Late Saturday night I found myself in a dream explaining in great detail what exactly I believe about heaven and hell and the possibility of an afterlife. This was an occurrence (even in a dream!) so unusual (I don't like to be pinned down and what I believe is constantly changing anyway) that the shock of it woke me up, and I was almost, but not quite, energized enough to get up and write it all down while it was fresh. I didn't do that, but I will try to reproduce some of it here, since I thought it was a better job than I'd ever done of it while I was awake and I wanted to record it for future reference.
As is evident from the synthesis of my blogs over the past 8 months or so, my belief set ranges from something approaching orthodoxy on some days to the downright heretical on others, and it would bother me more if my beliefs were constant than it does that they are constantly changing. But, of course, they have been pushing more in some directions than others over the past few years, and I am enjoying the leisure at this point in life to spend some time following through and chasing down some trails of spirituality and religion that others have walked before me. I doubt that I'm blazing any new trails, but do hope that my rambling will encourage others to ramble a little on their own as well. I think the only true heresy in this world is to be of a completely settled faith -- to stop questioning, learning and growing. That would be to be dead already!
One might think that it being Easter had a lot to do with my dream and the arguments I made in it, but I think it was the expected death of an elderly friend (she died on Easter Sunday) that actually precipitated the dream. In it, I was pinned down and made to explain whether I believed in heaven/hell and an afterlife, and there was no escaping putting my thoughts into words. So here, to the best of my memory, is what I said:
"Humans have always had a very difficult time talking about things that are spiritual, since we don't have very good vocabularies to do it. At the same time, I think we are in awe of the power of the spiritual realm, and that we use language not just ineffectively, but deliberately in attempts to put at arms length or play down the importance of the things we are discussing. Thus, we too often use "only" and "just" where they should not be; as in "only metaphor" or "just a myth." Actually, metaphor and myth are quite possibly the most powerful language we possess, and certainly best we have devised for talking about the realm of the spirit.
"That said, I believe that heaven and hell are metaphor and that the concept of afterlife is myth. AND, I believe absolutely in the thing, the concept, behind these terms. We have no other language to convey -- but, let me try anyway.
"I believe that the choices we make have meaning and consequence greater than anything we can conceive, not just for ourselves or even those close around us, but even for the universe as a whole.
"I also believe that we are each more a part of the universe, and of each other, than we fully understand. One of the first tasks of a baby, in order to function as a human in this world, is to distinguish between "myself" and "other." We are not born with than innate distinction of separate self. In fact, meditation helps to suppress the part of the brain where we have built up the 'separate-self sense,' which may explain why it can be such a spiritual experience. Perhaps we learn this sense a little too well -- I think in many ways the separate self is a dangerous illusion.
"Physically, the universe appears to be a closed system. Matter and energy cannot be created or destroyed, only changed. We are the stuff of stardust--our molecules the remnants of ancient suns exploding into the vastness of space and converging here on Earth in just the right conditions to give rise to life as we know it; and 'remember that you are dust and to dust you shall return.' Time too, we now know from Einstein, is a physical property of the universe, related to space and distance. I think eternity in the spiritual sense is perhaps more of a concept of outside of time-outside the constraints of the universe or perhaps encompassing time and space and the physical universe. I believe that what we call 'the spirit' that is in us is also part of this closed system of the universe, and is neither created or destroyed but changed again from one being to another in this complex web about which we understand so little. And perhaps "God" is the spiritual equivalent of eternity -- encompassing, or outside of and beyond...
"If we were only to say that our choices matter in ways that will continue to have repercussions after our death, the very wording seems to imply that they will matter to others after we die, but somehow we will be beyond caring or will have ceased to exist to care. But, this violates the idea of the universe as a closed spiritual system. Whatever it is that makes up me, that is my life's meaning, doesn't just go away when I die, however changed it may be. So, what matters now will still matter to my spirit--my self--as something that it deeply connected to all of life's/the universe's continuity. And, although my choices affect others as well as myself, the responsibility for my choices lies only with me. [That is, perhaps what matters in the spiritual sense is not so much the consequence (the physical element) as the responsibility.] I can think of no metaphor other than heaven/hell that actually captures this kind of awesome responsibility for our choices and the profound consequences (physical) and import (spiritual) of them for a universe in which there is no escape.
