In the following months, I learned more than I can ever recount here. I studied vigorously, and paid attention even to the government of the city, which I thought basically as tiresome as any government, and read voraciously the great Christian scholars, completing my time with Abelard, Duns, Scouts and other thinkers. Whether the ostensible … Continue reading
Many People Remember a Time When the Desire to Solve the Riddles of the Universe and to Find Truth was the Driving Force in their Lives
I cannot live without this beauty. I cannot endure without it. Oh, God, you have shown me Hell and it lies behind me, surely in the land where I was born. If Christ is the Lord, if Christ is the Lord, then what a beautiful miracle it is, this Christian mystery—that the Lord himself should come to Earth and clothe himself in flesh the better to know us and to comprehend us. Oh, what God, ever made in the image of Man by His fancy, was ever better than one who would become flesh? However, absolute unity, in spire of brilliant dashes in its direction, still remains undiscovered, still remains a Grenzbegriff. “Ever not quite.” After all that reason can do has been done, there still remains the opacity of the finite fact as merely given, with most of their peculiarities mutually unmediated and unexplained. To the very last, there are the various points of view which the philosopher must distinguish in discussing the World; and what is inwardly clear from one point remains a bare externality and datum to the other. The negative, the alogical, is never wholly banished. Something—call it fate, chance, freedom, spontaneity, the devil, what you will—is still wrong and other and outside and unincluded, from your point of view, even though you be the greatest of philosophers. #RandolphHaris 1 of 14
Reason is but one item in the mystery of the Universe; and behind the proudest consciousness that ever reigned, reason and wonder blushed face to face. Real possibilities, real indeterminations, real beginnings, real ends, real evil, real crises, catastrophes, and escapes, a real God, and a real more life, just as common-sense conceives these things, may remain in empiricism as conceptions which that philosophy gives up the attempt either to overcome or to reinterpret in monistic form. The Last Days! Christianity is a religion based on the notion that we are living in the Last Days! It is a religion fueled by the ability of beings to forget all the blunders of the past, and get dressed once more for the Last Days. Here in this room, we all of us believe in molecules and the conservation of energy, in democracy and necessary progress, in Protestant Christianity and the duty of fighting for the immortal life. Our reason is quite satisfied, in nine hundred and ninety-nice cases out of every thousand f us, if it can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case or credulity is criticized by some one else. Our faith is faith in someone else’s faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case. Our belief in truth itself, for instance, that there is a truth, and that our minds and it are made for each other,–what is it but a passionate affirmation of desire, in which our social system backs us up? #RandolphHarris 2 of 14
We want to have a truth; we want to believe that our experiments and studies and discussions must put us in a continually better and better position towards it; and on this line we agree to fight out our thinking lives. Why do few scientists even look at the evidence for telepathy, so called? Because they think, as a leading biologist, now dead, once said to me, that even if such a thing were true, scientists ought to band together to keep it suppressed and concealed. It would undo the uniformity of Nature and all sorts of other things without which scientists cannot carry on their pursuits. However, if this very being had been shown something which as a scientist one might do with telepathy, one might not only have examined the evidence, but even have found it good enough. This very law which the logicians would impose upon us—if I may give the name of the logicians to those who would rule out our willing nature here—is based on nothing but their own natural wish to exclude all elements for which they, in their professional quality of logicians, can find no use. Still, there is a truth, and it is the destiny of our minds to attain it, we are deliberately resolving to make, though the sceptic will not make it. The faith that truth exits, and that our minds can find it, may be held in two ways. #RandolphHarris 3 of 14
We may talk of the empiricist way and of the absolutist way of believing in truth. The absolutions in this matter say that we not only can attain to knowing truth, but we can know when we have attained to knowing it; while the empiricists think that although we may attain it, we cannot infallibly know when. To know is one thing, and to know for certain that we know is another. One may hold on to the first being possible without the second; hence the empiricists and the absolutists, although neither of them is a sceptic in the usual philosophic sense of the term, show very different degrees of strict and rigid doctrines in their lives. What one ha to do in the World as a human being is henceforth to be done not really by one’s ordinary personal self but by the Presence which, shapeless and silent though it be, is the vital living essence of what connect one with God. If this seems to deprive one of the attributes which make a being a being, I can reply only that we are here back with the Sphinx. Yes, the enigma is great; but the realized understanding and experience is immeasurably greater in its blessedness. One’s life becomes a lengthened awareness of this Presence. One is never lovely because one is never encased in the belittling thought that this narrow personal self-consciousness is the totality of one’s “I.” #RandolphHarris 4 of 14
One lives every moment in the awareness of one’s higher self. Yet this does not oppose nor interfere with the awareness of one’s lower one. Everything one then does is done by the ordinary personal self alone, out of and in harmony with the Overself, or one’s higher individuality. In thus working together, the divine presence supports the ego’s presence, but the ego is put in its place and kept in harmony with the higher individuality. If this is what people mean by killing out the ego (which is really killing our its tyranny), there could be no objection to the statement. However, to asset that it is not functioning at all is silly. If the claim of complete merger is valid, if the individual self really disappears in the attainment of Divine Consciousness, of whom then was this same self away in the experience of attainment? No—it is only the lower personal self that is transcended; the higher spiritual individuality is not. One day a learned colleague called me up and cried angrily, “There is a saying in the New Testament which I consider to be one of the most immoral and unjust statements ever made!” And he began to quote our text—“To him who has will more be given,” his anger increasing as he continued, “and from him who has not, even what he has will be taken away.” I believe that most of us cannot but feel equally offended. #RandolphHarris 5 of 14
And we cannot easily excuse the passage by suggesting what this colleague suggested—that the words may be due to a misunderstanding on the part of the disciples. No, they appear at least four times in the gospels with great emphasis. And furthermore, it is clear that the writers of the gospels feel exactly as we do. For them, the statement is a stumbling block, and they tried to interpret it in different ways. Probably none of the explanations satisfied them fully, for this particular saying of Jesus confronts us immediately with the greatest and perhaps most painful riddle of life—the inequality of all beings. We certainly cannot hope to solve it. Neither the Bible nor any of the great religions and philosophies was able to do so. However, this we can do: we can explore the breadth and dept of the riddle of inequality; and we can try to find a way to live with it, unsolved as it may remain. When we consider the words, “to him who has will more be given,” we ask ourselves—what do we have? And we may discover that much has been given us in terms of external goods, of friends, of intellectual gifts, and even of a comparatively high morality on which to base our actions. So we can expect that even more will accrue to us, while, at the same time, those who are lacking in all these attributes will lose the little they already have. #RandolphHarris 6 of 14
Even further, according to Jesus’ parable, the one poor talent they possess shall be handed over to those who have five or ten talents. We shall be richer because they will be poorer. And cry out as we may against such an injustice, we cannot deny that life abounds in it. We cannot deny it, but we might well ask—do we really have what we believe we have, so that it cannot be taken from us? It is a question full of anxiety, intensified by Luke’s version of our text: “From one who has not, even what one thinks that one has will be taken away.” Perhaps our having of those many things is not the kind of having that can be increased. Perhaps the having of a few things on the part of the poor is the kind of having that makes them grow. Jesus confirms this thought it the parable of the talents. The talents that are used, at the risk of their being lost, are the talents that we really have. Those that we try to preserve, without risking their use for growth, are those that we do not really have, and that will therefore be taken from us. They begin to disappear, until suddenly we feel that we have lost them, perhaps forever. Of some things we feel that we are certain: we know, and we know that we do know. There is something that gives a click inside of us, a bell that strikes twelve, when the hands of our mental clock have swept the dial and meet over the meridian hour. #RandolphHarris 7 of 14
The greatest empiricist among us are only empiricists on reflection: when left to their instincts, they dogmatize like infallible popes. When the Cliffords tell us how sinful it is to be Christian on such insufficient evidence, insufficiency is really the last thing they have in mind. For them the evidence is absolutely sufficient, only it makes the other way. They believe so completely in an anti-Christian order of the Universe that there is no living option: Christianity is a dead hypothesis from the start. However, as pragmatism explains, the criteria for the validity of knowledge are the consequences that are produced by the (given) knowledge. This approach provides useful implications for understanding human beings (for instance, thoughts or behaviors that give people pleasure or help them meet basic needs). The consequences, of course, as that our fields of experience have no more definite boundaries than have our fields of view. More that continuously develops, and that continuously supersedes them as a life process validates not only sense perception, but also affectional, intuitive, imaginal, and spiritual states of experience. It purports that usefulness need not be confined to discrete, overt, or measurable behaviors, but may encompass any experience that a person finds subjectively or objectively for help. #RandolphHarris 8 of 14
For example, it has been found by experts such as William James that so-called mystical experiences are useful for people. A sense of the divine gives beings a powerful ally for their own ideals. Spiritual life is more richly satisfying tan that of the conventional (logical-positivist) perspective. In the memory of all of us, there are many things that we seemed to have, but that we really did not have, and that were therefore taken away from us. Some of them were lost because of the tragic limitations of life. They had to be sacrificed so that other things might grow. We are all given youthful innocence, but innocence cannot be used and increased. The growth of our lives is made possible only by the sacrifice of the original gift of innocence. Sometimes, nevertheless, a melancholy longing arises in us for a purity that has been taken from us. We were all given youthful enthusiasm for many things and goals. However, all this enthusiasm also cannot be used and increased. Most of the objects of our early enthusiasm must be sacrificed for a few, and those few approached soberly. No maturity is possible without this sacrifice. Yet often a deep yearning for the lost possibilities and that enthusiasm takes hold of us. Innocence and youthful enthusiasm: we had them, and we did not have them. Life itself demanded that they be taken from us. #RandolphHarris 9 of 14
However, there are other things that we had and that were taken from us because we were guilty of taking them too much for granted. Some of us were deeply sensitive to the wonder of life as it is revealed in nature. Slowly, under the pressure of work and social life and the lure of cheap pleasures, we lost the wonder of our earlier years—the intense joy and sense of the mystery of life in the freshness of the young day or the glory of the dying afternoon, the splendor of the mountains and the infinite of the sea, or in the perfection of the movements of a young animal or of a flower breaking through the soil. We try perhaps to evoke such feelings again, but we find ourselves empty and do not succeed. We had that sensitivity and we did not have it, and it was taken from us. Others of us have has the same experiences with respect to music, poetry, great literature and the drama. We desired to devour all of these; we lived in them, and through them created for ourselves a life beyond our daily life. We had this experience and we did not have it. We did not allow it to grow. Our love for it was not strong enough, and so it was taken from us. Many people remember a time when the desire to solve the riddles of the Universe and to find truth was the driving force in their lives. #RandolphHarris 10 of 14
These beings could not rest satisfied with the littleness that see nothing beyond its own greed and desire. One was haunted by higher ideals than the ordinary; one wanted to be finer, cleaner, better and nobler human material than the common one. They entered college and the university not in order to gain access to the upper middle classes or the preconditions for social and economic success, but because they felt driven by their thirst for knowledge. They had something to which, seemingly, more could be added. However, their desire was not strong enough. They failed to nurture it, and so it was taken from them. Expediency and indifference towards truth took the place of genuine academic interest. Because their love for the truth was let go, they sometimes feel sick at heart; they realize that what they have lost may never be returned to them. We all know that any deep relationship to another human being requires watchfulness and nourishment; otherwise, it is taken from us. And we cannot recapture it. This is a form having and not having that is the root of innumerable human tragedies. We are all familiar with them. An outward organization may be useful to those who are still on the religious and mystical levels but for the purpose of philosophic advancement it is unnecessary. #RandolphHarris 11 of 14
Public societies are mere babels of strict and rigid opinions and lead in the end to confusion. The correct history of many spiritual organizations is not an edifying one. No formal association or institution is of any real worth here. Every student must work hard on and for oneself. Outside of that one may catch inspiration and receive help from an expert guide. The few who are able to walk together with one on this path will come along with time; the others would only be a drag. However, if one wants to join wit other really interested persons in studying the books together in an informal way, with no external bond, one may try it. And there is the most fundamental kind of having and not having—our having and losing God. Perhaps in our youth and innocence, and even beyond it, our experience of God was rich. We may remember the moments in which we felt God’s presence intensely. We may remember our praying with an overflowing heart, our encounter with the holy in words and music and holy places. We communicated with God; but this communication was taken from us, because we had it and did not have it. We failed to let it grow, and therefore, it slowly disappeared, leaving only an empty space. We became unconcerned, cynical and indifferent, not because we doubted our religious traditions—such doubt belongs to a life rich in God—but because we turned away from what once concerned us infinitely. #RandolphHarris 12 of 14
Such thoughts mark the first step in approaching the riddle of inequality. Those who have, receive more if they really have what they have, if they use it and cause it to grow. And those who have not, lose what they seem to have, because they really do not have it. The seeker after Reality will be suspicious of professional spirituality, although the seeker after religion will be attracted by it. It is not necessary to advertise inner attainment. One who would be a true philosopher must turn to the only source of true philosophy—the front within oneself. That is, one must turn inward, not outward to a group. Institutions tend to deaden inspirations. Of all things Truth is the freest. So, if a being is to find it in all its genuineness, and not in its distortions, caricatures, or fragmentation, not in any substitute for it, then one must preserve one’s own freedom to search for it. However, this is just what one cannot do so easily if one joins a sect. As I see it, the history of humankind divides into two great periods: the first one existed from time immemorial until roughly the Renaissance or Enlightenment, and it was characterized by the ritualist view of nature. The second period began with the efflorescence of the modern machine age and the domination of the scientific method and World view. In both periods beings wanted to control life and death, but in the first period they had to rely on a nonmachine technology to do it. #RandolphHarris 13 of 14
Primitive ritual manufacture of life may not have actually controlled the Universe, but at least it was never in any danger of destroying it. We control it up to a point—the point at which we seem to be destroying it. Besides, our belief in the efficacy of the machines control of nature has in itself elements of magic and ritual trust. Machines are supposed to work, and to work infallibly, since we have to put all our trust in them. And so when they fail to work our whole World view begins to crumble—just as the primitives’’ World view did when they found their rituals were not working in the face of New World culture and weaponry. I am thinking of how anxious we are to find the exact cause of an airplane crash, or how eager we are to attribute the crash to human error and not machine failure. Or even more, how certain authorities hush up their air crashes: how can machines fail in machine paradise? The fact is that beings in the New World did not know what was going on because they were faced with a technics so alien to their ways of thought probably explains our long puzzlement over the organization of primitive society. “Awake, and hear the words which I shall tell thee; for behold, I am come to declare unto you the glad tidings of great joy. For the Lord hath heard thy prayers, and hath judged of thy righteousness, and hath sent me to declare unto thee that thou mayest rejoice; and that thou mayest declare unto thy people, that they may also be filled with joy,” reports Mosiah 3.3-4. #RandolphHarris 14 of 14
The Struggle itself Toward the Heights is Enough to Fill a Being’s Heart—One Must Imagine Beings Happy!
