is to reach a certain degree of comfort with paradox, to rejoice in the ambiguity of human experience, to live with the questions, and hope against hope...

But when it comes to the advent of the Kingdom (here on earth as it always already IS in heaven) there is going to be a conflict or tension that cannot be avoided or covered over. When the incarnation of Non-dual awareness in Jesus confronts the "powers and principalities" of this world, there is going to be fireworks... And one of the most central aspects of following the way of Jesus is to stand in that place where the world is in pain and groaning for fulfillment... In this sense, Non-dual awareness (Grace) is precisely that Gift which allows us to navigate the deeper tensions of human existence, to go to with Jesus the dangerous and powerless places, to be the heart of a heartless world, and I don't expect that this process (where suffering + love = transformation) will end any time soon...

Thanks again for your post, I appreciate your perspectives here. Cam

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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The Two Natures (mentioned in The Sacred Heart of Christianity Interview and in...

 My internet (and thinking) journey to this discussion started with Ken's interview of Rollie Stanish, The Sacred Heart of Christianity, in which Rollie shared how he came to find a deeper meaning in Christianity, and how IL helped him along the Way. Then I went to Corey deVos' discussion blog, Sitting on Top of the World, in which he talks about an internal "kingdom of heaven", as we grow into a more non-dual relationship with Christ, one that is focused on integrating our "dual natures" (as spirit and flesh) via "love". Then, I came to Cameron's blog post and discussion about "the Kingdom of Heaven" as not being like the worldly versions of a kingdom, and about Christ's intentional use of iconoclastic parables.

Then Cameron's and Mark's discussion of "grace logic" vs. (Mark's term of...) "tenacity of resolve" seemed to ground me in the reality that I must navigate between the two natures, and that it would be both insincere and self-deceptive to say I am constantly and masterfully self-governed by "the logic of Grace".  I value Ken's distinction between stages and states, but I am not sure we can ever say we are totally rooted in a higher stage, since states of lostness and corrupt consciousness (or "sin"?) can de-evolve us back to a lower stage (even, possibly to the point of forgetting the top of the world where we once were).

Accordingly, it seems wise to keep our mind's eyes open and to not get too comfortable on the mountaintop, or higher stage. I am not talking about a fearful sort of vigilence. That could be the very corrupted consciousness state that could pull us back down a stage or two. But a graceful vigil - relaxed open eyes, neutral mind observations. Like the way eyes move along the contours of the scene of a snow drift (assuming you didn't just get your car stuck in one!).   

Part of the vigil is acceptance of the conflict or "fireworks", as discussed in this thread. Heaven and earth do not always gracefully interact. There are figure and ground reversals that take us backward, as well as forward.That is part of the way we are in this carnal state. Better to accept it than to be constantly discouraged, disappointed, or self-deluded. Still, there is a sense that grace logic and energy/spirit are stronger and will win out in eventual transformation to higher consciousness/being. As with winter solstice, the darkness is mitigated by the fact that the days are beginning to get longer.  

Below is a poem I wrote several years ago. It seems to fit the current insights:

 

The Intersection

 

 

I had a vision of 40 cars and 12 trucks

stopping suddenly, unexpectedly, 

for no apparent reason, 

at a busy intersection.

 

And people got out of their vehicles,

and shook hands, and introduced themselves,

and told life stories and love stories.

Christ was listening.

 

Then tires screeched all around them.

Irate drivers got out and cursed,

and made angry gestures

toward the story tellers.

Fists were shaken at the sky.

Christ was watching.

 

Then the law enforcers came in droves,

and interrupted the stories, 

and read the peaceful people their rights,

and charged them all with endangering others,

and hauled them away in 7 patty wagons.

But Christ forgave them -

each and every one of the officers.

 

 

                                                    ©2003 D. Moneyhon 

 

 

 

 

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Jesus, the Rebel and his Subversive Teachings

Jesus was (is) profound.  And so are you.

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Ungrateful 2nd Tiers and Acknowledgement

The ungrateful second tiers also have the habit to acknowledge you... or call you by your name, when it is to criticize you. Pay attention to that "phenomenon"....

When you praise them (and unintentionally and unfortunately boost their ego), it is very likely they won't call you by the name.   They are "too good" for that.

 

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The Threat of the Second Tier ...

 is not upon the lower tier. The threat is that a lower tier person may lose his or her lower-tier advantage (of the gifts of being humble and more open and fresh at the start of a journey) to advancement to the higher tier.

That does not mean that I ask God to "make me ignorant as a hog". A friend of mine witnessed a holy-roller type service in which one of the congregants actually shouted this out in an ecstatic frenzy.

But it does mean "Watch out, I might get what I ask for (or strive for). If I do "move on up to the big time, to that deluxe apartment in the sky" like the Jeffersons (a sit com from awhile back), will I forsake the freshness and openness of the early part of the journey? Will I "lose that lovin' feelin'? 

This discussion has really helped me see the truth in the "transcend but include" principle that Ken Wilber put out there for us. This discussion helps me put that principle in here, in me. Because who knows, I might suddenly find myself in a deluxe, second tier, apartment in the sky!

The real threat of the Second Tier is that I may transcend and not include the lower levels. The new and improved model may be superior in many respects - but not in all. The threat is to forget the gifts of the lower tier. 

                 Thanks, Dora for your discussion points that helped keep this "thread"within a thread alive.  

                                                                             Darrell                                                           

 

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Your Uncommon Appreciation...

Hello Darrell,

Thank you very much for your appreciacion.  This is what I understand love to be, not theorizations on how 'not' to feel the unpleasant, be silent and still... and all those mind "techniques" to master the ability to be as in-human as possible and sound like an academic authority.

You are absolutely right about the danger of the second tier upon a lower tier.   I would prefer to call, the less aware.  The less aware or informed who seeks spirituality is usually humble and open hearted.   He/she wants to learn, primarily. He is not concerned about being better than the other (yet), but he is likely to get to that place too.   

The one who is "more informed" on the other hand (the second tier) can be deceived by his/her relative superiority. The danger I believe is to make that relative or temporary or circumstancial "superiority" the goal, for instance with the fixation on the idea of enlightenment as opposed to un-enlightenment.  The stage is set for competition, most likely unconscious, but inevitable if that is the place the person is.

The second tier can become an expert in denying his/her own feelings and therefore the feelings of others; he despises vulnerability as if it was a sign of inferiority and lack of awareness when in fact, it is a "lower gift" as you mentioned. A gift of authentic authenticity.  But for the second tier it could be a reason for shame as if we should not be affected by any wordly thing whatsoever. Because if we are affected, if we get upset on something, or hurt, or angry, no matter how momentary or not,  how justified or not...that is supposedly a terrible sign of spiritual weakness, unenlightenment; it means we are not as evolved as we should be if we only had mastered the techniques of silence and stillness, meditation, expectations of nothing, neutrality, and blah, blah.  

And supposedly, that is why one (the lower tier) should terribly need a "teacher" (the second tier). The stage for dependence is set.  And the "student" supposedly will always know less than the teacher, never be as enlightened.  The teacher on the other hand is very driven by comparison with other teachers.  The competition with others of similar level and/or above works as motivation to know more about the "enlightenment business".

Ungratefulness is another characteristic.  "Sucking" as much information as possible from others who could be more aware in certain areas and replying to them with some theorization, or moral lesson, or disapproval for the other's supposed foolishness.  It is the wise "foolishness" that one could achieve if he/she could just let go the need to 'be better than' the other. 

Yes, this is pretty typical. Thank you Darrell, great posts!   Mark was telling me about you and your posts a while ago...

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Instructive, in the best sense

 I loved your "student" vs. "teacher" thing. Yes, in terms of the transactional analysis "school" of thought, the "parent" ego state is activated in the teacher role and the child ego state is hooked/triggered by the student ego state. But I have witnessed profound wisdom from both mentally retarded and schizophrenic individuals during the course of my institutional clinical career.

I have a huge ego in many ways, but I know truth when it is spoken, and I hear if from a "retard" or a student just about as well as from an expert teacher (sometimes better, because of my inner child anti-authority tendencies). Perhaps a simple way to see how we are right now unfolding the Kingdom of God, is that we are reminding ourselves to keep our minds and hearts (a certain deep part of mind, possibly connected to right-brain skills, at least that is what Mark and I have been speculating) open. A closed mind and heart stop growing toward the truly integral life, toward wholeness. 

My family pet, a dog named Happy, is sitting peacefully beside me as I type this on my laptop. He is teaching me loads about peace and love, being with another being. Yet he has not shown the ability to grasp any of the integral life concepts. Nonetheless, he is a valid "teacher".

Hopefully, the below poem is not merely an ego trip (although I do love attention), but it is a simple, humble, by no means one of my "elite" poems, that seems to match a sentiment you expressed in the above or other comments during this discussion thread. I wrote it years ago, yet it never seemed truer than it does now, in this context:

 

 

Ode to Elitism

 

 

How many gifts have been tossed?

How many souls have been lost?

How can we count the costs

to the family?

 

Who was tossed to the side?

Who wasn’t heard when he cried?

Who had a dream denied?

you, me

 

 

 

© 1990 Darrell Moneyhon

 

 

 

 

 

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Happy needs no concepts...

Dear Darrell,

Very nice poem on elitism.  Yes, I can tell you get the idea very very well. I was raised in upper middle class in Sao Paulo, went to college and had more opportunities than the vast majority of the population.  Still, since I was a child I loved to spend time with simple people.  I loved to chat with the maids, laugh with them, listen to their stories. I am glad my parents did not object, at least on that...

As to your dog, Happy, I just think that animals are a lot more integral than humans.  They don't need any concepts.  They live the present, the moment. I have two cats and they are to me more pure than any humans I know.  I am not sure why but I do sense that they are noble souls. I "worship" them in a way that (at least today) I can not worship any human being. Wonderful loving creatures they are!  Picasso said that cats are pure love.  I could not agree more.

Have a good night!

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Happy Pajamas, Are Poems also a Pet?

Dear Dora,

  I thought you might like a poem I wrote about Happy "talking" about love. Poetry is also like a loving pet to me, as it is a blend of civilized, conscious (left brain?) and natural, semi-conscious and subconscious (right brain?) modes. The integral mind, the mind set on wholeness, seeks out and cherishes good interfaces such as pets and poems.

But a non-dual warmth flows through the interfaces, making them more than merely linkage "devices". Maybe "guide" or "messenger" or "angel" are more appropriate words for the function that pets provide, while they are doing the job of linking us back to the natural self which tends to get lost in this somewhat artificial civilized world.

Nonetheless, I think the job needs to be done. And if the subjective quality of love helps get the job done, then it is both friend and co-worker. I believe we cannot ignore the shadow of artificiality which is transmitted via "civil-ization. I further believe that artificial aspect of civilization is the result of forced, coerced, or over-done assimilation, resulting in what Ken Wilber calls a "pathological" hierarchy, or holarchy.

Pets help us heal from the pathological aspect of being civilized. They help us connect with an aspect of our own authenticity, with our naturalness. I would like to think that poetry does a similar thing. Funny how civilization tried to diminish the natural as being "base" or "animalistic" or "crude". Yet now, with global warming and post modern alienation, we are faced with the necessity to appreciate the nature both outside and in. I believe this to be part of the evolution toward transrational intelligence, and the Tree of Life.  

The below poem seems to blend the love of pets and the love of poetry, seeing both as "angels" which help us integrate the natural garden within (spirit) and around us (Mother Earth) with the Tree of Knowledge (and judgmentalness) that civilization cultivated both around and within us. Pets and poems play a role in "greening the mind" as we evolve toward the Tree of (dynamic and sustainable)  Life. Pets and poems may also assist in "greening the culture", something we must do if we are to survive and prosper as a species.  

 

Happy Pajamas

 

 

I love the fact that my dog “Happy” 

takes comfort in the cloth that comforts me,

my warm flannel pajamas

and toasty thick socks

heaped in the hallway

just outside the bathroom.

 

Happy loves to rest on those clothes

at the close of night

as I prepare for a fresh day,

washing off my overnight scent.

 

He delights in sniffing the smell of me

on my hollowed out form curled up on itself.

That pile is hallowed ground for him. 

He curls up on it and drifts to sleep

while I shower. 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2005 Darrell Moneyhon

 

 

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Thanks Darrell

Thanks Darrell,  beautiful post, beautiful poem.

What you say about pets is so very true.  They play a major role in our emotional stability.  They can comfort us in such a profound way that allow us to get back to our simple "human roots" and leave a world of alienation... of madness, behind. All we need to do is simply interact with them when they invite us or when we invite them. It is magical. Talk about great healers, no? Those are the ones. 

And the poem says everything about their love for us.  I LOVE when I see my cats on top of our clothes.  They could be elsewhere but they are not...the smell of moma and papa seems so comforting for them.   :)  And you know what, one of my cats loves to lay his head on my stomach when I am sleeping. He has a heart murmur and sometimes his heart beats are too fast and irregular; I can feel it just by touching him in certain areas.  He gets agitated. So it seems like the movement of my breathing calms him right away and his heart beats go back to normal. It is amazing to observe.  Now more than ever I see that our relationship with pets is more about mutual support than a one way street.  Besides, we feed them, give them  heat and comfort, take them to the vet...they are smart enough to sense how much they are cared for.

Happy Holidays!  Enjoy the snow...we have about 14 inches snow here in Portland. I heard last time it was this bad was about 40 years ago.  I am stuck at home...which I like very much.   :)

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The Kingdom of God and the Commune-ity in Communication

 Dear Cameron, 

  I cherished this post. Yes, it speaks of the wisdom of the beginning of a journey, when the mind is not yet highly differentiated, but strongly senses the gist of truth. I have elsewhere likened this early, humbled, stage with the Holy Ghost. Spirituality appears ego-dystonic (outside of self) because the self has not yet assimilated the spiritual principles and ways. But there is a certain freshness that comes with this early part of the journey. To lose that freshness would be like losing our inner child. To transcend but include it is to keep the word living/alive, vital. 

The midpoint of the spiritual journey may match the Son, still aware of the creative source of living life fully, but also "manifest" in the world (assimilated into the language of worldly logic and life). To have faith, one must be incarnate in the level/world/program in which he or she is inserted - bringing higher consciousness of the vertical, spiritual, mind to the horizontal mind of whatever level he or she is participating. God is any worthwhile gathering of wholeness from beyond the pale of the horizontal reality in which we are participating. Christ is an intercessor to that vertical mind which can help us be transformed back toward the wholeness of a natural garden, Eden, but now lifting the details of the horizontal plane into a higher differentiated whole than the undifferentiated whole of Eden.

The Father is the full maturity of the spiritual journey. As persons still growing, the father appears beyond - something higher to be followed or to aspire to. But this is only when we identify with the horizontal mind on the limited plane on which we appear to be existing. The vertical mind at least senses what Stephen Covey calls "the end in mind". It flies lightly beyond the box of the horizontal reality and already claims its membership in non-dual Mind, or Spirit. The Father is the creative potential toward which we strive.

But in striving, the horizontal mind is quite capable of contaminating whole-mind with part-mind. When part-mind gets in front of (given too much priority) whole-mind capacity and whole-mind activity/application, then there is a mental and spiritual dis-order that results in corrupting the connection between the vertical, spiritual, mind and the horizontal, worldly, mind. 

Even the noblest striving for spiritual growth can allow part-mind, horizontal, thoughts to get in the way of wholeness. Falling back into grace, into the Holy Spirit, into the Garden, can help us correct the dis-order. Like relapse prevention, the sooner the dis-order is caught, the easier to correct the spiritual distortion. Spiritual elitism is corrected/healed by returning to the beginning of the spiritual journey, in order to advance toward true spiritual Fatherhood.  

Thanks for the theological meanings in your post which points to the wisdom of the early phase of the spiritual journey. As we grow spiritually, the honeymoon may be over, but its love can remain, and can be renewed with an occasional revisiting of the honeymoon.             Darrell

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A Spiritual Principle of Appreciation

Dear Mark, 

One of the "imaginary" principles in the fictional/philosophical book is the Spiritual Principle of Appreciation. I will practice what I preached in the book, by thanking you for your encouraging words, and by "appreciating"(amplifying) the energy of your nurturing energy. As I can tell you know, it gets awfully lonely out here in "thin veil" land!   

I can't wait to hear about your spiritual/mystical experiences. I'll read your autobio (profile) as soon as I can. 

