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A Model of Mormon Spiritual Experience,
Part 2
Encountering Order and Creativity in the Physical World
By Kevin Christensen
Editor’s note: This is the second of a three-part series
that gives a model of Mormon spiritual experience, particularly
as related to the way our prayers are answered. Read part one here:
If approached without reference to any particular doctrinal
interpretation, Ian Barbour suggests that spiritual experiences
can serve as a common ground for discussion, a place of solid footing,
a point of little disputed reference from which to examine the varied
interpretations and traditions. Those I shall discuss in this paper
(following Barbour) can be seen as generally framing a movement:
-
Then returning to the external world as human action:
Personal dialogue where you begin interpret external events as God speaking
to you, and you answer through your own actions.
Social and Ritual behavior
These matters cannot objectively prove the existence
of a God (whether personal or impersonal), but, as I hope
to demonstrate, they do constitute the core of religious experience
for believers. They provide the ground of experience on which
reasoned and feeling assessments of the validity and worth
of faith are based. They encompass the ways in which spirituality
is manifest in history and symbol. They are the wine — and
doctrine the wine-bottles.
To argue and contend about doctrine is to emphasize
the wine skin over the wine. In Alma’s terms, it is to emphasize
what you think you “know” over what ultimately gives “cause
to believe” (Alma 32:18).
Encountering Order and Creativity in the Physical World
Joseph Smith’s 1832 journal contains a reminiscence
of his awakening wonder at the order and creativity in the
physical world. While specific Mormon interpretations of the
creation can and should vary, this is enough to place a sacred
appreciation of nature and the cosmos firmly in the Mormon
tradition. This earliest version of the youthful Joseph’s
first vision suggests that his awakened wonder was at least
partially responsible for carrying him towards the Sacred
Grove. Despite the awkwardness of the phrasing, the intensity
of his experience comes through. (Spellings follow the original.)
For I looked upon the sun the glorious luminary of the earth
and also the moon rolling in their magesty through the heavens
and also the stars shining in their courses and the earth
also upon which I stood and the beast of the field and the
fowls of heaven and the fish of the waters and also man walking
forth upon the face of the earth in magesty and in the strength
and beauty whose power and intiligence in governing the things
which are so exeding great and marvilous even in the likeness
of him who created them and when I considered upon these things
my heart exclaimed well hath the wise man said it is a fool
that saith in his heart there is no God my heart exclaimed
all all these bear testimony and bespeak an omnipotent and
omnipresent power a being that makith Laws and decreeeth and
bindeth all things in their bounds who filleth Eternity who
was and is and will be from All Eternity to Eternity.
Common Symbols and Rituals in Religion
In trying to orient ourselves when confronted by the
bewildering variety of religions, we can take some comfort
in the surprising discovery that all religion gathers around
common symbols and rituals. Emphasizing the mythic side of
things, Joseph Campbell has been very effective in popularizing
the notion that humankind shares “one mythology.” The same
themes, “creation, death and resurrection, ascension to heaven,
virgin births,” are retold everywhere with “inflection to
culture.”
On the ritual side, the Myth and Ritual school at Cambridge pointed to the Year Rite as the center and climax of
ancient religious activity everywhere:
The dramatic representation of the death and resurrection of
the god [and the mourning and seeking of the god by his female
consort]; The recitation or symbolic
representation of the myth of creation; The ritual combat,
in which the triumph of the god over his enemies was depicted;
The sacred marriage; The triumphal procession, in which the
King played the part of the god followed by a train of lesser
gods of visiting deities.
But besides ritual and psychological aspects of myth,
there may also be historical associations. The performance
of a rite is a historical event and the archaic insistence
on imitating archetypes leads to a ritually conditioned history,
as is especially evidenced in kingship. Hugh Nibley argues for the
primacy of the temple since that is where the historical,
the mythic, the ritual, the social, and the symbolic meet
and fuse. In Mormonism, “all things which
have been given of God from the beginning of the world, unto
man, are the typifying of [Christ]” (2 Nephi 11:4).
