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A Model of Mormon Spiritual
Experience, Part 3
Personal Dialogue
with Deity
By Kevin Christensen
Editor’s note: This is the
third 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
and part two here
Personal Dialogue
Drawing on works by Martin Buber,
Ian Barbour suggests that an interpersonal relationship with Deity
can be seen as “One understands oneself to be addressed through
events… A person replies through the speech of his life; he answers
with his actions. Events in daily life can be interpreted as a
dialogue with God.” [1] I immediately think of Tevye in Fiddler
on the Roof. I was tempted to defer to the beauty of that example,
but I found a suitable Mormon counterpart from historian Richard
Bushman:
I had been a branch
president and bishop, and was then president of the Boston Stake.
Those offices required me to give blessings in the name of God
and to seek solutions to difficult problems nearly every day.
I usually felt entirely inadequate to the demands placed upon
me and could not function at all without some measure of inspiration.
What I did, the way I acted, my inner thoughts, were all intermingled
with this effort to speak and act righteously for God. I could
no longer entertain the possibility that God did not exist because
I felt His power working through me... Only when I thought of
God as a person interested in me and asked for help as a member
of Christ’s kingdom did idea and reality fit properly. Only that
language properly honored the experiences I had day after day
in my callings. [2]
May I add, that in my own life, I’ve
adopted the metaphor of “stones lighting up” based on the account
of the brother of Jared in the book of Ether 3, to describe occasions
when external events seem to speak to me with all the clarity
of the finger of the Lord touching stones, bringing light into
darkness.
Summing Mormon Religious
Experience
Like it or not, people within the
Mormon tradition can and do enjoy the full range of all the experiential
and historic aspects of religion, along with access to rich symbolism. Each
aspect becomes like a thread in a rope: awe at the creation, numinous
and mystic encounters, moments of reorientation of the mind, and
reconciliation of the heart, moral obligation, the likening of
scriptures to ourselves, making ancient stories into personal
biography, dipping into the common mythic experience of humankind,
or any number of individual historic events that define and bind
our community. Like it or not, when you look at the Mormon
community and the Mormon faith at this level of core experience,
all that defines religion anywhere exists here.
Therefore, like it or not, at the
outset, any assessment of the religious value of Mormonism should
admit that here the fountain of living waters flows briskly. In
assessing Mormonism, in dealing with questions raised about any
particular thread in what can be a complex bundle of threads of
varied strengths, some more significant than others, but no single
thread carrying all the weight, keep in mind that the validity
of Mormon spiritual life must be accepted as a given.
Appendix A: Answers to Prayer
in LDS Scripture
Here are scriptures describing answer
to prayer through the Spirit. Contexts usually refer to study,
pondering, inquiry, musing, fasting, and reflecting on the subject
of the prayer before and during the experience described or promised.
You should study the scriptures in context. These verses should
spur introspection in assessing personal experience, and in considering
the claims of others. (Even skeptics should define what they do
not believe in.) They are also a strong test for the claims of
Joseph Smith. Consider them in light of my model and note how
well they all hang together. The Spirit is a promised witness
to the obedient (Acts 5:32; John 7:17, 8:31-32).
Answer to Prayer Emphasizing
Thinking
a. Guides to truth (that is,
to what is real; Jacob 4:13; John 16:13; Ephesians 5:9-10).
b. Brings Christ’s words
to remembrance (John 14:26).
c. Eyes of understanding
opened, that ye may know (Ephesians 1:16-19). “We began to have
the scriptures laid open to our understandings, and the true meaning
and intention… revealed to us in a manner we never could attain
to previously, nor ever before thought of.” (Joseph Smith — History
1:74)
d. “It is calm and serene;
…a person may profit by noticing the first intimation of the spirit
of revelation: for instance when you feel pure intelligence flowing
into you, it may give you sudden strokes of ideas.” [3]
e. Expands your mind (Alma
32:34).
f. Is this not real? What
is true is discernible. “Whatsoever makes manifest is light” —
truth is things as they really are (Alma 32:35; Jacob 4:13; Ephesians
5:13; D&C 52:14-19) “A pattern in all things” (D&C 52:14).
g. Persuades to believe
in Christ (Moroni 7:17).
h. Judge righteously (D&C
11:12; Matthew 7; Luke 11:35).
i. Enlightens your mind
(D&C 11:13–14; Alma 32:34).
j. You will know and bear
record (Ether 4:11–15).