And think of all the things you did, waking that ancient one Akasha and almost loosing her on humanity. As if we do not have enough monsters created by evolution. And then your adventure with the Body Thief. Coming into the flesh again, having that chance, and rejecting it for what you were before. You know your friend Gretchen is a stain in the jungles, do you not? Well, do not believe what you have read in the papers. Gretchen lost her mind; she is fixed in a state of hysteria and you believe it is your fault. I did not place judgement upon the incident. If we can go back to what I was saying. I was saying that you did everything but ask me to come! You challenged every form of authority; you sought every experience. You have buried yourself alive twice, and once tried to rise into the very Sun to make yourself a cinder. In simple situation neuroses the basic anxiety is lacking. Individuals are constituted by neurotic reactions to actual conflict situations on the part of people whose personal relations are undisturbed. The following may serve as another example of these cases as they frequently occur in a psychotherapeutic practice. A woman of twenty-five complained about heart pounding and anxiety states at night, with profuse perspiration. There were no organic findings, and all the evidence suggested that she was a healthy person. #RandolphHarris 1 of 18
The impression she gave was a warmhearted and straight forward woman. Five years before, for reasons which lay not so much in herself as in the situation, she had married a man twenty-five years older tan she. She had been very happy with him, had been satisfied in the pleasures of the flesh, had three children who had developed exceptionally well. She had been diligent and capable in housekeeping. In the past two or three years her husband had become somewhat cranky and less able to engage in pleasures of the flesh, but she had endured this without any neurotic reaction. The trouble had started seven months before, when a likable, marriageable man of her own age had begun to pay her personal attention. What had happened was that she had developed a resentment against her older husband but had entirely repressed this feeling for reasons that were very strong in view of her whole mental and social background and the basically good married relationship. With a little help in a few interviews she was able to face the conflict situation squarely and thereby rid herself of her anxiety. Nothing can better indicate the importance of basic anxiety than a comparison of individual reactions in cases of character neurosis with those in cases, like the one just cited, which belong to the group of simple situation neuroses. #RandolphHarris 2 of 18
The latter cases of neurosis are found in healthy persons who for understandable reasons are incapable of solving a conflict situation consciously, that is, they are unable to face the existence and the nature of the conflict and hence are incapable of making a clear decision. One of the outstanding differences between the two types of neuroses is the great facility of therapeutic results in the situation neurosis. In character neuroses therapeutic treatment has to proceed under great difficulties and consequently extends over a long period for the patient to wait to be cured; but the situation neurosis is comparatively easily solved. An understanding discussion of the situation is often not only a symptomatic but also a causal therapy. In other cases the causal therapy is the removal of the difficulty by changing the environment. Thus while in the situation neuroses we have the impression of an adequate relation between conflict situation and neurotic reaction, this relation seems to be missing in character neuroses. Because of the existing basic anxiety, the slightest provocation may elicit the most intense reaction, as well shall see later in more detail. #RandolphHarris 3 of 18
Although the range of manifest forms of anxiety, or the protection against it, is infinite and varies with each individual, the basic anxiety is more or less the same everywhere, varying only in extent and intensity. It may be roughly described as a feeling of being small, insignificant, helpless, deserted, endangered, in a World that is out to abuse, cheat, attack, humiliate, betray, envy. One patient of mine expressed this feeling in a picture she drew spontaneously, in which she was sitting in the midst of a scene as a tiny, helpless, undressed baby, surrounded by all sorts of menacing monsters, human and animal, ready to attack her. In psychoses one will often find a rather high degree of awareness of the existence of such an anxiety. In paranoid patients this anxiety is restricted to one or several definite persons; in schizophrenic patients there is often a keen awareness of the potential hostility of the World are them, so much so that they are inclined to take even a kindness shown to them as implying potential hostility. In neuroses, however, there is rarely an awareness of the existence of the basic anxiety, or of the basic hostility, as least not of the weight and significance it has for the entire life. #RandolphHarris 4 of 18
A patient of mine who saw herself in a dream as a small bird that had to hide in the cabinet in order not to be stepped upon—and thereby gave an absolutely true picture of how she acted in life—had not the remotest idea that factually she was frightened of everyone, and told me she did not know what anxiety was. A basic distrust toward everyone may be covered up by a superficial conviction that people in general are quite likable, and it may coexist with perfunctorily good relations with others; an existing deep contempt for everyone may be camouflaged by a readiness to admire. Although the basic anxiety concerns people it may be entirely divested of its personal character and transformed into a feeling of being endangered by thunderstorms, political events, germs, accidents, canned food, or to a feeling of being doomed by fate. It is not difficult for the trained observer to recognize the basis of these attitudes, but it always requires intense psychoanalytic work before the neurotic person oneself recognizes that one’s anxiety does not really concern germs and the like, but people, and that one’s irritation against people is not, or is not only, an adequate and justified reaction to some actual provocation, but that one has become basically hostile toward others, distrustful of them. #RandolphHarris 5 of 18
So long as a being, whether one be Duchess Meghan Markle or Tee Grizzly, one had to walk, eat, and work, one must use one’s individuality. What is lost by the scholar is one’s attachment to individuality with desires, hates, angers, and passions. Artistic expressions, even when dilettante, is one of the most satisfactory forms of objectifying and thus projecting inner tensions. The dance is undoubtedly the most ancient form of artistic expression; its unique position among the arts is guaranteed by more than mere seniority: as we have seen, the dance is essentially a cooperative art, an art of the isolated examples of solo and couple dances among ancient peoples, they are not truly solo or couple performances; they presuppose the presence of singing and rhythmically tapping audiences who open the dance or who join in it later. In pre-cultural human society dance must have been a universal form of expressing strong emotions collectively. Admittedly, there have been reports of some danceless peoples, yet so long as we accept testimonies from observers on animal-dances—for instance Dr Kohler’s reports that his apes had danced too—we cannot be far wrong in concluding that the dance was a universal play-form in pre-cultural communities. #RandolphHarris 6 of 18
Ancient people dance for every occasion—birth, initiation, marriage, death, war and so on. Sometimes the motive force appears to be an overflow of vitality and joy, at other times it seems to issue from a craving for the dissolution of the self, or it may be linked with magical practices, for instance, rain-making dances, hunting dances or war dancing. Dr. Oesterley believed that “all dancing was originally religious and was performed for religious purposes.” He insisted that the dance was sacred in origin and that every other type of dance was derived from this original religious dance. Dr. Oesterley sensed that in the dance the individual exerted oneself to reach beyond one’s limited selfhood and merge with a reality larger than one’s self. From the biological point of view this larger reality is the totality of the species, and not much can be gained by saying that a communion wit the community is merely a symbolization of a more significant and higher union, a union with God or with the essential principle of the Universe. A social communion is complete and there is nothing in it which transcends the species. It is, of course, true that a religious symbolization and dramatization of phylic communion can substantially assist the latter when the communal principle of the situation is stressed, but this does not alter the biosocial character of the experience. #RandolphHarris 7 of 18
Psychologically, the normal mind is synonymous with the mystical mind. In our unconsciousness we deny the collateral immediacy of our social inclusiveness and for this reason we project the lineal image of indefinite extension composing a being’s dream of a personal life eternal. Denying our organic unity of compass, we compensate in a fanciful unity of duration. What or who is using the body and mind of a self-realized person? Is it God or the being who acts, works, speaks, or writes then? It is true that the ego is kept but subordinated by God? Or does it vanish altogether and only seem present to the outer observer? We do not accept that interpretation of mystic experience which proclaims it to be an extinction of human personality in God’s being. The differences between human beings still remain after illumination. The variations which make each one a unique specimen and the individual that one is, still continue to exist. However, the Oneness behind human beings powerfully counterbalances. Still, the line of demarcation between beings and the World-Mind can be attenuated but not obliterated. It is perfectly possible to become impersonal in attitude and yet remain individual in consciousness. The winning of the one condition does not mean losing of the other. #RandolphHarris 8 of 18
We beings recoil from the bleak picture of an impersonality without feeling, a life without passion, or survival without ego. Yet it seems bleak because it is rarely known or seen in experience, and also because it is unfamiliar and unrealized. Freed at last from this ever-whirling wheel of birth and death to which one was tied by one’s own desire-nature, what happens to one can only be as opening up to a new better indescribable state, and it is so. One as one was vanishes, not into complete annihilation and certainly not into the Heaven of a perpetuated ego, but into a higher kind of life shrouded in mystery. They must face this dilemma in their thinking, that if their absolutist realization is a fixed and finished state there is no room for an ego in it, however sublimated, refined, and purged the ego may be. The end, then, can only be a merger, a dissolution into self-actualization and a total disappearance of the conscious reality of lack and limitation. This is a kind of death. However, there is another kind of salvation, a living one where unfoldment and growth still continue, albeit on higher levels than any which we now know. The gap between the finite human mind and the infinite World-Mind is absolute. A union between them is not possible unless the first merges and disappears into the second. #RandolphHarris 9 of 18
Will he have to surrender all conscious life and get in return the problematical advantage of a merger indistinguishable from complete annihilation? True, the possibility of further suffering will then be entirely eliminated. However, so will the possibility of further joy. It is a fallacy to think that this displacement of the lower self brings about its complete substitution by the infinite and absolute Deity. This fallacy is an ancient and common one in mystical circles and leads to fantastic declarations of self-deification. If the lower self is displaced, it is not destroyed. It lives on but in strict subordination to the higher one, the Overself, the divine soul of a being; and it is this latter, not the divine World-principle, which is the true displacing element. One is untied with, but not absorbed by, the infinite Overself. One is a part of it, but only individually so. This is one’s highest condition while still in the flesh. There is some kind of a distinction between one’s higher individual and the Universal Infinite out of which it is rayed. And this distinction remains in one’s higher mystical state, which is not one of total absorption and utter destruction of this individuality but the mergence of its own will in the universal will, the closet intimacy of its own being with the universal being. #RandolphHarris 10 of 18
One does not discover the absurd without being tempted to write a manual of happiness. What! By such narrow ways? There is but one World, however. Happiness and the absurd are sons of the same Earth. They are inseparable. It would be a mistake to say that happiness necessarily springs from the absurd discovery. It happens as well that the feeling of the absurd springs from happiness. The Overself is one with the World-Mind without however being lost in it. There is no final absorption; the individual continues to exist somehow in the Supreme. The fact that one can pass away into it at will and yet remain again, proves this. Something is there, something must take the place of the absent ego to perform its function and do in the World what needs to be done. The unit of mind is differentiated out and undergoes its long evolution through numerous changes of state, not to merge so utterly in its source again as to be virtually annihilated, but to be consciously harmonized with the source whilst yet retaining its individuality. If on the other hand one is conscious of oneself in the divine being, on the other one is conscious of oneself in the human ego. The two can coexist, and at this stage of advance, do. However, the ego must knit itself to the higher self until they become like a single entity. #RandolphHarris 11 of 18
