Pure
and genuine religion in the sight of God the Father means caring for orphans
and widows in their distress and refusing to let the world corrupt you. ‒
James 1:27
With
all the hubbub surrounding the resignation and replacement of the pope, it
seems like a good time to revisit a theme I've covered here briefly before,
namely, the purpose and role of religion as seen by spiritualists and those
friends who have communicated with us from the other side of that boundary we
call death.
While
I'm generally not one given to quoting the Bible, the verse above, disregarded
by many in organized religion, seems to be pertinent to a discussion about the
role of religion and it's a definition with which I heartily agree. Note that
there is no mention in the verse of rituals or ceremonies, nothing about being cleansed
of sin, nothing about sacrifice, the Eucharist or baptism, no requirement that
one should hold certain beliefs, and absolutely no reference to a pope or any
ecclesiastical structure whatsoever. Religion in this definition is confined to
service and the individual pursuit of virtue (or building of character). In our
verse, caring for widows and orphans is a metaphor for all types of service
rendered to others.
It
should be noted here that over the past 160 years of modern spiritualism this simple
outlook on religion has consistently been the message from the other side.
Spirit in message after message has repeatedly stressed the personal quest for
truth and righteousness and downplayed the role of ceremony and all activities and doctrines associated with
organized religion. Service to others is seen by spirit as the single most effective means of assuring one's
spiritual growth. In other words, religion is conduct and nothing more as noted
by scientist and clergyman George Henslow in The Religion of the Spirit World (1920).
In
his voluminous writings on history spiritualist author Arthur Findlay shows how
this "natural religion" as he calls it was corrupted over the
centuries by both ignorance and deliberate manipulation from the priestly
class. Rites and dogmas were added until nowadays almost everyone equates
religion with these formal institutional-based practices and beliefs. The whole
story is interestingly told in Findlay's 2,000-page masterwork The Psychic Stream (1939).
Put
another way, scholar Karen Armstrong says that religion isn't about adherence
to doctrines as literal truth ‒
it's about living one's life a certain way from hour to hour and day to day.
And the remarkable spirit guide Silver Birch said, "Religion is living in
a way that brings you closer to the Great Spirit. Religion is when the Great
Spirit is expressed in your actions. Religion is service."
Spiritualism
and New Thought have both taught that before each action there always is
thought. The thought of unenlightened minds is usually rooted in self-service
and only with spiritual growth does one emerge from this selfish frame of mind.
Ignorant and undisciplined people who have not yet begun to look beyond self
generally do what is wrong with wrong actions, according to Findlay, being
those which "upset the harmony and aspirations of life." (Note the
absence of the word "sin!")
"Wrong-doing
comes from unbalanced and undeveloped minds, and, in its final analysis, can be
reduced to selfishness, to the consideration of only our own wishes and the
ignoring of those with whom we come in contact," Findlay elaborated in his
two-volume history of the world, The
Curse of Ignorance (Vol. 1, Chapter XI). "...The finer or enlightened
mind could not find peace and harmony if others suffered from actions produced
by its thoughts. The enlightened mind is so telepathically in touch with the
minds of other people that it is upset if it produces disharmony in other
minds. As the mind develops it becomes ever more sensitive to the thoughts of
others, and adjusts itself to prevent the disharmony which leads to quarrels
and unhappiness."
History,
Findlay says, is the story of unfolding minds. Over much of mankind's past
undeveloped minds constituted the majority of the population but during the
past few centuries steady progress has been made and now there is less cruelty
while efforts to help the less fortunate are abundant.
Our
institutional religious dogmas and traditions, however, are products of an age
when cruelty was the norm and ignorance reigned supreme. In assessing the
impact of Christianity on the world's people, Findlay asks, "What, then,
was the ethical standard of instruction in those days [when Christianity was being formed], and how
exactly did the people look upon life? They had their own crude ideas of right
and wrong, just as a savage has, but they had no incentive to strive for
something better, as they were taught and believed that their wickedness had
been forgiven by God, because 'By the righteousness of one [Jesus] the free
gift [of salvation] came upon all men... so by the obedience of one shall many
be made righteous.' (Romans 5: 18) This being so, they had no reason to worry
over their shortcomings."
This
outlook, of course, persisted from the fall of the Roman Empire right up to the
Renaissance and is still being promoted by many within organized Christianity.
Nowadays parishioners are exhorted to secure their salvation primarily by
endorsing certain beliefs followed by regular church attendance, tithing,
baptism, partaking of the Eucharist, and any number of other things espoused by
various denominations. And, oh, you should also clean up your act along the way
but, don't worry, do these things the church asks and you're saved and won't go
to eternal punishment in hell. Those who distance themselves from the church
are looked upon with suspicion because, the preacher says, how can anybody be
truly "good" outside of the "body of Christ" (code name for
the so-called universal church)?
That's
a lot of baggage wrapped up in religious clothes and, according to our verse at
the top of this post, entirely unnecessary baggage at that. Since its emergence
160 years ago, modern spiritualism has attempted to lead people back to the
important but simple foundations of living: Practice the Golden Rule, serve one
another, love in abundance, and
recognize who you really are ‒
a self-conscious manifestation of the
Universal Life Force that is destined to live forever. That realization alone
(which is proven over and over again through spirit communications)
automatically alters one's behavior away from selfishness and toward a full,
rich and loving relationship with All Life.
So,
don't hold your breath that the new pope or any other leader in organized
religion will usher in our New Age ‒
that task is just not one that has been assigned to any religious institution.
Instead, look to enlightened science and to the prompting from within for the
transformations we are longing for. As science edges closer and closer to
discovery of spirit and as mankind as a collective realizes who he/she really
is, then the resolve will be there to change our own world for the better. Then
will our New Age truly be here.
The Catholic Church has benefited from millennia of learning how to entrain people's mood with the cadence of the chants and grandeur of its buildings and ceremonies. The entire service is designed to appeal to the hindbrain more than to the intellect. Of the primary instincts of the primitive mind; feeding, reproduction, survival, fight or flight, the fear associated with fight or flight is the most resistant to a rational filter. This makes people especially vulnerable to the authority of the priesthood which too easily equates spiritual with fear of an all-powerful father god.
ReplyDeleteSpiritualism, on the other hand, is almost entirely about the intellect. The Zen saying, "Before Enlightenment chop wood carry water, after Enlightenment, chop wood carry water" is very apt for Spiritualism. It is a Spiritualist's task to do the work necessary to understand the nature of reality and to learn to live accordingly. A natural result of this understanding is the recognition that we are all connected as one community, meaning that each person is responsible for his or her personal progression. This is a personal thing, but something that never happens in a vacuum. The wood that is chopped and water that is carried is in service of the community.
David,
ReplyDeleteTerrific article !!!
Thanks,
RBB
(rbrannon1@hotmail.com)