k. “Still small voice,”
“which whispereth through and pierceth all things often making
my bones to quake,” “voice in mind,” “as of one crying in the
wilderness… because you cannot see him” (Enos 1:10; 1 Kings 16:13;
Isaiah 30:21; D&C 85:6; 88:66; see also 3 Nephi 11:37).
l. I know that ye believe
them... by the manifestation of the spirit, great is my joy. He
that preacheth and he that receiveth, understand one another,
and both are edified and rejoice together (Alma 7:17; D&C
50:10-25). It can be a shared experience that is witnessed and
not self-induced.
m. Experience a change
of perception. “God has created man with a mind capable of instruction,
and a faculty which may be enlarged in proportion to the heed
and diligence given to the light communicated from heaven to the
intellect; and that the nearer a man approaches perfection, the
clearer are his views, and the greater his enjoyments, till he
has overcome the evils of his life and lost every desire for sin;
and…arrives at that point of faith where he is wrapped in the
power and glory of his Maker and is caught up to dwell with Him…
This is a station to which no man ever arrived in a moment: he
must have been instructed… by proper degrees, until his mind is
capable in some measure of comprehending the propriety, justice,
equality, and consistency of the same.” [4]
Answer to Prayer Emphasizing
Feeling
a. Heart burns within (Luke
24:32; Jeremiah 20:9;Psalms 39:2-3, 12; D&C 9).
b. Enlarges soul (Alma
32:27: Moroni 10:3-6); cf. Enos for enlargement of soul, first
praying for self, then his people, then his enemies (Enos 1-17).
c. Word begins to be delicious
to you (Alma 32:27); also tree of life (1 Nephi 8:10–16).
d. Word grows in you (Alma
32:28-43) “As that subject seems to occupy my mind, and press
itself upon my feelings the strongest” (D&C 128:1). “Never
did any passage of scripture come with more power to the heart
of man than this did at this time to mine. It seemed to enter
with great force into every feeling of my heart. I reflected upon
it again and again” (Joseph Smith–History 1:12).
e. Invites to do good
(Moroni 7:13); fruit of spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance (Galatians 5:22-25).
f. Invites to love God
and to serve him (Moroni 7:13-19).
g. Peace to mind concerning
the matter (D&C 6:14-15, 22-23).
h. Feel that it is right;
stupor of thought if wrong (D&C 9:7-9).
i. Leads you to walk humbly
(D&C 11:12).
j. Peace and power of
spirit flow into you (D&C 111:8).
k. Spirit teaches you
that ye must pray (2 Nephi 32:8-9).
l. Spirit fills with joy
(D&C 11:13-14; Mosiah 4:3)
m. Peace of conscience
(Mosiah 4:3).
n. Consolation, comfort,
peace (Helaman 3:5; John 14:26-27)
o. Guilty take truth hard,
for it cuts to the center (Acts 2:37; 1 Nephi 16:2; 2 Nephi 32:2).
Some harden hearts against it; others repent (see Alma 14, 15,
and 36).
p. Experience a change
of heart (Alma 5:26). “The spirit of the Lord… will whisper peace
and joy to their souls; it will take malice, hatred, strife and
all evil from their hearts, …and their whole desire will be to
do good, bring forth righteousness, and build up the kingdom of
God.” [5] “Law… written in hearts” (Jeremiah 31:33). “New heart,
new spirit within you” (Ezekiel 11:19).
Other Ways Prayers Are
Answered
a. You receive help that you’ve
prayed for (James 5:16–18). “The fervent prayer of a righteous
man availeth much” (James 5:16).
b. Numinous Experience:
awe and reverence, mystery and wonder, fascination and dread,
a sense of otherness, confrontation and encounter; becoming aware
of dependence, finitude, limitation, and contingency. [6]
c. Mystical Experience;
sense of the unity of all things, joy, harmony, serenity, peace,
loss of ego. “Eight central qualities of the mystical or transcendent
experience” are: [7]
d. The “ego quality.” During
the experience, the person may lose the sense of self, and feel
absorbed in to something greater. (cf. He that ascended up on
high, as also he descended below all things, in that he comprehended
all things, that he might be in all and through all things, the
light of truth; D&C 88:6; And it came to pass that the
Lord spake unto Enoch, and told Enoch all the doings of the children
of men; wherefore Enoch knew, and looked upon their wickedness,
and their misery, and wept and stretched forth his arms, and his
heart swelled wide as eternity; and his bowels yearned; and all
eternity shook. Moses 7:41);
e. The “unifying quality.” During
the experience, the person may feel that “everything is one.” (cf. He
comprehendeth all things, and all things are before him, and all
things are round about him; and he is above all things, and in
all things, and is through all things, and is round about all
things; and all things are by him, and of him, even God, forever
and ever. D&C 88:41),
f. The “inner and subjective
quality.” The person may feel that things possess consciousness
which we don’t usually regard as being conscious, like trees,
or the earth itself. (cf. And it came to pass that Enoch
looked upon the earth; and he heard a voice from the bowels thereof,
saying: Wo, wo is me, the mother of men; I am pained, I am weary,
because of the wickedness of my children. When shall I rest, and
be cleansed from the filthiness which is gone forth out of me?