When one’s mind is immovably fixed in this state, one’s personal will permanently directed by the higher one, one is said to have attained the true mystical life. All is not, has not been, exhausted. It drives out of this World a God who had comes into it with dissatisfaction and preference for futile sufferings. It makes of fate a human matter, which must be settled among beings. Silent joy is contained therein. One’s fate belongs to one. One’s soul is one’s thing. In the Universe suddenly restored to its silence, the myriad wondering little voices of the Earth rise up. Unconscious, secret calls, invitations from all the faces, they are the necessary reverse and price of victory. There is no Sun without shadow, and it is essential to know the night. The absurd being says yes and one’s effort will henceforth be unceasing. If there is a personal fate, there is no higher destiny, or at least there is but one which one concludes is inevitable and despicable. For the rest, one knows oneself to be the master of one’s days. At that subtle moment when beings glance backward over their life, in that slight pivoting one contemplates that series of unrelated actions which becomes one’s fate, created by one, combined under one’s memory’s eye and soon sealed by one’s death. #RandolphHarris 12 of 18
Thus, convinced of the wholly human origin of all that is human, a vision impaired being eager to see who knows that the night has no end, one is still on the go. The rock is still rolling. We are left at the foot of Heaven. One always finds one’s burden again. However, it is the higher fidelity that negates God and raises rocks. All is well. This Universe henceforth without a master seems to neither be sterile nor futile. Each atom of that stone, each mineral flake of that night-filled mountain, in itself forms a World. The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a being’s heart. One must imagine others happy. The belief that any institution or organization is divine has led to much superstition and unnecessary strife: the true belief that all such things are strictly human, and therefore fallible, as history repeatedly confirms, would have saved humankind much suffering. All observation and experience suggests that when the things of the spirit are brought into organized forms, such as societies and sects, the harm done to members counterbalances the good. Do not look for any group formation created by a philosopher, for you will find none. One is sponsored by no church, no sect, no cult, no organization of any kind, for one needs none. One’s credentials come from within, not from any outside source. #RandolphHarris 13 of 18
One requires no one to flatter one’s personal importance. We are also reminded that someday we shall be forgotten. Since we cannot endure the thought we repress it. The literature of humankind is full of stories in which kings as well as beggars are reminded of their having to die. Beings cannot stand the anticipation of death, and so they repress it. In the Vampire Armand by Anne Rice, when Armand is dying he says, “It is not my time. I know it. And such a statement cannot be undone by a mere handful of hours. Smash the ticking clock. They meant, by a soul’s incarnate life, it was not time. Some destiny carved in my infant had will not be so soon fulfilled or easily defeated.” We cannot smash the clock, we cannot ignore fate. The repression does not remove one’s ever present anxiety, and there are moments in life of everyone when such repression is not even slightly effective. Then, we ask ourselves—will there be a time when I shall be forgotten, forever? The meaning of the anxiety of having to die is the anxiety that one will be forgotten both now and eternity. “Ah, but what if there are many lands?” says Armand. “What if on the second fall, I find myself on yet another shore, and sulfur rises from the boiling Earth and not the beauty first revealed to me. I hurt. These tears are scalding. So much is lost. I cannot remember. It seems I say those same word so much. I cannot remember.” #RandolphHarris 14 of 18
Every living being resists being pushed into the past without a new presence. A powerful symbol of this state of being forgotten is being buried. Armand goes on to express his feelings about the subject, while he is on his death bed. “These events involved all the other souls whom I never touched; I saw now the hurts I had inflicted, and the words of mine which had brought solace, and I saw the result of the most casual and unimportant things I had done. I saw the banquet hall of the Florentines, and in the midst of them, I saw the blundering loneliness with which they stumbled into death. I saw the isolation and the sadness of their souls as they had fought to stay alive.” Burial means being removed from the realm of awareness, a removal from the surface of the Earth. The meaning of Jesus’ resurrection is intensified by the words in the Creed that he was buried. A rather superficial view of the anxiety of death states that this anxiety is the fear of the actual process of dying, which of course may be agonizing, but which can also be very easy. No, in the depth of the anxiety of having to die is the anxiety of being eternally forgotten. Beings have never been able to bear this thought. An expression of one’s utter resistance is the way the Greeks spoke of glory as the conquest of being forgotten. Today, the same thing is called historical significance. #RandolphHarris 15 of 18
If one can, one builds castles, mansions, memorial halls or creates memorial foundations. It is consoling to think that we might be remembered for a certain time beyond death not only by those who loved us or hated us or admired us, but also by those who never knew us expect now by name. Some names are remembered for centuries. Hope is expressed in the poet’s proud assertion that the traces of one’s Earthly days cannot vanish in eons. However, these traces, which unquestionably exist in the physical Word, are not we ourselves, and they do not bear our name. They do not keep us from being forgotten. Is there anything that can keep us from being forgotten? That we were known from eternity and will be remembered in eternity is the only certainty that can save us from the horror of being forgotten forever. We cannot be forgotten because we are known eternally, beyond past and future. However, although we cannot be forgotten, we can forget ourselves—namely, our true being, that of us that is eternally known and eternally remembered. And whether or not we forget or remember most of those things we experience every hour is not ultimately important. However, it is infinitely important that we not forget ourselves, this individual being, not to be repeated, unique, eternally precious, and delivered into our hands. #RandolphHarris 16 of 18
Unfortunately, it may then be mistreated, overlooked, and imprisoned. Yet, if we remember it, and become aware of its infinite significance, we realize that we have been known in the past and that we will not be forgotten in the future. For the truth of our own being I rooted in the ground of being, from which it comes and to which it returns. Nothing truly real is forgotten eternally, because everything real comes from eternity and goes to eternity. And I speak now of all individual beings and not solely of humans. Nothing in the Universe is unknown, nothing real is ultimately forgotten. The atom that moves in an immeasurable path today and the atom that moved in an immeasurable path billions of years ago are rooted in the eternal ground. There is no absolute, no completely forgotten past, because the past, like the future, is rooted in the divine life. Nothing is completely pushed into the past. Nothing real is absolutely lost and forgotten. We are together with everything real in the divine life. Only the unreal, in us around us, is pushed into the past forever. This is what last judgment means—to separate in us, as in everything, what has true and final being from what is merely transitory and empty of true being. We are never forgotten, but much in us that we liked and for which we longed may be forgotten forever. #RandolphHarris 17 of 18
Such judgment goes on in every moment of our lives, but the process is hidden in time and manifest only in eternity. Therefore, let us push into the past and forget what should be forgotten forever, and let us go forward to that which expresses our true being and cannot be lost in eternity. “But behold, this is not all; for ye ought to know as I do know, that inasmuch as ye shall keep to commandments of God ye shall prosper in the land; and ye ought to know also, that inasmuch as ye will not keep the commandments of God ye shall be cut off from his presence. Now this is according to his word,” reports Alma 36.30. A person who seeks God and wants to pursue this quest of truth will have to become a different being—different from what one was in past because the old innate tendencies have to be replaced by new ones, and different from other beings because one must refuse to be led unresistingly into the thoughtlessness, the irreverence, and the coarseness which pervade them. It is not only a moral change that is called for but also a mental one, not only a physical but also a metaphysical one. There is no need to let go of one’s humanness in order to find one’s divine essence, but only of its littleness, its satisfaction with trivial aims. #RandolphHarris 18 of 18
This is the Price that Must be Paid for the Passions of this Earth thus I Have Given the Recipe for the Absurd Victory!
Making sense of the senseless and finding the freedom in a capricious, perilous World is our primary philosophical concern. We must help each other live with and even benefit from the unfathomable conditions of life. When meaning or traditions dissolve, the legend of Christ becomes relevant. Mourners understand it; so do unemployed factory workers. Victims … Continue reading
The Course of Each Quester is Not Necessarily Invariable Nor are One’s Experiences Always Inevitable
He had lost his hold of the magnetic chain of humanity. He was no longer a brother-man, opening the chambers of the dungeons of our common nature by the key of holy sympathy, which gave him a right to share in all its secrets; he was now a cold observer, looking on humankind as the subject of his experiment, and, at length, converting man and woman to be his puppets, and pulling the wires that moved them to such degrees of crimes as were demanded for his study. Aggression emerges on the spectrum at that point where overt conflict also emerges. Although conflict may be faintly detected in self-affirmation and may be even slightly more noticeable in self-assertion, on those levels it is typically directed inward. There is a conflict within me, for example, when I get m nerve up to assert myself before a large audience to ask a question of the speaker; the conflict may then be invisible to the outside World. However, in aggression there is no question about the overt conflict. There occurs a pitting of interest against interest, and the aggressive act is an endeavor to come to some resolution in this conflict. A Pandora’s box of moral maladies is opened if, following the habit in America, we condemn aggression as evil as soon as it shows its head. #RandolphHarris 1 of 14
To that kind of thinking, the power of the status quo is automatically beneficent and God-given, whether it be the state troopers going in to slaughter at Garlic Festival or the police quelling a Sacramento riot; just as automatically the rebel is seen as evil. Thus we have the tendency to label one act as aggressive and, therefore, to be condemned when performed by those out of power, and to label the exact same act as good when performed by those in power (or vice versa). The reason aggression terrifies people so much is that it involves the potentiality of force. The force in aggression can take away our lives in the physical, intellectual, or spiritual sense. Physical force is understood well enough. Intellectual aggression may have the same compelling quality, as in abrasive argument—especially argumentum ad hominem. Or the coercion may be spiritual, as in the threat of ostracism or excommunication. That is last can be a great threat is shown by the phenomenon known as “voodoo death.” A condemned person who is “cut dead” in primitive society, as a punishment, say, for breaking one of the taboos, falls to the ground; one’s pulse becomes thready; one pants and breathes hard; and in a few hours one dies. Even in advanced societies “cutting one dead” is an aggressive act that is both psychological and spiritual and produces potent results. #RandolphHarris 2 of 14
The Janus-faced nature of aggression can be seen in that word’s Latin root aggredi, which means “to go forward, to approach.” Primarily, this means to “approach someone for counsel or advice.” Second, it means “to move against” or “to move with intent to hurt.” In other words, aggression in origin is pure conjecture, a reaching out, a making contact either for friendly affirmation of yourself and another or for hostile purposes the way a bear hug is part f a puglist’s technique. The opposite of aggression is not loving peace or consideration or friendship, but isolation, the state of no contact at all. This is actually the state of the person—the understanding of whom may be obtained by looking within one’s self and not necessarily observing in a mental hospital—who can brook no rebuke of what one does or thinks; soon one can accept no correction; and, finally, no comment at all. One becomes totally isolated from other persons. As so often happens in psychotherapy, when the patient expresses some negation—“I feel you are attacking me. I cannot stand that…”—or when the therapist says: “What you are saying makes me angry; let us see why,” both together can explore what sensitive spot was hit. #RandolphHarris 3 of 14
When these aspects of aggression are worked though, there is not only a clearing of the air but both arrive at a new and deeper understanding of the other and, generally—since we love people for their faults as well as their virtues—a greater affection for the other too. The constructive forms of aggression include cutting through barriers to initiate a relationship; confronting another without intent to hurt but wit the intent to penetrate into one’s consciousness; waring off powers that threaten one’s integrity; actualizing one’s own self and one’s own ideas in hostile environments; overcoming the barriers to healing. Love-making and fighting are very similar neurophysiologically in human beings. Lovers’ quarrels often end up in pleasures of the flesh. There is a strange relationship between the fighter and the lover: the knight rescuing the maiden from the dragon and enjoying pleasures of the flesh with are part of the same fable. In fighting there is a vivid intimacy, a closeness that partakes of both hate and love, an intimacy held off by hatred but an intimacy nevertheless, and it can blossom into affection or love. An example of this is seen in Armand the Vampire by Anne Rice when Armand has a one night encounter of the pleasures of the flesh with Lord Harlech. Lord Harlech tries to kill him, but Armand escapes. Only for Lord Harlech to track him down, break into his house, and kill two of the boys. Armand is so upset that he refuses to hide and goes after Lord Harlech to take his life. #RandolphHarris 4 of 14
