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Ecstatic Rationalism
A sermon offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church
October 21st, 2007
By the Reverend Hilary Landau Krivchenia
Reading
Aldous
Huxley from the Doors of Perception
In a
world where education is predominantly verbal, highly educated
people find it all but impossible to pay serious attention to
anything but words and notions. Even in this age of technology the
verbal humanities are honored. The non-verbal humanities, the arts
of being directly aware of the given facts of our existence, are
almost completely ignored - any genuinely Alexandrian project is
sure of approval and financial support: But when it comes to finding
out how you and I, our children and grandchildren, may become more
perceptive, more aware of inward and outward reality, less apt, by
psychological malpractices, to make ourselves ill - when it comes to
any form of non-verbal education no really respectable person in any
really respectable university or church will do anything about it.
Verbalists are suspicious of the non-verbal; rationalists fear the
given, non-rational fact; intellectuals feel that "what we perceive
by the eye (or in any other way) is foreign to us as such and need
not impress us deeply." Systematic reasoning is something we could
not, as a species or as individuals, possibly do without. But
neither, if we are to remain sane, can we possibly do without direct
perception of the inner and outer worlds into which we have been
born. This given reality is an infinite which passes all
understanding and yet admits of being directly and in some sort
totally apprehended. To be enlightened is to be aware, always, of
total reality. Our goal is to discover that we have always been
where we ought to be. Unhappily we make the task exceedingly
difficult for ourselves.
But the
man who comes back through the Door in the Wall will never be quite
the same as the man who went out. He will be wiser but less sure,
happier but less self-satisfied, humbler in acknowledging his
ignorance yet better equipped to understand the relationship of
words to things, of systematic reasoning to the unfathomable Mystery
which it tries, forever vainly, to comprehend.
Sermon
William
Blake wrote: To see the world in a grain of sand /And heaven in a
wild flower /Hold infinity in the palm of your hand /And eternity in
an hour.
Have
you ever had such an experience? An experience of seeing beyond the
uses of a thing, beyond habitual observation, cultural labeling to
see a deeper reality – it’s a rare experience – and often set apart
as a strange, perhaps, even dangerous way of perceiving.
It is
religious experience. Last week in the video from the Unitarian
Universalist Association a young man shared a phrase I’ve heard many
times. “People say they’re spiritual – but not religious.” It’s an
interesting phrase. It’s pretty clear that, at least in the present
time, “religion” has come to mean those outward forms of practice
that belong to specific traditions, churches, temples, mosques and
sects. Thus, spiritual somehow means all those experiences
unfiltered through outward form by individuals as they encounter
meaning in awe and wonder. I’d like to go back to the term
religious to describe those experiences of ultimate meaning, wonder,
and belonging that bind us to the larger world – from the smallest
grain of sand to the furthest galaxies.
Probably the most famous work written on this topic was William
James Varieties of Religious Experience published from a set of
lectures given in 1901-2. James approached his topic from a
psychological viewpoint. He wanted to ensure that what he explored
were not experiences programmed into a person by religious
institutions but were authentic experiences and expressions of
something – perhaps universally human. He outlined four
characteristics of these experiences. The first was ineffability –
beyond words – that the experience pretty much defied expression.
He likened it to trying to bring alive a specific piece of music to
a person who can’t hear music at all. The second was a noetic
quality – a quality that is less feeling than knowing. I feel happy
at hearing the laughter of my children – I know my children when I
see them. Yet the knowing that James was speaking of was profound
-- he said “they are states of insight into depths of truth
unplumbed by the discursive intellect.” The third characteristics he
cited was transience. These states can’t be maintained for long –
they happen and then he wrote: “they fade into the light of common
day.” The last characteristic he cited is contested – that they’re
passive – the person may have done all manner of things to invite
this state but once it arrives passivity takes over – as though the
person is in the grips of something strong and controlling or
overwhelming. It’s contested because this has often been observed
not to be the case – as people who go on vision quests can attest.
