My personal bias is apparent. I do not mean to be disrespectful, but once one has experienced the real thing, all else pales by comparison.
BTW – Jesus is not a pseudo-fabrication or extension of my alter ego. I am very well individuated thank you.
This is saying a lot about a concept of faith. Question: In the pantheistic belief, what is the role of and to whom does the glory and praise go to?
I just cannot experientially grasp the concept of being “personally touched” by a non-personal theism. Even in Christian mysticism, a soul to soul encounter and mystical union with God is a personal encounter with a three Person triune God.
I just don’t get it. Maybe you can help me better understand. How can one claim to have an authentic “relationship with the Divine” and “I live very much in relation with the Divine” whereby “The Divine is intimately involved in every aspect of my life, not in any way remote or out of touch”; when the Divine of pantheism without personality. How does a human being have a relationship with a non-personalistic entity? It seems to me like one claiming to have an intimate relationship with their employer entity General Electric Company, and not with the CEO or the individuals who comprise the company. Maybe need to change your wording to reflect the reality of this non-personal “relationship” with a non-personal Entity?
Setter,
As I said in my response to GK above, when I referenced creating a personal deity, I was not referring to Christianity or implying that Christians created the person of Jesus. I was speaking only to say there would be no honor in pantheism creating a personal deity…just for the purpose of having one.
The role of praise…I suppose is because praising is how humans celebrate and honor that which they appreciate. It is like laughter…what purpose does it serve…hard to pin down, but it is our natural reaction none the less. Praise and glory flow from a grateful heart. They honor the Divine, even if it’s not personal…this is a lame comparison but…when a woman sees a dress and says “oh, aren’t you beautiful.” or a man sees a great car and “says, sweetheart, come to daddy…” whom are they praising? and for what purpose? It is just their automatic reaction. Praising does the praiser good, and it calls attention to the thing being praised. Maybe that is the purpose, that others may be made aware of how awesome the Divine is.
I don’t know how to explain it to you, if you truly can’t conceive a critical relationship to something that doesn’t have a personality.
Think of your relationship to the earth. It supports you. All your sustenance comes from it. Your life depends on it. Maybe you never think of it that way…I don’t know. But I do. The Divine is in all things, causing them to operate together to bring about what is. I see it, feel it and experience it. I don’t have a human to human type relationship with it, but I have a Divine to human relationship with it. It plays the
Divine role, and I respond in my human way.
What can be more intimate than my relationship with that which sustains me and IS me, brings me forth? Everything that interacts with me, is the Divine interacting with me.
Do Jesus and God talk to you everyday? Do they give you a hug, a smile, call to chat, drop by? Or do they interact with you in another style, a style that is beyond human, that is Divine, but clearly recognizable to you?
Most people I know have relationships with things that are not human. A pet, a place, their home, car, food, sports.Sometimes these relationships are very important and meaningful. I guess it is like that…but more so.
I’m not sure there is any way to fully explain it to someone who has never had that type of experience. Like trying to desribe what being in love feels like, or what chocolate tastes like, or what the color red looks like…to someone who’s never experienced it.
My words acurately reflect my experience. I can’t change what is true because it does not please or make sense to someone else.
If you don’t think a person can have an intimate and meaningful relationship with something non personal, stop breathing for several minutes. Pretty soon you will recognize how intimate your relationship with the air is, and how awesome it is, and how grateful you are to be reunited with it. Sometimes we take air and breathing for granted. Most of the time we don’t think about the exchange of molecules that is taking place. We ignore the relationship, but that doesn’t mean it is not there.
Pantheism is not a dualistic faith. We don’t divide the world into physical seperate from spiritual. So…we don’t just consider relationship to be something we have just between personalities. We exist in relation to all things. We are in relationship with all things, individually, and as a whole. The physical and “spiritual” are not seperate and divided. Part of the practice of pantheism is to be aware of that.
cheddar