                                                                                          Yours Searchingly and Sensingly,

                                                                                                                                   Darrell

                                          

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Principle Center?

 Back to the left brain again, what did you mean by: The last phase while uniquely different from your "imaginary" principles of your fictional/philosophical book, are one and the same...?

I am curious. Something like Covey's "Principle Center" (as opposed to enemy centered, money centered, church centered, self centered, power centered, etc.)?  Are there "principles" that live somewhere between our outer shell and our innermost core of energy/spirit? Useful "systems" of thought (I have Bohm's Thought as a System on hold with my library card)? At the door of pure causal body formlessness, these "principles" may exist, like the cherifims (?) at the doors of the Temple. The inner sanctum of the mind/temple is no longer "in doors", but translogical, like a Mobius strip that goes totally out of doors (outdoors) after we go totally inside of the temple's doors. 

I just recently bought the Moody Blues' album In Search of the Lost Chord from itunes. Parts one and two of House of Four Doors culminate in finding oneself outdoors again, "nowhere" (or no place?) "at all". But faith can't run on pure formless out of doors spirit. It needs, among other things, principles to help us interface pure energy within to the coarser, manifested, crusty, matter/flesh without. I find it fascinating that fractal antanae can pull in so many more frequencies than ordinarily configured antenae. See my IL post "Comparison of Ken Wilber's Ideas (from the Integral Approach) and Benoit Mandelbrot's Fractal Geometry

Here is a possible cue as to how the second tier complexity may serve the Tree of Life - some highly integrated state that also includes a highly differentiated field - formlessly formed form. As our minds develop complex fractal-like neuropathways accompanying each and every thought, at some point the complex mess becomes an antenae to the inner core, such that the inner stuff is received by the outer stuff. 

I intuitively knew this long ago. I had an entire "book" on my office wall. It consisted of only two "chapters"; Chapter one (in big print on a single sheet of paper) = "Go there", chapter two (also in big print on a single sheet of paper) = "Reality is an antennae".  I suspect that the right brain, when allowed to interface with the left brain, uses its asymmetrical, synthetic, wizardry to help form a more complex, fractally-organized, left brain, which then can pull in spirit signals. Left brain Darrell (and/or Darrell's left brain), Be ye transformed! 

But the thing is, fractal geometry involves a principle of "self-similarity" (authenticity, if viewed in spiritual terms?) in which the parts are similar to the whole, I suppose like a hologram. If forbidden, inauthentic, fruit comes in via traditional, non-poetic, learning, then the fractal structure may be corrupted by non-self-similarity. The fractal mind must "To thine own self be true". Eve eats the apple everyday when we nibble off of someone else's understanding and insert it without digesting it into our own gift/frequencies. Red can't fruitfully live in blue unless it is truly assimilated into the authentic color of purple. Integration involves a process and the process may be aided by systems such as sound "principles" .  Think of principles as interface mechanisms.

Am I anywhere near what you saw in the fourth phase of your vision? Principles? Or did you mean something else, more between the lines?

                                                              Fun to play in this sandbox with you,

                                                              Darrell 

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That Reminded Me of a Shadow Recovery Dream...

 I once had after going to bed angry (largely repressed anger) at my wife. In the dream a man came up out of the water to attack my wife (she and I were in a boat on the water). I defended her by choking the man. As I was attempting to squeeze the breath and life out of him, I realized that his breathing was synchronized with mine, and realized that he was a part of me, so I let loose and morphed into him until the two were one again.

My repressed anger had split part of me into the shadow realm. I feel very fortunate that awareness of the splitting (and of the potential to re-integrate) somehow crept into the dream state. It taught me to both see my projections as part of myself, and to process my anger better, rather than "stuffing" or repressing it.

Did the lessen take right away? No. But the combination of life lessons over the years since that dream, and the instructive value of the dream itself have very gradually improved my psychological awareness, my "wisdom" (especially about not confusing anger with badness - separating the sin from the sinner so that I can love me whether I am angry or not. Of course the same applies to my assessments about, and feelings toward, others as well. I can be angry at them and love them at the same time, and they can be angry at me and love me at the same time.) The "twins" of life experience and the revelatory dream have also gradually increased my overall capacity for integration/wholeness. In fact, some (not all) of that "thin veil" may be attributable to this personal growth.

Together, the two dreams - yours and mine - seem to suggest that the right brain and its oceanic consciousness, can be a source of creative potential (as suggested by your dream) as well as a repository of unprocessed emotions (as suggested by my dream). In both dreams, the water seems to be a sort of battery. Batteries store things, but they also provide energy.

I have suspected for some time now that we humans have gunked up our subconscious, right-brain, minds so much with shadow fragments that we have blocked much of its creative and healing/integrative capacity, in effect giving the right hemisphere a "bad rap". The unknown side gets blamed for housing demons, and the angels get thrown out in the process, like the baby that gets thrown out with the bath water. 

          Mark,    Thanks for sharing that piece of you, which is somehow also a piece of me - a weird, transrational, realization that somehow increases the peace in me. 

                                                                                    Your Fellow Searcher,  Darrell 

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This discussion links up with one below, about shadows as windows, as...

 See the discussion way below between us (Mark, myself, and Cameron) about "logos made flesh" (Mark) and then my thoughts about reciprocating universes in which our "shadows" become the other side's "teleological opportunity". I will attempt to tie the acronym "TO" in with the "God to"(the Father, the glimpsed end of the spiritual journey) face of Spirit (in contrast to the faces of : "God in" = Holy Spirit, and God With = the Son/Christ) in a third installment of a blog series called "Creation Crossover".  The series begins with this blog:  Poem as a World, the first in a series about "Creation Crossover"

                                                                             Darrell

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Heaven= Something from no-thing?, Worldly= something from something?, Hell=...

Mark, I must have slept on some of the ideas you said several times about reality unfolding from imagination or from some non-distinct inner core. Plus, the idea of God (and us in God's image) as "creator (s)". Also, our stage-of-the-spiritual-journey dialogue.

Out of nowhere (and out of the shadow-soup of our earlier discussion) this hypothesis popped into my head. Not sure whether it will hold up to philosophical/theological scrutiny - but then that never stopped me before!

I had already conceptualized the human being as a flare on/from God's energy mass (like a sun?).

This view sees a continuous unfolding from pure energy within, to matter outside. But the flow may not always be even, getting trapped at times by sin, emotional complexes, addictions, unresolved traumas ("scars"), adjustment disorders (afraid to move onto another life stage), etc. This depthways/sideways view of energy centers (chakras?) is like seeing the human thing/being as a kind of solar flare from the sun-god. As the flare's energy and gases release into a cooler, denser, atmosphere, they become liquified and then crusty, like a crystalized cloud. The lower chakras operate more in the denser atmosphere where energy takes the higher resistance form of matter. In this metaphysical model, Christ is at the flare's mid point, and assists in keeping the transformative flow outward going more evenly, more gracefully. 

 

So, spirituality, as we know it, largely consists of the bridging of the inner pure (or purer) energy core flowing out into material forms of existence (existence means "to stand out").  Our only way to define/grasp that inner core is to admit that it is a formless void of incomprehensible, ineffable, stuff that consists of no thing, and, to us, is nothing.

 

When something comes out of that no-thing or nothing, then we are in union with the source of all being and thingness. But it can only be nothing becoming something. As agency agents who are ego-based, and matter-oriented we cannot understand (not "really") nothing.

 

It is only in that time and space in which something comes from nothing (surprise!) that we can be said to be of God. All other times and spaces, we are from God or toward God, but not of God - not in God's spiritual domain, often called "heaven". Virtually everything that comes from nothing is potentially good. It may be used later for bad (as a something working upon something else, or something coming from something else) but at the beginning of existence's journey, it is holy, pure, of God and in God's Kingdom. 

 

I think this is the same as that first principle the fictional citizens of Allsberg are using - the spiritual principle of whole-to-part. Why the same? Because a whole-mind state is a whole greater that the sum of its parts. It is no-thing. It is it-all, and/yet no-thing. And perhaps the only way to get to wholeness is to "lie (as in laying down), in" (yes, even when wide awake) and momentarily cease to exist, cease to stand out. But don't worry, we can't be here and stay there. Instead, the submission to the unknown innermost realm of lying in can only create something - from nothing. It cannot stay nothing, any more than an ink drop can refuse to spread out in a glass of water.

 

Hell is when, out of too much attachment to part mind - to something - there is not enough God-creative energy to create more, and the thing comes to an end of the road. We are given a gift, and far too often we get nothing from that something. We waste the gift, even the gift of life itself. Perhaps because we did not acknowledge the source of the something; failed to acknowledge the no-thing from which the something came. We "operated from part to whole", rather than whole to part.  

 

Potential is forever lost because there is not enough energy in "something". When we try to get creative energy from part-mind or something, where does that lost potential, the lost energy, the entropy or heat loss, go? Back to nothing, from where something can again (and again and again...) be created. I called this the law of anti-bondage in an earlier writing about the laws of spiritual energy. This law corresponded to the principle of lightness and the core virtue (or "characteristic") of simplicity/ease (or, as you said, "letting go"). 

 

The third of three tree stories I shared elsewhere shows how the human mind (mine) can cling too much to its own somethings, and begin to taste the hell of meaninglessness. My brilliant man-made star was no longer from the creator, but from darrell's ego. I was fortunate that it was but a taste of the living dead, rather than a place where some get stuck for a long time (in a living, or seemingly eternal, hell). The law of transformation (corresponding to the principle of appreciation and the core virtue of "gift-hood"/purpose) "saved" me.  Check out the third of the tree stories shared in this link:   A Sacred Heart-Space of Christmas, Experiences Surroundilng the Symbol of the Winter Solstice Tree

 

  You mentioned a "thin veil". Sometimes I think I am blessed to have a sleep disorder (not yet formally diagnosed, but I have plenty of symptoms). One of the symptoms is a kind of mental distractibility as though I fall asleep mentally in the middle of a thought. This can be a bad thing when it gets bad enough to make me confused. But in its milder forms I am frequently waking up in the middle of consciousness. One day on the way to work, I "discovered" my left hand, and grooved on how neat it is to have a second hand to accompany my first. I am not sure, but this felt like I must have just woken up in this world, or just dropped into it. Most people have to take acid to get perceptions like that. My other symptoms are confusion, multiple falling asleep behind the wheel (sometimes even after I turn off onto my home "circle/blvd", and, yes, I have slept past exits, and even once got a speeding ticket in which I was awaken by the flashing lights), and I can go into REM phase very fast while taking power naps (suggestive of disturbed REM sleep at night, so my mind tries to make up for the deficit by going into REM faster).

You mentioned mental illness as a possible gift. Include pathologies such as narcolepsy or sleep apnea. One neuropsychologist even believed that increased brain hemisphere lateralization in males was the result of testosterone suppressing left brain development in embryonic development in boys. This defect allowed the right brain to operate more, and more independently, from the left.

So, we men may have an excuse for not being in touch with our emotions. While we may have leaned on the right brain to help out with math and other tasks, the hemisphere lateralization/independence made the emotionally aware right brain less accessible to the conscious left brain. Men's two hemispheres may not spontaneously cross-communicate as well as female brains. Anyway, it is a good excuse!

The theorist (I forgot his name) even called the resulting increased lateralization that he thought resulted from left brain suppression, the "giftedness of pathology". One of the "horse whisperers" , Martin?, learned to read horses well because he was color blind and could observe wild horses better at dusk when he was in the relative cloak of darkness. Rods (black and white sensors) are less effected by dark than cones (color sensors). Since he had no cones to lean on, he could "see" well in twilight situations. Just as blind folk tend to hear better than us seeing folk. Giftedness of pathology. 

  As you can tell, I am still having fun in this sandbox of wild intellectual speculations. You are one of few who are likely to have any appreciation for such long speculative dissertations. I hope that was, in fact, the case. Oh, and thanks for the plug about my blog. Did you ever share your web site composition ideas with me? If so, it got lost in the dust of the busy holiday season. 

                                                                                                       

                                                                                                                 Darrell   

 

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God is an atheist

 Hi Cameron,

I enjoyed your blog very much. You manage to re-construct the nuggets of truth inherent in the christian religion while maintaining a modern/postmodern framework. I for my part feel that you were also successful in transcending and including the dignity of the postmodern green structure. This is no small thing to do.

I especially like this paragraph:

" For in Christ God is now fully identified with the god-forsaken - as Chesterton said: from all the religions of the world it is only in Christianity and Jesus’ cry of desolation from the Cross does it look like God, for an instant, became an atheist..."

That's absolutely right. This is also consistent with Zizek's writing on the crucifixion: "Only then are we one with god, when s/he is not one with him/herself anymore, when s/he gives him/herself up, and internalizes the radical distance that seperates him/her from us. [...] only when I suffer the infinite pain of the seperation from god, I share an experience with God him/herself (Christ on the cross)." 

You see, I restored my bookshelf :P I'm still trying to catch up with you. I'm a bit short on Derrida, and theology in general, but I'm trying hard. Thank you for inspiration and motivation to carry on.

Christophe

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On Zizek...

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Thanks for all yr posts and comments here Christopher, I just thought I'd mention that there’s a new book out soon called “The Monstrosity of Christ” co-written by eccentric philosopher Slavoj Zizek and the founder of Radical Orthodoxy – John Milbank, an popular English theologian… I spoke to Milbank recently in Rome and the basic theme of this new publication turns on the question of Paradox and Dialectics – i.e. the nature of the Hegelian developmental synthesis, the “transcend and include” of integral philosophy…

And Zizek, by employing his characteristic reversals and paradoxes argues that he (the atheist) is really the orthodox Christian, while Milbank (the orthodox Christian) is really a pagan philosopher who obfuscates the revolutionary core of Christianity – I for one can’t wait to have a read… Cam

 

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Horizontal Enlightenment and The Wimp Business

Dear Christophe, I suspect that your "inner library" is more powerful than the outer one. 

It is great that you are from an European country and can see beyond the "behave well & feel good" mentality while one ironically dictates the rules for others out there through self-serving "compassion".

The problem that I personally see with the "outer library" is that it could be impregnated with fearful-feel-good-books.

There is a lot of stuff published about what has been called (here) "horizontal enlightenment" and of course, the wimp business that comes with it. 

A lot of theorization and very little action. Elite thinking, in other words...  It is not any wonder the word 'activism' is so unpopular in elite environments.

If you notice, the people who 'want' the FACTS more than anything else are the ones eager for social transformation.

There is NO "vertical enlightenment" without social transformation.

I agree though, please don't take me wrong...  certain writings are precious ...and Cameron's in my view are prime.

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Social Spirituality, Splinter Power!

 Hi Dora,  

   Upon re-reading your above comment, it seemed to fit in well to an emerging theme throughout this overall blog discussion -  that spirituality may involve getting our hands dirty and feet muddy in trying to make the world an (actual) better place to live. Are we neo-Zionists? Not the narrowly defined God's chosen-people making Heaven on Earth, but the wider, integral, God-choosing people who are co-creating a transformative spirituality into the world's culture and social structure? 

This theme re-emerges strongly later on. The importance of Integral life remaining open to a wide variety of gifts from all quadrants and levels.  Wow! This blog has kind of held on strong. It is as if we really are creating a kingdom of God, at least for awhile in an internet "world". 

  Are we sub or pre integral folk still struggling to fit in with the more scholarly, or polished, or accomplished, integral life organization players? Are we contributing to the integral game from the bench? Way down deep in the thread? Hey coach, let me in the game! I'll play the role of the psychotic-like player, Dennis Rodman. Put me in, and I'll shake things up a bit. OK, coach? Oh, or are we saying we are the coach of this integral game? Splinter power. From a splinter group, and we're getting splinters off the bench! 

                                                                           Darrell

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Are we trying to reclaim our own projections?

 Dear Christophe, The way you said what you said -somewhere, somehow in the content of the comment - helped my mind glimpse a possible (postmodern-like) truth, that we are dealing with a lot of mental projections as we speak of God and God's kingdom. I have to piss right now. That is real, not much in the way of a projection. But even it involves a "project", as well as a "projectile" stream. I must mentally project myself out of this chair, as a fellow peeing. We are all in this boat, on this earthly plane. The limitation of being a "human being" is that I must be a "human peeing"! Disequilibrium of the mind. Fractured from my state of equilibrium as I develop and share my (sometimes bizzare) thoughts with you. Broken in a broken, highly relativistic, post modern world. But I go on an piss when I need to. And I meet myself at the mental projection of a "man needing to pee", or "a man peeing".