Other
words for these experiences are peak or mystic experiences --
moments when life opens clear, tangible, and profound. Much of our
time is spent on the surface of life – with the groceries – the
errands, chores, the stoplights. Or – at that place where we’re
aware all too painfully that life is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery,
inside an enigma. Sometimes it’s glorious, sometimes awful – but
always it’s larger and greater than we are. Mysterium tremendum,
Rudolph Otto, the theologian called it. The holy is the giant
mystery in which we live. In mystic experience something about the
mystery breaks clear and makes sense. The holy is revealed in some
intimate way.
They
are peak experiences – times when life is elevated – and they’re
remarkably hard to come by – you can’t just try really hard to have
a peak experience now. Mystics have gotten a strange reputation –
sometimes the connotation is of someone who might be bizarre, on the
fringe, wild haired and wild eyed – wearing a hair shirt and eating
peyote buttons. Irrational. Even James tended to see them as
neurotic.
There’s
a convergence of reasons that we in the Western world have tended to
look on mysticism in this way. First, our own religious traditions
– Judaism, Christianity, and even Islam – have been far more about
listening to some religious leader tell you the meaning of life and
then believing that – following belief rather than exploring meaning
in community and testing it against reason and experience. While
each tradition has had its mystics – they’ve been mostly out of
favor – too emotional and challenging to structures of
interpretation. It can be hard to tell from the histories of the
saints if some of them were really mystics or simply delusional.
Second, our history of philosophy has encouraged what can be
discovered by reason alone, from the safety of an armchair -- a
reasonable pipe of tobacco silhouetted against the flickering
hearth.
Third,
the realm of feeling has been denigrated over time so that the
western world – the one in which we live – has tended to fear
feelings. Feelings can lead us to acts of love or crimes of
passion. But this fear ignores the power that we have to teach and
to learn about feeling. Our unskillfulness with feeling reminds me
of Harry Potter and how he accidentally discovers his magic powers
and also that he has to learn to govern them – like the time he’s
moved to compassion by the snake in the reptile house so that he
causes the glass to dissolve and release the snake – to the terror
of everybody else or when he angrily inflates his obnoxious aunt.
Even without magical powers, feelings are considered more dangerous
than thoughts or ideas – despite the fact that the history of ideas
has shown them to be far more dangerous than feelings. Consider the
idea of ethnic cleansing. You don’t need to stir a mob into a
frenzy – just convince them that someone else is dangerous and
different and they’ll justify most any behavior. The idea of one
path to salvation has been quite deadly. In another area -- for
centuries the idea prevailed in medical circles that women were too
feeling -- “hysterical” governed by their wombs – and therefore
their illnesses were easy to dismiss. Just feelings. It’s still
not uncommon that women’s health issues are dismissed as symptoms of
stress.
Fourth,
religious practices from around the world were so far outside our
frame of reference that they seemed strange – as though spinning in
a circle were really any stranger than davening – or chanting in
Latin any stranger than chanting in Sanskrit. In 1995 the best
selling poet in the United States, I learned – was Rumi – the
Persian Mystic. So, recently the west has opened its mind to the
possibilities of mystics.
Finally, in the early 20th century scholarly men began
to wonder if mystical experiences could be induced chemically – and
proven therefore to be of biological origin – universal to human
experience if the right neurons were fired. The yearning for
instant insight begat a legacy of serious seekers, scientists, and
junkies who hoped to access revelation through the use of chemicals
and herbs. Among some indigenous people the use of substances such
as peyote are part of a whole spiritual discipline – a life of
purity, prayer, service, schooling the mind before trying a
substance – so that the outcome would be not only a test of the
person’s courage – but a trusted passage to a new position of
spiritual service to the community. As William Blake also wrote: If
the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to
man as it is: infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees
all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern. Hoping to escape the
cave people turn in many directions – but the way is a labyrinth
instead of a passageway. Seeing these seekers inspired folks like
Aldous Huxley to experiment with Mescalin. He wrote: “To be shaken
out of the ruts of ordinary perception, to be shown for a few
timeless hours the outer and the inner world, not as they appear to
an animal obsessed with survival or to a human being obsessed with
words and notions, but as they are apprehended, directly and - this
is an experience of inestimable value to everyone and especially to
the intellectual. Let there be a voice to assure them the ultimate
Reality remains unshakably itself and is of the same substance as
the inner light.” Yet, Huxley said that mescaline was no substitute
for spiritual discipline – or for insights that were wrestled out of
the mind with fierce attention – he readily admitted that flinging
open the doors of perception with a chemical substance was “cheap
grace”. After Huxley came Timothy Leary and others who hoped to
glimpse nirvana through a pill.