And behold, all things have their likeness, and all things
are created and made to bear record of me, both things which
are temporal, and things which are spiritual; things which
are in the heavens above, and things which are on the earth,
and things which are in the earth; both things which are under
the earth, both above and beneath: all things bear record
of me. (Moses 6:63)
The phenomenon of a single underlying mythology in human
history is arresting, whatever the ultimate explanation. Natural
curiosity makes it reasonable to ask, how well does any particular
religious tradition integrate and interpret these common patterns
and symbols? Hugh Nibley suggests the extent to which Mormonism
integrates the essential symbols and patterns.
A century of bound periodicals in the stacks will tell the
enquiring student when scholars first became aware of the
various elements that make up the super-pattern, but Joseph
Smith knew about them all, and before the search ever began
he showed how they are interrelated. In the documents he has
left us, you will find the central position of the Coronation,
the tension between Matriarchy and Patriarchy, the arcane
discipline for transmitting holy books through the ages, the
pattern of cycles and dispensations, the nature of the Mysteries,
the great tradition of the Rekhabites or sectaries of the
desert, the fertility rites and sacrifices of the New Year
with the humiliation of the kind and the role of the substitute,
etc.
Some people may despise the symbolic and inner aspects
of religion, but they are really no less significant than
the literal and historic aspects. As the writer of the Gospel
of Phillip says, “We enter by means of despised symbols.” The symbols guide us through
the transitions and passages in our own lives and provide
a means to point beyond literal meanings to truths that cannot
be expressed or apprehended in any other way.
The myths of faith are not lies, but are metaphors —
models that point beyond themselves, paradigms that define
a community. The archetypal unity of world mythology invites
humankind into a single community. I believe that ultimately,
all myth points to Christ.
Key Historical Events
Every community celebrates and re-enacts particular
historical events which are crucial to its corporate identity
and its vision of reality.
Just as some people may dispute the historical and literal
aspects of religion, yet these too are no less significant
than the symbolic and inner aspects. Think of the communities
defined by celebrations of the Jewish Passover and Exodus,
the Buddha’s enlightenment, Mohammad’s call, and the Passion
of Christ. For Mormons, historical events such as the first
vision, the translation and publication of the Book of Mormon,
the Martyrdom of the Prophet, and the Mormon Exodus, all contribute
to a sacred history that defines and binds the community.
This kind of “key event” also may include direct experience
that becomes crucial to personal identity and a personal vision
of reality. Some people may see particular historical events
as having mythic or symbolic significance, and subsequently
record them in mythologized terms. This means that some events
may be both historical and mythically significant.
Nevertheless, “What distinguished Mormonism,” writes
Richard Bushman, “was not so much the Gospel Mormons taught,
which in many respects resembled other Christians’ teachings,
but what they believed had happened — to Joseph Smith, to
Book of Mormon characters, and to Moses and Enoch [and later
to the pioneers, during their archetypal Exodus to the west]…
The core of Mormon belief was a conviction about actual events…
Mormonism was history, not philosophy.”
Moral Obligation
When does a sense of moral obligation become a truly
religious experience? The essential “Do unto others as you
would have them do to you” makes good sense in any society
that expects to thrive. Certainly one could feel far more
secure in such an environment than in pecking orders that
adopt Korihor’s “Every man prospers according to his strength”
and “whatsoever a man did was no crime.”
And thus... they did not send away any who were naked, or that
were hungry, or that were athirst, or that were sick, or that
had not been nourished; and they did not set their hearts
upon riches; therefore they were liberal to all, both old
and young, both bond and free, both male and female, whether
out of the church or in the church, having no respect to persons
as to those who stood in need. (Alma 1:30)
Social conditioning does influence the experience of
conscience and moral obligation. However social influence
cannot completely explain such feelings since people at times
feel obligated to speak out against their own society, even
at the risk of their lives, or even more, at risk of their
soul. Indeed, it’s difficult get much more heroic than Mark
Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, when he decides, against
his social and religious training, to help Jim. “All right,
then I’ll go to hell.” Many students of religion
have been powerfully impressed on encountering a sense of
moral obligation that seems to transcend social conditioning
and survival instincts. Consider the following from the Book
of Mormon:
Now when the Lamanites saw that their brethren would not flee
from the sword, neither would they turn aside to the right
hand or to the left, but that they would lie down and perish,
and praised God even in the very act of perishing under the
sword — Now when the Lamanites saw this they did forbear from
slaying them; and there were many whose hearts had swollen
in them for those of their brethren who had fallen under the
sword, for they repented of the things which they had done.