Below is a bizzare (but I believe profound) poem of the person projecting finding themselves in (actually, by, because of, from) the projected dream of successfully hunting a deer. The poem suggests that the human mind has a means to reclaim its own projections. Gestalt therapy does this routinely. Seeing self in the projection and then applying the insights to self. As one practices this projection reclamation, the distance between projector and the projected image, or the "project"(all we have to do is pronounce the word Project as we would a verb, "to project"), seems shorter and shorter and less and less "real". I believe the mind can look back at itself through its own projections. 

Perhaps we are not talking at all about any discernible thing or being called God. We are talking about our own minds projected out onto a form that we sense can help us reclaim our wholeness, humanity, and love. It is the self inside, which was too bright to look at or see. It is the ultimately authentic, Godly, Spirit within. 

Our words here are but little mirrors that are partially reflecting that inner "truth", yet always partially distorting it (that awareness of distortion or relativity is a valid post modern contribution to the truth). 

I am not sure anything I am saying here makes much sense. I am not necessarily trying to make sense. I am trying to speak from a space somewhere between the projector and the projection. Poetry may be a better device to engage in such a "process" of reclaiming, or transcending, the outer projected mind. He is a poem about that (I think!):

Being Found by Yourself (letting a poem be a deer)

 

I heard this story. I

identified with

it. It

haunted me, hunted me, 

camouflaged as a story. 

But it was a wholesome hunter,

a kind of holy ghost hunter

whose weapon of choice

is a cross

bow strung with the specter

of the unknown, yet committed to 

this, this 

whatever

it is. It is 

a matter of hunting from a blind

for something beyond.

 

There is a story, 

if that is all

you let it be. 

It can be more

if you seek something

more, more

or less let it seek you.

 

This is behind the scenes stuff.

It is not the stuff of poetry. 

It is step-by-step preparation,

like buckling up a boot,

like setting up a blind,

and sitting up there, waiting

until the story finally comes around,

out of the wild. 

 

On the first day of deer season, 

a young man headed 

to a Pennsylvania convenient mart 

early in the morning, at

four something, for something

to eat through the day

while he watched for deer. 

 

 

 

On the way to the store

(one of those all night and all day

gas station stores), driving his vehicle

(I never heard what kind. Was it an Impala? 

More likely a Cherokee 

or an F-150, or an S-10; no matter,

it was the vehicle he chose, 

on the path he chose.), a big buck

appeared out of nowhere

and crashed through the windshield

before the young man 

had a chance

to spot him or aim or count the points.

 

The two of them died on that road,

leaving everyone

wondering which

was the hunter 

and which the hunted? 

 

Irony at times seems gruesome, 

tempting a cruel perception 

of poetic justice, like some Edgar Allen Poe 

poem, in which a young man

full of dreams,

who, due 

to a lust for dreams, 

is impaled

by the very racks he longed for.

This is a very dark version of a very strange story.

 

There is another story

wrapped around the same facts, 

wrapped around the driver,

and run through him, 

having shattered the standard view. 

 

It is a story of grace, of the 

lithe crossing of life

paths, of sections of life

intersecting, 

of the ghostly thing you look forward to,

finding you so brilliantly

that it is as if it is 

the essence, the holy ghost, of yourself

finding you. Wham!

 

In this story, hunter and hunted are not at all

at odds, but in a sacred coming together,

out of doing what they were most called to do,

to be, to see

out from the blind. 

 

In this story, there is no distance

between the young man, his last breath,

and the breathless anticipation of the listener

as he or she hears the story, 

or sees it in the mind, 

out from the blind 

of mere plots plodding along 

without intersecting themes.

 

In this story, you live like Tristen 

lived in Legends of the Fall

committing wholly to your truest path, 

hunted by that holy ghost 

who helps you, as the young man in the story, 

“die a good death”. 

 

 

 

© 2008 Darrell Moneyhon 


Now I must go pee!  
 
                                                                                 Darrell

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Shadow work

Hi Darrell

Shadow work is an integral part of an integral life practice and how often we need to remind ourselves that our shadows contain both those things we dislike about ourselves as well as the potential of what we can become.

 

Possibly the whole idea of the shadow can also be seen in the two parables discussed by Cameron. The mustard seed has within it the potential to grow into a huge shrub and the “profane” leaven has within it the ability to allow dough to rise.  Jesus includes the poor, the outcast, the afflicted and the powerless because he can see their potential when no one else can.

 

Cameron writes, “So the Gospel of Jesus Christ is a radical paradox – it does not make everything make sense, it disturbs and unsettles and throws everything off balance.”

 

Somehow, for me, when considering the concept of reclaiming our own projections, this paradox seems to, at least momentarily, resolve itself.

 

Thanks for the poem.

Linda

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Shadows and Spiritual Machines

Dear Linda, 

 If we see our man-made technical creations as projections, then it is one of the ways the shadow is brought out into the light. Hopefully, we are reclaiming some of that "projection" by using it as a mirror to correspond the deepest truths we can write about, here on a machine-web, using machine-pens, and machine-like habits to use them. But once in awhile an authentic voice of the human soul comes across a laptop screen - out of nowhere, out of the shadows, projected from the projection, back to the writer/projector. Is the writer writing? Or being written by her writing? 

These projecting/projection ideas seem along the lines of the new IL interview about spiritual machines and the creator re-integrating with its creations, and the idea of "up-creating" in which a lesser thing creates a greater thing. But, in a way, doesn't the creative process tend to do that quite often? A bunch of trash or a few worn out words become an expression of great beauty in the form of a statue or poem. The whole was up-created from its lowly parts. Very much like the hunter being found by his own hunted, lowly, deer. By the way, the story was a true story. 

And then where does the beauty exist? Out in the thing created? Or in the eye of its beholders? Making the beholders also a part of the sculpture and poem. Like the Eveready battery bunny, good energy keeps on going and going and going....

 To become lighter and less resistive, so we can let that energy flow seems to be a way (Way?) to bridge the gap between projector and projected, creator and created.  This would seem to involve a shift from action-based mentality to awareness-based mentality. There is a lot of faith in that. 

                                                                       Thanks, Darrell

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Journey to the Center of the Self

 Dear Linda,  You got me thinking (and feeling) about "shadow". When you made your comment, I was in a place of intellectual appreciation of the shadow, but as I thought about responding to your statement, I sensed that I was head heavy and becoming fuzzy at that. This sensed (and uncomfortable, because part of me doesn't like to not know) fuzziness ended up serving me well. I will try to reconstruct the pathway from head to heart which happened to me as a kind of "healing". Turns out, I had developed the same "dis-order" of mind which I had discussed earlier with Mark DeBous (sp?), and whoever else read it. The disorder is getting part-mind ("thoughts", discrete thoughts) in front of whole-mind activity and states. The heaviness and coarseness of the worldly mind had become a cross my spirit had to bear. I had developed too many buzzing mental fragments (like Jungian "complexes" or Allport's "functionally autonomous" behaviors/thoughts) which were making my "computer" start to freeze up. It was time for defragging (which I believe dreams largely are, a kind of natural defragging, the pattern of which we only saw later in civilization in the form of computer defragging - as the shape of the human mind was projected outward). But dreams are not the only defragging means. Meditation, although not "shadow" work, seems to be a catalyst to defragging, reclaiming projections, shadow work, etc.

In the middle of the night (closer to wake-up time), I woke up and decided to, in Jules Verne's words, Travel to the Center of the .... Self. This was partly cued from the remnant thought of: "To become lighter and less resistive, so we can let that energy flow seems to be a way (Way?) to bridge the gap between projector and projected, creator and created.  This would seem to involve a shift from action-based mentality to awareness-based mentality. There is a lot of faith in that." which was in the initial comment I made in response to your comment. Although I was running hot and fuzzy at the time of making that statement, it must have contained what I thought, in a subconscious way, to be a truth worth applying. So, when I woke up, after having defragged enough to have a clearer mind, I guess I did just that; I applied it via meditation.

There were several phases and sub-experiences to the journey, and they are hard to put into words, but one feature which stood out was a sense of becoming like a compressed file of "Darrell", something like the Austin Powers' "mini me"! This mini me moved much easier into the internal zones. There was also several waves of color identification (with indigo) which seemed to assist in the journey. All through the journey, the mind kept reversing back toward normal consciousness, but did less so as I moved toward the center (I also conceptualized this center as "God", not the lording god, but the Source god, or Ground of being). One phenomena which recurred several times was the intense downloading of an electrical-like rush into my non-mini-me body. I thought I would explode a time or two.  There were also moments of astral projection like sensations of hovering and moving about, above the physical self - lightness sensations which I felt to be in, was identifying with. 

But then a funny thing happened on the way to the core. While I was proceeding in an entirely agency, independent, self exploration mode, without any thought of anyone else, I stepped out of the center in a state of intense love for my wife who was sleeping beside me. This turned out to be the third time in my life (to the best of my memory) that I suddenly arrived at pure heart via pure "head". 

This supports my contention that intellectualization has gotten a bad rap. In psychology, intellectualization is seen primarily as an escape or defense mechanism. My instinct to philosophize was tainted by this wrong (although not completely wrong) idea. Later in life I decided to not believe everything I have been told. This freed me to intellectualize away, with a faith that it would be a process that can work toward wholeness and humaness, rather than a mere addiction to anesthetize me from life experiences. 

Thanks for helping me "accidentally" "back into" another round of a mind experiment that suggest that my hunch about intellectual thought is right. It is not forever separated from heart. Much like Ken's Marriage of Sense and Soul, I once again saw how honest philosophizing (letting my little philosophical light shine) can open a door to the heart - perhaps even to the "Sacred Heart of Christianity". 

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Head and Heart

Dear Darrell

Thank you very much for sharing your experience so openly and honestly.  I totally agree that intellectual thought is not “forever separated from heart.”

 Much of what you described seems to tie in with what Robert Perry says later on in this thread in “Thoughts on the Kingdom and Elitism”. He speaks of 'a condition of transformed perception' and  ' a radically transformed perception of others, in which everyone, including "tax collectors and sinners," even the "bad," the "unjust," and "enemies," were seen as precious, infinitely lovable and deserving children of God.'

Are you aware of kundalini awakening.  I am not an expert on the subject but your description – "One phenomena which recurred several times was the intense downloading of an electrical-like rush into my non-mini-me body. I thought I would explode a time or two." reminded me of that.

Your original reply to me has given me much food for thought (head) and I have had distinct feelings of my shadow (heart) throughout the day. Thanks.

 Linda

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Head Heart Integration Again, on different blog

Linda,  I transplanted this head/heart discussion elsewhere, on the general discussion blog about the second installment of Ken and Rollie's  The Sacred Heart of Christianity, Simply Love, post by Corey https://integrallife.com/member/corey-devos/blog/general-discussion-simply-love

Comment = Integrating the Good Old Head with the Good Old Heart

Posted January 6th, 2009 by Darrell Moneyhon in response to Master of Integration  

If you read it, you will find out how the topic picked up many new ideas, like a snowball gaining mass. Of particular interest may be the spiritual energy law section toward the end, in which I tackle the Shadow, in the form of the law of "Projection". I think you may find the analysis of both "negative" and "positive" projection to be consistent with some of the things you said above in this current discussion. I had written the "Laws" years ago, based mostly on an epiphany I had while running, but matching an earlier form of 5 "elements" or characteristics of a healthy community. In an earlier meditative experience I had noted how a sunrise presented spirit-parts of  Earth (horizon), Air (sky), Water (mist), Fire (sun), and Consciousness (I saw my awareness of the sunrise scene as an element in and of itself, a kind of God-consciousness).

My mind has varied the theme of 5 for several years, in the form of core virtues, spiritual principles, spiritual energy "laws", fingers (corresponding to the five fingers on my hand), and in the form of the 5 cosmic "elements" described above.

A funny thing happened on the way to Mystic Land. While I was initially inspired/obsessed with writing about Virtues in The Marketing of Virtue (still only two thirds written some 8-10 years later), I looked up the word virtue in a fairly large/detailed dictionary, only to be blown away by a sub-definition which identified the Virtues as the 5th rank of angels, concerned with formating spiritual stuff into worldly forms - exactly the focus of my book. To this very day, I feel the obsession with the number 5 signifies an actual information source of the 5th rank of angels. If only a myth, it is an especially powerful one for me.  As long as it works, it is a mental projection I will continue to use and to gradually "re-claim". 

Hope you find the rather in-depth discussion at the above link useful. Thanks for your treatment of the topic of the Shadow. As Stephen Covey would say, you have "sharpened my (virtue-creating culture idea) saw". 

 

                                                    Darrell

                     

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Kundalini Experience

Linda, 

I only now noticed the link you included in your comment. When reading about the topic of the kundlini awakening, I was totally interrupted by the same experience, and unexpectedly broke into intense crying.

It was very much like an experience I had from grasping a DVD called Blue Butterfly a spiritual healing movie using the other side (after life) visitations to heal a boy dying of cancer. I was so electrified that I thought a team of medics would have to come get me off of the video rental store's floor. A similar rush happened out west while hearing Native Americans tell of the meanings of their rituals only that time felt like the intense energy lifted me off the ground instead of heavy or tearful.

As regards this current trigger of merely reading about kundalini, I couldn't read anymore, had to stop - way too intense. Will try again later. What kind of "weird science" is going on in this highly rational guy who loves to analyze the hell out of things?!  It lives partway in my Shadow.  

                                                     Darrell

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Re: reclaiming our projections

 Hello Darrell,

hey this is an inspired poem of yours. Great! I also love Edgar Ellen Poe.  I actually prefer poems to statistical data, but I guess both have their time and space. ;-)

I bet there are a million ways to move on from this clearing you opened up. Instead I just want to point you and other possible interested readers to the writings of Slavoj Zizek on the christian religion. I highly recommend them for getting an idea of what a post-conventional interpretation of the christian 'good news' might look like.

The Fragile Absolute: Or, Why is the Christian Legacy Worth Fighting For? (London: Verso 2000)

On Belief  (London: Routledge, 2001)

The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse Core of Christianity (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2003)

 

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Slavoj Zizek

 Dear Christophe, 

  Thanks for the info about the author. I will look those books up.    Darrell

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Edgar Allen Poe-like Shadow Poetry, This one's for you!

Hi Chris, I was looking through my poems in preparation for another reading at a local cafe, when I came across a very dark, but simple, poem which is very Edgar Allen Poe-ish. I remembered you saying that you liked his poetry, so I thought I'd share this poem. Like one of our beer commercials says (Budwieser beer), "This bud's (one's) for you!" It looks the Shadow - its best (our worst) nightmares -  squarely in the face.  Hope you like it.  

                                                                                                   Darrell

 

These Fingers

 

 

 

These fingers held my child with care.

His rosy cheeks I kissed.

I tossed him, playful, in the air.

Then these fingers missed.

 

These fingers, daggers, tools of death,

forsake my deepest needs.

My “pride and joy” took his last breath.

My heart forever bleeds.

 

These fingers, bars I’m looking through,

as I dream that fingers find

a truth to grasp, a deed to do

to finally free this mind.   

 

 

 

 

                                    © 2005 Darrell Moneyhon


 

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More Gore and Gloom

Gift Basket

 

Live as though constantly receiving a gift. 

What do we have here?

A place to rest my head. 

The guillotine blade acts swiftly, 

and a suitable basket has been provided.

 

 

© 2006 Darrell Moneyhon

 

 

 

 

On Earth as it is in Heaven

 

 

A wind is blowing down

and a light is shining

and someone is hiding in the neighborhood.

An agent with a gun is hovering above. 

A culprit with a gun is slinking below.

 

Someone is wakened in the night. 

There is a disturbance of the peace.

Thoughts are running. 

Why such things happen

escapes me. 

 

© 2005 Darrell Moneyhon

 

 

 

 

 

The Basement

 

 

 

Down in the basement:

fragments of time,

dusty, musty stuff,

books never read, 

stairs over there, left

up to me to climb.

 

Down in the basement,

so many things,

Now I know just where the time flies,

down in the basement

where it folds its wings and clings

long after its servant dies. 

