Guest guest Posted April 24, 2004 Report Share Posted April 24, 2004 Recommend following links! From: dmc Sent: Saturday, April 24, 2004 11:08 AM Subject: Re: [Negative-Capability] as of concern >>alice sent: Influence of Carl Jung on the Church Part II >> Thank you for this. It illustrates what I often experienced when I lived in the Midwest and didn't belong to the especial large local mall church that ruled the particular region. (The Romans would recognize the Mall Church's ruler. They called them Geniuses. http://www.jungcircle.com/muse/genius.html ) Once the faithful knew you were not of the body, their eyes seemed to roll back and the voice in their heads would warn them they were speaking to the devil. That's you, or anyone who speaks anything besides the cant of Mallchurch. (The Cant of Mallchurch. Was that a poem?) Of course, the writer of this piece, Sundquist, has no idea that it's a demon that speaks inside him, that writes this very piece. That moves his pen. Jung knew, as the ancients and certainly the world that spawned St. knew, that demons speak to us all, and do it all the time: To the Greeks, daemons http://www.jungcircle.com/muse/plato.htm were messengers, inter-mediators between man and deity; time and eternity. To extrapolate, intermediaries between Self and the Ego, conscious and unconscious. Nature, the mystery we come out of and go back into. To mistrust your own inferior function is so common. To fear it is the stuff of psychosis. And really, let's be honest. Not all that much known about St. . Not much known generally about his times now, either, he of the same world as Philo and the " historical Jesus. " (An excellent grounding perspective: http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2004/2004-7.html .) I hear some Rapture-ready Fundamentalists knocking him for derailing the process, the Truth: he's often gotten in the way of mainlining the old Blood sacrifice deity. He did embrace mystery; he did interpret the Jesus story as allegory. A symbol. And we can't have that. No--we must have the literal. As Jung said, all great spiritual truths turn into literal truths, becoming no more than tools in the hand of man. The old Jinn is always getting out of the bottle. And what a brilliant myth that was, Aladdin. What a projection for our own bottling up the deity so we can hold it in our mind, " capture it " --- for as soon as we do, it's lost to us. Isn't that what alice just said: >>Problems arise the minute the personifications obscure the archetypal processes they represent. Always unveil the 'goddes' n think what processes they represent. Literalism is the demon at work - neg Saturn rules concretization!>> Looks like Saturn rules Sundquist's piece quite well. And that Aladdin bottling up of the deity is what Phoebe was speaking to... people do this, they create a sick deity and bring it into the world, these human psyches that believe (and thus create) in evil. Who have forgotten that Apollo shares his powers with Night. Psyche's stubborn insistence on seeing Eros isn't resolved until *she becomes a deity as well.* That is, the higher mysteries absorbed, the lower mysteries understood as steps to get there. All are precious... if I can still use that word. x's dmc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2004 Report Share Posted April 25, 2004 I'm sure my response is out of context to what was being discussed on JF. I was really responding to the importance of the concept of daemons and geniuses. Why? Because those who hold scripture as the word of God must claim God speaks through the writer. Who decides when it's really God? The assemblers of the Bible, the Canon, gave that power to themselves: the Church. What is the Church? Who decides that, who decides true, false? Once this sort of rationalization begins, it never ends. God is good, yet Job. Questions of philosophy. Paradox. Thus Augustine and the hordes of scholars addressing the problem of Evil. The assigning of blame, the story of Lucifer. The Devil is a major player in this religion, as important as the deity. And now in our time, the concept of Evil is used to galvanize a modern Holy War. Making a devil, jinn, angel, genius a real, living, and / or alien force within one's consciousness is a powerful form of control. It's what Jung addresses, and why Jung is so dangerous to Fundamentalism. It's also why we try to sense, understand (a great old word), disrobe, de-veil, and work so hard to come to terms with archetype. ... man derives his human personality only secondarily from what the myths call his descent from the gods and heroes; or, to put it in psychological terms, his consciousness of himself as a personality derives primarily from the influence of quasi-personal archetypes. ~CGJUNG, in CW5, SYMBOLS OF TRANSFORMATION The other issue is the history, the period that scripture was created from and in. There's a movement with Historians at the moment to place in a firm Jewish tradition. Fine. So *what was that tradition in his time?