The two of them get into a fight and Lord Harlech cuts Armand, then Armand slashes his throat, but he did not die. As the battle continues, Lord Harlech expresses his feelings. “You horrid damnable little devil,” he said. “You made me adore you so you could draw and quarter me at your pleasure. You promised me you would come back!” The Armand says that, Lord Harlech “kept up this sort of verbal barrage the entire time we fought. He seemed to need it, rather like a goading battle drum and fife.” “Come on, you despicable little Angel, I will tear your wings off!” Lord Harlech said. This battle proves that there is a strange relationship between fighting and love. Because Lord Harlech could not get the love he wanted and had an obsession, he fighting Armand was the only way he could get close to him, but it blossom into affection, as Armand and Riccardo ended Lord Harlech’s life, and Lord Harlech poisoned Armand. So I guess it pays to be careful who you fight with. The negative side of aggression is what is normally referred to in our society and thus does not require much definition here. It consists essentially of contact with another with intent to injure or give pain, taking power from the other for one’s self-protection or simply to increase one’s own power. #RandolphHarris 5 of 14
Why has the beneficial side of aggression been so consistently repressed and the negative side so emphasized? One obvious reason is that we have been terrified of aggression, and we assume—delusion though it is—that we can better control it if we center all our attention on its destructive aspects as though that is all there is. This identification of a word with only its negative meanings (such as expletives and devil) is one of the oldest misuses of the diamonic. In so doing we proscribe the whole area by labeling it off limits, so that anyone who talks about the devil is already under his power. Another reason we tend to emphasize only the negative side of aggression is that it carries with it anxiety and guilt. We think we can better avoid that anxiety and guilt if we call Prometheus a fanciful legend and posit ourselves as saved from anxiety and guilt by the second Adam, Christ. When this is done through rigid and strict doctrines, as it is by many fundamentalists, it does give the individual a certain amount of control. However, the system of control is shaky at best. Its value is grossly outweighed by the harm it does in truncating consciousness and blocking off sensitivity and understanding of others. The truth is that practically everything we do is a mixture of positive and negative forms of aggression. #RandolphHarris 6 of 14
Before I give a lecture, I find myself getting in the mod of “If anyone foes to sleep, my voice and ideas will be so importunate that I will wake him up” (which is positive aggression). Sometimes I defiantly feel: “If anyone tries to interrupt me by heckling, I will shut one up by making one look silly” (which is negative aggression). There is a hypothesis that people have a predisposition toward anxiety to the degree which they had been rejected by their mothers. However, it is only true 50 percent of the time because people who are forced out of their houses by their mothers, many of them simply make their friends among other youngsters on the street. Hence, there was not the predisposition to anxiety we would have expected according to what we know in psychology. How could this be? Had the rejected young women who had not experienced anxiety become hardened, apathetic, so that they did not feel rejection? The answer to that seemed clearly no. Were they psychopathic or sociopathic types, who also do not experience anxiety? Again, no. I felt myself caught by an insoluble problem. Late one day, putting aside my books and papers in the little office I used in that shelter house, I walked down the street toward the subway. #RandolphHarris 7 of 14
I was tired. I tried to put the whole troublesome business out of my mind. About fifty feet away from the entrance to the Brighton Station, it suddenly struck me out of the blue, as the not-unfitting expression goes, that those young women who did not fit my hypothesis were all from the proletarian class. And as quickly as that idea struck me, other ideas poured out. I think I had not taken another step on the sidewalk when a whole new hypothesis broke loose in my mind. I realized my entire theory would have to be changed. I saw at that instant that it is not rejection by the mother that is the original trauma which is the source of anxiety; it is rather rejection that is lied about. The proletarian mothers rejected their children, but they never made any bones about it. The children knew they were rejected; they went out on the streets and found other companions. There was never any subterfuge about their situation. They knew their World—bad or good—and they could orient themselves to it. However, the middle-class young women were always lied to in their families. They were rejected by mothers who pretended they loved them. This was really the source of their anxiety, not the sheer rejection. I saw, in that instantaneous way that characterizes insights from these deeper sources, that anxiety comes from not being able to know the World you are in, not being able to orient yourself in your own existence. #RandolphHarris 8 of 14
I was convinced there, on the street—and later thought and experienced only convinced me the more—that this is a better, ore accurate, and more elegant theory, than my first. The helplessness of a child is often considered merely as a biological fact. Though the child is for long years factually dependent on its environment for the fulfillment of its needs—having less physical strength and less experience than the grown-ups—there is nevertheless too much emphasis on the biological aspects of the question. After the first two or three years of life there is a decided change from the prevailingly biological dependence to a kind of dependence that includes mental, intellectual and spiritual life of the child. This continues until the child matures into early adulthood and is able to take life into its own hands. There are great individual differences, though, in the degree to which children remined dependent on their parents. It all depends on what the parents try to achieve in the education of their offspring: whether the tendency is to make a child strong, courageous, independent, capable of dealing with all sorts of situations, or whether the main tendency is to shelter the child, to make it obedient, to keep it ignorant of life as it is, or in short to infantilize it up to twenty years of age or longer. #RandolphHarris 9 of 14
In children growing up under adverse conditions helplessness is usually artificially reinforced by intimidation, by babying or by bringing and keeping the child in a stage of emotional dependence. The more helpless a child is made the less will it dare t feel or show opposition, and the longer will such opposition be delayed. In this situation the underlying feeling—or what we may call the motto—is I have to repress my hostility because I need you. Fear may be aroused directly by threats, prohibitions and punishments, and by outbreaks of temper or violent scenes witnessed by a child; it may be aroused also by indirect intimidation, such as impressing this child with the great dangers of life—germs, street cares, strangers, uneducated children, climbing trees. The more apprehensive a child is made the less will it dare to show or even to feel hostility. Here the motto is: I have to repress my hostility because I am afraid of you. Love may be another reason for repressing hostility. When genuine affection is absent there is often a great verbal emphasis on how much the parents love the child and how they would sacrifice for one up to the last drop of their blood. A child, particularly if otherwise intimidated, may cling to this substitute for love and fear to be rebellious lest it lose the reward for being docile. In such situations the motto is: I have to repress hostility for fear of losing love. #RandolphHarris 10 of 14
Thus far we have discussed situations in which a child represses his hostility against the parents because he is afraid that any expression of it would spoil his relations to the parents. He is motivated by plain fear that these powerful giants would desert him, withdraw their reassuring benevolence or turn against him. In addition, in our culture a child is usually made to feel guilty for any feelings or expressions of hostility or opposition; that is, he is made to feel unworthy or contemptible in his own eyes if he breaks the rules set up by them. These two reasons for feelings of guilt are closely interrelated. The more a child is made to feel guilty about trespassing on forbidden territory the less will be dare to feel spiteful or accusatory toward the parents. In our culture the sphere of pleasures of the flesh is the one in which guilt feelings are most frequently stimulated. Whether prohibitions are expressed by audible silence or by open threats and punishment, a child frequently comes to feel not only that pleasures of the flesh and curiosity about pleasures of the flesh are activities that are forbidden and they feel they are dirty and despicable if they indulge in them. If there are any fantasies and wishes concerning pleasures of the flesh, they are to remain unexpressed as a result of the forbidding attitude toward sexuality in general, and of course it makes a youth feel guilty. In this situation the motto is: I have to repress hostility because I would be a bad child if I felt hostile. #RandolphHarris 11 of 14
In various combinations any of the factors mentioned may bring a child to repress one’s hostility and eventually produce anxiety. However, does every infantile anxiety necessarily lead ultimately to a neurosis? Our knowledge is not advanced enough to answer this question adequately. My belief is that infantile anxiety is a necessary factor but not a sufficient causes for the development of a neurosis. It seems that favorable circumstances, such as an early change of surroundings or counteracting influences of any sort, may forestall a definite neurotic development. If, however, as frequently happens, living conditions are not of a kind to diminish the anxiety, then not only may this anxiety persist, but—as we shall see later—it is bound gradually to increase and to set in motion all the processes which constitute a neurosis. Among the factors that may influence the further development of infantile anxiety there is one that I want to consider especially. It makes a great difference whether the reaction of hostility and anxiety is restricted to the surroundings which forced the child into it, or whether it develops into an attitude of hostility and anxiety toward people in general. #RandolphHarris 12 of 14
If a child is fortunate enough to have, for example, a loving grandmother, an understanding teacher, some good friends, one’s experience with them may prevent one from expecting nothing but bad from everybody. However, the more difficult are one’s experiences in the family, the more will a child be inclined to develop not only a reaction of hatred toward the parents and other children but a distrustful or spiteful attitude toward everyone. The more a child is isolated and deterred from making other experiences of one’s own, the more such a development will be fostered. And finally, the more a child covers up one’s grudge against one’s own family, as for instance by conforming with one’s parents’ attitudes, the more one projects one’s anxiety to the outside World and thus becomes convinced that the World in general is dangerous and frightening. The general anxiety concerning the World may also develop or increase gradually. A child who has grown up in this kind of atmosphere described will not dare in one’s own contacts with others to be as enterprising or pugnacious as they. One will have lost the blissful certainty of being wanted and will take even a harmless teasing as a cruel rejection. One will be wounded and hurt more easily than others and will be less capable of defending oneself. #RandolphHarris 13 of 14
The condition that is fostered or brought about by the factors I have mentioned, or by similar factors, is an insidiously increasing, all-pervading feeling of being lonely and helpless in a hostile World. The acute individual reactions to individual provocations crystallize into a character attitude. This attitude as such does not constitute a neurosis but it is the nutritive soil out of which a definite neurosis may develop at any time. Because of the fundamental role this attitude plays in neuroses I have given it a special designation: the basic anxiety; it is inseparably interwoven with a basic hostility. The answer to those who defend group work by quoting Jesus’ single statement, “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I, in the midst of them,” is that it contradicts his repeated statement, “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you,” and is more likely to be interpolated than authentic. Within the exclusivity of a sect one’s power to think forcefully, creatively, and originally is lost. One is forced into a narrow area, deprived of the stimulating results of World-search. There is neither the wish nor the will to step outside the imposed borders of one’s own sect and measure other ideas, test other ideals, and benefit by other insights. There is a pathetic acceptance of mental captivity. No organized church likes individual revelations to supplant its own authority. One may work toward enlightenment and inner freedom, to the aspiration which draws one most. #RandolphHarris 14 of 14
Life is Teaching Us All the Time—Happiness Depends on Our Understanding of Life and Understanding Depends Upon the Penetration of Insight!