 

 

                                               © 2005 Darrell Moneyhon 

 

Dogs in the Dark

 

 

Dogs in the dark prowl in the park,

just beyond my spread.

The dog in my home doesn’t roam;

at night he curls up on my bed.

 

I hear them bark, those dogs in the dark,

and my pet perks up his ears.

He used to moan for his kind, but then, 

he hasn’t done that for years.

 

When I go to sleep, as I sink in the deep, 

images prowl in my head. 

My senses take leave and, I swear, I perceive

a dog howling out from my bed. 

 

© 2005 Darrell Moneyhon 

 

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God is a humanist

 I found this such an interesting post . . . 

having just very recently found myself in the integral world - thrown here from the world of phariseeical Christianity it is nice to find myself coming up and finding air to breathe ;-) . . . at any rate . . . in that world that rails against humanism I have always been one who has said that God was (and is) the original humanist . . . loving man unto the death of Himself . . . 

Laurie

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a (somewhat) dissenting exegesis

Cameron, thank you for initiating this interesting discussion. Actually, there are several major important topics here that I want to discuss: your interpretation of these parables, Christianity’s claim to historicity, what Jesus meant by the Kingdom of God, and what to make of the theology of reversal in Jesus’ teachings and the broader biblical tradition. I will address each of these in separate comments over the next few days if my time and energy permits.

I don’t mean to be antagonistic, but I will begin by pushing back a little on your interpretation of the two parables. I am sympathetic to the larger thrust and concerns of your post, so this is sort of a tangent, but I would like to offer a somewhat different perspective.

As I understand it, leaven is not moldy yeast but just simply yeast, and it was not associated with corruption. Unleavened bread has a special place in Jewish tradition because in their rush to leave Egypt the Hebrews did not have time to let yeasted dough rise. The festival of unleavened bread is a commemoration of that hasty flight. Leavened bread was the form of bread normally eaten. If it where thought unclean, Jews would not have eaten it. Bruce Chilton has suggested that the point of the parable is that righteousness (moral uprightness and spiritual awakening) is contagious. Jewish tradition saw uncleanness or impurity as being contagious and was very concerned with preserving cleanness and restoring cleanness when it was lost through contact with anything unclean. In this parable, Jesus reverses the emphasis in human interaction from preserving purity (preventing a negative by limiting interaction) to spreading goodness (creating a positive through interaction).

As for the mustard seed, it is not a pernicious weed but a garden plant. Leviticus 19:19 does not forbid the planting of mustard. Leviticus 19:19 is a purity law that forbids mixing (not keeping pure) different kinds of crops in the same field, and mustard is not specifically mentioned. The point of the parable is that the kingdom starts as something very small that grows into something very great.

What the two parables have in common is the idea of natural spreading and growth from small to large, which is nicely compatible with an evolutionary, integral perspective. I think it is going too far to understand Jesus to have been saying in these parables that the kingdom would have its origins in the unclean and unruly. That may be true, and there may be other parables that suggest that, but I don’t think he was trying to say that with these specific images.

This in no way diminishes the larger concerns you raise in the post, and I hope address them later.

John

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Law of Abundance?

 Thanks John for your scholarship. Each new point, whether mildly dissenting or not, may help reveal deeper principles. Your assessment did not reverse the iconoclastic elements of the Good News, but first reading of your comment left me thinking about one of the Wayne Dyer's "faces" of "intention", "abundance" (does my memory serve me correctly?). A spiritual principle of abundance does seem to fit the nuances of your particular interpretation (or the interpretations you reference).  

I am a somewhat wild intellectual speculator, always looking for patterns, but lacking some (well, perhaps many!) of the skills of precise scholarship. Being true to form, I will even go on to say that much of the above reminded me of a piece on NOVA about fractal geometry. I went out on a fractal limb and wrote an IL blog on the subject. I don't yet know how to put links in here, so if you are interested in that particular side trip, the blog post is called "Comparison of Ken Wilber's Ideas (from the Integral Approach) and Benoit Mandelbrot's Fractal Geometry".

The way fractals form complex patterns (that actually work, are beautiful and "good", rather than a complex and impure mess) by means of the action of "iteration" and in accordance to "self-similarity" seems to match the idea of a law of abundance. Has the limb I just climbed out on snapped?! Anyway, its an honest attempt to look for patterns in science which might match patterns in religion or theology, in line with the vision Ken showed in The Marriage of Sense and Soul. 

                                                                        Darrell

                                                                     

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Violate to save...

Thanks John, this is precisely the kind of thoughtful and well informed feedback I love to receive. I used to agree with you that both of these parables (the mustard seed and the leaven) are loosely saying that "from small things big things grow" – a nice integral metaphor, but I now I disagree…The central point - i.e. the Kingdom does have its origins in the unclean and unruly, is much more in line with the great majority of Jesus’ recorded teachings…
 
First the mustard seed… Of course, in the myth in which the people of first-century Israel were living, the Kingdom of God had it’s origins in power, triumph, holiness, and goodness. The kingdom, when it came, would introduce a glorious new age of universal peace, with God's chosen people at the head of the nations. So where the cultural symbol for this myth was the great cedar of Lebanon, Jesus says the Kingdom is like a mustard seed - the smallest and most insignificant of all seeds which is forbidden in a household garden because it was fast spreading and would tend to invade the veggies. (Leviticus does not mention mustard per se, but it does forbid the mixing of seeds, which means that mustard – which grows wildly - would have been illegal in any household garden)
 
But there is a further reversal here for the image of the Kingdom of God as a towering cedar of Lebanon is also explicitly ridiculed. As Father Thomas Keating says “According to Jesus, the kingdom of God is like a mustard seed, which some man illegally planted in his garden. It became a shrub and a few birds nested in its modest branches. That's all. The parable subverts all the grandiose ideas about what the kingdom is going to be like when it finally arrives.” So even the “small to large” metaphor is stretching things a bit here…
 
And the parable of the Leaven - I do like the idea that the Kingdom is contagious but your reading also seems to obscure more than it reveals. Leaven is clearly a subversive image in a 1st century context. Here’s what Father Thomas Keating – the most esteemed teacher in the Integral Christianity conversation - has to say:
 
“If the kingdom of God is like leaven, Jesus' teaching is absolutely revolutionary. In the ancient Israelite world, leaven--today's yeast--was a symbol of corruption. Modern English usage has given it a positive sense--fermentation and new life. But for the people of Israel, leaven was the archetype of corruption. It symbolized the unholy, the profane, everyday life. Unleavened bread was the proper symbol of the holy, the sacred, the feast. Why was leaven regarded as such a lively symbol of corruption? In ancient times leaven was made by placing a piece of bread in a dark, damp place until it rotted and stank…”
 
Father Thomas is basically reflecting the consensus of contemporary scholarship on the parables of Jesus, but more importantly the idea that the Kingdom has its origins in the “unclean and unruly” is a very strong theme in the great majority of Jesus’ teachings… Jesus’ most well known parables feature corrupt or “immoral” heroes – the half-caste Samaritan, the wasteful son, the shrewd business manager, the stranger in the dead of the night, etc. And it is well attested that the radical dawn of early Christianity attracted precisely the nothings and nobodies of the world, while the crucifixion of Jesus itself shows us in the most shocking way possible that God indeed becomes unclean…
 
So it seems that God loves the god-forsaken (those without power and privilege) and that Jesus was very partisan about this... And so while Jesus did indeed subvert the boundaries between the sacred and the profane, he also makes clear value-judgments and distinctions: he favors the out-of-favor, he privileges the underprivileged, and he loves the unlovable…
 
This is not a “There is only One Consciousness and we are all an aspect of this One Self but a shocking and deeply challenging teaching - the Kingdom is freely offered to the poor and powerless (the mustard seeds and leaven) and immediately revoked from those that claim its possession (the Great Cedar and the Festival of UnLeavened Bread).
 
Sometimes we have to violate a tradition in order to save what’s good about it… And honestly, we should not gloss over the paradoxical heart of Jesus’ and the Kingdom of God with nice metaphors about righteousness and growing really big and tall… That’s precisely what Christian tradition has done all along, its a part of the problem not the solution, and if Christianity is going to thrive in the 21st century it really needs to get back to Jesus… who is precisely the opposite of the Messiah that we want or expect…
 
But thanks for you feedback comments, feel free to push back as much as you want and I will respond in kind as soon as time allows… Cam

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"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Forgive me

Dear Cameron, and John,

 I am writing without reading your (Cameron's latest) whole comment, because a burning bush inside of me says to make a point.

Politics has been equivocated with political so much that we feel it would defile the holy truth by realizing that Christ came out of a political struggle of the have-nots trying to find their legitimate place and power. They turned to God power, which is a kind of "We" power to work together and feed off each other (multiplying loaves and fishes sort of thing), similar to the migrating geese's V formation - one nation under God, one body in Christ.

The non-dominant mode rose up to have its rightful place in life. And it is precisely here that creativity bests transforms us. 

We do not defile the message by putting it into its political (human suffering "political") historical context of class struggle. We glorify God's name in the form of "incarnational mysticism" (from Ken's interview with Rollie Stanish). The mysticism of God became incarnate in a people's struggle to be heard and to find wholesome sovereignty. The Creator had a real job to do - to help these down-trodden people. And he/she/it did create a solution, through Christ speaking spiritual truths for largely political (legitimate political) reasons. 

I have a book by Werner Lange called Social Spirituality. It addresses this interface of social/political reality and spirituality. If interested, I will try to contact him and see if he or his publisher has more. Part of the social justice movement. Lange mentions Mathew Fox's Creation Spirituality (which I also enjoyed/valued) and the concept of base (?, memory foggy here) religion, locally empowered, movement of Catholic churches in Central America.

Creation theology and social theology both seem inclusive, reminding me of Isaiah's message of receiving the gifts of Gentiles and serving the have-nots. Opening up to gifts from previously cut off sources. Using the whole collective body, rather than only the heads of religion and state.  I believe Christ fashioned his being after Isaiah's prophesy, more-so than an outer God casting Christ into a prophetic fate. The suffering servant (one of three allegories about Israel or Jeruselum)  was a role that Christ was big enough spiritually and politically to step into. 

Forgive me for speaking before listening to your whole comment. But I will read it thoroughly later. 

                                                                                                             Darrell 

 

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Jesus as Social Organizer

 

Dear Cameron, I did finally digest the comment and found it very useful. Here are some of my thoughts after reading the piece in its entirety. 

 To me, it looks like Christ was developing a "kingdom" in all four quadrants: 1. internal transformation in the upper left (the Kingdom of God within oneself), 2. spirit-energy re-formating for the hereafter dimension (saving the spiritual "bodies" for a new objective reality - top right, at least in a metaphysics sense -  in The Kingdom of God in Heaven), 3. Cultural "kingdom" revamping in the We, bottom left quadrant (this was a biggy for Jesus, as he was a kind of folk-leader), and 4. Social/political empowerment and reorganization (bottom right quadrant) of the have-nots via spirituality/morale.

Jesus may have emphasized 1 and 3, and talked quite a bit of 2, but he seemed quite focused on 4 as well. I believe he was offering a gift to the socially oppressed of his time, and that his gift was intended to manifest itself in actual social changes which would physically and psychologically help the have-nots. His, 4th quadrant Kingdom of God on earth was one of social justice. 

   That was the intended destination. The primary means, however, was was a 3rd quadrant (cultural) folk movement. That is why he used parables that involved images which a folksy have-not could identify with.

   According to Bandura, et. al, social modeling requires two main elements: 1. the role-model must be held in high esteem, looked up to, and 2. the role-model must be perceived as "one of us", "like me", or "similarity". Christ was using the mustard shrub (barely a tree) to invoke a sense of similarity to the folk - a kind of king and kingdom within reach to where they were socially/politically at the time.  

In terms of quadrant four, in which a leader must be concerned with "organization" , "positive manipulation", or "regulation", Jesus was trying to make a new social model, like selling a new car. This model did have different, more democratic, characteristics than the old top-down model of social organization. Jesus probably did think as a king who uses means-end thinking to align his subjects to the new model of organization - to align the subjects of the kingdom to the new principles. 

Looking at the Christ movement from just that quadrant (the social/political perspective), I can imagine that if I had been Christ, the below little "integral regulation" model (that came to me while running today) would have been a valuable tool for the positive manipulation or "regulation" of the masses as I attempt to help them align with the new and improved principles. Here is the model. Notice, it has 4 quadrants. So, imagine clicking onto Ken's quadrant 4 (bottom right), then these new 4 cells show up on the screen.

Upper left quadrant in the social organizer/regulator tool is "Automatic Internal Regulation (AIR)". As a leader, I want my subjects to identify with the mustard tree and the leavened bread so much that they automatically align with the new principles - I'll inspire them into self-government, using parables as tools of inspiration. The "automatic" way of aligning people to the new principles may be called "harmonic alignment". A good poet harmonically aligns his reader/listener to the poem's content and form. The poem sells itself (gets his/her "attention"), and automatically begins to transform the reader (the reader's "being").  Christ understood harmonic alignment as a vital component of social change. 

The Upper right quadrant is "Controlled Internal Regulation" (CIR). If I sell the subjects on the advantages of the new social organization model - the new version of "kingdom" - then they will be willing to gently push themselves toward the practices required by that new kingdom. This is called "motoric (or kinesthetic) alignment".  In the crudest sense, motoric alignment is "get your ass over here (in line with the principles and practices)". But internal control is the individual being willing to move his own ass, instead of requiring you to intimidate him into moving it. CIR is what we usually end up thinking of when we say "discipline" or "individual responsibility."

The lower left quadrant is "Automatic Regulation Externally" (ARE). The surrounding culture has been orchestrated in such a way that the external culture itself moves the individuals, more or less automatically, toward proper alignment with the new principles and practices. Disciples are used to help seed the culture. Also, it is here that coming across as one of them, as a folk figure, rather than an expert or king, helps with changing the culture which, in turn, changes the people. 

The lower right quadrant is "Controlled Regulation Externally" (CRE). At its worst, CRE is mass intimidation via the politics of fear. At its best it is a conscious social engineering, positive manipulation, using social utilitarianism in which even cherished cultural things are used to externally regulate the masses. When it comes to cultural manipulations or cultural engineering, the only difference between ARE and CRE is the degree of methodical, conscious, planning behind the social organizing (or re-organizing). The more methodical and planned-out, the more "controlled" it is. The danger of this control is that it tends to narrow consciousness, may put blinders on the leaders. The advantage of this control is that it may be more effective, efficient, and more consistently replicated. It is a more organized, left brain, way of regulating or organizing the social sphere. 

 

 I am considering consciously (lower right quadrant of the Integral Regulation model) promoting this leader/organizer model within the Integral Life organization. Does it have merit and usefulness? Thanks for bringing me here to this place of creative and critical thought.   

                                                                       Darrell

                                                                     

 

 

 

 

 

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historicity?

 

Cameron, you began your post with these words:
In a way that seems to go beyond the requirements of any other of the world's religious faiths, Christianity stakes its truth-claims on certain historical events – particularly the life, death and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth. As the event of God’s most explicit self-communication to human beings, Christianity is about something that happened in world-history, where the person of Jesus is the Christ – the “Logos made flesh”, the embodied story of God in time.
Well said!
 
This claim to historical revelation is a BIG problem for Christianity. It is generally understood to mean that the Bible presents on its surface an objectively reliable record of miraculously special acts of God in human history. This claim does not hold up to critical scrutiny and sets up the faithful for unnecessary confusion and painful disillusionment when they move from amber to orange and above. The sooner Christianity drops the claim, the better.
 
The narrative content of Christianity, like all other (premodern at least) religions is myth. Actual people and events of history may have provided some of the building blocks, but the final result is not objective history. For example, I am convinced based on careful reading of the New Testament and a few other sources that Jesus’ resurrection was not a physical, bodily, outwardly visible event but an inward, subjective, spiritual experience among his followers that came to be expressed in more concrete terms as the tradition evolved. To say that Christianity can be trusted because of the historical fact of the resurrection is entirely bogus. It is not a historical fact; it is something else, something very important, but not fact. Myth is about that something else, about deeper truths and realities. Myth is the native language of religion, and there is no shame in admitting that Judeo-Christian narrative functions finally and most importantly as myth.
 