* What did it mean to be a Jew? Many many things at this time. http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2004/2004-7.html And if is firmly placed in some argument that results inevitably in the ultimate Messiah Jesus, why is it that we have firm evidence of his letters being doctored, sometimes even reversing what he was saying. Only 7 of his New Testament letters are not considered forgeries. Moreover, why does Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha attributed to him place him so firmly in mystical magical traditions? As does the logic of his history. Why was he claimed later as the leader of Gnostics in other texts? That's the leap of faith I'm making, skipping entirely the arguments for scripture itself. Scripture is the centerpiece of Fundamentalism, after all. And the concepts of Daemons, the modes of transmission of information from a Deity, is the axis it all spins around. LONG ago I read CS's Mere Christianity. I disagreed with him somewhere in the first 10 pages. He could go on forever--which he does--but he does it without me. Influence re the Diaspora discussed in Freke and Gandy's Jesus Mysteries: If we can throw off the traditional picture of and look at the evidence with an open mind this anti- rhetoric is understandable, since his letters show distinct Gnostic and Pagan influences. is a Jew who had embraced the ubiquitous Greek culture of the times. He writes in Greek, his first language. He quotes only from the Greek version of the Old Testament. His ministry is to Pagan cities dominated by Greek culture.32 Of these, Antioch was the center for the Mysteries of Adonis, Ephesus was a center for the Mysteries of Attis, and Corinth was a center for the Mysteries of Dionysus.33 was a native of Tarsus in Asia Minor, which by his time had surpassed even Athens and andria to become the major center of Pagan philosophy.3 " It was in Tarsus that the Mysteries of Mithras had originated, so it would have been unthinkable that would have been unaware of the remarkable similarities we have already explored between Christian doctrines and the teachings of Mithraism.35 frequently uses terms and phrases from the Pagan Mysteries, such as pneuma (spirit), gnosis (divine knowledge), doxa (glory), sophia (wisdom), teleioi (the initiated), and so on.3 " He advises his followers to " earnestly seek cater charismata. " 37 The word " charismata " derives from the Mystery rnakarismos, referring to the blessed nature of one who has seen the mysteries.38 He even calls himself a " Steward of the Mysteries of God, " 39 which is the technical name for a priest in the Mysteries of Serapis.40 quotes the Pagan sage Aratus, who had lived in Tarsus several centuries earlier, describing God " in whom we live, and move, and have our being. " 41 He also teaches Mystery doctrines. " 42 Like the Pagan sage Socrates, who was deemed wise because he knew he knew nothing,43 teaches: If someone thinks he knows something, he still doesn't know the way he ought to know. 44 Just as Plato had written that we now only see reality " through a glass dimly, " 45 so writes, " For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face. " 46 This famous passage from has also been translated: At present all we see is the baffling reflection of reality; we are like men looking at a landscape in a small mirror. The time will come when we shall see reality whole and face to face.47 This translation clearly brings out the Platonic nature of 's teachings. Plato had used the image of prisoners trapped in a cave who are only able to see the shadows of the outside world cast on the cave walls as an allegory for our present condition of mistaking for real what is in fact only a reflection of ultimate reality.48 For Plato, as for , " At present all we see is the baffling reflection of reality. " Plato teaches that philosophers are those who are released from the cave to go outside and see the reality of the dazzling light of day for themselves- " face to face. " This phrase is a ritual formula of the Pagan Mysteries. In The Bacchae we read: " He gave these Mysteries to me face to face. " 49 Lucius Apuleius writes of his initiation: " I penetrated into the very presence of the gods below and the gods above, where I worshiped face to face. " 50 Martyr acknowledges that: " The aim of Platonism is to see God face to face. " 51 Plato describes how in the temple of the " true earth, " which exists in the realm of ideas of which this Earth is a mere image, " Communion with the gods occurs face to face. " 52 Why Philo and St. ? Because these are ~contemporaries of Christ. philo 25 bce - 50 ce paul 3 bce - 65 ce 1st Century ce: The diversity. Yet we look back, sorting people in pigeon holes that didn't yet exist. What I'm showing is the RANGE shown in that link to that history essay, a perspective enormously important in seeing that in Christ's time, not only was there no mass / well defined single movement of Christians, but this was also true of Jews. Philo and illustrate the range of what happened in the Diaspora. " The Jesus Mysteries Thesis proposed that the Jews had created their own version of the ancient Mysteries with Jesus as their Osiris-Dionysus. How could this have happened? The traditional history paints a picture of the Jews as an insular people, separate and distinct from the other Mediterranean cultures, staunchly nationalistic and fanatically