My song was the only sad note in Heaven, and yet the sadness was transfigured immediately into harmony, into a form of psalm or canticle, into hymn of praise and wonder and gratitude. Sensitive souls have reacted with shock to the elemental drama of life on this planet. We raise our heads over the face … Continue reading
The Rhythmic Life Alternates and Reacts, it Brings Alternation of the Alternations and Reactions against the Reactions
If I never lay eyes on you again after tonight, if I never come across a single shred of evidence that you really exist or were here with me, or that any of these things were said, I will still be transformed by you as I am not. You are my miracle of sorts. You are greater proof than millions of mortals have ever been given. You are proof not only of the supernatural and the mysterious and the wondrous, you are proof of exactly what I believe! The central fact of modern history in the West—by which we mean the long period from the end of the Middle Ages to the present—is unquestionably the decline of religion. No doubt, the churches are still very powerful organizations; there are millions of churchgoers all over the World; and even the purely intellectual possibilities of religious belief look better to church people now than in the bleak days of self-confident nineteenth-century materialism. A few years ago there was even considerable talk about a religious revival, and some popular and patriotic periodicals such as Life magazine gave a great deal of space to it; but the talk has by now pretty much died down, the movement, if any, subsided, and the American public buys more automobiles and television sets than every before. #RandolphHarris 1 of 18
When Life magazine promotes a revival of religion, one is only too painfully aware from the nature of this publication that religion is considered as being in the national interest; one could scarcely have a clearer indication of the broader historical fact that in the modern World the nation-state, a thoroughly secular institution, outranks any church. The decline of religion in modern times means simply that religion is no longer the uncontested center and ruler of being’s life, and that the church is no longer the final and unquestioned home and asylum of one’s being. The deeper significance of this change does not even appear principally at the purely intellectual level, in loss of belief, though this loss due to the critical inroads of science has been a major historical cause of the decline. The waning of religion is a much more concrete and complex fact than a mere change in conscious outlook; it penetrates the deepest strata of being’s total psychic life. It is indeed one of the major stages in being’s psychic evolution. Religion to medieval beings was not so much a theological system as a solid psychological matrix surrounding the individual’s life from birth to death, sanctifying and enclosing all its ordinary and extraordinary occasions in sacrament and ritual. #RandolphHarris 2 of 18
The loss of the church was the loss of a whole system of symbols, images, dogmas, and rites which has the psychological validity of immediate experience, and within which hitherto the whole psychic life of Western beings have been safely contained. In losing religion, beings lost the concrete connection with a transcendent realm of being; one was set free to deal with this World in all its brute objectivity. However, one was bound to feel homeless in such a World, which no longer answered the needs of one’s spirit. A home is the accepted framework which habitually contains our life. To lose one’s psychic container is to be cast adrift, to become a wanderer upon the face of the Earth. Henceforth, in seeking one’s own human completeness beings would have to do for oneself what one once had done for one, unconsciously, by the church, through the medium of its sacramental life. Naturally enough, being’s feeling of homelessness did not makes itself felt for some time; the Renaissance being was still enthralled by a new and powerful vision of mastery over the whole Earth. No believer, no matter how sincere, could possibly write the Divine Comedy today, even is one possessed a talent equal to Dante’s. #RandolphHarris 3 of 18
Visions and symbols do not have the immediate and overwhelming reality for us that they had for the medieval poet. In the Divine Comedy the whole of nature is merely a canvas upon which the religious symbol and image are painted. Western beings have spent more six hundred years—over half a millennium—in stripping nature of these projections and turning it into a realm of neutral objects which one’s science may control. Thus it could hardly be expected that the religious image would have the same fore for us as it did for Dante. This is simply a psychic fact within human history; psychic facts have just as much historical validity as the facts that we now, unlike the beings of Dante’s time, travel in airplanes and work in factories regulated by computing machines. A great work of art can never be repeated—the history of art shows us time and again that literal imitation leads to pastiche—because it springs from the human soul, which evolves like everything else in nature. This point must be insisted upon, contrary to the view of some of our more enthusiastic medievalist who picture the psychic containment of medieval beings as a situation of human completeness to which we must return. #RandolphHarris 4 of 18
History has never allowed beings to return to the past in any total sense. And our psychological problems cannot be solved by a regression to a past state in which they had not yet been brought into being. On the other hand, when beings fail to recognize that every major step forward by beings of the past and present entails some loss, the sacrifice of an older security and the creation and heightening of new tensions, enlightened and progressive thinkers are equally blind. (We should bear this in mind against some of the criticism of Existentialism as a philosophy that has unbearably heightened human tensions: it did not create those tensions, which were already at work in the soul of modern beings, but simply sought to give them philosophic expression, rather than evading them by pretending they were not there.) It is far from true that the passage from the Middle Ages to modern times is the substitutional of a rational for a religious outlook; on the contrary, the whole of medieval philosophy is one of unbounded rationalism in comparison with modern thought. Certainly, the Whole natural World, and particularly this natural Would as it opens toward God as First Cause should be transparently assessible to human reason. However, it is also possible that the limits of human reason have very radically shrunk. #RandolphHarris 5 of 18
Human reason, in some cases, has been applied like an acid solvent to all things human and divine. The rationalism of the medieval philosopher was contacted by the mysteries of faith and strict and rigid doctrines, which were altogether beyond the grasp of human reason, but were nevertheless powerfully real and meaningful to beings as symbols that kept the vital circuit open between reason and emotion, between the rational and non-rational in the human psyche. Hence, this rationalism of the medieval philosophers does not end with the attenuated, bleak, or grim picture of beings we find in the modern rationalists. Here, once again, the condition under which the philosopher creates one’s philosophy, like that under which the poet creates one’s poetry, has to do with deeper levels of one’s being—deeper than the merely conscious level of having or not having a rational point of view. We could not expect to produce a St. Thomas Aquinas, any more than a Dante, today. The total psychic condition of beings—of which after all thinking is one of the manifestations—has evolved too radically. Which may be why present-day Thomists have on the whole remained singularly unconvincing to their contemporaries. #RandolphHarris 6 of 18
The true deathlessness must be a changeless one. Consequently it must be an eventless one. However, this does not necessarily mean a boring one. For if we realize our higher individuality, we shall be able to hold consciously and unaffected such an immortal life within our hearts whilst entering into relations with a changeful World process without them. And this will be true whether the World be on our present physical level of perception or not, whether in the flesh or out of it. One who has reached this degree will be always poised in the Overself, always aware of one’s identity with its inimitable nature yet also conscious of one’s limitations as an ego. This may seem queer and contradictory yet the being will never feel oneself pulled in different directions but, on the contrary, will feel a perfect harmony between the human and the divine. When all else is but a heap of ashes, this, once established, will remain. Insight always remains with its possessor whereas intuition only comes and goes. Insight deals solely with the Real whereas intuition deal with the phenomenal. Amid all this variegated World-activity, the Real remains unchanged and unchangeable just as the dream-World which is emanated from the mind of a dreamer leaves one’s mind unaffected and unaltered. It never changes. Hence the first characteristic of insight—that faculty in beings which can perceive this reality—is likewise that it never changes. #RandolphHarris 7 of 18
While still continuing to feel the presence and enjoy the peace of the Infinite, one attends to ordinary everyday affairs. However, it is inevitable that the attention demanded by the later forces some reduction in awareness of the former. One’s work in the World, one’s life in the home, and even one’s pleasures in society will not at any moment stray outside one’s divinized consciousness but will always be held within it. One will remain in relation with the mystical part of one, the part that is forever alone. What I say here appears perhaps to many an obscure and foolish saying, since they even boast of never having been in dread. However, doubtless one should not be in dread of being, of finite things, but only the being who has gone through the dread of possibility is educated to have no dread—not because one avoids the dreadful things of life, but because they always are weak in comparison with those of possibility. If on the other hand the speaker means that the great things about one is that one has never been in dread, then I shall gladly initiate one into my explanation, that this comes from the fact that one is spirit-less. If the individual cheats the possibility by which one is to be educated, one never reaches faith; one’s faith remains the shrewdness of finitude, as one’s school was that of finitude. #RandolphHarris 8 of 18
However, beings cheat possibility in every way—if they did not, one has only to stick one’s head out of the window, and one would see enough for possibility to begin its exercises forthwith. “One thing I do, forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead,” reports Philippians 3.13. These very personal words of Paul, which appear in one of his most personal letters, lead us to ask—what did he want to forget? What do we forget, and what so we remember? What is the function of forgetting in a being’s life and in the household of the Universe? Above all, what should we remember and what should we forget? However, in raising these questions, another more disturbing one comes to mind—what does it mean for a thing, for a being, to be forgotten? When we are forgotten, in parts of our being, or totally, for a period, or for life, what does it mean for us? What does the thought we may be forgotten in eternity do to us? When he says of the dead that “the memory of them is dead,” that they are forgotten “with their love and their hate,” and according to the psalm, that their place knows them no more, how can we endure the words of the Preacher? #RandolpHarris 9 of 18
The simple word “forget” can plunge us into the deepest riddles of life and death, of time and eternity. The Bible abounds in its use. For forgetting and remembering are two of the most astonishing qualities by which the divine image of a being is made manifest. I ask you to concentreate with me on the myster of forgetting and remembering and of being forgotten, knowing in advance how limited our words and insight and courage must be in the face of such a mystery. Let us first consider forgetting and remembering, and then being forgotten and perhaps also being remembered. The biggest deceiver in religio-mystical life is the institutional establishment, the organizational group. For here the followers have the experience of being nourished when in actuality only the social need is being nourished. Here the truth and its virtue, beauty, strength, reality, and above all its transcendence, which is totally outside ordinary Worldly experience, are imitated effectually and successfully. So the followers are satisfied and fall into complacence. The Quest is deserted and the copy which is substituted for it has the advantage of being much easier and pleasanter for all concerned. #RandolphHarris 10 of 18
The most commonplace life has events enough, no doubt, but the question is whether the possibility in the individuality is honest towards itself. It is recounted of an Indian hermit who for two years had lived upon dew, that he came once to the city, tasted wine, and then became addicted to drink. This story, like every other of the sort, can be understood in many ways, one can make it comic, one can make it tragic; but the being who is educated by possibility has more than enough to occupy one in such a story. Instantly one is absolutely identified with that unfortunate being, one knows no finite evasion by which one might escape. Now the dread of possibility holds one as its prey, until it can deliver one saved into the hands of faith. In no other place does one find repose, for every other point of rest is mere nonsense, even though in being’s eyes it is shrewdness. This is the reason why possibility is so absolutely educative. No being has ever become so unfortunate in reality that there was not some little residue left to one, and, as common sense observes quite truly, if a being is canny, one will find a way. However, one who went through the curriculum of misfortune offered by possibility lost everything, absolutely everything, in a way that no one has lost it in reality. #RandolphHarris 11 of 18
If in this situation one did not behave falsely towards possibility, if one did not attempt to talk around the dread which would save one, then one received everything back again, as in reality no one ever did even if one received everything double, for the pupil of possibility received in infinity, whereas the soul of the other expired in the finite. No one ever sank so deep in reality that one could not sink deeper, or that there might not be one or another sunk deeper than one. However, one who sank in the possibility has an eye too dizzy to see the measuring rod which, Brenda, Kelly, and Dylan hold out as a straw to the downing being; one’s ear is closed so that one is just as good as most of them. One sank absolutely, but then in turn one floated up from the depth of the abyss, lighter now than all that is oppressive and dreadful in life. Only I do not deny that one is educated by possibility is exposed—not to the danger of bad company and dissoluteness of various sorts, as are those who are educated by the finite, but—to one danger of downfall, and that is self-slaughter. If at the beginning of one’s education one misunderstands the anguish of dread, so that it does not lead one to faith but away from faith, then one is lost. #RandolphHarris 12 of 18
On the other hand, one who is educated by possibility remains with dread, does not allow oneself to be deceived by its countless counterfeits, one recalls the past precisely; then at last the attacks of dread, though they are fearful, are not such that one flees from them. For one dread becomes serviceable spirit which against its will leads one wither one would go. Then when it announces itself, when it craftily insinuates that it has invented a new instrument of torture far more terrible than anything employed before, one does not recoil, still less does one attempt to hold it off with clamor and noise, but one bids it welcome, one hails it solemnly, as Sokrates solemnly flourished the poisoned goblet, he shuts himself up wit it, he says, as a patient says to the surgeon when a painful operation is about to begin, “Now I am ready.” The dread enters into his soul and searches it thoroughly, constraining out of him all the finite and the petty, and leading him hence whither he would go. When one or another extraordinary event occurs in life, when a World-historical hero gathers heroes about one and accomplished heroic feats, when a crisis occurs and everything becomes significant, then beings wish to be in it, for these are things which educate. Quite possibly. #RandolphHarris 13 of 18
However, there is a much simpler way of being educated much more fundamentally. Take the pupil of possibility, set one in the midst of the Jutland heath where nothing happens, where the greatest event is that a partridge flies up noisily, and one experiences everything more perfectly, more precisely, more profoundly, than the being who was applauded upon the stage of universal history, in cause one was not educated by possibility. The establishment of spiritual ashrams or communal colonies is an enterprise of which, we hope, we shall never be guilty. Such institutions usually find an enthusiastic response from persons who like to join cranky cults, indulge in endless tea-table talk, and worship leaders suffering from inflated egos. We however are working for those who have understood that it is better to worship God in solitude than in public hall or church and who believed us when we constantly repeated that institutions invariably end as the greatest obstructions to the progress of genuine spirituality. Their material expansion is usually taken as a sign of the expansion of spiritual rot. Just as the League of Nations erected magnificent million-pound buildings as its headquarters only a short while prior to its total collapse, so these institutions flourish externally at the cost of their internal life. We ask those who have faith in our teachings to keep clear of spiritual organizations, unless you are sure they are safe and righteous. #RandolphHarris 14 of 18
The words “annihilate,” “destroy,” “fight,” “tear out”—these are surely aggressive. Aggression has many more facets than is customarily recognized. In contrast to self-assertion, which may be simply a holding fast—“Here I stand; you can come this far and no farther”—aggression is a moving out, a thrust toward the person or thing seen as the adversary. Its aim is to cause a shift of power for the interests of one’s self or what one is devoted to. Aggression is the action that moves into another’s territory to accomplish a restructuring of power. This level in our spectrum occurs because of the individual’s or group’s conviction that the restructuring cannot come by self-affirmation or self-assertion. Perhaps the aggressor wants land and resources, as nations do when they annex the other’s territory in war. Or perhaps the aggressor has an intellectual stake in the change, as Mondrian did in his new art forms. Or perhaps the aggression grows out of a hated of injustice, or it has a spiritual aim, like that of the abolitionists. Whatever the aim and motive may be, and without reference at the moment to when it is justified and when it is not, aggression itself consists of the endeavor to seize some of the power, prestige, or status of the other for one’s self or for the ideas to which one is devoted. #RandolphHarris 15 of 18
The question does arise, however, as to the conditions which generate this jealousy. Are jealous reactions as they are observed in sibling rivalry and in the Oedipus complex bound to arise in every child, or are the provoked by definite conditions? Dr. Freud’s observations concerning the Oedipus complex were made on neurotic persons. In them he found that high-pitched jealousy reactions concerning one of the parents were sufficiently destructive in kind to arouse fear and likely to exert lasting disturbing influences on character formation and personal relations. Observing this phenomenon frequently in neurotic persons of our time, he assumed it to be Universal. Not only did one assume the Oedipus complex to be the vary kernel of neuroses, but also one tried to understand complex phenomena in other cultures on this basis. It is this generalization that is doubtful. Some jealousy reactions do arise easily in our culture in the relations between siblings as well as in those between parents and children, as they occur in every group living closely together. However, there is no evidence that destructive and lasting jealousy reactions—and it is these we think of when talking of the Oedipus complex or of sibling rivalry—are in our culture, not to speak of other cultures, so common as Dr. Freud assumes. They are in general human reasons but are artificially generated through the atmosphere in which a child grows up. #RandolphHarris 16 of 18
Suffice it to mention the lack of warmth and the spirit of competitiveness contribute to jealousy. Besides, neurotic parents who create the kind of atmosphere we have discussed are usually discontented with their lives, have no satisfactory emotional or relationships in pleasures of the flesh and hence are inclined to make their children the objects of their attention. They lose their need for affection on the children by excessively meddling in their lives, and this can go on well into adulthood. If a parent is jealous of their child, because a child as an adult has freedom and the opportunities that the parent does not, the parent may try to profit off their child’s demise so he or she can live the type of lifestyle he or she thinks one deserves. Some parents choose to skate by in life, instead of working for what they want, and are often stuck in relationships and with material items that are nice, but they do not find satisfying. Therefore, exploiting their child for profit may be very appealing. We, however, are accustomed to believe that a hostile opposition to the family or to some member of it is unfortunate, of course, if the child had to fight against the actions of neurotic parents. If there are good reasons for opposition, however, the danger for the child’s character formation is possessed not so much in feeling or expressing a protest, but in repressing it. #RandolphHarris 17 of 18
There are several dangers arising from the repression of criticism, protest or accusations, and one is that the child is likely to take all the blame on itself and feel unworthy of love; the implications of this situation we shall discuss later on. The danger that concerns us here is that repressed hostility may create anxiety and start the development we have discussion. There are several reasons, effective in various degrees and combinations, why a child who grows up in such an atmosphere will repress hostility: helplessness, fear, love or feelings of guilt. The increase in violence and destructiveness on a national and World scale has turned the attention of professionals and the general public alike to the theoretical inquiry into the nature and causes of aggression. Such a concern is not surprising. It is due to the lack of spiritual vitality, where institutions become more important than the teaching and the Worldly strength of the human-made organization is preserved by the sacrifice of its mortal strength. However, we establish institutions to uplift beings. The institutions turn themselves by degrees of vested interests. The original purpose is then lost and a selfish purpose replaces it. The consequence is that beings are both affected and infected by this moral deterioration of the institutions. They are no longer helped to rise, nor even prevented from falling. #RandolphHarris 18 of 18
We Yearn with Desire to Find a Steadfast Place and an Ultimate Fixed Basis whereon We May Build a Tower to Reach the Infinite!
