So how do people know that who haven’t been exposed to this way of thinking/believing? I’ve seen some figures on how many Catholics/Christians there are distributed over time and geography. Not many, really, since the taming of fire.
So that kind of pictures a dynamic I really don’t understand. I DO understand that we are all made in the image and likeness of God, but that as well is not necessarily a ready bit of information outside Christendom in its broadest sense. What I am convinced of is that anyone looking at the stary sky, a maimed battle victim, a newborn baby, or who considers their life beyond the thickness of a piece of paper in depth does ask themselves the Big Questions. And maybe to some extent their faith, whatever it might be, may be of help.
But ultimately, what is efficacious, within OR without a religious context, is a transformation in the realm of awareness. There are evidences of this everywhere. So one has to ask, “If, without respect to religion as a factor either adding to or subtracting from the result, how is it that there occurs in every human condition throughout history, spontaneous awakenings to a very similar explication of phenomenon and hierarchy of events?” Would that not encourage looking for some commonality in the very nature of humans that is hard wired before the acquisition of a parochial religion?
Accounting for the obvious necessity that a person will try to express their experience in the language of the paradigm, there are things that people go through that are considered “spiritual” which are astonishingly similar. That is out there for everyone to look at. So instead of wrangling dogmas and intellectual assertions in the realm where these things don’t happen, how about getting on finding a common language to talk about these things do we aren’t slamming or discounting folks with what might be exactly our own experience in another mode of discursive exegesis?
Right now, go back in these forums and I will bet that you find people of every description and background who reports some form of such a happening. For my part, I’m way more invested in saying, “OK, whats the same about these?” than saying “That can’t be right because you aren’t my religion!”
If you know anything about human psychology, you will also know that most religion is assimilated in the formative years when the mind is in a learning trance. So family and culture have great bearing here. But God, or the Invisible, or Mind, or Whatever is Universally True and the actual fundamental relationship we have to THAT is also Universally true. So why are we bickering over cultural particulars, and even sacred dogmas that can yet be read to fit this model instead of discovering how we are already experientially open in the same way and only linguistically opposed?
Death and the process of dying may very well include a process of recapitulation. And just go to any hospice and ask the workers there about how people die. What they think and what ceremonies are offered them are different. But what they do is the same. Think about that and what it might mean.