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What is your expectation for the future – is it optimistic
or pessimistic? Consider that question personally and globally,
as you read on. Ask yourself how you react to the questions raised
here. Do they excite or scare you? In writing this, I am distilling
much recent reading and thinking about these questions, both in
the sciences and in the new forms of human spirituality. I think
we all recognise now that the coming century and those beyond could
be deeply challenging and risk human survival on this planet. In
this review I thus assess how old ways of thinking about ourselves
need to be challenged on every front if humanity is to emerge into
a creative future on earth, at last feeling at home in the Universe.
TS Eliot reminds us that the human species is always journeying,
searching and striving:
“We shall not cease from exploration. And the
end of our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know
the place for the first time.”
On the way we, at times, pause on that journey and turn away from
open exploration, fossilising past insights and ways of living together
in our various societies. But, in due time there comes a growing
recognition that we need to break free and move on with our human
journey. The tectonic plates of our ideas move and nothing is quite
the same. Now is another
such time of awakening.
Our old ways of looking at life and shaping human society are self-evidently
no longer workable. So what do we need to do to initiate a peaceful
global awakening that will potentially draw humanity past its turbulent
adolescence and on to its maturity? How do we become the harmonious
global society we long for – living peacefully as nation states
within wider unions – engaging in creative dialogue across
the world’s religions, until together we develop a sustainable
future for humanity and the earth? How do we take forward past sources
of human wisdom into the 3rd millennium AD, in a sense knowing them
again for the first time?
Making the necessary changes will require progressives and other
open minded people to challenge the previous deep seated beliefs
which still dominate most religions, cultures, economies and legal
systems. It will need fresh thinking within Christianity and the
other faiths, as well as from those taking a secular perspective.
It will require an almost impossible ‘awakening’ (locally,
collectively and globally), to achieve such change. This is necessary
whether people approach it via the literalism of much religious
belief, or the hard secularism that has put out the fire!
“And new philosophy calls all in doubt, the element
of fire is quite put out; The sun is lost, and th’earth, and
no man’s wit can direct him, where to look for it.”
Difficult though it will be, we will need to work to identify
ways to build a new global socioeconomic and political consensus,
linked with a reshaped global spirituality, which could reignite
humanity’s ‘fire’. Such a consensus will require
radical reflection on the ways we have been living unsustainably,
cut off from the spiritual heart that underpins reality. Spiritual
awareness will need to underpin global governance.
Human beings are not free. We all inherit from our upbringing a
deeply embedded mindset that reinforces cultural and religious values
which still, today, derive from the early days of civilisation.
(This is true even for secularists who rightly criticise religious
beliefs as predominantly inconsistent with science and human decency.)
These mindsets have emerged in, or in response to, empire-like “civilisations”-
which first developed around 4000 years ago, with farming and differentiation
of labour. They have become embedded in religious / cultural writings
that have been read as God given – and thus been heightened
to the status of infallible scripture – with the passage of
time. The same texts can support war and oppression (to preserve
the tribe or empire) in close juxtaposition with soaring poetry
and praise to God or the Gods. They have justified separation of
classes and roles, defined gender in terms of male authority, and
the separation of their peoples from peoples with other religious-cultural
writings and laws. They have claimed in most cases to be bearers
of the only true way.
In the west, the Judeo-Christian and Islamic Religions developed,
or built on, the concept of a Sky God. This God (wholly other) was
seen as far separate from humanity – which was seen as fallen
and sinful – requiring God given community sanctions to keep
them in line (for example in the Old Testament summaries of Jewish
Law). Christianity too, in its turn, began to teach that the substitutionary
death of God’s Christ was necessary to appease that Father
God of wrath and so buy human salvation, reaching its climax in
Calvinism. This was a far cry from the simple teaching of Jesus
that we can still glimpse in the early books of the New Testament.
The societies in which these ideas developed were, and in most
cases still are, societies where religion and the state are intertwined.
At their worst (medieval Christianity) they launched crusades and
called for holy war (jihad) – framing later collective memory
on the basis of centuries of mistrust. At their best, as in early
Islam, they recognised human universality under God in the concept
of “ummah”. This history still deeply influences global
relationships today.