And it came to pass that they threw down their weapons of
war, and would not take them up again. (Alma 24:23-25)
Responses like this show moral obligation springing
from feelings that are experienced as sacred illumination.
Any moral act that springs from conscience in this way transforms
morality from secular courtesy to sacred encounter with the
holy.
One final example of moral obligation deserves mention
here because of its unusual complexity and intensity, as well
as its vivid presence in the Book of Mormon. Sociologist Terrence
Des Pres made a study of the experiences of individuals who
have survived extreme horrors created by fellow humans. A striking type of survival
behavior that emerged from Nazi and Soviet death camps came
as certain persons developed a will to “survive as witness”
and to create a specific genre of survival literature. These
Survivor-Witnesses can be described as follows:
1.
The will to remember and record anchors the survivor
in the moral purpose of bearing witness, thus maintaining
his own integrity in conscious contradiction of the savagery
around him (Mormon 3:11-16; Moroni 9:6-25).
2.
Witnessing of his experience is viewed as a duty, even
a sacred task (Mormon 4:16; 8:14; 9:31).
3.
It is instinctively felt, an involuntary outburst of
feeling, born out of the horror that no one will be left (Mormon
6:17-22; 8:1-3).
4.
The task is
often carried out despite great risks; often in secret or
by depositing the record in a secret archive (Mormon 6:6;
8:14).
5.
Survivors do
not witness to inflict guilt or to rationalize their own survival.
Their mission transcends guilt and their irrepressible urge
to witness arises before any thought of guilt surfaces and
at the initial stages of adjustment to extremity (Mormon 9:30-31; Moroni 9:3-6).
6.
They speak
simply to tell, to describe out of a common care for life
and for the future, realizing that we all live in a realm
of mutual sacrifice (Mormon 4:17-22; 8:37-40; Moroni 7:45-48).
7.
Survival in
this sense is a collective act; the survivor has pledged to
see that the story is told (Mormon 4:16).
8.
The survivors speak to the whole world, as a firsthand
eyewitness, one whose words cannot be ignored (Mormon 4:16-22;
9:30).
9.
The view themselves as a necessary connection between
the past and the future (Mormon 4:17-22; 5:12; 7:1-10; 9:30).
10. They perceive that “out of horror... the truth will
emerge and be made secure,” That “good and evil are only clear
in retrospect,” for wisdom only comes at a terrible price.
Thus their mission is to display the “objective conditions
of evil” (Mormon 5:8-9; 9:31; Moroni 9-10).
Reorientation and Reconciliation
Discussing reconciliation, Barbour writes, “The redemptive
power of love is known in human life. Grace and redemption
are not theological abstractions but experienced realities
in which divisions within man and between man and his neighbor
are healed.”
Barbour’s here focuses on the experience of grace, when
“people unable to accept themselves are somehow enabled to
do so. Such reorientation may need to a new freedom from
anxiety, an openness to new possibilities in one’s life, a
greater sensitivity to other persons.” Notice that Reorientation
is a Thinking process, turning the mind, and Reconciliation
is a Feeling process, turning the heart.
I’ve chosen two examples to illustrate the Mormon experience.
One shows the reorientation and reconciliation as neat and
sudden, and the other as the more typical experience, which
includes periodic stumbles. The first comes from the Book
of Mormon, from the center of Alma 36.52:
And it came to pass that as I was thus racked with torment,
While I was harrowed up by the memory of my many
sins,
behold, I remembered also to have heard my father prophesy
unto the people concerning the coming of one Jesus Christ,
a Son of God, to atone for the sins of the world.
Now, as my mind caught hold upon this thought,
I cried within my heart:
O Jesus, thou Son of God, have mercy upon me,
who am in the gall of bitterness,
and am encircled about
by the everlasting chains of death.
And now, behold, when I thought this,
I could remember my pains no more;
yea, I was harrowed up by the memory of my sins
no more.
And oh, what joy, and what marvelous light I did behold;
yea my soul was filled with joy as exceeding as
was my pain! (Alma 36:17–20)
The next example comes from a writing often called Nephi’s
Psalm. I’m fond of this one because it shows reorientation
and reconciliation as an ongoing process. Again, I’ve arranged
the text to highlight poetic characteristics.
