Say, have you and your brother discussed the differences between what is spiritual and what is religious? Obviously, without having a "spiritual" instinct, inspiration or an intuition of some kind, there would be no religions. Still, I feel there is a distinction between being a spiritual person and a religious person. It has much to do with our perceptions and our concept of Divinity
As is usually the case, semantics weigh heavily in our ability to communicate about such aspects of human existence as
spirituality and what we might conceive of as any organized religion. I wholeheartedly agree that to be a spontaneous and spiritual individual is hardly the same as being a devoutly religious person.
Frankly, religious thought is more often than not, a case of complete blind faith of believe in an Omniscient authority, when one has no quantifiable proof of it's existence. This does not make such belief untrue, however, and cultures across the globe have shared many of these inspired hypotheses (despite the lack of scientific evidence, so sought by reason).
By in large, humanity chooses to project anthropomorphic characteristics upon their chosen (or their family's or culture's chosen) Deity and do not seem to have any direct experience of the Divine in their daily lives. In this way, I can relate to honoring atheists for not needing to buy into the processed package of religious dogma, itself responsible for many of humanity's woes.
Holy Bible (KJV) Hebrews 11:1 wrote:Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.
So, for those who have faith in an unseen GOD, who creates the universe we all exist within and is the ultimate force in said play of life, it's not something to lightly mock. Atheists seem to have a contemptuous attitude to all "believers" and imply they are of inferior intelligence. This is both, unkind and quite egocentric. Neither is it fair to generalize about the awareness of of such peoples.
Conversely, many so-called "religious" folks have such negative and rigid view of this multiverse, that it stains the inspiration which the living Spirit instills in the hearts of it's followers (as personified by the illumined founders of it's doctrine). After all, locking our heads into the conceptual confines of human religious thought can be anything but spiritual. Right?
No doubt there is an alternative stance, born of direct contact with the One and a seamless synthesis of logic and faith. In my opinion, it behooves humankind to modify it's conceptual format for contemporary religious thought. I would suggest broadening the belief in a Divine presence to include ourselves and all others in this very same
Field of Indivisible Consciousness... as with the Chinese idea of the eternal and ever-changing Tao. After all, is not all of existence a harmony of polarities, a singular force expressed through myriad variations of diversity? :idea:
Granted, it's a matter of perspective and highly susceptible to our subjective impressions of said totality. In other words, if we accept that the universe is composed by a mysterious or mystical force, which through it's very nature of being, causes quantum fluctuations and initiates
The Cosmic Dance... we needn't feel apart from such a
Field of Unified Energy. We are all that essence of unity, for if having a spiritual experience means anything, it seems to point towards an interconnection to everything else in the paradigm of life as we understand it.
It is not simply another hypothesis culled from our brain's organic circuitry, another conceptual projection... if one perceives it directly within oneself, AS ONESELF. Seeing is believing. Understanding is knowing. And so, a symbiotic interphase is key to unlocking the central
Truth of our being, the whole of being. Naturally, the birthing of
The Godhead, through our immersions within the immanence of the spiritual realm, awakens the
Omniself. For it's much, much more than just a deep feeling or an profound idea... it is an active REMEMBRANCE and a lucid type of inner KNOWING. This is clearly realized in a state of pure awareness, within the silent cessation of our mental dialog. Stopping the mind ... to perceive the soul in it's all it's naked glory.
Socrates wrote:My knowledge comes from an unknowing.
We might ideally embrace each moment as completely new and full of an infinite potentiality, in the HERE & NOW. In so doing, we do redefine our perception of reality, our thoughts/ideas about God and the totality of existence (both perceived and imagined). To my understanding, this is what being spiritual is all about. One perceives MORE than just the appearance of the gross material and utilizes an integral union with
No Mind to step beyond the predictable outcome of the dynamics of pragmatic cause and effect.
We are the present witnesses to this existential phenomenon. It is absurd to think that together we can come to some reasonable consensus about the burgeoning birth of a fusion of scientific reasoning, coupled with transcendental levels of mind? I personally feel this is the most worthy direction for our collective inquisitiveness.
The quest for direct immersion within the Divine Being needn't be structured into a dogmatic theology. Nature is our greatest teacher; echoes and reflects the all-pervasive Spirit of The One. Are we not called to psychonautical flight by this very universal mind, awakening through our discoveries within an expanded awareness?
There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.