Other empires had different theologies, with pantheons of Gods,
but divinised rulers – as in the pre Constantinian Roman Empire
– which remains, with Greek learning, (rediscovered in Europe
via Islamic scholars) the dominant source of western thought. Throughout,
these societies were equally coercive, as society remained stratified
and slavery taken for granted. Only since the Renaissance has western
society begun to openly challenge this religious and cultural conditioning,
as the principles of open inquiry and verification in the sciences
has spread to allow critical appraisal of religion and culture itself.
In the east, the Hindu and Buddhist religions dominated with a
very different perspective. At the cultural level Hinduism was pantheistic
with multiple religious expressions of worship of individual ‘manifestations’.
Buddhism can be seen as agnostic about God as external reality –
preferring to focus on practice – through ancient Vedanta
techniques of mediation providing ways to handle the suffering inherent
in life. At the heart of these ancient spiritualities is a profound
insight that,
“Who thinks the Self may kill, who thinks the
Self itself be killed, has missed the mark of truth. Self is not
born, nor does it ever die; it does not come to life, not having
been, nor, having been does it thereafter cease. Eternal, ancient,
ever present Self, though bodies are cut down, lives on intact.”
The Cross fertilisation of religious ideas is now growing rapidly
as east and west share common insight to a growing extent –
though with little impact in the more fundamentalist expressions
of each religion. For example, there is increasing emphasis on meditation
practice in Christianity with numerous local groups across the UK
making links between the Christian mystical and contemplative tradition
and eastern practices. More recent writers, such as Eckhart Tolle,
are increasingly recognised as key western leaders in the movement
to “awaken” individuals to the “presence”
found in times of stillness:
“When you lose touch with inner stillness, you
lose touch with yourself. When you lose touch with yourself, you
lose yourself in the world.”
The hard reality is that all the major world faiths struggle between
such elevated thought and a crude defensive barbarity, which supports
slaughter in the name of God or the Gods – and divides on
tribal / sectarian lines within and across the faiths.
The exception is the Baha’i religion, which is the only faith
to have developed within the framework of post enlightenment thought.
It embeds these values in its approach to science, human and religious
unity, lack of prejudice, equality of men and women, the centrality
of education, avoidance of extremes of wealth, international institutions,
global justice and the goal of world peace.
However, with a small number of exceptions, our religious global
heritage is more often the problem than the source of a solution.
The problem is our inherited belief systems, not the higher level
understanding of religion founders and ‘masters’. The
reaction to modernity from most faiths has been, on the one hand,
an intellectual recognition of the western enlightenment and thus
a reinterpretation, or, on the other, an increasingly strident return
to fundamentalism.
Fundamentalists and conservatives cling to scriptural warrant to
slow or stop progress. They are capable of leading us into an era
of new religiously underpinned wars. It is the conservatives who
seek to contain children’s education and shape pliable minds
into ways of believing and behaving that make no sense to enlightened
thinkers, whether secular or spiritual seekers.
I fear that without a step change in our approach to religion,
politics and economics, we risk pushing humanity back to a global
dark age, surviving only in small numbers on a despoiled planet.
It is, of course, not just religion that is at fault, but also materialist
and capitalist culture – which has driven economic growth
past the limits of sustainability. We are all caught up in that
and ought now to be fully aware of the risks. There are countless
millions in poverty, and there is a growing insight that we are
at a key turning point for humankind and “life in all its
fullness”, as countless other diverse species and habitats
are lost.
So here I get to the nub of my argument. At root these problems,
and their holding back of global unity, stem from what we believe.
So, to effect change we need to frame the challenge at the level
of belief – and its spin offs in the different global
cultures.
The project we need to unite to build is nothing less than a new
humanity. We need to recognise our global situation
and manage change to minimise harm to the people caught up most
in impacts from climate change and the disturbance that will follow
to global economies in the decades ahead and beyond. We will best
do this if we have a fresh look at what many are coming to see as
a new “revelation of God”. The historic faiths were
built around a series of “revelations” by human beings
for whom “God”, “Life” the “All”
was experienced as a deep reality by the faith founders. (This experience
is not unique to the religion founders but is a common human experience,
whether we are “believers” or secular people –
it expresses in simple awe and in the mystical and creative processes
of the creative arts and writing.)
The religions developed from the founders, and later ‘teachers’,
ways of framing religious practice. They also developed myths and
laws applicable to their circumstances. Codified as scripture, these
are still the dominant source of rules and guidance for most of
humanity. The difficulty is they no longer work for today’s
global society and economy. The way forward is not to, “throw
out the baby with the bathwater” but to transcend
the time bound framing of “scripture” and develop a
new universal one – which owns the positive insights and overarches
them with a new paradigm and new insight.