"In complexity science, one talks about the emergent properties of a system (such as the intricate patterns of sand dunes sculpted by wind, rain, and individual grains of sand; or the intricate dance of schools of fish). Emergent properties are properties of the whole of a system that are not in evidence in, or extensible from, any of the individual components that make up the system. In a sense, I think, one can consider life itself to be an emergent property of the right collection of complex organic molecules, water, and energy. And, perhaps consciousness is an emergent property of a highly complex brain. I wonder if it couldn't also be considered that God is an emergent property (THE emergent property, or the sum of the emergent properties) of the whole of the complex universe? Despite the seeming reductionism of this thought, I don't think it necessarily takes anything away from our concept of God. If everything we are -- our consciousness, our sense of self, our creativity and values and morals -- could be emergent properties of our complex individual lives and our societies together, how much more complex could be a God who is emergent from the whole of the great, almost infinitely complex universe? And if we have questioned and pondered for generations on whether we are the sum of our parts or whether we create ourselves through our learning, actions and choices, then how much more complex a question about whether God is creator of the universe, or the universe of God? Or, if that is ultimately even a meaningful question? As small individual components in that complex system, the one thing we do know is that we do not have--cannot have--the ability to fully grasp that whole, even though we are impacted by and live in the patterns that characterize it.
"Complex systems may have several different stable states, and often transition between them with only seemingly minor variations in the configuration of the components. Thus, the individual components of even vast systems can produce major changes that affect the whole. (One fish encounters an obstacle and begins swimming in a different direction -- suddenly the whole school is engaged in a new dance pattern!) Seen from this point of view, again, the consequences of individual choice on the universe could be considered to be vast, ongoing, and inescapable -- still under control of God; within the design of God--whose nature is the patterns that are the 'stable states,' but choices that are momentous nonetheless.
Occasional (sometimes very occasional!) thoughts about whatever is on my mind at the moment; frequently theological, occasionally feline, sometimes just random... --AnnBarbie
*It's freeing, isn't it -- not to have to be right about everything? One thing I've learned in my "retirement age" life is that, no matter how close I might get, I am never completely right about anything, and I don't have to be. I am also guaranteed to be imperfect. Come be imperfect with me...
Monday, April 25, 2011
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Passion, Sanity and Betrayal
As I write I am looking at the wedding portrait of two good friends -- still happily married as far as I know, and I hope they remain that way--but the portrait reminds me, nevertheless, that sometimes the people who most despise each other are those who were, in the past, married to each other. Why is it that we reserve our most intense, almost insane, enmity for the people who have been perviously the most dear to us? Passion: red hot or cold blooded, fire and ice, ecstasy and horrible pain. Love is so strong, so full of hope; yet also so costly and so prone to be disappointed. We expect that our loves will provide us with the reason for living. I think, in fact, it can be the hardest thing that we ever do to forgive when when we are failed by someone in whom we have invested so many of our hopes and dreams -- when we can only say, "I gave so many years of my life, my fortune, all my effort, all my future into building what has turned into only ruins and shambles." The sense of betrayal can be so severe that it does bring on a sort of (hopefully temporary) insanity, where it's almost impossible not to lash out in violence of words and/or acts. Perhaps at the same time, this is the greatest test of character.
The gospel for today (Matthew 26), I believe, gives us two examples of this kind of overwhelming passion that can lead to disappointment, and the extremes to which the one(s) who are disappointed may go.
The crowds who followed Jesus truly believed that he was going to be the leader who would restore the kingdom of God to Israel, who would give them independence from Rome, drive out foreign invaders, restore prosperity and self-determination. Many followed him at great personal expense, risking family, fortune and freedom to help in his political and social rebellion. And here he was seemingly giving himself up, abandoning their movement just when it looked like they could achieve something. If he would only seize the opportunity and call on the crowds he had gathered to fight and overwhelm the rulers, protest in the streets, create an uprising! Hadn't he been telling them that the time had come? --the kingdom of God was at hand? How quickly, but how naturally too, the devotion to Jesus' cause turned into hatred and scorn at how he had duped them, how he refused to fight, how he refused to compromise, even a little, for the sake of ends that should justify whatever means necessary to effect them! It's easy to look back in scorn at the crowds yelling "crucify him," but I've felt that same kind of bone crushing disappointment myself; that feeling of having given everything I had into the hands of someone who just thrust it all aside as if it was nothing. I suspect that Judas really did believe that Jesus just needed a little push; that his kiss would simply spur him into taking the action that he'd planned all along. But, if it did not, perhaps it was fitting as the last chance and the last straw -- "if this doesn't make him act, then we are all history! Too many promises, not enough follow through." It's perhaps a bit ironic that, with us, the crowd that condemned Jesus could have easily sung "All my Hopes on Him are Founded." The only difference is that their hopes were also thoroughly dashed. They expected an uprising, a successful throwing off (intifada) of the oppressor, a new kingdom that would launch a new age. And what they saw was a revolutionary that had given himself up and given them over. No WONDER they turned on him.
