Searching for God # 76
The matter of a faith and its impact on one’s life, has some many cognitive lenses through which to ‘biopsy’ human decisions. And human decisions, both individual and collective, taken together, form a metaphoric river of collective consciousness and unconsciousness that flows in and through each of us and in which we ourselves ‘flow’ or swim or are buffeted by the various currents, rocks, embankments and seasons. Our intimate participation in that shared collective river is inescapable.
We read
psychological depictions of ‘getting into the flow’ a phrase ascribed to highly
tuned and trained, dedicated and committed athletes, Olympic athletes, for
example. And there are also religious depictions of a similar, although likely
different flow. In her introduction to the Benedictine Way of Saint Benedict, Seeking
God, Esther de Wall writes:
But
first of all we have to tackle what can both ruin our private life and become a
corrosive in our relationship with others, namely self-will. It is our self-centredness
that St. Benedict means by self-will and it is important to that when he says ‘renounce
your will’ this does not mean our free-will. That is one of our greatest gifts.
He wants us to free ourselves from the possessive self, concerned with
self-interest, which so grasps and clutches that it gets in the way of any free
and open relationship with God. So it is the use we make of our will which is
the point at issue…..(And
in summary, she writes) Knowing my own limitations I have no right to destroy
other people for theirs. (p. 45-6-7)
In his
insightful work, Peace of Mind, Joshua Liebmann writes, in a section entitled ‘Acceptance
of Self’:
Most men
have a dual interpretation of themselves—two pictures of their two selves in
separate rooms. In one room are hung all of the portraits of their virtues,
done in bright, splashing colors but with not shadows and no balance. In the
other room hangs the canvas of self-condemnation-a kind of grotesque Dorian
Gray caricature—painted equally as unrealistically with dark and morbid greens
blacks and no light or relief. Instead of keeping these two pictures isolated
from one another, we must look at them together and gradually blend them into
one. In our exalted moods we are afraid to admit our guilt, hatred, and shame
as elements of our personality; and in our depressed moods we are afraid to
credit ourselves with the goodness and the achievement which really are ours.
We must begin to now to draw a new portrait and accept and know ourselves for
what we are. We are relative, and not absolute, creatures; everything we do is
tinged with imperfection. So often people try to become rivals of God and make
demands of themselves which only God could make of Himself—rigid demands of
absolute perfection. There is a little tyrant and a touch of the critic and martyr in
all of us. There are moments when we want to dominate, to tear down and make
others suffer. These traits, however, can be and must be subordinated to the
total goodness of the personality. (p. 41)
The last
statement begs some unpacking, based as it is, on the premise that we are all
created in the image of God, and continue to encounter those voices of the tyrant,
the critic and the martyr from within. Perhaps Tolstoy’s little epithet might
be helpful, not as another ingredient in a self-help menu, but rather as a
light of wisdom. From Tolstoy’s collection entitled, Three Methods of Reform (1900),
Everyone thinks of changing the world but no one thinks of changing himself.
Although Saint
Benedict had no intentions or illusions of ‘changing the world’ his idea seems quite
congruent with Tolstoy’s. And at its core, the search for seems
to have as its parameters, the transformation of one through the transformation
of the other. Saving the world, and saving the sinner, are neither antithetical
nor mutually exclusive. In his 1846 lecture and later book of the same title, ‘Existentialism
is a humanism,’ Jean-Paul Sartre expresses the idea that whatever we wish (or
decide) for ourselves, we also wish for the world. (Paraphrasing AI)…Sartre
explains that because there is no pre-defined human nature or God to determine
our purpose, every individual is entirely free to define their own essence
through their actions. (Existence precedes essence). The idea of making a
choice, for Sartre, was not about choosing only for oneself but rather choosing
to create an image of what one believes a human ought to be, essentially
creating a set of values for the whole world. Personal subjective choices have universal
significance.
If we bring
Jung into our discussion, we find that, while we are constantly making
decisions, choices, the ‘motivations’ for those choices are mixed, including
not only our conscious discernment of reality and our conscious attempt to ‘discern’
what we would like but also our unconscious, our inner conflicts, fears, repressed
emotions and what might seem like ‘fate’ (echoes from the last post). Nudging
Sartre’s idea, Jung posits the notion, not of essence, (as a static portrait)
but also the dynamic concept of making a choice based on what I choose to
become. And, helpful, at least partially, is the cornerstone idea: ‘until we
make the unconscious conscious, it will direct our life and we will call it
fate.’
What does ‘making
the unconscious conscious’ have to do with a search for God? Much if not all of
our conversations in the academic, corporate, political, medical and legal
fields are based upon a recitation of empirical, literal information. Our
senses perceive, our brain interprets and our deliberations ensue. From one
perspective, we come to consciousness of ourselves, others, and the universe as
if in layers; we know in part, and see and think in part, until we see and think
and know further, again only in part. Jung’s (and Freud’s) discernment of those
influences in our mind/psyche/soul (from Hillman), include what we can
articulate and what remains a mystery.