The idea that God is revealed in certain special acts in history cannot be separated from supernatural theism, and supernatural theism just don’t fly anymore. A nondual “God” is equally the source of and present in every moment and place and event of being, so there are no “special acts” based on the intentions of a divine being. The specialness is invested (constructed) by human interpretation. It is absolutely true that the Judeo-Christian tradition was shaped by historical events and the struggle to make sense of them, but that history proves little and is often distorted by the tradition.
 
I know: I’m preaching to the choir! My point is that I think postmodern/integral/progressive/whatever Christianity must be explicit in rejecting claims to special historical revelation and must consciously and deliberately deconstruct its own development and understandings of history. In doing this, its own history and its history of understanding its history does become revelation. In doing this Christianity would plumb the depths and behavioral patterns of human consciousness and spirituality in a way that would reveal integral development from within itself.
 
John

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With Instead of On?

 John,

One way I have of absorbing the truth of what you said, is that we are served best (both as growing individuals, and as a species trying to survive and prosper) by shifting to an attitude of "with" instead of "on" (working on other religions, trying to sell them our exclusive product).  

When we include the intellectual content of this shift, it appears a bit more complex, but when we look at the underlying attitude it seems simpler - more like an "attitude" conveyed by a statement such as: "Welcome. You non-Christians can help us discover the essence of our Christianity. And we'll be glad to help you discover the essence of your faith traditions as well." 

This brings to mind something I have been processing in my mind lately, the idea of "unfolding". When a person (or a group, such as "Christians") covers up his or her emotional vulnerability, we tend to blame the "walls" or the "hard exterior" as creating maladaptive behavior and as limiting his or her growth potential. Sure enough, the walls seem to contribute to the problem, but the real problem is that the flow from inner spirit to the outer emanations of self (and further out into culture and world) is not a good continuous (or relatively continuous) stream, such that the individual (or group) is consistently "unfolding".

I believe we are more like dynamic solar flares than we are noun-like objects. To me, the walls are an effect. The cause is an unfolding problem. If I find a way to return to the source of my unfolding, and to then base my actions and more superficial thoughts upon that "found fountain foundation", then the walls will tend to dissolve. I may need to direct the healing energy stream toward the walls (shadow work) but the main cause of the healing is to think and act like I am an energy-based, spiritual, person who is constantly unfolding from the inner energy core, toward the outer material crust. I have not existed (exist means to stand out). I am existing.  

                                                                          Darrell

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On Historicity (Part II)

Apologies for the delay, but to continue the question of this this thread: does Christianity need to shed its historical truth-claims to survive in the 21st century? I would have to say no, for the distinctiveness (even uniqueness) of Christianity is that it is the only religion which claims that the Creator of the Universe actually showed up in history – in the daily life of the Roman Empire. That is, Jesus is the historical event of God’s own self-revelation - this is essential to what Christianity is, and it means that if Christianity is to remain true to itself it must preserve its historical roots.

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 On this point, unlike the Eastern Enlightenment traditions (as viewed through my Western lens) the Gospel message is not a system of psychological development or a path of ones personal self-realization, it is not a message about self-improvement, and is not new way of re-ordering ones private religious interiority... It is a disturbing and unsettling announcement to the world that “Jesus is Lord” (i.e. not Caesar/Empire) and as Chesterton says: this makes dust and nonsense of comparative religion.

And importantly, we can preserve the unique historical claims of Christianity while still jettisoning its out-dated super-natural baggage. Philosopher Slavoj Zizek has written extensively about this in recent publications, but the basic point is that Christ's death on the cross means that one should drop without restraint the mythic God ‘out there’ as a transcendent caretaker who guarantees the rational order of the Universe and a happy outcome of our acts - Christ's death on the cross is the death of this God, it repeats Job's stance, it refuses any “deeper meaning” that obfuscates the brutal reality of historical catastrophes...

 So we can affirm the historicity of Christianity – where God shows up in as a vulnerable, suffering creature radically present at the heart of flesh - and still shed the super-natural theistic God of the traditional Church. I may have missed something here so feel free to respond...

Cameron

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History and Faith...

Another great post John, and I will respond more to this later... When it comes to historical facts, there are only a few most of us should be able to agree on:

1) Jesus was a Ist century Jew

2) Jesus taught and practiced the Kingdom of God

3) Jesus was crucified

I totally agree with you that the Resurection is not a historical fact - I prefer to call it an eschatological event... which basically means that I have much more hope in God's creative-redemptive plan in Christ than I have hope for the short-term future of our planet...

I will say some more soon - this is a very important question - does Christianity have to shed it's histoircal claims?  Surely Jesus was a historical person. Isn't Christianity the very place at which God becomes enfleshed, the only religion in which God's own self  shows up in human history? I will have to get back to you on this, but great question... Many thanks. Cam

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Figurative Truths vs Literal Truths

John and Mark,

 This discussion is fascinating to me, because I have just finished a long clinical career within state institutions, and have marveled at two things many times: How a delusion does have an often unappreciated "truth" value to it, but the truth is an emotional one meant to move us in the general direction of a solution. It is a figurative truth that must be further interpreted if the client or the therapist is to get anywhere. On the other hand, if the truth of the delusion is simply discounted, then neither client or therapist can get anywhere as well.

The most effective approach seemed to be to uphold the figurative truth of the delusional client, and to help him or her find more reasonable ways to respond to the figurative truth. "I am God" could get me in a state hospital easily. But if I get help to understand that I either have become disconnected from my spiritual side (and therefore need to remind myself that I am one with Spirit/God), or that I am significant because I (even as a failing human being) am caste from the image of God, then I may not need to go off to a hospital and do the Thorazine shuffle for the rest of my life. I can find rational ways to manifest the truths that I am spiritual and I am a significant human being - that I have access to a Source and that I am a manifest gift "just as I am". 

The differentiation between figurative and literal truths is very important with meaningful myths as well. If we call myths "delusions", then we can't get anywhere with amber religion. If we acknowledge the figurative truths and suggest alternate ways of approaching those truths, such as applying/living the values and principles, then we may not invite the same level of resistance and insistence that the myth is, in fact, factual.

Part of the problem in selling the idea that figurative counts as a valid form of truth, is that there is no poetry in everyday culture. By that, I don't mean the reciting or reading of poems, but the poetic logic about the patterns and flow of the events before our very eyes. Such poetic visions are seen as merely imagination (as if imagination is some weak force to be avoided!), or as a ghost in a machine. I seriously doubt if we really believe we have a "spirit" or spiritual aspect that has enough significance to even acknowledge its existence, or give it "the time of day". 

So, what solace is it to hear "You have a figuratively true idea there, but it is not literally, or factually, true."? Since we have been mis-taught to undervalue the figurative, the poetic sense, then such a statement is tantamount to being called a liar.

I believe we can create a culture, or influences within an existing culture, which help people reclaim a poetic understanding of life. Teaching and reinforcing abstract thinking, encouraging use of metaphors, throwing obvious metaphors into daily conversations without acting ashamed about it, or even good old mind-expanding education and a high value of the educated, broadened, mind. These are either in or not in a culture (to a significant extent). If they are not in the culture, then they cannot "cult"-ivate the mental distinction of figurative truths. 

The integral approach does seem to be a healthy cultural intervention to help us understand the reality of figurative truth. This is one of the powerful messages in The Marriage of Sense and Soul. Both science and religion have a kind of "truth" to offer humanity. I think Ken calls figurative truths "meaning", but the idea is the same. 

                                                                                            Darrell

 

 

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leaven & mustard


interesting metaphors .. makes me curious .. what metaphors would jesus use today ?

technology and rock musicians for example perchance ?

 

 

 

 

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The Kingdom of God is like...

Hi Dee.

You got me thinking about this last night - how to bring the parables into today's world... Here's what I came up with:

The Kingdom of God is like: 

"Cancer that infects the entire body of a woman who dies just as she finds the love of her life..." 

“An Arabic terrorist who infiltrates the CIA and uncovers unknown secrets of US foreign policy and its global agenda” 

“A tiny poppy seed grows in the treacherous mountains of Afghanistan into a small plant and is harvested for the US opiate market” 

“A humble janitor working an inner city jail forgives the convicted and confessed murderer of his daughter” 

“A small child who walks into the market place and shop lifts food for the homeless...” 

“A HIV infected homosexual drug addict becomes a rock star and gives everything he owns away in an attempt to end world poverty” 

“A actively homosexual priest celebrates and presides over a Catholic Wedding...”

There you go, feel free to let me know what you think. Cam

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"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Integral Elitism & The Jesus Impulse

Cameron,

Outstanding post. Two things were triggered in me as I read it. The first is this:

You write:

"As an Integrally informed scholar/practitioner, the most perplexing aspect of the Gospel story for me is that the Kingdom of God is not for the best and brightest, not for those who meet the requirements of second-tear awareness, and not for those with turquoise qualifications and credentials, as Paul said of the early Christian apostles, 'Not many were wise according to worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth; but God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong, God chose what is low and despised in the world... to bring to nothing things that are.' (Cor. I:27-28)."

I've spent the last year attempting to bring the integral impulse into a small town community environment. While things got off to a great start, we eventually experienced a major train wreck over a related issue. Here's how I have outlined this problem in another blog:

"The biggest challenge I have faced, in all of the integral community-building I have been involved with, is finding healthy, helpful ways to deal with what appears to be a very strong elitist mentality in the integral world. Much of the integral world I am connected with is strongly aligned with Ken Wilber and his particular version of integral. While I deeply resonate with almost everything Ken has to say, I have found it very challenging to deal with what I experience as a rigid, near-fundamentalist mentality for championing his work. I have also noticed that the integral world, as it exists today, tends to attract people with very strong intellectual abilities. I love this, but have noticed that deep intellectual understandings do not always translate into honoring others with less cognitive abilities, or recognizing that others with less cognitive abilities may actually be more advanced in other lines of development, or their overall center of gravity. I currently believe that in order for the integral impulse to spread and stick in community environments that are made up of many different kinds of people, with many different kinds of intelligences, life experiences, aptitudes, and gifts to offer, these two tendencies need to come into balance."

So my experience echoes a concern about elitist tendencies within the integral world -- and within ourselves. I think this tendency is understandable, perhaps even necessary, at least in the academic and intellectual realms in which modern integral thought emerged. But if the integral impulse is going to spread to the rest of the world -- and reach people who are not as cognitively developed as the current integral community, forces will need to emerge that level the playing field as Jesus did during his time period.

Or, closer to home, if the integral impulse is going to become more grounded and fully embodied in us, then we, too, may need to move out of our heads into our hearts and real world.

One analogy that puts some flesh and bones on this is to imagine the high-powered thinkers that wrote the U.S. Constitution. They had the vision to declare that "all men are created equal". But in practical application, this didn't include woman, blacks, and other minorities. They were viewed as inferior in the same way that many of the people Jesus reached out to were viewed as impure, unworthy, and unsuitable by the powers-that-be of his time. I think the integral world is faced with a similar situation: there is a declaration that there are many different lines of development, but the intellectual line, in real life practice, is lauded above the rest -- and it shouldn't be, in my opinion anyway. It's vital. It's absolutely necessary. It cannot and should not be ignored. But without giving appropriate weight to other lines of development -- or people who are strong in other lines but weak cognitively -- I think we miss the boat.

Or, turning this idea on ourselves, there is a need to acknowledge the disenfranchised, the weak, the needy, the less intellectually inclined aspects of ourselves and give them a prominent place at the table.

Which brings me to my second point:

The current integral landscape also appears to be dominated by people who have strong backgrounds in Eastern traditions and inward-looking practices. I think this is wonderful, but significantly lopsided. One way I see this playing out in the integral world is by having a very strong focus on Buddhism, meditation, and various inner practices, especially as they pertain to personal growth. I think all of these are very important. But they are only half the picture. The other half pertains to outer expression, which would be expressed as a focus on interpersonal relationships, community, service, healing, actively loving others, etc. All things that are classically associated with Jesus. And evolution. And the West's preoccupation with improving things and making things happen in the external world. Again, it's not that these ideas are missing from the integral model. They aren't. But from my perspective, they're definitely not emphasized as much OR AS FULLY EMBODIED as Eastern impulses. You can even see this reflected in the Christian authorities who are honored and engaged in the integral world: as far as I can tell, most of them come from monastic and contemplative Christian orders, which is a reflection of classic Eastern or mystical perspectives and inclinations. This, of course, is not what the Jesus of the New Testament is known for. His primary contribution was not as a hermit, mystic, or desert father. It was a hands on, over-the-top, society-upsetting, history-changing engagement in the real world. His calls for people to enter the "Kingdom of God" were not, as far as I can see, only calls to discover an inner experience, or inner relationship with God. They were also radical calls to manifest this inner state in the outer world; to bring heaven to earth; and to do so by getting fully engaged in the outer world of human relationships.

Again, given the people and places that the integral impulse has emerged in modern times, I think it is perfectly understandable, perhaps even vital, that there has been such a strong focus on inner experiences and conditions; on personal growth; on reading, studying, and developing cognitive lines. But in order for the impulse to spread, grow, and be sustainable, long term, I think a strong Jesus-like energy is also going to need to emerge in the integral world.

What do you (and the other folks following this thread) think?

By the way, Cameron, great profile. Thanks for  taking the time to share so much about your personal journey. I found it inspiring.

David

------------

David Sunfellow
Integral Rising
Integral NHNE
Integral Organizers

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Social Spirituality

 Thanks David. Well said. The point you made below is a clearer way of saying something I was trying to also say. Our ideas converged. Here is what you said: 

'Christian authorities who are honored and engaged in the integral world: as far as I can tell, most of them come from monastic and contemplative Christian orders, which is a reflection of classic Eastern or mystical perspectives and inclinations. This, of course, is not what the Jesus of the New Testament is known for. His primary contribution was not as a hermit, mystic, or desert father. It was a hands on, over-the-top, society-upsetting, history-changing engagement in the real world. His calls for people to enter the "Kingdom of God" were not, as far as I can see, only calls to discover an inner experience, or inner relationship with God. They were also radical calls to manifest this inner state in the outer world; to bring heaven to earth; and to do so by getting fully engaged in the outer world of human relationships.'

Here is something similar I said:

Politics has been equivocated with political so much that we feel it would defile the holy truth by realizing that Christ came out of a political struggle of the have-nots trying to find their legitimate place and power. They turned to God power, which is a kind of "We" power to work together and feed off each other (multiplying loaves and fishes sort of thing), similar to the migrating geese's V formation - one nation under God, one body in Christ.

The non-dominant mode rose up to have its rightful place in life. And it is precisely here that creativity best transforms us. 

We do not defile the message by putting it into its political (human suffering "political") historical context of class struggle. We glorify God's name in the form of "incarnational mysticism" (from Ken's interview with Rollie Stanish). The mysticism of God became incarnate in a people's struggle to be heard and to find wholesome sovereignty. The Creator had a real job to do - to help these down-trodden people. And he/she/it did create a solution, through Christ speaking spiritual truths for largely political (legitimate political) reasons. 

I have a book by Werner Lange called Social Spirituality. It addresses this interface of social/political reality and spirituality. If interested, I will try to contact him and see if he or his publisher has more. Part of the social justice movement. Lange mentions Mathew Fox's Creation Spirituality (which I also enjoyed/valued) and the concept of base (?, memory foggy here) religion, locally empowered, movement of Catholic churches in Central America.

 

Creation theology and social theology both seem inclusive, reminding me of Isaiah's message of receiving the gifts of Gentiles and serving the have-nots. Opening up to gifts from previously cut off sources. Using the whole collective body, rather than only the heads of religion and state.  I believe Christ fashioned his being after Isaiah's prophesy, more-so than an outer God casting Christ into a prophetic fate. The suffering servant (one of three allegories about Israel or Jeruselum)  was a role that Christ was big enough spiritually and politically to step into. 