Oh, how innocent he sounded, how it came from his heart, ancient and childlike, a heart so preternaturally strong that it has taken hundreds of years to render it safe to beat in the company of mortal hearts. Cities are, first of all, seats of the highest economic division of labor. They produce thereby such extreme phenomena as Paris the remunerative occupation of the quatorzieme. They are person who identify themselves by signs on their residences and who are ready at the dinner hour in correct attire, so that they can be quickly called upon if a dinner party should consist of thirteen persons. In the measure of its expansion, the city offers more and more the decisive conditions of the division of labor. It offers a circle which through its size can absorb a highly diverse variety of services. At the same time, the concentration of individuals and their struggles for customers compel the individual to specialize in a function from which one cannot be readily displaced by another. It is decisive that city life has transformed the struggle with nature for livelihood into an inter-human struggle for gain, which here is not granted by nature but by other beings. For specialization does not flow only from the competition for gain but also from the underlying fact that the seller must always seek to call forth new and differentiated needs of the lured customer. #RandolphHarris 1 of 16
In order to find a source of income which is not yet exhausted, and to find a function which cannot readily be displaced, it is necessary to specialize in one’s services. This process promotes differentiation, refinement, and the enrichment of the public’s needs, which obviously must lead to growing personal differences within this public. All this forms the transition to the individualization of mental and psychic traits which the city occasions in proportion to its size. There is a whole series of obvious causes underlying this process. First, one must meet the difficulty of asserting one’s own personality within the dimensions of metropolitan life. Where the quantitative increase in importance and the expense of energy reach their limits, one seizes upon qualitative differentiation in order somehow to attract the attention of the social circle by playing upon its sensitivity for differences. Finally, beings are tempted to adopt the most tendentious peculiarities, that is, the specifically metropolitan extravagances of mannerism, caprice, and preciousness. Now, the meaning of these extravagances is not at all possessed in the contents of such behavior, but rather in its form of being different, of standing out in a striking manner and thereby attracting attention. For many character types, ultimately the only means of saving for themselves some modicum of self-esteem and the sense of filling a position is indirect, through the awareness of others. #RandolphHarris 2 of 16
In the same sense a seemingly insignificant factor is operating, the cumulative effects which are, however, still noticeable. I refer to the brevity and scarcity of the interhuman contacts granted to the metropolitan being, as compared with social intercourse in the small town. The temptations to appear to the point, to appear concentrated and strikingly characteristic, is possessed much closer to the individual in brief metropolitan contact than in an atmosphere in which frequent and prolonged association assures the personality of an unambiguous image of one’s self in the eyes of the other. The most profound reason, however, why the metropolis conduces to the urge for the most individual personal existence—no matter whether justified and successful—appears to me to be the following: the development of modern culture is characterized by the preponderance of what one may call the objective spirit over the subjective spirit. This is to say, in language as well as in law, in the technique of production as well as in art, in science as well as in the objects of the domestic environment, there is embodied a sum of spirit. #RandolphHarris 3 of 16
The individual in one’s intellectual development follows the growth of this spirit very imperfectly and at an ever-increasing distance. If, for instance, we view the immense culture which for the last hundred and fifty years has been embodied in things and in knowledge, in institutions and in comforts, and if we compare all this with the cultural progress of the individual during the same period—at least in high status groups—a frightful disproportion in growth between the two becomes evident. Indeed, at some points we notice a retrogression in the culture of the individual with reference to spirituality, delicacy, and idealism. This discrepancy results essentially from the growing division of labor. For the division of labor demands from the individual an ever more one-sided accomplishment, and the greatest advance in a one-sided pursuit only too frequently means dearth to the personality of the individual. In any case, one can cope less and less with the overgrowth of objective culture. The individual is reduced to a negligible quantity, perhaps less in one’s consciousness than in one’s practice and in the totality of one’s obscure emotional states that are derived from this practice. The individual has become a mere cog in an enormous organization of things and powers which tear from one’s hands all progress, spirituality, and value in order to transform them from their subjective form into the form of a purely objective life. #RandolphHarris 4 of 16
In needs merely to be pointed out that the metropolis is the genuine arena of this culture which outgrows all personal life. Here in buildings and educational institutions, in the wonders and comforts of space-conquering technology, in the formations of community life, and in the visible institutions, in the wonders and comforts of space-conquering technology, in the formations of community life, and in the visible institutions of the state, is offered such an overwhelming fullness of crystalized and impersonalized spirit that the personality, so to speak, cannot maintain itself under its impact. On the one hand, life is made infinitely easy for the personality in that stimulations, interests, uses of time and consciousness are offered to it from all sides. They carry the person as if in a stream, and one needs hardly to swim for oneself. On the other hand, however, life is composed more and more of these impersonal contents and offerings which tend to displace the genuine personal colorations and incomparabilities. This results in the individual’s summoning the utmost in uniqueness and particularization, in order to preserve one’s most personal core. One has to exaggerate this personal element in order to remain audible even to oneself. The atrophy of individual culture through the hypertrophy of objective culture is one reason for the butter hatred which the preachers of the most extreme individualism harbor against the metropolis. #RandolphHarris 5 of 16
However, it is, indeed, also a reason why these preachers are so passionately loved in the metropolis and why they appear to the metropolitan being as the prophets and saviors of one’s most unsatisfied yearnings. If one asks for the historical position of these two forms of individualism which are nourished by the quantitative relation of the metropolis, namely, individual independence and the elaboration of individuality itself, then the metropolis assumes an entirely new rank order in the World history of the spirit. The eighteenth century found the individual in oppressive bonds which had become meaningless—bonds of a political, agrarian, guild, and religious character. They were restraints which, so to speak, forced upon beings an unnatural form and outmoded, unjust inequalities. In this situation the cry for liberty and equality arose, the belief in the individual’s full freedom of movement in all social and intellectual relationships. Freedom would at one permit the noble substance common to all to come to the fore, a substance which nature had deposited in every being and which society and history had only deformed. Besides this eighteenth-century ideal of liberalism, in the nineteenth century, through Goethe and Romanticism, on the one hand, and through the economic division of labor, on the one hand, another ideal arose: individuals liberated from historical bonds now wished to distinguish themselves from one another. #RandolphHarris 6 of 16
The carrier of being’s values is no longer the general human being in every individual, but rather being’s qualitative uniqueness and irreplaceability. The external and internal history of our time takes its course within the struggle and in the changing entanglements of these two ways of defining the individual’s role in the whole of society. It is the function of the metropolis to provide the arena for this struggle and its reconciliation. For the metropolis presents the peculiar conditions which are revealed to us as the opportunities and the stimuli for the development of both these ways of allocating roles to beings. Therewith these conditions gain a unique place, pregnant with inestimable meanings for the development of psychic existence. The metropolis reveals itself as one of those great historical formations in which the opposing streams which enclose life unfold, as well as join one another with equal right. However, in this process the currents of life, whether their individual phenomena touch us sympathetically or antipathetically, entirely transcend the sphere for which the judge’s attitude is appropriate. Since such forces of life have grown into the roots and into the crown of the whole of this historical life in which we, in our fleeting existence, as a cell, belong only as a part, it is not our task either to accuse or to pardon, but only to understand. #RandolphHarris 7 of 16
Our present times call the firsthand information, experience, and individual proof of the Truth, which the Quest alone offers. Institutions and organizations, on the other hand, offer nothing, demand much, and actually impede progress. There are a very few redeeming exceptions which justify their existence, but there are not generally known. The assertion that spiritual chaos and anarchy are the alternatives to spiritual institutionalism and organization is absurd, for the contradictory claims and teachings of the various institutions themselves lead to a chaotic situation. Only the uninformed can be deceived by the outside appearance of unity in these organized groups. The struggles and conflicts and factions which really exist inside them are a better indication of their moral grade than their tall talk in print or lecture. Those who are distrustful of organization for religious purposes find good reasons in history for their attitude. The records betray its inner failure, how it really substitutes one kind of Worldliness for another, how it merely offers ambition a different stage to play on, or how it replaces personal self-seeking by the corporate kind. Why should many who are unable as individuals to life themselves in prayer, devotion, or actions be able to do so as a group? It is illogical to believe that they can, auto-suggestive to believe that they do. The way of group organization is only a poor substitute for the way of individual inspiration. #RandolphHarris 8 of 16
I am quite chary of organization, because I have seen too much in the New World and the Old World of the evils which it quickly breeds, as I am quite unimpressed by centralization because I have seen how hard it is to eradicate the illusions to which it leads. Instead of organization, it is better to encourage individual effort; and instead of centralization, it is wiser to encourage individual deepening. The goal is to move toward a continuous unbroken realization that it is quite unnecessary to stay in monasteries. Only your mind…function in freedom….let it abide nowhere, but be free from attachment to all outside objects. To pray faithfully means to realize that tranquility of essence of the mind is possible. Thorough understanding of the truth about reality and a penetration into and through delusions, to one’s essence of mind, seeks to eliminate the personal feelings usually attached to identification. It is a union of reason and intuition. It is an awakening once and for all. It is not something, a state alternative gained and lost on numerous occasions, but gradually expanded as it is clung to. It is a single awakening that enlightens the being so that one never returns to ignorance again. One has awakened to one’s divine essence, one’s source in mind, as an all day and every day self-identification. It has come by itself, effortlessly. This is as high as human consciousness can possibly go while yet encased in the flesh. #RandolphHarris 9 of 16
This high of human consciousness is as present to one as one’s clothes, yet it exists through a sixth sense. One lives simultaneously aware of both Worlds of being. And one knows which is the eternal one. When this spiritual state is established in a being, when it stays with one for the remainder of one’s years, one is truly blessed. This state is paradoxical for the very name is really wrong, since it implies something that can be different later or was different earlier, something that is in time. However, what is being here described is not of that kind. Time flows out from it, there is no change yet to come that will better it or bring it any gain. It still is what it always was. Why, then, is the word “state” used at all? Partly, of course, through the poverty of human language in describing what is trans-human and partly because there is a state but it is in us, the change which brings us into being in our minds. Angels do feel dread, this is the very thing that causes Satan to rebel against God and he is very seductive in his truths, but cannot be trusted. It is said that music sooths the savage breast for this is the set of human emotions and the encasement of feelings. Sense humans can be in dread, and the greater the dread, the greater the being. This, however, is not affirmed in the sense in which beings commonly understand dread. Only in this sense can we interpret the passage where is said of Christ that he was in dread [angetes] even unto death, and place also where he says to Judas, “What thou doest, do quickly.” #RandolphHarris 10 of 16
Not even the terrible word upon which even Luther dreaded to preach, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”—not even in this expresses suffering so strongly. For this word indicates a situation in which Christ actually is: the former sayings indicate a relation to a situation which is not yet actual. Dread is the possibility of freedom. Only this dread is by the assistance of faith absolutely educative, laying care is it does all finite aims and discovering all their deceptions. And no Grand Inquisitor has in readiness such terrible tortures as has dread, and no spy knows how to attack more artfully the being one suspects, choosing the instant when one is weakest, nor knows how to lay traps where one will be caught and ensnared, as dread knows ow, and no sharp-witted judge knows how to interrogate, to examine the accused, as dread does, which never lets one escape, neither by diversion nor by noise, neither at work nor at play, neither by day nor by night. However, let us also consider those among us who are surrounded by friends and neighbors, by co-workers and country people, who live in family groups and enjoy the communion of the genders—everything that others do not have. And let us ask—are they without the pain of loneliness? Is their aloneness covered up by the crowd in which they move? #RandolphHarris 11 of 16