Notwithstanding the great goodness of the Lord,
in showing me his great and marvelous works,
my heart exclaimeth: O wretched man that I am!
Yea, my heart sorroweth because of my flesh;
my soul grieveth
because of mine iniquities.
I am encompassed about,
because of the temptations and the sins which so easily beset
me.
And when I desire to rejoice, my heart groaneth
because of my sins;
nevertheless, I know in whom I have trusted. . . .
Oh then, if I have seen so great things,
if the Lord in his condescension54 unto the children of men
hath visited men in so much mercy,
why should my heart weep
and my soul linger in the valley of sorrow,
and my flesh waste away,
and my strength slacken, because of my afflictions?
And why should I yield to sin, because of my flesh?
Yea, why should I give way to temptations,
that the evil one have place in my heart
to destroy my peace and afflict my soul?
Why am I angry because of my enemy?
Awake, my soul!
No longer droop in sin.
Rejoice, O my heart,
and give place no more for the enemy of my soul.
(2 Nephi 4:17–19, 26–28)
In a more recent treatment of these “core” religious
experiences, Barbour adds remarks on the burden that religion
carries towards providing believers with the courage and understanding
to face “suffering, death, transciency,” as well as the existence of
natural and human evil. It strikes me that humankind also
hungers for “reconciliation and reorientation” on these matters
as well.
Like Enos, after finding ourselves reconciled and reoriented
before God, we may find our souls enlarging with concern for
our neighbors, and then our adversaries. How do we orient
ourselves towards the human condition?
In the course of this essay, I have mentioned the well-known
strengths of Mormonism in dealing with the problem of evil. Elsewhere I have written on
the strengths of the Latter-day Saint teachings regarding
the afterlife. Here, let me recognize the
significance of the letters from Liberty Jail, D&C 121
and 122, and 2 Nephi 2 in defining the Mormon paradigm for
reorienting believers towards, and reconciling them to, tragedy
and death.
My son, peace be unto thy soul; thine adversity and thine afflictions
shall be but a small moment. . . . If the heavens gather
blackness... if the very jaws of hell shall gape open the
mouth wide after thee, know thou, my son, that all these
things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy
good. The Son of Man hath descended below them all. Art
thou greater than he? (D&C 121:7; 122:7-8)
Adam fell, that men might be; and men are, that they might
have joy. (2 Nephi 2:25)
Eugene Seaich, A Great Mystery (unpub), 198-99:
“The goddess had an important part to play in the resurrection
of her husband…We will recall how Anath made possible Baal-Hdad’s
resurrection by attacking and destroying his enemy, Mot, the
God of death. In Mesopotamian myth it was Inanna-Ishtar who
descended into the realm of the dead to destroy Erishkigal’s
power so that the dead Dumuzi-Tammus could be restored to
life. Aristide’s Apology describes how Aphrodite descended
into Hades to ransom Adonis from Persephone. Cybele likewise
made possible the resurrection of Attis on the third day,
while in Egypt it was Isis who made possible the resurrection of her
husband, Osiris… But no matter what the details of these ubiquitous
Near-Eastern death-and-resurrection legends, the underlying
theme is the same: the god is helpless without the ministrations
of his consort”; cf. John 20:11-18, Alma 19:29-31, and
2 Nephi 11:4.
In Lord Raglan, The Origins of Religion (London:
Thinkers Library, 1948), 67, citing Samuel H. Hooke, Myth,
Ritual, and Kingship (Oxford: Clarendon, 1958).
See Nibley, “The Hierocentric State,” in The Ancient State: The Rulers and the Ruled The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 10 (Salt Lake City and Provoe; Deseret Book and
FARMS, 1991) 99-147.
Hugh W. Nibley, “The Sacrifice of Isaac,” in Nibley
on the Timely and the Timeless (Provo, UT: BYU Religious
Studies Center, 1978), 130.
© 2006 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved
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| About
the Author: |
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Currently
working as a technical writer in Pittsburgh, Kevin Christensen was
born in Salt Lake City, and happily raised on a nerd ranch in Bountiful
Utah. Notable events in between include a mission in England, marriage
to Shauna Oak, parenting Nick and Karina, getting a B.A. in English
from San Jose State University, moving from Utah to California to
Kansas and to Pennyslania, and publishing 14 essays via the Foundation
for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies. |
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