 
It dawned on me that this is looking at the "Kingdom of God" from the bottom right? (or is it bottom left?) of the Integral quadrants. This (political process) requires a less heady, more "inclusive",  approach.  I am currently trying to write a book about a model community that works with a group-endorsed philosophy of being spiritual principle-centered. The five spiritual principles don't require a degree in rocket science to embrace. Consensus must find down to earth ways to say the common ground of various organized religions in an interfaith community. A few principles are more like our "constitution". The spiritual principles are, in effect, a spiritual "constitution" for the fictional model community. The principles can also be stated as "characteristics", or as "laws". I noticed that a
"characteristic" is easier to conceptualize (I also called them "core virtues"), whereas "spiritual energy laws" are more abstract and require more intellectual horsepower. Principles are somewhere in-between in complexity.
   This approach allows the consumer/citizen to 'buy" the user-friendly "models" of the spiritual principle "product". Below are the "principles", as compared to some of the consensus points from the Snowmass conference:  
 

Comparison of Allsberg's Spiritual Principles to Consensus Points from the Snowmass Interreligious Conferences of 1984 and 1986

 

 

1.  spiritual principle of whole-to-part (see One Mind section), corresponds to 

      core virtue of  Awareness  

 

     1984 Snowmass Interreligious Conference* consensus points about conceptions of 

     Ultimate Reality which seem related to the spiritual principle of whole-to-part:  

     

      (1.) We all bear witness to the experience of Ultimate Reality to which we

          give various names: Brahman, Allah, Absolute, God, Great Spirit.

      (2.) Ultimate Reality cannot be limited by any name or concept.

      (5.) The potential for human wholeness -- or in other frames of reference,   

          enlightenment, salvation, transformation, blessedness, nirvana -- is 

          present in every human person.

 

     ● Excerpt from The Marketing of Virtue (Chapter 7):

                     To maintain awareness, one must maintain the proper order of mind, which is from whole-mind to part-mind. The dis-order of part-mind to whole-mind is, Jim believed, tantamount to worshipping a false god because “god” means something you base your life and mental operations upon. When you approach life, or even a specific challenging life event, from the base of a part-mind activity (as represented in the de-synchronized spikes of “beta” electrical activity of the brain), the mind is, sooner or later, not open enough - not whole enough - to remain fully aware. 

    He felt that the first of the ten commandments from the Judeo/Christian  faith tradition, "Thou shalt put no other gods before me" means "Operate primarily from a whole-mind state, rather than from part-mind states which represent lesser gods, lesser things to base one's life upon. Base your life on wholeness, on the one (whole) God."  

 

      ● 1986 Snowmass Conference consensus points about common disciplined 

          practices and attitudes related to the spiritual principle of whole-to- part: 

            

              (II.)  It is essential to extend the formal practice of awareness into 

                  all the aspects of our life

              (I. 8.)  Practice in awareness (recollection, mindfulness) 

                         and living in the present moment.

              (IV.) Prayer is communion with Ultimate Reality, whether It is regarded as 

                       personal,  impersonal, or beyond them both.

                 

 

2.  spiritual principle of responsible creating (see Responsible Creating section), 

      corresponds to core virtue of Challenge

 

     ● 1984 Snowmass Interreligious Conference consensus points about conceptions of 

         Ultimate Reality which seem related to the spiritual principle of responsible creating:

 

        (3.) Ultimate Reality is the ground of infinite potentiality and actuality

 

     ●  Excerpt from The Marketing of Virtue (Chapter 7):

 

David Brookbinder chimed in, “Drew, you closely associated challenge with the act of creating, such as creating a better, or worse, world. Seems to me, that is awfully close to the idea that we are created in the image of God – that we, like God, can create. Wayne Dyer calls us ‘co-creators’, and sees our creative capacity as being part of our spiritual nature. 

 

● 1986 Snowmass Conference consensus points about common 

          disciplined practices and attitudes related to the spiritual  

          principle of responsible creating: 

 

              (I. 3.)    Practicing moral precepts and virtues

              (I. 10.)  Study of scriptural texts and scriptures

 

 

 

3.  spiritual principle of interconnectedness (see One Body section), 

      corresponds to core virtue of Friendliness 

 

     ●  1984 Snowmass Interreligious Conference consensus points about 

          conceptions of Ultimate Reality which seem related to the spiritual principle of 

          interconnectedness:

 

             (7.)  As long as the human condition is experienced as separate from 

                     Ultimate Reality, it is subject to ignorance and illusion, weakness and 

                     suffering.

 

     ● Excerpt from The Marketing of Virtue (Chapter 7):

 

Phil Ackerman, a fairly new member, but one who was obviously passionate about the overall project of cultural healing, spoke up. "I think we should start with the golden rule. Some form of the golden rule is in nearly all the religions. Its essential assumption, which seems the hallmark of spiritual thought, is that all human beings are interconnected, such that their actions affect one another. The principle is interconnectedness or interdependence. The advice which follows from that is “Treat others as you would yourself, because they are you."

 

     ● 1986 Snowmass Conference consensus points about common 

        disciplined practices related to the spiritual principle of 

        interconnectedness: 

          

(I. 1.)  Practice of compassion

(I. 2.)  Service to others

 

 

 

4.  spiritual principle of appreciation (see Todd Enters section), corresponds 

       to core virtue of Gift-hood

 

     ● 1984 Snowmass Interreligious Conference consensus points about conceptions of  

         Ultimate Reality which seem related to the spiritual principle of appreciation:

 

           (6.) Ultimate Reality may be experienced not only through religious practices   

                 but also through nature, art, human relationships, and service to others.

 

● Excerpt from The Marketing of Virtue (Chapter 7):

 

   Gift-hood, as I conceptualized it in the essay, meant just what you were describing above as you spoke on appreciation and thankfulness. I thank God everyday for the gift (of marriage) that he, she, it gave me. This is the attitude of thankfulness that you associated with Thanksgiving day. By my thanking God for my marriage, I am making every day Thanksgiving day. Plus, there is another clever way of looking at what I am doing when I engage in prayers of thanks.

    I truly believe that I am also increasing the value of the gift itself, not just my perception of the gift, but the value of the actual gift. In the form of a positive self-fulfilling prophesy I am increasing the quality of the actual marriage. In economic terms, I am appreciating, rather than depreciating, the asset of marriage. The word you used - 'appreciation' - has two meanings. It means the emotional fullness, or 'soaking it in', and it means building it up, making it healthier and stronger. Gift-hood, like a place called a 'neighbor-hood', is a meaningful zone, a place to be mentally. And it involves both meanings of the word 'appreciation'. I propose that we call that a principle - the principle of appreciation."

 

     ● 1986 Snowmass Conference consensus points about common 

         disciplined practices or attitudes related to the spiritual principle of 

         appreciation: 

        

               (III.) Humility, gratitude, and a sense of humor are indispensable in the 

                     spiritual life.

 

 

5.  spiritual principle of lightness (see Lightness section), corresponds to core 

     virtue of Simplicity

 

     ● 1984 Snowmass Interreligious Conference consensus points about conceptions 

         of Ultimate Reality which seem related to the spiritual principle of lightness:

 

           (8.) Disciplined practice is essential to the spiritual life, yet spiritual 

                 attainment is not the result of one's own efforts, but the ripe fruit of 

                 the experience of oneness with Ultimate Reality. 

          (4.) Faith is opening, accepting, and responding to Ultimate Reality. In this   

                sense faith precedes every belief system.

 

     ● Excerpt from The Marketing of Virtue (Chapter 7):

 

    Jeremy said, "Looks to me like the mind tends to overheat and even at times start to jam up like an engine being run without lubricant whenever it deals with too much detail or seriousness or control. The antidote to this tendency would seem to be to return the mind to to a state of peace, to ease up and become lighter, like that joke about why angels can fly - because they take themselves lightly." 

 

      ● 1986 Snowmass Conference consensus points about common disciplined practices    

          or attitudes related to the spiritual principle of lightness:

 

               (13.)  Periods of silence and solitude

                 (III). Humility, gratitude, and a sense of humor are indispensable in the spiritual  

                          life.

 

 

 

 The fourth characteristic ("core virtue") and principle speaks to the inclusiveness we are advocating here. The collective body needs all these "gifts", intellectual or not. Thanks for your comments that help create balance in the integral life organization. Balance is part of integration. Even though the median, mode, or mean of a field of information should not be equivocated with "integration", it does play a corrective role which can indirectly facilitate integration. If we are stepping in certain quadrants or stages too often, how will we "include" the gifts of the lower stages?

 

 

                                                                        Darrell 

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Great post, David

Great post, David!  We agree with everything you said.

I just read this aloud so that Mark could listen to it.  He said..."good thing that people are coming out of the closet!"

Thanks!  :)

 

 

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Ditto...

Thanks for you post David. I agree with everything you say, and am intruiged to hear from one who has been getting their hands dirty with the application of Integral in small town communities... Yes, we are dealing with some difficult issues here... I mean integrally-informed people are (generally) brighter (cognitively) and more self-aware (psycho-spiritually) than many others, but there is also this elitist tendency, and we all know that the narcissistic ego just loves to elevate itself by denigrating others... So I sometimes wonder what really motivates people to live an integral life, and am pretty sure its a mixture of an authentic (and rare) creative impulse and narcissistic search for glory

As far as I can tell, this integral elitism is is best dealt with by taking a look at the Gospels, where Christ says "what you do unto the least of my breathen, you do unto me..." As a Christian, to see ones self as 'superior' to others is to be in peculiar danger of moral wreck and I honestly feel that in todays world Christianity is the only thing left to put into question the power of the well-bred and well-fed and provide a much needed objection to a complete confidence in the rich…

A great Christian paradox (from Chesterton) is that the man should rule who does not think he can rule… We must take the crown in our hands and go hunting in dry places and dark corners of the earth until we find the one man who feels himself unfit to wear it… In other words, we should not crown the exceptional man who thinks he can rule but the far more exceptional man who knows he cannot...

So rather than claiming the high ground of second-tier maybe IL we would do well to seek the opinion of those who are too modest to offer their opinion, trust those who do not trust themselves, or as Chesterton says: "The great man knows that he is not God, and the greater the man, the more he knows it..."

I could go on, but this will do for now... Thanks for sharing your thoughts and experiences. Cam

 

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Openness as a Marker of Spirituality

Dear Cameron,

 While the below reading is fairly long, it provides the context for the simple insight which occurred as I was writing: spirituality has a lot to do with keeping the mind open and whole. I will underline the main points about this insight, so you can go right to those statements if you don't have the time, energy, or desire to read the long excerpt (from The Marketing of Virtue). Openness seems to be the theme we are touching on, or perhaps a social form of openness - "inclusiveness". Much of the below discourse also speculates about the "logic of grace" that you (Cameron) and Mark mentioned earlier in another section of this general discussion. 

 The open house celebration had also obviously activated overall motivation to work at building a physical community that embodies the principles and qualities long envisioned by the group. It put the morale in moral. Whether or not the two words are linguistically related (although it would be hard to imagine no language root connection when the only spelling difference between the two words is a single letter, an “e”), there seems to be a close tie between the two in terms of meaning. 

    In order to maintain moral action, a person needs to give a damn - to care - about behaving morally, and about being a moral person of good character (“integrity”). The goal to be moral is a form of challenge or motivation, the second core virtue. It requires a positive, going-toward-the-light, kind of emotional foundation if it is to be sustainable. 

    That does not mean everything must be seen as being rosy; the rosy outlook often begs the opposing image of the dreaded “thorns”. But it does mean that something positive and worth striving for needs to be sufficiently sensed if we are to consistently have the motivation to “stay the course” of moral action and thought. 

    The idea that positive thinking is related to the discipline of morality seems to be related to the grace theology of Christianity. An attitude of grace is an anticipation of some form of a positive outcome, such as “mercy” or a “gift”. This grace attitude connects the fourth core virtue of gift-hood to second core virtue of challenge (in this case, to make a moral, virtuous, person and community), because the anticipation and appreciation of the gift keeps the individual hopeful enough to maintain the necessary motivation to work on producing virtue and morality in oneself, in others, or in life in general.

   In addition to contributing to the general quality of good morale, the grace state of mind has two other characteristics that help maintain morality.  First, the state of grace includes a sense of mystery or surprise. The anticipation of life’s gifts involves a readiness to be pleasantly surprised, whether it is by the big colorfully-wrapped present under the Christmas tree, by the breathtaking beauty of a sunrise, by the sweetness of an unexpected kiss, or by the “grace” of a butterfly crossing your path. While the anticipation of a gift is usually linked to the positive consequences of the event or thing that is coming, the anticipation apart from, and independent of, those consequences, is a gift in and of itself. Like so many spiritual states, the surprise aspect of grace involves the opening up of the mind, a type of receptiveness. 

    Note that “anticipation” does not equal “expectation”. That sweet kiss is all the more tasty when it is unexpected. If expected, the kiss tends to be taken for granted. The kiss can even become a source of disappointment if it is not received when expected. The non-expecting anticipation aspect of grace has the specific motivational value of keeping spontaneity and mystery alive; and of keeping monotony, boredom, and dread in check. Expectation is a closed-mind state, whereas an anticipation based on the appreciation of surprise involves openness. A sense of mystery is a subset of the morale which maintains the (condition of being) moral.  

    Secondly, the thinking habit of grace involves a self-image of what Carl Rogers called “unconditional positive regard”.  To feel loved or valuable in an unconditional way is a valuable way to maintain morale. It helps the individual accept himself or herself, no matter how bad he or she messes up. While the idea of “earning” or “making” something also has motivational value, it leaves its participant dependent on two outcomes - being able to perform the job, and getting paid (or obtaining the desired outcome) once the job is completed. 

    This leaves self esteem totally dependent on factors other than one’s true potential. Even if a person mistakenly pursues something for which they are not naturally gifted, and, as a consequence fails miserably - more or less proving that he or she doesn’t have much potential in that specific area - he or she still has plenty of potential in other areas. When the individual’s pool of potential is eclipsed by poor outcomes or by a sign of personal limitations, it creates a de-motivating state that unnecessarily limits his or her actualization of potential – including the actualization of virtues or morality. 

    Again, the problem of outcome-dependency is that it involves a closed state of mind. The solution to this problem is an unconditional positive self-regard which both requires and creates a form of openness.  Although we often associate morality with judging or decision-making, in which bad, unhealthy, options are closed out (thus, making morality seem to lean toward focalized attention and closed-mindedness), the spiritual "well" (the well of wellness) from which sustainable morality flows comes from a state of receptiveness.       

   Some thinkers may argue that grace theology can compromise the “responsibility” part of the principle of responsible creating, saying that it allows the individual to deny or minimize their own accountability as regards the outcomes. It is argued that whatever happens, the grace-user receives the reward of feeling good (or at least OK) about themselves. This is thought to create a kind of disincentive for making correct choices. 

    While there may be some truth to this contention, the consented-upon philosophy of Allsberg places grace, and gift-hood, first. Why? Because grace tilts the mind toward openness and whole-mind activity, whereas effort and control tilts the mind toward part-mind activity. In the long run, grace, openness, and whole-mind priority will produce more "responsible" behavior than forcing oneself to make  the right choices. In fact, being overly responsible ends up being irresponsible, because it tends to create a psychological shadow of self-doubt and/or false pride. 

    This shadow is not unlike the lactic acid which a runner builds up when he/she exceeds his/her sustainable pace. In the long run, forced responsibility clouds the mind and interferes with its overall ability to make good decisions, just as the lactic acid deadens the muscles and interferes with the runner's performance at the end of the race.  Like an effective distance runner who knows how to properly pace, how to recover, and how replenish the body, Allsberg takes the long view as regards responsibility. 

   All three of the motivational factors of the grace state, or thinking habit, discussed above contribute to a bias toward openness. The general sense of morale offered by grace – the positive thinking aspect of grace – helps keep the mind happy and comfortable enough to take on necessary risks and challenges. The specific sense of mystery which is included in the “grace package” opens up the mind to explore -  to contemplate the spontaneous unfoldings of life. The specific sense of unconditional love, or unconditional positive regard, contained in grace helps keep the mind from being insecure and self-defeating. A person without this unconditional aspect of grace is more likely to say to himself or herself, “I have nothing to lose, so it is OK to go ahead and be immoral, or to be of bad character.” 

   To put it simply, it’s easier to be virtuous and moral when you’re happy. If you develop the art of receiving gifts – including the gift of your own unique existence - you are more likely in the long run to meet the challenge of creating a virtuous and moral life. An attitude of grace greatly assists in mastering the spiritual principle of responsible creating, and in creating the healthy characteristic of challenge in Allsberg.   

    As it turns out, the open house celebration put the second core virtue, and its corresponding principle of responsible creating, in its place in two ways. First, it acknowledged the quality of having a manifested place to live, a place in which to take actual form. Challenge had a “parking place”. That certainly was something worth celebrating.  