Our societies are becoming polarised and divided because of literalist
religion. Populist politics, too, is being forced to accommodate
the views of literalist religion. As a result the project for global
“unity in diversity” is being slowed. Even where liberal
and progressives in the faiths are putting forward open alternatives,
the pressure to hold to the founding fundamentals, when they are
clearly damaging and plain wrong in the light of 21st Century understandings,
is accommodated by leaders who regard unity as paramount. Radical
voices for change are thus contained. It is important, therefore,
that much effort goes in to exciting conservative and fundamentalist
believers with the knowledge that the evolutionary “great
story” offers as a way of bringing science and religion together.
In my view, it will take a profound effort to involve the world’s
current religious institutions in the project to build a common
vision for a new society, which could
take us forward together globally through this new millennium. It
will involve radical and progressive leaders and spiritual teachers
to put forward clearly the fruits of science, working alongside
an open spirituality (within and beyond the historic faiths), to
roll back the fundamentalist tide. Science, secular voices, and
open spiritualities are increasingly becoming partners in this post-modern
world – as we better understand the nature of reality and
the Universe we inhabit.
Our understanding of human minds and their relationship to the
spiritual field of the Universe needs to expand. New holistic ways
of managing disease is already being more and more recognised. Referring
back to Einstein’s experience of “contemplating”
his theory, Brian Swimme, director of the Centre for the Story of
the Universe, at the University of Oregon comments:
“..the consciousness that learns it is at the
origin point of the Universe is itself an origin of the Universe.
.. We are all of us arising together at the centre of the cosmos.”
We need to move forward together on this major challenge to awaken
ourselves and all we meet to this amazing reality. The story of
evolution, under attack from some fundamentalists, has been called
the “Great Story” and frames a new collective understanding
of our place as human beings Michael Dowd sums up his hopes this
way:
“Over the coming decades I foresee that religious
believers of every tradition will embrace a far larger, more reality
based view of God than was possible even a century ago. This will
be a vision of the Holy One that will draw the vast majority, regardless
of religion or philosophical worldview, into a place of respect,
adoration, love and care for the larger body of which we are part.
Scripture will have become more all encompassing and universally
inspiring because altogether new writings will qualify as scripture.
Our spirituality will no longer be restricted to ancient texts,
we will come to know and be led by God’s word in every fact,
every detail, every truth of cosmic history and of that undeniable
wholeness in which we all live and move and have our being.”
At the same time we will need to manage massive economic readjustment
as we seek to manage the impacts of global warming. So as we look
out at the vastness of space we need to look too to our stewardship
of our amazing, gifted, planetary home. We and it are One!
The “Spiritual but not Religious” movement, other new
spiritual voices, and many thinkers in the biological and physical
sciences are helping shape this “post religious” agenda
on websites, through books and conferences. Some are working within
the faiths as voices of reason and progressive thought. Others are
now involved in the many varied forms of the new spirituality. I
have written on this previously in a “Free to Believe”
booklet “Reshaping Christianity” which maps the development
of this ‘territory’ in open spiritual exploration.
The shape of the new society will be very different – it
will require a clear understanding of the links between the scientific
understandings in biology, chemistry and physics as well as an open
approach to the intelligence at the core of the “All”
– of which we are part. The hope is this will become increasingly
the universal paradigm for human societies.
The new spirituality will be influenced
by many strands of insight now appearing within the historic faiths
(already at the heart of some e.g. Buddhism). As explained elsewhere,
radical spiritual explorations, rather than traditional faith teachings,
broadly identify a set of common perspectives on the nature of reality,
human life and the way to experience God. These perspectives are
being explored in significant ways. Gordon Lynch (Professor of the
Sociology of Religion at Birkbeck University, London) has also written
about The New Spirituality, which he summarises as:
the guiding intelligence behind evolutionary process
and the energy of the universe itself
Pantheism / Panentheism – replacing a transcendent,
patriarchal view of God
Mysticism and the divine feminine – using
symbol and liturgy, encounter with nature and celebration of the
feminine in God
The sacralisation of nature – affirmation
of the material and nature / life as participation in divinity
The sacralisation of the self – as a manifestation
of the divine (with human selfconsciousness derived from the supra-consciousness
of the “All”).
Understandings of Religion – as culturally
and historically bound and thus metaphorical – enabling
a growing spirit of ‘ecumenism’ (and interfaith encounter).