When will my Creator sanctify me, that I may rest, and righteousness
for a season abide upon my face? Moses 7:48)
g. The “temporal/spatial
quality.” The person may experience time and space differently,
and may even feel that the experience occurs outside the normal
boundaries of space and time. (cf. And it came to pass, as
the voice was still speaking, Moses cast his eyes and beheld the
earth, yea, even all of it; and there was not a particle of it
which he did not behold, discerning it by the spirit of God. And
he beheld also the inhabitants thereof, and there was not a soul
which he beheld not; and he discerned them by the Spirit of God;
and their numbers were great, even numberless as the sand upon
the sea shore. And he beheld many lands; and each land was
called earth, and there were inhabitants on the face thereof. Moses
1:27–29. Compare also Black Elk’s vision.);
h. The “noetic quality.” The
person may feel that the experience is the source of true knowledge. (cf. And
now, behold, is your knowledge perfect? Yea, your knowledge is
perfect in that thing, and your faith is dormant; and this because
you know, for ye know that the word hath swelled your souls, and
ye also know that it hath sprouted up, that your understanding
doth begin to be enlightened, and your mind doth begin to expand. O
then, is not this real? I say unto you, Yea, because it is light;
and whatsoever is light, is good, because it is discernible, therefore
ye must know that it is good; ...Alma 32:34-35 )
i. The “ineffable quality.” The
experience may be impossible to express in normal language. (cf.
And behold, the heavens were opened, and they were caught up into
heaven, and saw and heard unspeakable things. And it was forbidden
them that they should utter; neither was it given unto them power
that they could utter the things which they saw and heard; And
whether they were in the body or out of the body, they could not
tell; for it did seem unto them like a transfiguration of them,
that they were changed from this body of flesh into an immortal
state, that they could behold the things of God. 3 Nephi 28:13-15. Which
he commanded us we should not write while we were yet in the Spirit,
and are not lawful for man to utter; Neither is man capable to
make them known, for they are only to be seen and understood by
the power of the Holy Spirit, which God bestows on those who love
him, and purify themselves before him; D&C 76:116-117)
j. The “positive emotion
quality.” (cf. He hath filled me with his love, even unto
the consuming of my flesh. 2 Nephi 4:21. And oh, what joy,
and what marvelous light I did behold; yea, my soul was filled
with joy as exceeding as was my pain! Yea, I say unto you, my
son, that there could be nothing so exquisite and so bitter as
were my pains. Yea, and again I say unto you, my son, that on
the other hand, there can be nothing so exquisite and sweet as
was my joy. Alma 36:20-21).
k. The “sacred quality.” The
experience may seem to be intrinsically sacred. (But now
mine own eyes have beheld God; but not my natural, but my spiritual
eyes, for my natural eyes could not have beheld; for I should
have withered and died in his presence; but his glory was upon
me; and I beheld his face, for I was transfigured before him. Moses
1:11).
l. Dreams and Visions;
compare Nephi and Lehi, Daniel, Peter, and John, etc.
m. Personal Dialogue;
you feel yourself addressed through events, and answer through
your actions. [8]
Appendix B: An Extract from
a Comparison of Smith and Emerson
To illustrate the bridging of numinous
and the mystical by Joseph Smith, compare these passages from
the “Spirit” section in Emerson’s 1836 Nature [9] and some unified
passages from an 1832 revelation (D&C 88) that Smith termed
an “olive leaf which we have plucked from the Tree of Paradise.”
I’ve broken the lines to facilitate comparisons, not just of the
poetic prose, but of the conceptual content.
Notice that Emerson starts with mystic
truths arising within a meditating human consciousness, and that
Smith starts with the numinous divine reaching down to illuminate
human consciousness.