    Secondly, the open house festivities acknowledged that the manifestation was primarily a gift, rather than being merely an accomplishment. This puts accomplishment and challenge “in its place” -  behind gift-hood (and the corresponding spiritual principle of appreciation), behind the open-minded wonder of true awareness (the first core virtue and its corresponding principle of whole-to-part), behind the love (the third core virtue and its corresponding spiritual principle of interconnectedness) of life itself, and behind simply receiving (invoking the fifth core virtue of simplicity and its corresponding spiritual principle of “lightness”). 


                                                                                           Darrell

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Thanks...

Hi Darryl,

I just want to extend a genuine thanks for this post and all of your contributions to this (and other) threads. I simply nod in agreement when reading your comments, so please forgive me for not responding in depth. I am at a library computer terminal right now and so have no time to elaborate much, but this stuff certainly helps to clarify the grace perspective that is at the heart of the Kingdom teachings of Jesus. I will get back to you again asap. New Years cheers, Cam

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Thoughts on the Kingdom and elitism

Cameron,

I really appreciated your post. Very informed and thoughtful. The scholarship you cite on the historical Jesus has been important for me personally for a long time and I can see you are thoroughly acquainted with it. A pleasure to read.

I'd like to address your comment about the elitism of Integral in relation to Jesus' notion of the kingdom. Personally, I believe that the kingdom as he portrayed it really is a kind of enlightenment concept--in the sense of being an enlightened state. It seems to me to be a condition of transformed perception, affect, and experience that one can enter and that, once one has done so, can come through one to others. This naturally entails a certain kind of elitism, in that certain people have entered this state more fully than others--Jesus being someone who seems to have entered it to a remarkable degree, making extraordinary things possible in him and around him. He lived in the kingdom in a way that few have done.

On the other hand, central to this state as he sketched it seems to have been a radically transformed perception of others, in which everyone, including "tax collectors and sinners," even the "bad," the "unjust," and "enemies," were seen as precious, infinitely lovable and deserving children of God.

This is what I feel is lacking in Integral. Is it me or is Integral lacking in an emphasis on social justice? I'd personally like to see more of this emphasis on the precious divine worth of even the lowliest and most "evil" among us, and on realization of that worth as a central and defining characteristic of the enlightened state. Maybe it's there and I've just missed it. But I certainly have missed it.

Robert

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Thanks, Mark

Mark,

Thank you for your comment. I look forward to hearing your thoughts when you get the time. And I'll certainly check out the post you cite. I caught another of Cameron's posts recently, and liked that one as well.

Robert

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Does it make sense to speak of entering the kingdom?

Mark,

I agree that all are, in some sense, already in the kingdom. It is a kingdom for everyone, even the nobodies. It is already present, in our midst (Luke 17:21). But I still think it makes sense to talk about how to enter it. After all, Jesus' sayings often do just that. There are many images of people either entering or not entering, as well as seeking and finding, the kingdom. It is portrayed as a domain that one can either be in or not in. I suspect the resolution is the familiar one with enlightenment, the idea that we come into a state which in truth we are already in. As it's put in the gospel of Thomas: "The kingdom of the Father is spread out upon the earth, but men do not see it."

Merry Christmas to you too!

Robert

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I have been wondering...

Hi Robert,

I have been wondering and asking Mark the same thing.  I asked him: "Why are you insisting on this Absolute/Eastern partial perspective of reality AS IF nothing else mattered...as if you wanted to invalidate the world of form...exactly what some of us (including you) have been struggling to bring to surface!"  And finally... he clarified.  He said, he is just trying to emphasize that all we need to do is to 'recognize' what we don't see.  In that sense, we are already there and we don't need to go anywhere.  BUT, BUT we need to recognize it.

If we take as example the discussion about "healthy boundaries" (the one I had with another member yesterday)  we can see that recognition is a major issue. 

How can any seeker of truth want to waste any opportunity for more clarity and 'seek boundaries' to prevent them from getting a bigger picture of reality...a reality that they indirectly claim to be unhealthy...when they are saying all along that they want to see more, they want knowledge, they want the non-dual, they want to live integrally?  

It is extremely ironic.  I feel like saying, why is one getting involved in these matters in the first place?!   So,  one side of the boundary is supposedly clean and healthy, and the other side is dirty and unhealthy?

Mike mentioned something on his last post (to Barbi) about the "scars" from his relationships with teachers or people involved in spirituality.  He said that it was worse than the relationships with ordinary people.  Probably because the ordinary people do not presume they are so "good and advanced" and because the student does not put so much trust on the ordinary individual as he would do to a "special spiritual teacher".  He said something like...people played with his head.

Are people seeking the non-dual or precisely using spiritual teachings 'to avoid' the non-dual because that is too scary to be faced? 

Oh pleeeease..."healthy boundaries" ??? I find this choice of word UNREAL.

Robert,  I wish you and your family a great snowy week..................................

 

 

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Maybe this is just a language thing

Mark,

I agree with you that we just need to recognize it. But I think we can still use the language of "entering" if we understand it to mean "entering into the recognition of." If my spouse were to say to me, "I don't feel like you are really in this relationship" (which thank God she hasn't!), I would know what she meant, that I may have entered it physically, but not mentally/emotionally.

So I suspect we are saying the same thing in different words.

Happy new year!

Robert

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Cognitive Keys to the Kingdom?

Dear Robert and Mark, 

An everyday, practical key?: 

 Now that I have migrated from the field of clinical psychology, I find myself embracing more than ever, the dominant line of thought in psychology - the power of thinking habits, called "cognitive psychology". Well, here's an example, If I practiced thinking to myself "What special gift does this woman (man, child, creature, thing, or situation) bring my way?" Wouldn't I be using a key to the Kingdom of God? The little thought would help prompt my mind to be open to the gift of life as planted in that person, creature, thing, or situation. And wouldn't that one little habit become a catalyst for the unfolding from potential spirituality into "actualized" spirituality?

At this point, the meaning of leaven and mustard seed seems to be that these metaphors represent unfolding of potential, which rises up through the crude to the refined, actualized, form. But the potential is always there inside, no matter what actualized stage the person, creature, thing, or situation is in. The Kingdom of God is everywhere as regards potentiality, but only actualized here and there. Thus, in this actualized sense, it is capable of being "entered".

We tend to see God as the creator. If we are in that image, then, as creative souls, we see the potential in the crude forms around us. We can take junk and make beautiful artworks from it, because each piece of junk has a special place in the overall unfolding process.

A philosophical key?:

To me, seeing reality as constantly unfolding (inside-out) is a metaphysical thought (paradigm) which also acts as a "key" to the Kingdom. This thought/philosophy/paradigm, in turn, seems related to thinking like energy and energy fields, as opposed to matter-based thought in which we see cause and time as things here, now, bumping into other things there, then, thereby "causing" the other things to move. But in energy terms, the energy stayed as it was, only taking on different states/forms. The movement was only in unfolding from the pure source form into the material, actual, existing (exist = to stand out) form. From "pure potentiality" (Depok Chopra) into actuality. 

This view would see the human being, not so much as a being-thing, as a solar flare that unfolds from its universal source. As soon as the flare hits the cooler (lower frequency) "atmosphere" of physical existence, it begins the journey of actualizing from crude states toward ever-refined states (not unlike fractals added over and over again- see Comparison of Ken Wilber's Ideas (from the Integral Approach) and Benoit Mandelbrot's Fractal Geometry

- until an efficient complexity is achieved in which the actualized whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and it becomes a kind of fractal antenae that picks up on the innermost frequencies of the pure energy, pure potential, realm).

Thanks for you thoughts that led me back to a familiar, but now more refined, place,

                                                                                            Unfoldingly yours, 

                                                                                            Darrell

 

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How Does One Enter "The Kingdom Of God"?

Hey Robert,

Along with being concerned about a general feeling of elitism in the integral world -- a feeling of looking down upon and excluding people who, perhaps, are less cognitively developed -- what also concerns me is the idea that one can enter "The Kingdom Of God" without immersing ourselves in day-to-day life. In other words, I've come to believe that a major part of "the practice" of entering into The Kingdom that Jesus talked about is to be engaged in the world. It's not about achieving some exalted state and then, while acting from this exalted state, one returns to the world loving and caring for the lowly and disenfranchised. Rather, it is about loving and caring for the lowly and disenfranchised as a path to awakening. Or, said another way, as a path to anchoring, establishing, grounding, and expanding whatever awakening we may already possess. I don't see this as a path that excludes classical meditative practices (or other kinds of vital inner work), but, rather, as a path that compliments, expands upon, and helps ground these practices, along with whatever authentic awakenings emerge from them.

One of the best ways I know to flesh this idea out revolves around shadow work. Now that shadow work appears as one of the four core modules of Integral Life Practice (which is definitely where it belongs in my mind -- a fundamental, core practice), I think there is a need to expand on this. Specifically, it is clear to most people who have done any serious shadow work that shadow material primarily emerges in our relationships with others. This is where we get a very clear look at our shadows and also where most of our shadow work takes place -- in our relationships with other human beings and, by extension, the external world. Why isn't this promoted as a core module? In the circles I run in, I have repeatedly said that I think relationships should be the fifth core module. The point being that the emphasis that Jesus had on service, love, relationships, community, making things happen in the outer world was not simply about making things better in the outer world, nor was it simply about bringing The Kingdom of God to Earth. It was HOW "The Kingdom Of God" was manifested, both inwardly and outwardly. In order to fully experience (and ground) The Kingdom of God within ourselves and within our world, we need to adopt daily practices that actively engage our external worlds by attempting, for example, to embrace, include, honor all the different kinds of people and forces that Jesus embraced -- especially those that are traditionally excluded. This, of course, is classic shadow work: in order to achieve personal healing, we are called to embrace the aspects of ourselves that we find objectionable, repulsive, unclean, which, not coincidentally, are also reflected to us in the outer world by people and things we find objectionable, repulsive, unclean. In this way our inner and outer worlds support one another, and, together, create an integrated path of development.

Once last point to drive this home: we are all aware that it is possible to experience exalted states of consciousness and still be a scoundrel as a human being. I think the path that Jesus advocated -- and the path that the integral model advocates (at least theoretically) -- is the antidote to this problem. If our intention is to live fully integrated lives, to experience exalted experiences in consciousness and have those states turn into permanent stages, we must take care of the business of bringing these impulses down to earth, in our earthly relationships and activities. This, in my view, is the way we ground these experiences AND pave the way for them to take place.

What are your thoughts on this?

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David Sunfellow
Integral Rising
Integral NHNE
Integral Organizers

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On Entering the Kingdom (Part II)...

When it comes to the question of entering the Kingdom, we do have this memorable aphorism from Jesus: “Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life and only a few find it.”[1] So we enter the Kingdom through the narrow gate, which in contemporary terms means we are to live with Jesus’ paradoxes - the creative tension between opposing perspectives, and this is indeed the road less travelled.... and about as much fun as child birth.

So Jesus does not say that the Kingdom is “always already” within us, that it has always and already been there, and that we need simply awaken to what we have all along possessed.  Were that the case, then the Kingdom would be a matter of Platonic “recollection,” of anamnesis, and entering the Kingdom  would amount to nothing more than a kind of Neo-Platonic conversion, a turning in that recovers what we have always possessed but have lately forgotten. This is a very Greek metaphysical (and even an Eastern Enlightenment) view of things and essentially at odds with the temporality and historicity of biblical experience. 

 So I’m not sure it’s a good idea to simply conflate the Kingdom with either the Greek metaphysics of ‘recollection’ or Eastern Enlightenment teachings on ‘always already’ awareness... So while the Kingdom is indeed “entos humon”: inside you, within you – it is not simply that it has always been within us and we just need to remember something forgotten (in involution, etc) but it is already happening, right now, and you are in the midst of it. As Jesus says:  “But if it is by the finger of God that I cast out devils, then the Kingdom of God has come upon you” (Lk. 11:20),

 So it is more accurate to say that the Kingdom has “come upon us”, not that it has always been within us. The Kingdom is not always already present, but something that is happening now, something that has begun to happen today, with the advent of God’s rule that Jesus announces.  It is a prophetic conception that God’s rule has come over us (ephthasen), and therefore an essentially historical conception- and not a Buddhist or Pagan theory about the make-up of the human soul which has driven off the highway of eternity into the ditch of time. So the proclamation of the Kingdom is not a theory about humans being always already perfect, but the announcement of an historical event, that the time of God’s reign has begun. Now, today... as a permanent challenge that is already beginning, where one becomes what one is not, and one ceases to be what one was.  I have had a change of heart, I have been transformed.  I have not become what I am but I have become something else, something new...

 


[1] Matt 7:13-14

 

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"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Kingdom as always/already is a defensible position

Cameron,

Good to hear from you. Of course, as you know, what Jesus meant by the kingdom is a huge and hotly debated topic in Jesus scholarship. Everyone agrees that it was the central point of his teaching, so what he meant by it is obviously a core issue--the core issue. When I first started reading Jesus scholarship about twenty years ago, I simply accepted what was then the virtual consensus, that it was the rule of God in society that was about to break in on the world through the ministry of Jesus. I heard vaguely about some British scholars who thought differently about it, but even though their position was more congenial to my spiritual beliefs, I figured they must have it wrong.

Since then that dominant position seems to be in the process of crumbling. Well, actually, it was crumbling back then, I just happened to be reading old books. Since then I have also read a great deal more. Since then the findings of the Jesus Seminar have been released. Since then Q has exploded as a focus of scholarship. And since then I have done a lot of my own thinking (as you clearly have) based on the original materials (as illuminated by modern scholarship).

The end result of all this is that I have personally come to believe that scholars have, especially in the past, interpreted the Kingdom in terms that are too historical. To me the Kingdom is looking more like Jesus' version of what the Buddhists and Greeks were talking about--his own very unique version, but a version nonetheless. One of the scholars I respect the most, Marcus Borg, has written this about the Kingdom:

"The phrase 'Kingdom of God' is thus a symbol for the presence and power of God as known in mystical experience. It is Jesus' name for what is experienced in the primordial religious experience and his name for the power from that realm which flowed through him as a Spirit person." (Conflict, Holiness and Politics in the Teachings of Jesus, p. 262)

It would take me a huge amount of space to defend why I concur with Borg. I don't consider the case I would make a slam dunk that would silence everyone else upon hearing it. Far from it. Even Borg seems to have moved his position (to a more social sort of Kingdom) since he wrote what I just quoted. I just wanted to say that I think a very good case can be made for the Kingdom being more like a state/presence/condition that is always/already here but that we haven't yet stepped into.

Robert

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The Kingdom of God: Definitely Something New & Different

Cameron, it sounds like we're on the same page (or very close to the same page). In my view, "The Kingdom of God" that Jesus was talking about was not simply about people to enter into enlightenment states that are traditionally championed by the East. It was about bringing these higher states of consciousness into fully embodied expressions in the Earth, in relationships, in every day activities; manifesting, in other other words, heaven on Earth. And it was a "harmonic convergence" of sorts -- the more this consciousness manifested in every day relationships and experiences, the more fully it connected us with the deeper aspects of ourselves. And visa versa. I think inner and outer conditions were supposed to be reflections of one another, and also fuel, inspire, inform, ignite one another.

In other words, it wasn't simply about attaining some inner experience, but also radically changing the world around us to reflect this transformed inner condition -- and also consciously using the outer world to enter, ever deeper, into the inner. You won't find this idea championed very strongly in most Eastern traditions, because most Eastern traditions don't really care about this world. As far as they are concerned, it is an illusion and you do what you have to do here in the service of waking up, getting out, moving beyond it. This, in my view, is the great failing of the East: it fails (generally) to understand the significance of this world, of why we are here, of why relationships are important, of the place, purpose, and power of the evolutionary current. We are here to get engaged, fully and wholeheartedly, because something new, different, and unique is wanting to become manifest. Jesus, I think, was one of the first ones to recognize this impulse and run with it. And clearly, the way he ran with it WAS NOT to create a new monastic order focused on attaining inner states. Rather, he stepped fully, and boldy, into the real world and attempted to manifest The Kingdom of God there.

Now, two thousand years later, we may be on the verge of it reaching some kind of critical mass -- or at least I hope we are -- where enough people are starting to "get it" that we have a serious shot of manifesting the Kingdom of God I think Jesus was pointing to, together, both inwardly and outwardly...

............