devoted to their religion, fiercely loyal to their one god Jehovah and entirely hostile to the Paganism of their neighbors. From this perspective, the idea that the Jews could possibly have adopted the Pagan Mysteries seems unthinkable. And so it would be, if any of this were true. " Freke & Gandy, Jesus Mysteries Eyes have to open to see. That old dark glass still with us. x's deborah The inspired speech of myth begotten of the Daimon reveals that the world is the theater of the periodic revolution of soul Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2004 Report Share Posted April 25, 2004 I'm sure my response is out of context to what was being discussed on JF. I was really responding to the importance of the concept of daemons and geniuses. Why? Because those who hold scripture as the word of God must claim God speaks through the writer. Who decides when it's really God? The assemblers of the Bible, the Canon, gave that power to themselves: the Church. What is the Church? Who decides that, who decides true, false? Once this sort of rationalization begins, it never ends. God is good, yet Job. Questions of philosophy. Paradox. Thus Augustine and the hordes of scholars addressing the problem of Evil. The assigning of blame, the story of Lucifer. The Devil is a major player in this religion, as important as the deity. And now in our time, the concept of Evil is used to galvanize a modern Holy War. Making a devil, jinn, angel, genius a real, living, and / or alien force within one's consciousness is a powerful form of control. It's what Jung addresses, and why Jung is so dangerous to Fundamentalism. It's also why we try to sense, understand (a great old word), disrobe, de-veil, and work so hard to come to terms with archetype. .... man derives his human personality only secondarily from what the myths call his descent from the gods and heroes; or, to put it in psychological terms, his consciousness of himself as a personality derives primarily from the influence of quasi-personal archetypes. ~CGJUNG, in CW5, SYMBOLS OF TRANSFORMATION The other issue is the history, the period that scripture was created from and in. There's a movement with Historians at the moment to place in a firm Jewish tradition. Fine. So *what was that tradition in his time?* What did it mean to be a Jew? Many many things at this time. http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2004/2004-7.html And if is firmly placed in some argument that results inevitably in the ultimate Messiah Jesus, why is it that we have firm evidence of his letters being doctored, sometimes even reversing what he was saying. Only 7 of his New Testament letters are not considered forgeries. Moreover, why does Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha attributed to him place him so firmly in mystical magical traditions? As does the logic of his history. Why was he claimed later as the leader of Gnostics in other texts? That's the leap of faith I'm making, skipping entirely the arguments for scripture itself. Scripture is the centerpiece of Fundamentalism, after all. And the concepts of Daemons, the modes of transmission of information from a Deity, is the axis it all spins around. LONG ago I read CS's Mere Christianity. I disagreed with him somewhere in the first 10 pages. He could go on forever--which he does--but he does it without me. Influence re the Diaspora discussed in Freke and Gandy's Jesus Mysteries: If we can throw off the traditional picture of and look at the evidence with an open mind this anti- rhetoric is understandable, since his letters show distinct Gnostic and Pagan influences. is a Jew who had embraced the ubiquitous Greek culture of the times. He writes in Greek, his first language. He quotes only from the Greek version of the Old Testament. His ministry is to Pagan cities dominated by Greek culture.32 Of these, Antioch was the center for the Mysteries of Adonis, Ephesus was a center for the Mysteries of Attis, and Corinth was a center for the Mysteries of Dionysus.33 was a native of Tarsus in Asia Minor, which by his time had surpassed even Athens and andria to become the major center of Pagan philosophy.3 " It was in Tarsus that the Mysteries of Mithras had originated, so it would have been unthinkable that would have been unaware of the remarkable sim ilarities we have already explored between Christian doctrines and the teachings of Mithraism.35 frequently uses terms and phrases from the Pagan Mysteries, such as pneuma (spirit), gnosis (divine knowledge), doxa (glory), sophia (wisdom), teleioi (the initiated), and so on.3 " He advises his followers to " earnestly seek cater charismata. " 37 The word " charismata " derives from the Mystery rnakarismos, referring to the blessed nature of one who has seen the mysteries.38 He even calls himself a " Steward of the Mysteries of God, " 39 which is the technical name for a priest in the Mysteries of Serapis.40 quotes the Pagan sage Aratus, who had lived in Tarsus several centuries earlier, describing God " in whom we live, and move, and have our being. " 41 He also teaches Mystery doctrines. " 42 Like the Pagan sage Socrates, who was deemed wise because he knew he knew nothing,43 teaches: If someone