From
Medium.com, in a piece entitled, How Writing makes peace with the baggage we
carry, by Jan fortune, November 8, 2018, we read:
Poet,
Robert Bly describes the shadow as a ‘long bag we drag behind us’ filled with
all that we denigrate and repress:
·
The parts of parents and teachers disapproved of
·
The parts that didn’t fit with peer pressure
·
The parts our culture has labelled ‘disallowed’
It is not a
stretch to note inferentially, as each of us lugs our ‘bag’ behind us, that collectively
too we share a different bag of what we might call blindnesses, shames,
embarrassments, guilts, denials, repressions, disapprovals, and disallowals.
Not surprisingly, the collective unconscious has a similar and imperial impact
on the social ethos, or the anima mundi, (Hillman) as Jung reminds us it has on
our individual lives.
In his penetrating
critique of the corporatist society and culture, entitled, ‘The Unconscious Civilization,’
John Ralston Saul writes about knowledge
this way:
I am a
snake, not an apple.
What
does that mean? Well, our civilization—the Judeo-Christian—in its founding myth
portrayed the deliverer of knowledge as the source of evil—the devil—and the
loss of innocence as a catastrophe. This probably had more to do with religion
than with the standard desire of those in authority to control those who are
not. And control of the Western species of the human race seems to turn upon
language….Those of us who disseminate language are the snake not the apple.
What does this mean in a corporatist society where knowledge is power—that is
in a society which rewards and admires the control of information in its tiniest
strips of specialization by the millions of specialists in their thousands of corporations,
public and private? The apple is the game. Power, self-protection,
self-advancement are dependent on our ability to control knowledge as if we
were the apple itself. I would say that we have now reached an astonishing
level of sophistication in our apple-envy psychosis. (p.38-39)
In scribbling
in search of my own unconscious, and attempting to bring into congruency (if
not always harmony) those duelling pictures of myself (hero and martry/victim
and conscious/unconscious), I am conscious that while the last several decades
of North American culture have seemed to concentrate on the ‘personal, individual,
ego’ aspects of each human, in and through therapy, as Hillman reminds us, ‘We’ve
had a hundred years of Psychotherapy and Things are Getting Worse’ (book title,
1992). Both Hillman and Saul are interested in addressing the ‘culture’ as an
entity needing to have its blinders removed. Conformity, repression, fitting-in,
for the purposes of personal self-aggrandizement both within the corporations,
government and also the church, have resulted in a conspiracy of silent
repression of many truths on the personal level as well as on the cultural
level.
Saul
continues:
In this
century dominated by mass ideologies, all-inclusive structures and technological
revolution, it is as if the Western individual has taken refuge in the search
for something that no one can take away—their own unconscious. Therapy, as
Hillman puts it, thus becomes yet another ideology—‘a salvation ideology’. (p.103 of We’ve had a hundred years
of therapy etc.) But this flight into the unconscious has gone far beyond
formal therapy into the general Western myth of what as individual is and –more
importantly—what properly should interest an individual. The answer? Himself.
Herself. Not society. Not civilization. The particular versus the whole. The
narrowly examined life of the passive citizen versus that unexamined life of
the twentieth century. (Saul, The Unconscious Civilization, p. 49)
Left off
the agenda of what amounts to the consciousness and the dramatic confluences of
geopolitical powers in deep tension over their own hegemony, often supported by
the churches, are the most profound and legitimate interests of the civilization
itself: survival, protection from global warming and climate change, the
widening gap between the rich and the poor, the growing public awareness of a
tension between mass migration and traditional cultural, religious and social
values. Buried in the narcissism of personal interest, (an argument abrogated
by the MAGA cult) along with the denial of the needs of civilization, we could
be facing an existential crisis of our own making.
MAGA is
merely a mirror image of everything it HATES, including D.E.I., international collaboration,
shared decision-making and shared international responsibility and the co-operation
of at least a form of ‘world order’ that MAGA, in its own narcissistic obsession,
deems to be fatally flawed. The corporation, and the pursuit of profit and wealth
and self-aggrandizement are now the mantra of the United States. Saul, and
Hillman, doubtless, would be neither surprised nor shocked.
Hillman
considered ‘money’ the idol at which American worships, while Saul considered ‘corporatism’
the disease under which North America labors and lives.
How
complicit is the church in both of these icons, idols, images or archetypes
depends on one’s experience, one’s sense of outrage and pursuit of justice? Irrespective
of one’s answer to that question, it is a matter not only of our politics or our economics that demands
critical examination. The churches’ both conscious and unconscious ‘fitting-in’
to the politically correct and also psychically and spiritually repressive expectations
and demands of the corporation, and its hierarchical, literal, empirical and structural
obsession with its own power, and the gigantically shaped rise in its influence
has only increased since both Hillman and Saul were attempting to frame its influence
on individual and on our shared culture.
Salvation
therapy is neither ethical nor effective on either the personal or the societal
level, under the shadow of unconsciousness. The Search for God, in these times,
can be and perhaps even should and could be open to that exploration. Risky,
undoubtedly, yet inescapable too.
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