If we can number ourselves among these people, we might answer the question as follows: When I was surrounded by people, but suddenly realized my ultimate isolation, I never felt so lonely as in that particular hour. I became silent and retired from the group in order to be alone with my loneliness. I wanted my external predicament to match my internal one. Let us not minimize such an experience by asserting that some people are simply not strong enough to obtain a significant place in the group, and that their withdrawal is nothing but an expression of weakness, that may call for counseling or psychiatric help. However, I speak now of the strong ones, who have achieved their place in the crowd, and who nevertheless experience the terror of ultimate loneliness. They are aware, in a sudden break through the World around them, of being’s real predicament. Let us also not minimize this experience by pointing out the fact that some people feel misunderstood despite their urgent desire to make themselves understandable, and therefore feel lonely in the crowd. No one can deny that there are such people, and further, that they even demonstrate a certain truth—for who is really understood, even by one’ self? The mystery of a person cannot be encompassed by a neat description of one’s character. Those, however, who always feel misunderstood confuse the mystery of each personality with imaginary treasures which they themselves believe they possess and which demand recognition from others. #RandolphHarris 12 of 16
When such recognition is not forthcoming, they feel lonely and withdraw. They also need help. However, again, there are those whose real treasures are great enough to find expression, to be understood and received, and yet who have this terrifying experience of ultimate loneliness. In such moments they break through the surface of their average life into the depth of being’s predicament. Many feel lonely because, in spite of their effort to love and be loved, their love is rejected. This loneliness is often self-centered. These people may be claiming as a right what can only come to them as a gift. They withdraw into a self-chosen loneliness, taking revenge through bitterness and hostility towards those they feel have rejected them, actually enjoying the pain of their loneliness in our time. They above all need help, for the easily become the prey of a demonic force that secludes them completely within themselves. They are not sure that God loves them and feel that he is angry with them. These beings feel the agony of separation from God! Their souls cannot ascend to Heaven! They cannot feel communion with God in their flesh. And as they sit up and lift their arms, these individuals realize they are trying to connect with God with their whole being, and cannot do it, and then the sadness comes over them, so great, so lonely, and so totally that they can only bow their heads. #RandolphHarris 13 of 16
However, there is also the genuine experience of rejected love. No special claim is made, but hope yearns toward another, and is disappointed. A community of love comes to an end or fails to exist at all. Such loneliness cuts our ties with the World. We are indeed ultimately alone, and not even love from other directions or the power of our own love can lift this burden from us. One who can endure the loneliness of disappointed love without bitterness experiences the depth of the being’s predicament radically and creatively. There are, finally, two forms of loneliness that cannot be covered or escaped: the loneliness of guilt and the loneliness of death. Nobody can remove from us what we have committed against our true being. We feel both our hidden guilt and our open guilt as ours, and ours alone. We cannot really make anybody else responsible for what we have done. We cannot run away from our guilt, and we cannot honestly cover it up. We are alone with it. And it is a loneliness that permeates all other forms of loneliness, transforming them into experiences of judgment. Then, there is that ultimate loneliness of having to die. #RandolphHarris 14 of 16
In the anticipation of our death we remain alone. No communication with others can remove it, as no other’s presence in the actual hour of our dying can conceal the fact that it is our death, and our death alone. In the hour of death we are cut off from the whole Universe and everything in it. We are deprived of all the things and beings that made us forget our being alone. Who can endure this loneliness? An anxiety may be fully accounted for by the actual conflict situation. If, however, we find an anxiety-creating situation in a character neurosis we always have to reckon wit previously existing anxieties in order to explain why in that particular instance hostility arouses and was repressed. We shall find then that this previous anxiety was in turn the result of a pre-existing hostility, and so on. In order to understand how the whole development started we have to track back to childhood. In examining the childhood histories of great numbers of neurotic persons I have found that the common denominator in all of them is an environment showing the following characteristics in various combinations. The basic evil is invariably a lack of genuine warmth and affection. A child can stand a great deal of what is often regarded as traumatic—such as a sudden weaning, occasional beating, bonding experience—as long as inwardly one feels wanted and loved. #RandolphHarris 15 of 16
Needless to say, a child feels keenly whether love is genuine, and cannot be fooled by any faked demonstrations. The main reason why a child does not receive enough warmth and affection is possessed in the parent’s incapacity to give it on account of their own neuroses. More frequently than not, in my experience, the essential lack of warmth is camouflaged, and the patents claim to have in mind the child’s best interest. Educational theories, oversolicitude or self-sacrificing attitude of an ideal mother are the basic factors contributing to an atmosphere that more than anything else lays the cornerstone for future feelings of immense insecurity. Furthermore, we find various actions or attitudes on the part of the parents which cannot but arouse hostility, such as preference for other children, unjust reproaches, unpredictable changes between overindulgence and scornful rejection, unfulfilled promises, and not least important, an attitude toward the child’s needs which goes through all gradations from temporary inconsideration to a consistent interfering with the most legitimate wishes of the child, such as disturbing friendships, ridiculing independent thinking, spoiling its interest in its own pursuits, whether artistic, athletic, or mechanical—altogether an attitude of the parents which if not in intention nevertheless in effect means breaking the child’s will. #RandolphHarris 16 of 16
Is there a Servant of God so Devoted that One Will Remain True to God Even in the Worst of Human Suffering?
When they understand, when they can forgive not only God for this big mess, but themselves for their own failures, their own horrible angry reactions, their own spite and meanness, when they love everyone totally in complete forgiveness, then they will be worthy of Heaven. Hell would have to be where they see the consequences of their actions, but with a full merciful comprehension of how little they themselves knew. To know what has hurt others, to realize that you did not know, that nobody gave you the knowledge, yet still you have the power. And to forgive that, and forgive your victims, and forgive God and forgive yourself. That will terminate your anger, your outrage. It is a place where you learn to understand what you have done to another being…where you come to realize the suffering you have inflicted on others! At the same time, the individual gains freedom of movement, far beyond the first jealous delimitation. The individual also gains a specific individuality to which the division of labor in the enlarged group gives both occasion and necessity. The state and Christianity, guilds and political parties, and innumerable other groups have developed according to this formula, however much, of course, the special conditions and forces of the respective groups have modified the general scheme. #RandolphHarris 1 of 17
This scheme seems to me distinctly recognizable also in the evolution of individuality within urban life. The small-town life in Antiquity and in the Middles Ages set barriers against movement and relations of the individual toward the outside, and it set up barriers against individual independence and differentiation within the individual self. These barriers were such that under them modern beings could not have breathed. Even today a metropolitan being who is placed in a small town feels a restriction similar, at least, in kind. The smaller the circle which forms our milieu is, and the more restricted those relations to others are which dissolve the boundaries of the individual, the more anxiously the circle guards the achievements, the conduct of life, and the outlook of the individual, and the more readily a quantitative and qualitative specialization would break up the framework of the whole little circle. The ancient polis in this respect seems to have had the very character of a small town. The constant threat to its existence at the hands of enemies from near and afar effected strict coherence in political and military respects, a supervision of the citizen by the citizen, a jealousy of the whole against the individual whose particular life was suppressed to such a degree that one could compensate only by acting as a despot in one’s own household. #RandolphHarris 2 of 17
The tremendous agitation and excitement, the unique colorfulness of Athenian life, can perhaps be understood in terms of the fact that a people of incomparably individualized personalities struggled against the constant inner and outer pressure of a deindividualizing small town. This produced a tense atmosphere in which the weaker individuals were suppressed and those of the stronger natures were incited to prove themselves in the most passionate manner. This is precisely why it was that there blossomed in Athens what must be called, without defining it exactly, the general human character in the intellectual development of our species. For we maintain factual as well as historical validity for the following connection: the most extensive and the most general contents and forms of life are most intimately connected with the most individual ones. They have a preparatory stage in common, that is, they find their enemy in narrow formations and groupings the maintenance of which places both of them into a state of defense against expanse and generality lying without and the freely moving individuality within. #RandolphHarris 3 of 17
Just as in the feudal age, the free being was the one who stood under the law of the land, that is, under the law of the largest social orbit, and the unfree being was the one who derived one’s right merely from the narrow circle of a feudal association and was excluded from the larger social orbit—so today metropolitan beings are free in a spiritualized and refined sense, in contrast to the pettiness and prejudices which hem in the small-town being. For the reciprocal reserve and indifference and the intellectual life conditions of large circles are never felt more strongly by the individual in their impact upon one’s independence than in the thickest crowd of the big city. This is because the bodily proximity and narrowness of space makes the mental distance only the more visible. It is obviously only the verse of this freedom if, under certain circumstances, one nowhere feels as lonely and lost as in the metropolitan crowd. For here as elsewhere it is by no means necessary that the freedom of a being be reflected in one’s emotional life as comfort. It is not only the immediate size of the area and the number of persons which, because of the universal historical correlation between the enlargement of the circle and the personal inner and outer freedom, has made the metropolis the locale of freedom. It is rather in transcending this visible expanse that any given city becomes the seat of cosmopolitanism. #RandolphHarris 4 of 17
The horizon of the city expands in a manner comparable to the way in which wealth develops; a certain amount of property increases in a quasi-automatical way in ever more rapid progression. As soon as a certain limit has been passed, the economic, personal, and intellectual relations of the citizenry, the sphere of intellectual predominance of the city over its hinterland, grow as in geometrical progression. Every gain in dynamic extension becomes a step, not for an equal, but for a new and larger extension. From every thread spinning out of the city, ever new threads grow as if by themselves, just as within the city the unearned increment of ground rent, through the mere increase in communication, brings the owner automatically increasing profits. At this point, the qualitative aspect of life is transformed directly into qualitative traits of character. The sphere of life of the small town is, in the main, self-contained and autarchic. For it is the decisive nature of the metropolis that its inner life overflows by waves into a far-flung national or international area. Weimar is not an example to the contrary, since its significance was hinged upon individual personalities and died with them; whereas the metropolis is indeed characterized by its essential independence even from the most eminent individual personalities. This is the counterpart to the independence, and it is the price the individual pays for the independence, which one enjoys in the metropolis. #RandolphHarris 5 of 17
The most significant characteristic of the metropolis is this functional extension beyond its physical boundaries. And this efficacy reacts in turn and gives weight, importance, and responsibility to metropolitan life. Beings do not end with the limits of their body or the area comprising their immediate activity. Rather is the range of the person constituted by the sum of effects emanating from one temporally and spatially. In the same way, a city consists of its total effects which extend beyond its immediate confines. Only this range is the city’s actual extent in which its existence is expressed. This fact makes it obvious that individual freedom, the logical and historical complement of such extension, is not to be understood only in the negative sense of mere freedom of mobility and elimination of prejudices and petty philistinism. The essential point is that the particularity and incomparability, which ultimately every human being possesses, be somehow expressed in the working-out of a way of life. That we follow the laws of our own nature—and this after all is freedom—becomes obvious and convincing to ourselves and to others only if the expressions of this nature differ from the expressions of others. Only our unmistakability proves that our way of life has not been superimposed by others. However, when self-affirmation no longer works, the individual gathers his or her powers together to pit against opposition. #RandolphHarris 6 of 17
A curious aspect of self-assertion is that human beings often seek out opposition in order to practice assertion. This, again, indicates that self-assertion is not pathological but a constructive expression of the power to be. One can observe this relatively early in children, in the second to fourth years. They will the limits, see how far they have to go to invite the opposition of parents, cross the parents for the sake of crossing them, say “no” for the sake of saying “no.” When the environment has introduced the moral issue—for instance, a four-year-old’s assertion is bad because it is in opposition to one’s mother’s demands—the child may concern himself with the question of “good” and “bad” in ways quite different from what the mother expects. Thus, Leo, four, was overheard speaking loudly to himself and asking, “Is he a good boy? Or is he a bad boy?” To which followed a cheerful declaration brought forth with glee, “Yes, good boy is Leo.” In seeking out of opposition, the child will often refuse to do something he is told, standing in the middle of the floor with just a suggestion of a smile on his face as though he somehow knows that this is all a game anyway. The sensible parent accepts this behavior not as a reason for increasing the guilt feeling of the child nor as a pretext for giving in—which would only mean that the child has to try harder to find some other issues in which to get bona fide opposition. #RandolphHarris 7 of 17
