Tuesday, 16 July 2013

The challenge of the written word

There are several ways we can learn about matters of the spiritual life, such as the being of man, the Mystery of the Atonement, the creation of the world, or even mundane things such as the spiritual properties of plants.  We can develop the spiritual capacities to enter into spiritual realms and thereby uncover certain truths for oneself; secondly, we can receive revelations from spiritual beings as an act of Grace; thirdly, we can accept the witness or teachings of people belonging to either category above.  

We have to accept the possibility that the revelation, either in the way it was received or in the way it was understood by the receiver and then communicated, has come to us coloured by the disposition of the person who received it.  It may be coloured by that persons vocabulary, their temperament, their worldview, their thought system, their psychology.  There are many factors that influence how we view and understand the world that we live in, and the spiritual is no different. 

We therefore ought to view scripture for what it is: communications through revelators or seers, that are coloured by the person who received them.  Moreover, people of different times do not have the same soul-spiritual faculties.  Our relationship with the divine changes over time.  Just think how different we were as children, compared to adults. Similarly, humanity’s relationship with the divine changes through time. Revelations written down a thousand years ago were written by someone with a different relationship to the divine than what we have today.  In regard to the Old and New Testaments, we must also factor in the translators – for their translations too are coloured in one way or another by their own selves.  Even those in authoritative positions making interpretations that we are expected to take with some weight, are coloured by their own personality, schooling, environment etc.

This is not to down play the importance of scripture.  Far from it, scripture contains a wealth of wisdom that humanity has yet to uncover.  But we ought not confuse the spiritual experience, the spiritual process of being enlightened, the revelatory process with the fixed written words that we have. The written word is the result of the experience, but is not the experience itself.  The revelatory process is a living spiritual event; the written word is a fixed residue.  We should not idolise a book, but seek a living spiritual relationship as real as the ones we have in this world.

The written word challenges the reader to revitalise the fixed, dead word, and to lift their thinking up back into the spiritual realm – to behold the truth for themselves.  A seer is one who sees into the realm of the divine. We ought to seek to develop such capacities for ourselves, then we too can uncover the truths that the written revelations point too.  When we rely unduly upon the written word, we run the risk of distancing ourselves from the divine world, which is always living, fresh, vibrant.  The scriptures are a medium, and not the end.  We have to uncover the spiritual truths, we have to take the steps into the divine spiritual worlds.  We do this through developing our thinking; studying the results of spiritual research is the first step on this path.

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