Neale Donald Walsch maps out several key changes that will shape
the future growth of an open contemporary spirituality. He boiled
these down to a series of “revelations” at the conclusion
of his 2003 book (summarised below):
God has never stopped communicating
Every human being is special – you are all
messengers
No path to God is more direct than any other path
– there is no “one true religion”
God needs nothing
God is not a singular super being, in or outside
the universe – God cannot be hurt or damaged and has no
need to seek revenge or impose punishment
All things are only One thing – all things
are part of the One
There is no such thing as right and wrong –
there is only what works and does not work
You are not your body. Who you are is limitless
and without end.
You cannot “die” and you will never
be damned.
What I think is going on in all this, is that the new spiritualities
are re-discovering what was always at the heart of the Christian
faith and other faiths too. In mystical experience or spiritual
encounter we can come to know the One, the All, ‘In whom we
live and move and have our being”.
I am increasingly of the view that the cultural roots of progressive
spirituality show underlying coherence, by reflecting adaptation
to modernism, liberalism and welcome insights in quantum physics
and cosmic ‘unfolding’. They will, I trust, be able
over the decades ahead to shape an accommodation with open and progressive
elements in the global faiths, necessary to underpin the hoped for
changes in global religion and society.
So, to move to a workable future global politics and
economy fundamental change is necessary too, as we
make the necessary transition to a global “commonwealth”
of peoples and nations able to manage the necessary moves to equality
and mutuality and handle the potentially profound impacts of our
20th Century period of excess and greed. We will need to transition
to appropriate global institutions – based on our common spiritual
understanding. The difficult years /decades will arise within this
century as the process of change and reaction gains momentum. However,
I am hopeful that what may seem like a dream can become reality
– as people of faith learn to cherish their holy texts as
history but, for the Judeo-Christian tradition, transcend them as
being the muddled insight of a projected distant and authoritarian
God – modelled on the authoritarian rule of tribal leaders,
emperors and other leaders.
We cannot predict what will be needed, but some of the challenges
arising in the credit crunch are pointers. There will need to be
a period of transition to build relationships based on “enough”
and a flattening of the gross disparities modern capitalism has
generated. There needs to be a full global accounting understood
and applied – to ensure transition from excess consumption
in the presently affluent nations, and a transfer of wealth to support
sustainable growth in the countries damaged by western greed. We
have plundered million year old planetary resources in oil, coal
and gas. New ways to tap renewable sources on a large scale for
equitable distribution will be needed to recover from this.
This will need to be supported by new forms of governance that
involve citizens in decision making and a new look at the way representation
can happen in a wired world. Travel will need to be restricted and
balanced by excellent communications infrastructure and in time
a “telepresence” in business and home. I could continue
to speculate – into a period of future fiction – as
it may all play out. There are grounds for hope for both a new politics
and a new economics.
And finally, a New World! There are many
visions of our future world – including that of fundamentalist
Christianity (and its counterpart in jihadist Islam), where the
world ends in a bang and a wrapping up of the universe as punishment
for human sin, with only the elect pardoned. That is not the God
I know or would want to know. The God I know is ‘present’
in all life, as the source of love, the foundation of all that is.
My life is rooted in that ‘presence’ - those moments
of deepest experience, knowing and creativity. What we are called
to do is enjoy and develop our present experience of God –
the All – eternally evolving and growing in and through us.
Thus, I trust that all who read this will share my confidence that,
“All Shall Be Well; and All Shall Be Well; and
All Manner of Things Shall Be Well.”
“For God showed a little thing, the size of a
hazel nut, lying in the palm of my hand, it seemed to me, and it
was round as a ball. I looked upon it with the eye of my understanding
and thought, 'What may this be?' And it was answered generally thus,
'It is all that is made'' I marvelled how it might last, for I thought
it would have fallen suddenly to nought for littleness. And I was
answered in my understanding, 'It lasts and ever shall, because
God loves it, and so have all things their being by the love of
God'. In this little thing I saw three qualities. The first is that
God made it. The second that God loves it. The third that God keeps
it.”
Together we can apply Julian’s confidence - for we will,
together, save this world for yet further lives, fully lived as
part of an ever evolving humanity, at last at home in the stars,
sharing God’s All.
John Hetherington - July 2009
(Copyright – only to be reproduced with express permission
Email: john.hetherington@btinternet.com)
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