For what the child wants is to try out his psychological muscles. It is a normal and necessary aspect of growing—a will to self-assertion is practiced by the child. Folklore is full of references to the child going out to learn to shiver and to shake, as the German nursery rhyme puts it. Unless there is an actual encounter or the potentiality for an actual encounter, an individual’s power of being remains hidden. The power to be becomes evident in the continual struggles of being against nonbeing, nonbeing is all aspects that negate and destroy being. These include conformism, which destroys uniqueness and originality; hostility, which shrinks courage, generosity, and capacity to understand the other; destructiveness; and, eventually, death itself. We have being to the extent that we can absorb nonbeing into ourselves. A life process is the more powerful, the more non-being it can include in its self-affirmation, without being destroyed by it. The aim is not to overlook or repress expressions of nonbeing, but to confront them directly, accept them as necessity, endeavor to absorb them—all of which reduces their destructive power. Out of this struggle comes creativity. Being is manifested only in the process of actualizing its power; otherwise how could we even be aware of it, let alone know its ramification? Power become actualized in those situations in which opposition is overcome. I estimate the power of a will according to how much resistance, pain, and torture it endures and knows to transform to its own advantage. #RandolphHarris 8 of 17
Every smallest step in the field of free thinking, and of the personally formed life, has ever been fought for at the cost of spiritual and physical tortures. Nothing has been bought more dearly than that little bit of human reason and freedom which is not the basis for our pride. Remember, God said, “This is the only World. And you know the World. Maybe Sheol awaits you. You have seen the World and Heaven but you have not seen Hell. Throughout my Creation, there are creatures whose spawn numbers in the thousands, of which only a tiny portion survive—fishes of the sea, turtles of the sea, winged insects of the air. A hundred, a million even, of one species may be born under the arc of one day’s Sun, with only a handful to survive and reproduce. Do not you know this? You do not think the beauty of Creation reveals my light to Humankind? You do not think these souls, which your yourself have brought here, have not developed out of a perception of the glory of all that has been made?” Life consists of self-overcoming. All living creatures, far from tending to preserve their existence, strive to enhance themselves, to grow, and to generate more life. In doing this they risk their existence. Life is that which must ever overcome itself. Indeed, you call it will to generation or drive to an end, to something higher, farther, more manifold: but all this is one. #RandolphHarris 9 of 17
This is why power cannot, strictly speaking, be given to another, for then the recipient still owes it to the giver. It must in some sense be assumed, taken, asserted. For unless it can be held against opposition, it is not power and will never be experiences as real on the part of the recipient. Therefore, it is absurd to think of artists simply as painting nature, as though they were only anachronistic photographers of trees and lakes and mountains. For them, nature is a medium, a language by which they reveal their World. What genuine painters do is to reveal the underlying psychological and spiritual conditions of their relations to their World; thus in the works of a great painter we have a reflection of the emotional and spiritual condition of human beings in that period of history. If you wish to understand the psychological and spiritual temper of any historical period, you can do no better than to look long and searchingly at its art. For in the art the underlying spiritual meaning of the period is expressed directly in symbols. This is not because artists are didactic or set out to teach or to make propaganda; to the extent that they do, their power of expression is broken; their direct relation to the inarticulate, or, if you will, unconscious levels of the culture is destroyed. They have the power to reveal the underlying meaning of any period precisely because the essence of art is the powerful and alive encounter between the artist and one’s World. #RandolphHarris 10 of 17
Nowhere was this encounter demonstrated more vividly than in the famous seventy-fifth anniversary exhibit of Picasso’s work, presented in New York in 1957. Broader in temperament than Mondrian, Picasso is a spokesman for his time par excellence. Even in his early works around 1900, his vast talent was already visible. And in the stark, realistic paintings of peasants and poor people in the first decade of this century, his passionate relationship to human suffering was shown. You can then see the spiritual temper of each succeeding decade in his work. In the early 1920s, for example, we find Picasso painting classical Greek figures, particularly bathers by the sea. An aura of escapism hovers about these pictures in the exhibit. Was not the 1920s, the decade after the first World War, in reality a period of escapism in the Western World? Toward the end of the twenties and in the early thirties, these bathers by the sea become pieces of metal, mechanical, gray-blue curving steel. Beautiful indeed, but impersonal, unhuman. And here one was gripped in the exhibit with an ominous foreboding—the prediction of the beginning of the time when people were to become impersonal, objectivized, numbers. It was the ominous prediction of the beginning of the man, the robot. #RandolphHarris 11 of 17
Then in 1937 comes the great painting Guernica, with figures torn apart, split from each other, all in stark white, gray, and black. It was Picasso’s pained outrage against the inhumanity of the bombing of the helpless Spanish town of Guernica by fascist planes in the Spanish revolution; but it is much more than that. It is the most vivid portrayal imaginable of the atomistic, split-up, fragmentized state of contemporary human beings, and implies the conformism, emptiness, and despair that were to go along with this. Then in the late thirties and forties, Picasso’s portraits become more and more machinelike—people turned literally into metal. Faces become distorted. It is as though persons, individuals, do not exist any more; their places are taken by hideous witches. Pictures now are not named, but numbered. The bright colors the artist used in his earlier periods and which were so delightful are now largely gone. In these rooms as the exhibit one feels as though darkness has settled upon the Earth at noon. As in the novel of Kafka, one gets a stark and gripping feeling of the modern individual’s loss of humanity. The first time I saw this exhibit, I was so overcome with the foreboding pictures of human beings losing their faces, their individuality, their humanity, and the prediction of the robot to come, that I could look no longer and had to hurry out of the room and onto the street again. #RandolphHarris 12 of 17
To be sure, all the way through Picassos preserves his own sanity by playing with paintings and sculptures of animals and his own children. However, it is clear that the main stream is a portrayal of our modern condition, which has been psychologically portrayed by Riesman, Mumford, Tillich, and others. The whole is an unforgettable portrait of modern man and woman in the process of losing their person and their humanity. In these sense genuine artists are so bound up with their age that they cannot communicate separated from it. In this sense, too, the historical situation conditions the creativity. For the superficial level of objectified intellectualization, but is an encounter with the World on a level that undercuts the subject-object split. Creativity, to rephrase our definition, is the encounter of the intensively conscious human being with his or her World. In Anne Rice’s Memnoch the Devil Lestat goes out in search of adventures for the sake of learning what it is to fear or be in dread. We will let that adventurer go his way without troubling ourselves to learn whether in the course of it he encountered the dreadful. On the other hand I would say that learning to know dread is an adventure which every being has to affront if one would not go to perdition either by not having known dread or by sinking under it. He therefore who has learned rightly to be in dread has learned the most important thing. #RandolphHarris 13 of 17
During childhood, it is an undisputed fact that we are particularly prone to react with anxiety, and there are good and understandable reasons, possessed in the child’s comparative helplessness against adverse influences. In fact in character neuroses it is invariably found that the formation of anxiety started in early childhood, or at least that the foundation of what I have called basic anxiety was laid in the time. Besides this, however, Dr. Freud believes that the anxiety in adult neuroses is still bound up with the conditions which originally provoked it. This means, for instance, that an adult man would be just as much harasshed by fear of castration, though in modified forms, as he had been as a boy. No doubt there are rare cases in which an infantile anxiety reaction may with appropriate provocations re-emerge in later life in unchanged form. An employee frequently changed position because certain employers provoked wrath and anxiety within him. The psychoanalysis showed that only those superiors having a certain kind of beard infuriated him. The patient’s reaction proved to be an exact repetition of a reaction he had toward his father at three years of age, when the latter attacked his mother in a menacing way. However, as w rule what we find is, in a phrase, not repetition but development. In cases in which the analysis allows us a pretty complete understanding of how a neurosis has developed we may find an uninterrupted chain of reactions from early anxiety to adult peculiarities. #RandolphHarris 14 of 17
Therefore the later anxiety will contain, among, elements conditioned by specific conflicts existing in childhood. However, the anxiety as a whole is not an infantile reaction. To consider it as such would be to confuse two different things, to mistake for an infantile attitude an attitude merely generated in childhood. With at least as much justification as calling anxiety an infantile reaction one might call it a precocious grown-up attitude in a child. The constant application of prayer to the activity of knowledge, to behaviour, thought, and feeling, eventually bring about a continuous awareness. It can accompany daily activity without interfering with it. It is a settled calm, and complete inner quiet. Here are no distinguishing marks that an outside observer can use to identify an enlightened individual because illumination represents consciousness itself rather than its transitory states. It is the lightning flash and considered to be the most desirable goal. Enlightenment is experiences as a pleasure. Because this consciousness is experienced as pleasure, and it is a permanent consciousness, the experiencer does not need to go into prayer. This is despite the outward appearance of a person who places oneself in the posture of prayer in order to achieve something. When you are engaged in outward activity it is not the same as when you are in a trance. This is true for both the beginner and the adept. #RandolphHarris 15 of 17
However, our language has wisely sensed the two sides of a being’s being along. It has created the word “loneliness” to express the pain of being alone. And it has created the word “solitude” to express the glory of being alone. Although, in daily life, we do not always distinguish these words, we should do so consistently and thus deepen our understanding of our human predicament. In the twenty-fifth Psalm we read—“Turn thou to me and be gracious; for I am lonely and afflicted.” The psalmist feels the pain of loneliness. We do not know the character of his particular loneliness, but we know the many faces that loneliness can have. We have all experienced some of them. Most widespread is our loneliness after those who helped us to forget that we are alone have left us, either through separation or death. I refer not only to those nearest to us, but also to those human beings who give us the feeling of communion, groups with which we have worked, with which we have had social constant, with which we have had spiritual communications. For many people such loneliness becomes a permanent state and a continuous source of profound melancholy. The sighing of innumerable lonely people, all around us and over the World, fills the ears that are opened by love. #RandolphHarris 16 of 17
Their devotion to the guru, the cult, or the group is, in terms of real spiritual progress, both a help and a hinderance. As a sign, and insofar as it is a measure, of aspiration to rise toward a superior state of being, it is a help. However, as another bar added to the cage in which they live, shutting out all those who are not co-followers or co-members, it increases partisanship and widens prejudice. To bind oneself to a sectarian group and to its ideas is to form another attachment for the ego. Group emotion is worked up until it becomes a substitute for personal inspiration. Either through ignorance of or inability to practise prayer, or both, the group members are happy to share, and are satisfied with, a common experience on the shallowest level. However, nothing will replace individual work at self-development leading to deeper experience and higher knowledge. When too much is made of an organization or institution and too little of the idea behind it, the leaders become tyrannical and the followers fanatical. That is, their character is corrupted. “Yea, I know that I am nothing; as to my strength I am weak; therefore I will not boast of myself, but I will boast of my God, for in his strength I can do all things; yea, behold, many mighty miracles we have wrought in this land, for which we will praise in his name forever,” reports Alma 26.12. #RandolphHarris 17 of 17
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Cans. Beer cans. Glinting on the verges of a million miles of roadways, lying in scrub, grass, dirt, leaves, sand, mud, but never hidden. Piel’s, Rheingold, Ballantine, Schaefer, Schlitz, shinning in the Sun, or picked by Moon or the beam of headlights at night; washed by rain or flattened by wheels, but never dulled, never buried, never destroyed. Here is the mark of savages, the testament of wasters, the stain of prosperity. These wise souls contemplated their past lives in a long wrathless reverie, and sought to answer prayers from below as I have said. They watched over their kindred, their clansmen, their own nations; they watched over those who attracted their attention with accomplished and spectacular displays of religiosity; they watched with sadness the suffering of humans and wished they could help and tried to help by thought when they could. However, who are these beings who defile the grassy borders of our roads and lanes, who pollute our ponds, who spoil the purity of our ocean beaches with the empty vessels of their thirst? Who are the beings who make these vessels in millions and then say, “Drink—and discard”? What society is this that can afford to cast away a million tons of metal and to make of wild and fruitful land a garbage heap? #RandolphHarris 1 of 14