From Emerson:
But when, following the invisible
steps of thought, we come to inquire, Whence is matter? and Whereto?
many truths arise to us out of the recesses of consciousness.
[10]
From Smith:
He that ascended
up on high,
as he also descended below
all things,
in that he comprehended all
things,
that he might be in all and
through all things
the
light of truth;
Which truth shineth.
This is the light of Christ.
As also he is in the sun, and
the light of the sun,
and the power thereof by which
it was made . . .
And the light which shineth,
which giveth you light,
is through him who enlighteneth
your eyes,
which is the same light that
quickeneth your
understandings;
(D&C 88:6-11)
Both writers express an identical
epiphanic awareness of a divine spirit interpenetrating and supporting
the physical world. Both speak in an identical tone, differing
only in that Emerson depicts the influence of the Spirit in terms
of a Nature metaphor, and Smith does so in terms of a light metaphor.
From Emerson:
We learn that the
highest is present to the soul of man;
that the dread universal essence,
which is not wisdom, or love,
or beauty, or power,
but all in one, and each entirely,
is that for which all this
exists,
and by which they are; that
spirit creates;
that behind nature, throughout
nature spirit is present;
one and not compound it does
not act upon us from without,
that is in space and time,
but spiritually, or through
ourselves. [11]
Which light proceedeth
forth from the presence of God
to fill the immensity of space
-
The light which is in all things,
which giveth life to all things,
which is the law by which all
things are governed,
even the power of God who sitteth
upon his throne,
who is in the bosom of eternity,
and who is in the midst of
all things. (D&C 88:12–13)
Regardless of the differing vehicles
that carry their thoughts, and their different points of origin,
both metaphors move towards the same awareness.
From Emerson:
therefore that spirit,
that is, the Supreme Being,
does not build up nature around
us,
but puts it forth through us,
as the life of the tree puts
forth new branches and
leaves through the pores of
the old. [12]
He comprehendeth
all things, and all things are before him,
and all things are round about
him;
and he is above all things,
and in all things,
and is through all things,
and is round about all things;
and all things are by him,
and of him,
even God, for ever and ever.
(D&C 88:41)
From
Emerson
As a plant upon the earth,
so a man rests upon the bosom
of God;
he is nourished by unfailing
fountains,
and draws at his need inexhaustible power . . .
we learn that man has access
to
the entire mind of the Creator,
is himself the creator in the
finite. [13]
From
Smith
And if your eye be single to
my glory,
your whole bodies shall be
filled with light,
and there shall be no darkness
in you;
and that body which is filled
with light comprehendeth
all things. (D&C 88:67)
Here Smith’s production embraces
the mystical experience of union and identity with the divine,
and sounds very close to Emerson. However, the complete text of
the “Olive Leaf” includes much that is numinous in tone and eschatological
in intent, totally alien to Emerson’s thought. Nevertheless, this
bridging to mystic experience by Smith may account for striking
parallels that appear in the key teachings of both men, just as
the more numinous aspects of Smith’s revelations can account (in
part) for the many differences.
[1] Barbour, Myths, Models, and Paradigms,
55. Barbour cites Martin Buber’s I and Thou.
[2] Richard Bushman, “My Belief,”
in A Thoughtful Faith: Essays on Belief by Mormon Scholars, ed.
Philip L. Barlow (Centerville, UT: Cannon, 1986), 24.
[3] Teachings of the Prophet Joseph
Smith, 151.
[4] Teachings of the Prophet Joseph
Smith, 151.
[5] Joseph Smith to Brigham Young
in a dream; see S. Dilworth Young, “Gift of the Holy Ghost,” Improvement
Era 71 (November 1968): 76. Also, Brigham Young, “ An Olive Leaf:
Tell the People to Keep the Spirit” in Sunstone 97 December 1994,
[6] Barbour, Myths, Models, and Paradigms,
53–54; Smart, Worldviews, 62-72; cf. Moses 1; Joseph Smith–Testimony;
Mosiah’s sermon; Alma’s conversion, etc.
[7] Mark E. Koltko, “Mysticism and
Mormonism: An LDS Perspective on Transcendence and Higher Consciousness,”
Sunstone 13/2 (April 1989): 14–19.
[8] Barbour, Myths, Models, and Paradigms,
54-55.
[9] Bode and Cowley, The Portable
Emerson, 42-43.
[10] Ibid., 42.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Ibid.
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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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