And
today there are new researchers who think that by stimulating
various areas of the brain we might be able to activate what they
call a God center. In Horgan’s book – Rational Mysticism – he
described his visit to the laboratory of Michael Persinger of
Laurentian University in Ontario who built a machine which generates
electromagnetic fields and focuses them on particular regions of the
brain’s surface. Even in a recent article in Scientific American
Persinger’s claims were touted as being successful – and yet Horgan
not only failed to have more than a warm experience of someone being
nearby – but also studied Persinger’s files and interviewed enough
of his subjects to learn that the God Helmet had failed to produce
God any more than a warm summer day.
There have been countless research projects to hook
religious persons engaged in prayer or meditation up to machines to
see how their brain patterns change. We want hard evidence – of
what? Many religious practices are meant to focus the mind – to
clear away the nonsense that we accumulate in any given week –
laundry lists of daily life – and open the inner eyes to insight.
Mistakenly people come to meditation expecting that it
will calm and focus the mind right away and lead to bliss and
clarity in short order. That often discourages meditators –
because, really, it’s like doing scales when learning the piano –
not much fun – but utterly needed. In reality – the practice of
meditation is meant to provide practice over time so that the person
can learn – slowly, painstakingly, how to pay attention to her
surroundings – how to open her eyes and ears – how to perceive
clearly – even the most ordinary of things. So that he truly lives
in every moment instead of waiting for the perfect moment – the
exciting moment to occur. The practice of meditation is meant to
clear the senses and still the emotions – not so that you don’t
perceive or cannot feel – but so that you can do both more clearly
and with deeper compassion.
Just as
it’s foolish to sit by the fire in the belief that the world can be
understood from the safety of the armchair it’s equally absurd to
think that by simply tickling the brain or pushing it over the edge
-- something revelatory – enduring, worthwhile and true – can be
achieved. We are mind/body, whole persons living in time. We know
the world through mind and senses at once. To reduce us to
intellects alone or to bundles of impulses – is to reduce human life
to less than half a life. To think that we’re capable of being
purely rational is to wistfully fool ourselves – time honored – but
still fooling ourselves. We’re not simply rational and almost never
rational at the times of life’s greatest meaning. This summer I got
to hear the Reverend Jeremiah Wright preach in Portland – he’s Barak
Obama’s minister. He was talking about the virtues and limitations
of rationalism. And then he said – you know there are some folks
who claim that all life can be experienced and understood rationally
– and to them I say – tell me – when have you had a rational
orgasm. Well – I wouldn’t say orgasm is a time of life’s great
meaning – but, well – never mind. I can say – I know that I wasn’t
rational while in labor. I know that I was beyond rational when I
stood joyfully with my husband to exchange wedding vows. And I know
that while raising children takes every ounce of reason I’ve got –
I’d get nowhere without that ineffable, electrifying, sense of
miracle that they’re part of my life.
Often
people yearn for peak experiences so that they might make sense of
the world – especially of the fact of suffering. In Here If You
Need Me by Unitarian Universalist minister and chaplain Kate
Braestrup, in heartrending prose describes the work of chaplaincy in
the Maine State Park Patrol. In one chapter she describes the
search for a woman lost in the Maine woods. She never reveals
whether the woman is found. Crews look everywhere – rangers,
police, firefighters, even men from the local prison search and all
later have warm drinks together on a break. Braestrup is haunted by
the question that comes up among the searchers – where is God in all
this? Why does God allow the many tragedies she sees – we see – in
our lives? And then in the interactions between all the people
working together on the search – she sees what she calls God. This
is what it means to say that humans are a meaning making animal.
