Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Gnostic Afterlifestyles of the Rich & Famous

As with so much of so-called "New Age" spiritualism, Scientology draws heavily from Gnostic conceptions of the afterlife.  The recent spat of new coverage resulting from the tragic death of John Travolta's teenage son spawned quite of bit of writing about Scientology's teachings on death and the afterlife.  I've long contended that the typical religious person is just as confused about their own beliefs as the average Baptist would be about the teachings of the Zoroastrians.  In an attempt to clarify Scientology teachings on death and the afterlife, MSNBC reporter Courtney Hazlett shared the following official release from the Church of Scientology:

“In Scientology, we believe that you have lived before and that you will live again. The spirit, which is you, is immortal and you are not your body. You as an individual are an immortal spiritual being and simply put, you have lived before and will live again, lifetime after lifetime. In Scientology, these past existences are simply referred to as past lives.”

This Scientology doctrine might just as well have come from Origen, an early Christian Bishop (185 - 254 CE).  Clear evidence exists to support that reincarnation was a central them of those we now call Gnostic Christians.  Of course, increasingly accepted scholarship indicates that many if not most early "Christians" held such "Gnostic" beliefs about the afterlife and that the idea that folks either went to Heaven or Hell upon their physical death was not a majority belief until the 4th century after the Christianity became the official state religion of Rome.  Before Origen, Plato promoted the concept of reincarnation  as well as developing the philosophical constructs upon which became the fountainhead for numerous Gnostic doctrines.  Even St. Augustine, perhaps the pre-eminent Orthodox Christian theologian of all, seems to hold out for the possibility of reincarnation as a possible alternative afterlifestyle.

My personal brand of neo-gnosticism simply holds that no one knows what happens to a human being's essence at the time of their physical death.  At least I certainly don't know what happens when we die.  Having issued that caveat, I strongly suggest that the metaphor of reincarnation would be a superior belief to the final judgment eschatology of both Orthodox Christianity and Orthodox Islam.

I present the following evidence for Reincarnation being a better afterlifestyle than Final Judgment by pointing again to the official doctrine the Church of Scientology regarding their funeral services:

“The Scientology funeral service celebrates the life of the person who has departed his body. Friends and family have the opportunity to say goodbye, to acknowledge and thank the person for what he or she has done in this lifetime, and to wish them well as they move on to their next lifetime. The service is a reaffirmation of the knowledge that we are immortal spiritual beings.”

Did you catch that last part -- "a reaffirmation of the knowledge that we are immortal spiritual beings"?  Isn't it interesting that when you pull away the imaginative nomenclature of L. Ron Hubbard (or Joseph Smith and Mary Baker Eddy, for that matter), what you are left with are these basic Gnostic concepts that human beings are spiritual beings having a human experience?

Even literary cult figure Philip K. Dick, in the novel VALIS, offers his own version of Gnosticism as Item #29 of his Tractates Cryptica Scriptura:

"We did not fall because of a moral error; we fell because of an intellectual error: that of taking the phenomenal world as real. Therefore we are morally innocent. It is the Empire in its various disguised polyforms which tells us we have sinned.”

Gnosticism itself, as we can clearly see, continues to be reincarnated by new generations of thinkers, writers and self-proclaimed prophets.  As we can also see, there really isn't very much new under the sun other than the creative narratives of Hubbard's thetans, Smith's magic seeing-stones and the brilliant reinterpretations of honest fiction writers like Philip K. Dick.  Whether it's reincarnation or salvation, human beings have an insatiable desire to know the answers to questions we obviously can't answer.

As for this Gneo-Gnostic Christian Universalist, I'll take the literary prose of Dick over the prophetic deceptions of ego-inflated cult leaders for my personal eschatology.  So, here's P.K. Dick's Item #44 of the Tractates Cryptica Scriptura to take us out of this post, even if we are spiritual beings trapped in physical flesh:

"Since the universe is actually composed of information, then it can be said that information will save us. This is the saving gnosis which the Gnostics sought. There is no other road to salvation."

On your own "road to salvation", I pray that this information might help a little!

Also, I shouldn't close this post until I say that my heart goes out to the Travoltas and to all those who were close to Jett Travolta -- may he return again to this world in whatever from is most pleasing to his Spirit!

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Evolt

I scribbled this on January 1st of 2007 and then cleaned it up a little later that month. I found it tonight while doing a bit of a year-end review of some things I'd written and I liked it much better after 2 years of aging than I did at the time, so I thought I'd risk the humiliation of sharing it here. The poem more or less was the beginning of an introspective year where I found a new use for the religious software that got installed in me as a kid growing up in the Bible belt. Joseph Campbell says "don't get stuck to the metaphor" & I've been able to re-embrace the metaphors that were first installed into my hard-drive as not only literal truth, but as Ultimate Truth that carried a pretty stiff penalty for non-belief. I spent more than a few years in revolt before I understood Campbell's message of spiritual freedom meant that I actually owned my software and that I was free to do with it whatever my imagination could cook-up.

So, maybe I can't uninstall the software, but I sure as Sunday can influence the output.

Revolution maybe the right flag for some to fly, but martyrdom seems overly dramatic to me. I'd rather work somewhere in-between the grooves where the status quo meets resistance, but the soldiers live to fight another day. Evolution, though, takes away the personal, the immediate and leaves no room for imagination -- which is to say it leaves no room for mankind.

Revolt, too aggressive.

Evolve, too passive.

"Evolt" strikes the right chord for the traveller.

Evolt
by KDM
1/26/2007

There will be no revolt
No Revolution
There will only be this
Forever

There will be Evolution
Yes, evolution
There will only be that
Not Revolution

Things will change
In every direction
Things will not change
No Predestination

You will be you
I will be me
They will be they
And we will be we

The moment is now
Has always been thus
Reason has no reason
To make such a fuss

My hands on the keyboard
Your eyes on the screen
No Communication
Just see what we see

You know what you know
And you don't what you don't
Forget revolution
Believe what you won't

I do not have the answers
Nor even the questions
Placed her by chance
Without destination

So here we are
And so we are too
Blinded by ashes
Still I can see you

What can I tell you
What can you tell me
No Revolution
Just Mystery