But, Jesus too must have been terribly disillusioned. By all accounts, he really believed, at least early in his ministry, that he would lead a revolution, establish a new society -- a kingdom of God here on Earth. James Taybor's The Jesus Dynasty (I highly recommend it, but be aware that it is a secular view of Jesus life and times, not a Christian text) gives some of the most convincing and exciting commentary on what Jesus and John the Baptist must have felt like and worked toward in those few years of his public ministry -- and it was revolutionary, and inspiring, and it did look like a believable threat to the Roman rule! Jesus too must have wondered where it all went wrong, where God's promises had taken him. In the garden, he gave God one last chance as well -- "There's still time, if it is Your will, You'd be welcome to get me out of this thing right about now!" Even in Jesus' choice on the cross to invoke King David in quoting Psalm 22 ("my God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"), one can also hear the echo of later verses of the same psalm ("O Lord, make haste to help me! Deliver my soul from the sword."). What is amazing, though, is that Jesus never once turns bitter. I can't believe that he really knew that it was all part of the Plan, that he believed it would all turn out the way it did. He must have been truly disappointed, his hopes for his own life completely dashed and his hopes for his followers undergoing some serious confidence-shaking; given their dispersal and betrayal. Yet, he does not accuse God of betrayal. He follows his sense of God's will, his trust in life's goodness and in truth and justice to the end. Even his refusal of the drugged wine while on the cross was, above all, an act of confidence in the goodness and value of this life he had always conducted in the very best way he knew -- he would not willingly miss a minute of it, not will himself into oblivion for even those last few moments. For Jesus, it was truly not over until it was over, and he never wavered in his passion for life lived according to his revelation, his sense of God.
I have often read that it's not possible to understand the Easter story without fully understanding the Passion story. I've never quite understood why, but perhaps the key is Jesus' passion for life, his confidence in its goodness, his willingness to live every second of it in radical obedience to his vision despite every temptation to the contrary... In another book I read this week, the main character remarked about how good it is to outlive one's resentments. That is, how different life is when one has learned that resentment, feelings of betrayal, the desire to strike back when we've been hurt -- all those things that have the capacity to turn formerly loving, self-sacrificing individuals into insanely vindictive and broken people -- do not need to be our response to even the worst disappointments of life. Radical trust in God, profligate giving of one's self and one's resources--like the sower who scatters precious seed freely over good, poor, stony and weed-choked ground alike, confidence even when all reason seems to be gone; these crazy and counter-intuitive things are our inheritance as Christians. If there's anything in this idea of resurrection that we will ponder next week, perhaps there are clues here.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
The Flowers that Bloom in the Spring
I had been back in the North Country for 10 days, but it would seem that as yet I had not even opened my eyes. My sister asked me if I my crocuses were out, and walked me outside to see hers. Their progress had been lovingly noted since the first small pinprick of green had creased the soil or pushed up under the still remaining mantle of snow. Surely, she said, I must have some too. But my winter mind was still focused inside on the leftovers of last year; repacking Christmas decorations (still waiting for me here in March after I drove south during the holiday season -- What? They didn't put themselves away?), cleaning away the dust that had settled over possessions and thoughts as well, putting things back in order and thinking to prepare for new life in the spring. Somehow, spring had arrived while I was lost in its anticipation.
I walked out the next morning and really looked at my yard. There were brave little purple blossoms all along the front fence, thrusting up through as yet unraked leaves and nearly buried under sand swept from the center of the road after a season of winter plowing. I spent the morning raking and tidying, and now the row of crocuses is startling and bright and I wonder how I could have missed their profusion. The longing, anticipation and preparation had become so absorbing that I almost missed the real thing. And they such bright and loud, almost raucous harbingers.
Is there a lesson in my deafness to the loud shout of spring all around my house? This is what I longed for and rushed back to see, yet I have been so focused on preparing for it that I almost missed it happening all around me.
I walked out the next morning and really looked at my yard. There were brave little purple blossoms all along the front fence, thrusting up through as yet unraked leaves and nearly buried under sand swept from the center of the road after a season of winter plowing. I spent the morning raking and tidying, and now the row of crocuses is startling and bright and I wonder how I could have missed their profusion. The longing, anticipation and preparation had become so absorbing that I almost missed the real thing. And they such bright and loud, almost raucous harbingers.
Is there a lesson in my deafness to the loud shout of spring all around my house? This is what I longed for and rushed back to see, yet I have been so focused on preparing for it that I almost missed it happening all around me.
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