Integral Rising
Integral NHNE
Jesus Rising

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On entering the kingdom

David,

As you might guess, I agree wholeheartedly with literally everything you have said, every word. Let me put it in my own terms. I see "shadow" as being primarily about the ego--the shadow being that portion of the ego that we do not see, which is most of it. As I use the term "ego," it refers to a profoundly deep-seated concept within us that says "I am me alone. Hence, I alone am what matters here. I am sun, you are satellite. I am end, you are means." From this perspective, we place everyone else in one of three categories: irrelevant, obstacle, or food.

I think the reason this concept isn't truly uprooted by transcendental experience is that the two are on such different levels. It's like hoping that the shining of a pristine and beautiful star will uproot a mole. The star is on too different of a level to seem relevant to the mole. So the star can shine and, at the same time, the mole can go about its business. They can coexist quite nicely.

I think we need to uproot the ego on its own level. I believe the ego is most manifest in how we perceive, feel about, behave towards, and affect other people. Thus, to transform our fundamental stance (internal and external) toward other people is a direct transformation of the ego on its own level, where it lives. I believe that Jesus' teachings were to a large degree aimed at exactly that. They weren't so much a moral code ("perform these noble, sacrificial acts toward others and God will class you as good") as a radical transformation of our entire stance toward others. They represented a reversal of feeling and behaving toward others based on those three categories: "If you are irrelevant to my interests, I'll ignore you. If you are an obstacle, I'll attack you. And if you are tasty food, I'll treat you well (at least until dinner time, or if you prematurely escape from the fridge)." His teachings invited us to step outside that system, completely.

To actually do that, I personally believe we do have to do the things you are talking about: Get in touch with our shadow, see the real nature of our destructive stance toward others and own it as ours, not thrust on us by them. And then do the work to turn this stance around. And do all this, as you say, while engaged in actual relationships, in the world.

Anyway, that's just my way of expressing the same points that I hear you making.

Robert

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Social Spirituality, And Christian or Integral Narcism

 It has been awhile since I read Werner Lange's Social Spirituality book, and it is doubtful anyone else has heard of it. I was fortunate to come upon it because the author happened to be a sociology professor to my youngest son in college. The book is probably self-published, and it reads a bit on the academic side at times, but I was enthralled by it. One of the truths the book spoke was a distinction of Christian narcism. Similar to things Robert, above, and others said recently - that the Kingdom of God may not be only about personal enlightenment, but may also involve (or even require) social transformation, and more investment in the lower two Integral quadrants of we (cultural) and its (social/political). 

Back to the Lange's concept of Christian (and now Integral's) Narcism, he simply notes that Spirit does not stop only at individual, every man for himself, transformation, as though all are staring narcisistically into a mirror, but yearns to lift the collective and to help the disenfranchised. I believe that he is right in suggesting that spirituality needs to be social as well as personal, and that he is right in implying that Christian narcism is actually a tool to help the social elites maintain the current (pathological, rigid) social heirarchies - a kind of (intentional or not) "divide and conquer" technique. I feel called to create a new social paradigm and a new social structure based on that (interdependent, one body) paradigm. 

But I must also do the self-work if I am to be a change agent. Lord, make me an instrument of thy social transforming!  As I asked Dora way above in an earlier section, are we Neo-Zionists? Not the ethno-centric God's Chosen people's "heaven" on earth, but the God-choosing, co-creating, integral, inclusive, form of creating a healthier, more heavenly, world/society?

I believe this to be part of the meaning of the Tree of Life, a stage in which we understand our interconnectedness and our synergy, rather than being mentally governed by discrete knowledge and facts and amber (?), dualistic(?), morality that overshadows spiritually-based, and spiritually-informed, morality. 

The green economic revolution, that Thomas Freidman and Obama speak of, also calls for a "green mind" revolution which includes such interdependent/interconnective/dynamic thought as Ken's Great Nest of Being and the Integral View/Map. We, each in our own little way,  are growing the firstfruits of the Tree of Life.  

Thanks for your contribution (of paradigm-challenging, or paradigm-changing, thought) toward this culture change.

                                                                                                   Darrell

                                                        

                                                                       

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Is This Heaven?

 Dear Robert,

   When perusing these comments, I thought of the scene from the movie Field of Dreams in which the angel (the main character's deceased father) asks his son, "Is this heaven?" The son thinks awhile and says maybe it is. Heaven, or God's Kingdom, may be right under our noses, in the form of an incarnational mysticism called blogging. The mystical unknown of the spiritual realm/aspect of existence may be right here in this discussion. I shared with Cameron a long discourse that related mental openness to spirituality. I even recall the minister Robert Schuler making the same point many years ago on his TV ministry show, Hour of Power.

  When I think about the father/angel asking me if this is heaven, I look at this blog discussion (instead of Kevin Cosner's looking at his Kansas farmhouse) and say, "Maybe it is". Why? because our minds are open to exploring the concept of God's Kingdom. That process itself may be a microcosm, a holographic representation, of the Kingdom of God. Ask and Ye shall receive. Perhaps we are receiving the Kingdom, or Heaven, now - right now. And we are "angels unaware" to one another.    

                                                                                                             Darrell

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Is this Heaven?

What a beautiful thought.  And I completely agree.

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Maybe it Is

 Peggy, I guess we need to keep telling ourselves, "Maybe it is". Then we can see the heaven that is working through the created situation - see the Creator in the creation. Easy to think, but not enough. We have to stop and say that to ourselves over and over, if we are to integrate the other side with this side.

                                                                           Darrell 

                                                               

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Embedded story of God in time...

"...'Logos made flesh', the embodied story of God in time."

Indeed Cameron, and an Integral Life will always be indebted to your significant contributions. In fact, it would not be where it is today without them...

Much love,

Mark

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Thanks

Thank you Mark, I'm working on some new stuff at the moment that I will post in the next few weeks... Keep up your enthusiastic efforts. Cam --

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Logos made flesh and Phenomenology?

Mark, Is this why you directed me here: Logos, the Word, as pure thought? And pure thought (Bohm's "proprioceptive thought" or "thinking"?)  as "phenomena"? And I'm still waiting for what you mean by the flash thing. When will you give me/us a test run?  Is it on the experimental site? Will it be? Is it the experimental site?   

 While I'm here, new piece of the "creation crossover" puzzle I am working on as a series. In the second blog post for the series (Reciprocating Universes), I get way ahead of my reasoning and mention how the shadows of this world may be the light, and building blocks of a parallel universe (or dimension). After philosophizing with a friend of mine moments ago at a local coffee house, I got some clarity on what I meant by that odd statement. 

The shadows here are what I would call a "teleological opportunity". The shadow I have in this world is the gap between my spiritual capacities and my actual behaving or being. I need help, I feel the need for help, I pray, I get help, God or God' intermediary agents, realize that a pleasing movement between realms occurred, they/He feel loved, I feel healed and loved. It is a reciprocal relationship between spiritual entities (and the spiritual realm) and me in this physical realm. In the movie Meet Joe Black, Death gets to taste peanut butter and to taste human love. The other side benefitted by crossing over. This is what I mean by this particular version of "creation crossover" - "transdimensional",  or "vertical-mind",  or "fountain-like", whatever is the best word for this version of creation crossover.   The gap (a pain, a sin, a falling short, a need for healing) feels "bad" to us, but it is an opportunity to pull us to God, and the word "to" could be an acronym, "teleological opportunity".

This builds on my revelation that came while getting inside a cough (and no longer coughing), and getting a fringe benefit of an awareness that all illness is a kind of window to the other side. Expand the concept to other painful "gaps", such as grief, loss, failure, sin, heartbreak, etc. , and all become valuable test cases for God's divine love and healing - a chance to taste human love, human growth/evolution, and even peanut butter!  

                                                                                 Darrell

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Much Love Link

  Mark, I liked the link, "much love" above. It speaks to the horizontal creation crossover concept, which, in turn, speaks to the mind set we need in forming a good IL community. Be willing to see the worth of each others' gifts, understand that the crossover is confusing and even painful at times, and do the crossover anyway - share and dare to integrate all those seemingly unrelated gifts. That is the "communion" (from the "holon" dude and from the speaker in the video)  and community that compliments each persons "agency" (from the "holon" dude) and "autonomy"(from the speaker). 

                                                  Darrell

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Towards an Integral embrace...

To continue the surprising and generous response to this post I just want to turn this inquiry upside down and begin by showing that there is indeed a strong and significant overlap between the Integral framework and the basic tenets of the Christianity (at least as I see them). For starters, “Free to be Fully Human” – the creative tension between Freedom (human) and Fullness (divine) at the core of the Integral Life catch-phrase, corresponds exactly to the paradoxical nature of orthodox Christology – where the person of Jesus is held to be 100% divine (free) and 100% human (full).

Moreover, in SES (volume 1 of the Kosmos trilogy), KW also unpacks the interlocking and overlapping conjunction of humanity and divinity (“Free to be fully human”) in Christianity in terms of the Non-dual union of Other-worldly Ascent and This-worldly Descent, which is also an integration Eros and Agape... where Eros is the love of the human (lower) for the divine (higher), and Agape is the love of the divine for the human.

So where the Christian story holds to the Absolute Paradox of God-in-time, in SES Ken also maintains this same kind of secret non-dual union of Eros and Agape: where Ascending and Descending paths are inextricably interwoven, as he writes in his footnotes on the Real: “the realization of the One-in-the-Many and the Many-in-the-One, is, of course, common and definitive of all Non-dual schools”[1] an insight which also points directly to the paradoxical teachings of Jesus and a profound convergence between Integral and Christianity...

In this respect one of the key points of SES is that an emphasis either too much Eros/Ascent or too much Agape/Descent have their own distinctive and correlative pathologies. The shadow of a merely Ascending (Eros) path is called Phobos (a repression or avoidance of the material-sensual world) the characteristic dysfunction of Western monotheistic religion; while the shadow of a merely Descending (Agape) path is Thanatos (a fixation to the material-sensory world) what Freud called the death-drive and something that is commonplace in flatland...

So where the secret Non-dual embrace of Integral can help to re-imagine, re-contextualize or re-configure the Christian tradition, and balance some of the lop-sided perspectives that have prevailed in Western Christianity, there is also something about the Gospel story of “the god-forsaken God” that slips through the AQAL net and offers a distinct alternative to the Eastern (Non-dual) enlightenment traditions.

The (real/apparent?) dissonance here has been put well by Slavoj Zizek (see The Puppet and the Dwarf: the Perverse Core of Christianity 2003) who reminds us that the Great Chain philosophy that underpins the basic orientation of the Integral model is actually a pagan philosophy (as exemplified by Plotinus, the Neo-Platonic mystic-philosopher). That is, the notion that we have to throw off the lower world of the flesh (material-sensory), purify ourselves and advance through higher stages from body to mind to soul to union with the One – is a purely Ascending (or pagan) philosophy... It has nothing to do with the Gospel message that “Jesus is Lord” (i.e. Caesar is not!) and denotes the very movement from the human to the divine (Eros) that Christianity overturns and reverses with the “Logos made flesh” (Agape)...

 To get to the heart of the matter, according to Zizek (arguably the most radical Christian thinker alive today), the primordial fact is the “non-coincidence of the Absolute with itself.”[2] This means that God is not at one with God’s self. There is an irreducible gap or tension in the heart of the Real that refuses any proper resolution or any mediation of opposites in a higher synthesis - i.e. there is no such thing as a secret Non-dual union... There is only the inherent gap of the One with itself – an Absolute Paradox - and this is particularly true of the Christ-event, the dividing point of Western history where God becomes “en-fleshed”, fully participates in the worst that the life-process has to offer, and puts radically into question all other man-made religions and philosophies, which in the wake of the crucified One are exposed as barely concealed and all too human attempts at self-deification...

The key difference here is that with Jesus and his death on the Cross, the fundamental gap between humanity and the divine is now radically transposed into God’s own self. This means that the very thing that once seemed to separates us from God (suffering, abandonment, death) is now the very thing that unites us with Him... That is, in my weakness and abandonment, when I am vulnerable and powerless - precisely then I am identified with Christ, the God-man, the one who was also abandoned and powerless on the Cross. As Zizek says, “we are one with God when God is no longer one with Himself, but abandons Himself, 'internalizes' the radical distance that separates us from Him. Our radical experience of separation from God is the very feature which unites us with Him – only when I experience the infinite pain of separation from God do I share an experience with God Himself (Christ on the Cross).”[3] For Zizek, the basic message here is that “God now trusts us” (i.e. the supernatural mythic God that guarantees an orderly universe is dead), and he goes on to argue that this is the only original freedom and fullness available to the Western tradition.

So in Christ, God becomes Incarnate (finite, temporal) and descends into the pain and messiness of life, God internalizes the painful gap between the human and the divine and becomes one of us, a broken, imperfect and suffering creature... and this Agape (descending) path is in direct contradiction to pagan (and Eastern) religions in which human are to purify themselves and move to the higher spheres of the Great Chain of Being.

So where Christianity finds an inseparable union with God in identifying with Christ crucified, the love of God in Christ is a radical disclosure of the “non-coincidence of the Absolute with itself”, the gaping wound in the heart of God’s own self… as German theologian Jurgen Moltmann says: God cannot love if God cannot make himself vulnerable.3 And just as Christian gospels tell us that God is radically present to us precisely when God is not at one with God’s self, the paradoxes of Jesus on the Kingdom of God also renounce all attempts to collapse this minimal difference (or irreducible gap between opposites) by either reducing one aspect to the other or enacting a “higher” synthesis of opposites.

The point here is that there is a paradox at the heart of things, or what Zizek calls a “structure of imbalance”– a paradox that was also alluded to by Ken Wilber at the end of  SES (1995) when he gives an all too brief prelude to Volume 3 of the Kosmos Trilogy (still as yet unpublished). Given a working title The Spirit of Post-Modernity when summarizing the basic contours of Volume 3 Ken says that all of our endless dualisms (agency/communion, coherence/correspondence, integration /differentiation, etc) are fated to battle it out forever, with no side ever, ever ultimately winning – and here we have what Zikek calls “the Real of irreducible tensions as such”, where Yin and Yang never find any ultimate reconciliation.

So there is an irreducible tension, gap or antagonism at the heart of the Kosmos, and in the Incarnation (the central mystery of Christianity) what we call God is precisely that which is fully present (and therefore becomes real) in the midst of this absolute contradiction… And in the same way, just as the teachings of Jesus challenge and overturn the ‘rational order’ of the pagan universe with a paradoxical reversal of meaning – or a “weird intrusion” that interrupts the semantic code of the default (pre-given) world - Christ himself is the ultimate diabolic figure, insofar as diabolos (to separate, to tear apart the One into Two) is the opposite of symbolos (to gather and unify).

As the Absolute Paradox (the irreducible gap in the heart of the Real) Christ brought the “sword, not peace,” in order to disturb the existing harmonious unity and turn the world as we know it inside out and upside down. Thus the Christian stance is radically different from the teachings of New Age (pagan) philosophy and Western Buddhism which claim that the universe is the abyss of the primordial Ground in which all “false” opposites - good and evil, appearance and reality, light and dark, etc. - coincide. Christianity proclaims as the highest action precisely what New Age paganism condemns as the source of all evil—the gesture of separation, a principle of ir-reconciliation, an event of rupture, a drawing of the line, a singular truth-event, a clinging to an element that disturbs the balance of the All

This is a pretty radical position but as far as I can see the paradoxes of Christianity are thoroughly orthodox, and they also evidenced in the parabolic structure of Jesus’ teachings on the Kingdom … And while there is indeed space for convergence between the Non-dual embrace of Integral and Christianity, as Zizek says of the New Age philosophy of ‘cosmic balance’, which seeks the global harmony opposites: “precisely what I find horrible in these new forms of spirituality is that we are simply losing our sense for these kinds of paradoxes, which are the very core of Christianity.”[4]

So the question here for me is this: Does the Absolute Paradox of Jesus Christ (God-in-time) reveal the secret Non-dual embrace of Eros and Agape, Human and Divine, Ascending and Descending currents, or is this “Kosmic balance” precisely what the paradoxes of Christianity break open and throw into question with the scandal of the crucified God and the non-coincidence of the One with itself?

That is, are we, like a good psychoanalyst to resolve the enigma of existence by supplanting it by an even more radical enigma? I don’t know the answer to this one, but any and all comments would be appreciated...

Cameron

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"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)