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Saturday, November 30, 2024

Beyond Here Lies Nothin'

So, knowing and unknowing constitute the metabolism of being?

Something like that, but that was yesterday's post. Today we're moving on to the next chapter, Metaphysics and Esoterism. What is the difference between esoterism and plain vanilla theology?

The former is aimed at people who think they're special. Like you.

I don't think it's a matter of specialness, rather, of consistency. Far as I'm concerned, standard issue theology results in inevitable fissures, absurdities, circularities, and contradictions that just bug the Raccoon mind, and are easily exploited by the anti-Raccoon mind. Esoterism, broadly speaking, is a way to address and reconcile these. It's a way to believe in a God that is believable, so to speak. 

So, to reduce God to your own categories and capabilities?

No, more like the opposite: to expand them in order to lift the mind to God. If it's a capability, it's more of a negative one. An example would be Eckhart's orthoparadoxical remark at the end of yesterday's post: God is greater than "God." Or even Thomas, who said that "Whatever is comprehended by finite being is itself finite." 

For Schuon, esoterism allows us to "escape" the limitations referenced above via an "upward path," instead of a downward one into "a worldly and suicidal liberalism." Both secular liberalism and religious literalism are bad options that must be transcended. 

Nor is esoterism a dogma, rather, more of an approach or stance. It is not the denial or negation of exoterism, rather, its complementary partner. In reference to the statement at the top of the post, one might say that exoterism and esoterism constitute our metabolism of God. As Schuon describes it,

The word “esoterism” suggests in the first place an idea of complementarity, of a “half” as it were: esoterism is the complement of exoterism, it is the “spirit” which completes the “letter.”

Or, it is the substantial kernel inside the formal shell. For Bérard, esoteric "means etymologically a movement 'more inward than,' that is to say, a knowledge that deepens more and more." It "prolongs exoterism... by harmoniously plumbing its depth" (Schuon). 

This is because every form -- even a religious form -- constitutes a limit, when God is the Unlimited. Exoterism speaks via forms that in turn must be transcended, which is a perfectly orthodox position. Amiwrong, Gemini, or just an assoul?

The statement you've presented is a profound exploration of the tension between the finite and the infinite, the limited and the unlimited, particularly within the context of religious belief and practice.

Let's break down the key points:

  1. Forms as Limits:

    • Religious Forms: Even sacred rituals, doctrines, and scriptures, which are often seen as pathways to the divine, are ultimately human constructs. They are forms, and as such, they are limited.
    • God as the Unlimited: The divine, or God, is often conceived as transcending all limitations. It is the ultimate reality, beyond human comprehension.
  2. Exoterism and Transcendence:

    • Exoterism: This refers to the outward, public expressions of religious belief and practice. It involves rituals, ceremonies, and teachings that are accessible to the general public.
    • Transcendence: The statement suggests that exoteric forms, while essential for communal worship and spiritual growth, are not the ultimate goal. They are meant to be transcended, to lead the individual beyond the limitations of the form itself.

This perspective aligns with many mystical traditions, which emphasize the importance of inner spiritual experience over outward religious practices. It highlights the paradox of using limited human language and symbols to point towards the infinite and the divine.

It certainly aligns with Eckhart, who, orthparadoxically, knew nothing about everything, which is preferable to the atheistic nihilist who knows everything about nothing: "The whole universe as compared to God is nothing." But God himself is another kind of nothing:

God is nothing. No thing. God is nothingness; and yet God is something.

I have nothing to add.

1 comment:

  1. Hello good Dr, readers all. There is much said about seeking God inside of oneself, but truth be told this has been difficult for me. Esotericism is clearly the right way, but to implement it, that is a horse of a different color. It is not like Dorothy going to Oz to get into a different frame of mind and learn something.

    Yet God met me on my own turf; I have had sufficient experiences to know He exists and is paying attention. The rest I make up as the HS moves me.

    These experiences were so tenuous. How fleeting, how delicate they were!
    Most are tiny slices of time, little things. The moment they are spoken of, they seem to dissipate like mist. Yet for all that, they were there. They were there.

    There were a few sustained campaigns where grace flooded in daily; these were times of extreme duress. This is why the bad times can be the best of times, in hindsight.

    In the end, these experience can become the most secure things encountered in life. You only know this when job, love, marriage, baby carriage, come, change, morph, and go. Then your nebulous experiences become the core of who you are.

    That's my esoteric story and I'm sticking to it.

    Trenchmeister.

    ReplyDelete

I cannot talk about anything without talking about everything. --Chesterton

Fundamentally there are only three miracles: existence, life, intelligence; with intelligence, the curve springing from God closes on itself like a ring that in reality has never been parted from the Infinite. --Schuon

The quest, thus, has no external 'object,' but is reality itself becoming luminous for its movement from the ineffable, through the Cosmos, to the ineffable. --Voegelin

A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. --Wittgenstein