Life’s
peak moments are more than rational. For them to have meaning,
value, and religious dimension they have to engage our understanding
and not simply our emotions. Untrained, unskilled, or broken, the
mind can have false, bleak, and even evil perceptions and think
they’re the truth. In addition, our revelations take on the tint of
our character and history. It’s always escaped me how people can
see the Virgin Mary on a piece of toast – but I know that cultural
training shapes what and how we see. In our Adult Religious
Education Room there’s a beautiful slice of a large old tree which
has in its center the exact shape of a chalice. A tree that lived
long in our John Wilms’ back yard and had to be removed. Was it a
miracle? When I was given a copy of the world’s great religions at
a tender age I saw immediately that the holy carried different
names, faces, forms, practices – all with equal fervor – all around
the world. I wondered what the holy would be like without all the
different names, faces, and forms. And when I had my own rather
mystical experience at an early age it reflected my own background.
I experienced, as though from within a million people -- the
inherent worth and dignity of each of them – unmediated by thoughts
of Gods or angels. It was direct – it was holy and glorious. It
was an ecstatic rationalism – a mystical humanism – a marriage of
wonder and reason.
In college, Barb, a geology major, brought the Earth to
life as she described layer upon layer of rock and fossil in which
she saw millions of years of history. That was ecstatic rationalism
– mystical humanism – a marriage of wonder and reason.
When my youngest was little we had a pretty book of
Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star. The pictures charmed me as I often
read and sang to her. But even as I read and sang I was aware that
those tiny stars twinkling like diamonds in the sky were fiery
giants creating the possibility of life on billions of planets. It
was an ecstatic rationalism – a mystical humanism – a marriage of
wonder and reason.
And when I would hold and rock her it was indeed to hold
infinity in my hands and to feel eternity in an hour. It was an
ecstatic rationalism – a mystical humanism – a marriage of wonder
and reason.
There’s a Zen expression -- Before you study Zen,
mountains are mountains and rivers are rivers. While you are
studying Zen, mountains are no longer mountains and rivers are no
longer rivers, but once you have had enlightenment, mountains are
once again mountains and rivers again rivers. This ecstatic
rationalism is not an otherworld experience – but an intensely
this-worldly experience. It’s only reasonable to feel ecstasy,
wonder, and awe. It’s only reasonable to nurture and cultivate the
ability to do it well so that our religious practice is informed by
healing and compassion.
William James wrote about my beloved Walt Whitman
because his revelations were not couched in traditional religious
understanding or language and he’d perceived that even a blade of
grass was no less than the journeywork of the stars. That, too, was
an ecstatic rationalism – a mystical humanism – a marriage of wonder
and reason.
The 18th century Jewish mystic the Ba’al Shem Tov said
that there were many paths to the holy. And one person’s path was
not for another person. When you peel away the prescriptions of
dogma and leave clear perception the possibility opens up that
you’ll find that path. Further, he said, the holy is not beyond
this world – it’s the light in everyone and everything around you.
It is obscured by dogma. Unitarian Universalism claims, too, that
there are many paths and many names for that which is holy – but
that each true path answers to reason, compassion, and direct
experience. Unitarian Universalism claims that together we have
more hope to find the path than alone – and that our insights are
worthless if they are only sights inward and not sights among us.
In many ways – as a tradition that asks that we peel
away dogma and front the world directly – we ask that our practice
be one of cleansing the doors of perception. At our best we ask that
of ourselves and support it in one another. And that reminds me of
one of my favorite passages from Willa Cather, “The miracles of the
church seem to me to rest not so much upon faces or voices or
healing power coming suddenly near to us from afar off, but upon our
perceptions being made finer, so that for a moment our eyes can see
and our ears can hear what is there about us always.” She could
have been speaking of our miracles -- ecstatic rationalism –
mystical humanism – a marriage of wonder and reason. With our love
and will so may it be.
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