thinks he knows something, he still doesn't know the way he ought to know. 44 Just as Plato had written that we now only see reality " through a glass dimly, " 45 so writes, " For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face. " 46 This famous passage from has also been translated: At present all we see is the baffling reflection of reality; we are like men looking at a landscape in a small mirror. The time will come when we shall see reality whole and face to face.47 This translation clearly brings out the Platonic nature of 's teachings. Plato had used the image of prisoners trapped in a cave who are only able to see the shadows of the outside world cast on the cave walls as an allegory for our present condition of mistaking for real what is in fact only a reflection of ultimate reality.48 For Plato, as for , " At present all we see is the baffling reflection of reality. " Plato teaches that philosophers are those who are released from the cave to go outside and see the reality of the dazzling light of day for themselves— " face to face. " This phrase is a ritual formula of the Pagan Mysteries. In The Bacchae we read: " He gave these Mysteries to me face to face. " 49 Lucius Apuleius writes of his initiation: " I penetrated into the very presence of the gods below and the gods above, where I worshiped face to face. " 50 Martyr acknowledges that: " The aim of Platonism is to see God face to face. " 51 Plato describes how in the temple of the " true earth, " which exists in the realm of ideas of which this Earth is a mere image, " Communion with the gods occurs face to face. " 52 Why Philo and St. ? Because these are ~contemporaries of Christ. philo 25 bce - 50 ce paul 3 bce - 65 ce 1st Century ce: The diversity. Yet we look back, sorting people in pigeon holes that didn't yet exist. What I'm showing is the RANGE shown in that link to that history essay, a perspective enormously important in seeing that in Christ's time, not only was there no mass / well defined single movement of Christians, but this was also true of Jews. Philo and illustrate the range of what happened in the Diaspora. " The Jesus Mysteries Thesis proposed that the Jews had created their own version of the ancient Mysteries with Jesus as their Osiris- Dionysus. How could this have happened? The traditional history paints a picture of the Jews as an insular people, separate and distinct from the other Mediterranean cultures, staunchly nationalistic and fanatically devoted to their religion, fiercely loyal to their one god Jehovah and entirely hostile to the Paganism of their neighbors. From this perspective, the idea that the Jews could possibly have adopted the Pagan Mysteries seems unthinkable. And so it would be, if any of this were true. " Freke & Gandy, Jesus Mysteries Eyes have to open to see. That old dark glass still with us. x's deborah The inspired speech of myth begotten of the Daimon reveals that the world is the theater of the periodic revolution of soul Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 27, 2004 Report Share Posted April 27, 2004 >>So good to " see " your voice again on JF again.>> Dear old Greg. >>I hope you won't mind my passing along your recent post to Tim Freke, writer of THE JESUS MYSTERIES. He'll be coming here to KC in early June (and staying with us) for a lecture entitled: FROM ANCIENT GNOSIS TO " HIP " GNOSIS Wish you were here to join us.>> Wouldn't I love to be there. (He lives in Glastonbury, I see. Glastonbury East. !) Thank you so much, yes. I'd be really interested in his thoughts. The genius - daemon concepts, so forgotten, glossed over, mutated, (spindled, folded, and generally mutilated), yet so important, not to mention fascinating. I remember somewhere in Nag Hammadi a ref to what sounds very like the genius' natal star influence. I'll look for it. Jung would have known it immediately. >> I'm sure he'll be heartened to see how his books are stimulating such wonderful contributions as yours here. If he has a comment, I'll share it with the list. I know he and Gandy are working on a new book so he may be too preoccupied to answer soon.>> What a great job they've done, and exactly now when it's so needed. With Historians, it's the view. Somehow, though, it never gets beyond to the public. So much being lost forever in Iraq, other sites flooded over. But to see the reality behind the evidence we DO have... it's critical at this time when, as you say, a literalist fundamentalism has so much power. I have some links and perspective on the passion here: http://jungcircle.com/muse/lettersclarissa.html (bottom third of page.) >>All the best dear friend; we miss you back on the plains! Big hugs, Greg>> Big hugs back at you, you were always so good to us. (But that's you.) Please go commune a moment with the Caravaggio and the many Three Graces there at -Atkins for me. They have a number of Assyrian Genus figures there. You see them when you first go in. (Always wanted Phoebe to see this exhibit.) http://www.echoesofeternity.umkc.edu/ great Egypt site: http://www.nelson-atkins.org/eternalegypt/default.htm x's deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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