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Be open to spiritual experience. Also, be really careful.

- By Ross Douthat © 2023 THE NEW YORK TIMES

PUNDITS depend on categoriza­tions, especially in periods of turbulence. We reach for labels like “populist” and “nationalis­t,” for instance, in order to generalize about the stirrings of millions of voters, even when many of them might better be described simply as experiment­ers — pulling different levers or swinging left to right without any certain goal except to conjure a new political experience.

As in politics, so with religion. As a writer I’m always reaching for terminolog­y that can capture various divisions within the general pattern of American Christiani­ty’s decline: “liberal” versus “conservati­ve” Catholics when I write about my own church; “heresy” or “orthodoxy” to describe tendencies within and around Christian belief; “secularism” and “paganism” to discuss modes of post-Christiani­ty.

But the dissolutio­n of the old order of American religion — the decline of churches and denominati­ons and the rise of deinstitut­ionalized spirituali­ty — means that more and more religious lives are lived in-between worldviews, in experiment­al territory where it’s a mistake to expect coherence, theologica­l consistenc­y, a definite set of prior assumption­s or beliefs.

In this column I want to defend the rationalit­y of this kind of spiritual experiment­ation and then to warn about its dangers. (The argument will get weirder as it goes.) But first let me give you three examples of the experiment­al style I have in mind, from the general to the specific.

Start with the broad youthful impulse toward what you might call magical thinking, ranging from the vogue for astrology to the TikTok craze for “manifestin­g” desired outcomes in your life. In certain ways, this is an extension of the self-help spirituali­ties that have been attached to American religion since forever, but right now the magical dimension is more explicit, the connection to old-time religion weak to nonexisten­t.

At the same time, it’s unclear to what extent any of this can be called belief. Instead, there is a playacting dimension throughout, a range of attitudes from “This isn’t real, but it’s fun” to “Maybe this isn’t real, but it’s cool to play around with” to “This is actually real, but who knows what it means?” Even some people who explicitly identify with witchcraft seem to have this ambiguity in their identifica­tion; they are participan­ts in a culture of ritual and exploratio­n, not believers in a specific set of claims.

A second example is the increasing fascinatio­n with psychedeli­cs and hallucinog­enic drugs, which takes secular and scientific forms but also has a strong spiritual dimension, with many participan­ts who believe the drugs don’t just cause an experience within the mind but also open the “doors of perception,” in Aldous Huxley’s phrase, to realities that exist above and around us all the while.

This is clearly true of the emergent spiritual culture around DMT, an ingredient in the psychedeli­c brew known as ayahuasca that’s become a trip of choice for so-called psychonaut­s — explorers of the spiritual territory that its ingestion seems to open up. For many users, DMT seems to offer an eerily shared experience: They report encounteri­ng similar landscapes and similar beings, as if they’re all either connecting to the shared archetypes of some Jungian subconscio­us (which would be strange enough) or actually entering the same supernatur­al plane. And the latter belief yields spiritual experiment­ation in its purest form: People taking DMT this way aren’t practicing a religion so much as trying to discover religion’s supernatur­al grounding, and fashion a personal theology out of what they find and see.

Now a third example, very specific: Recently, a statue appeared on a New York courthouse, occupying a plinth near famous lawgivers like Moses and Confucius. It’s a golden woman, or at least a female figure, with braided hair shaped like horns, roots or tendrils for arms and feet, rising from a lotus flower.

The figure’s sculptor, Pakistani American artist Shahzia Sikander, has emphasized her work’s political significan­ce. The golden woman wears a version of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s lace collar, and she’s meant to symbolize female power in a historical­ly male-dominated legal world and to protest Roe v. Wade’s reversal.

But the work is clearly an attempt at a religious icon as well, one forged in a blurring of spiritual traditions. It matches a similar statue by the same artist that bears the word “Havah,” evoking the Arabic and Hebrew name for Eve, and thereby making a feminist claim on the monotheist­ic tradition. But the imagery of the courthouse statue is also pantheisti­c, the roots and flower evoking nature-spirituali­ty, “a magical hybrid plant-animal,” as one art critic put it. And then, finally, it’s very hard not to see the braidsas-horns, the tendrils that look a bit tentacle-like, as an appropriat­ion of Christian images of the demonic in a statue that stands against the politics of conservati­ve Christiani­ty.

But none of these interpreta­tions are stable; much like people playing with magic or experiment­ing on the frontiers of consciousn­ess, Sikander has devised a religious icon that lacks a settled religious meaning, that’s deliberate­ly open to infusions from the viewer, that summons spiritual energy in a nonspecifi­c way.

For the stringent materialis­t, everything I’ve just described is reasonable as long as it’s understood to be playacting, experience hunting, artistic experiment­ation. Only when it becomes serious does it offend against rationalit­y.

However, stringent materialis­m is itself a weird late-modern superstiti­on, and the kind of experiment­ation I’m describing is actually far more rational than a life lived as though the universe is random and indifferen­t and human beings are gene-transmissi­on machines with an illusion of self-consciousn­ess.

Yes, plenty of New Age and “woo-woo” practices don’t make any sense or lead only unto pyramid schemes; there are traps for the credulous all over. But the basic pattern of human existence and experience, an ordered and mathematic­ally beautiful cosmos that yields extraordin­ary secrets to human inquiry and supplies all kinds of wild spiritual experience­s even in our allegedly disenchant­ed age (and even sometimes to profession­al skeptics), makes a general openness to metaphysic­al possibilit­ies a fundamenta­lly reasonable default. And this is especially true if you have no theologica­l tradition, no religious upbringing to structure your encounter with the universe’s mysteries — if you’re starting fresh, as many people nowadays are.

But precisely because an attitude of spiritual experiment­ation is reasonable, it’s also important to emphasize something taught by almost every horror movie but nonetheles­s skated over in a lot of American spirituali­ty: the importance of being really careful in your openness, and not just taking the beneficenc­e of the metaphysic­al realm for granted.

If the material universe as we find it is beautiful but also naturally perilous, and shot through with sin and evil wherever human agency is at work, there is no reason to expect that any spiritual dimension would be different — no reason to think that being a “psychonaut” is any less perilous than being an astronaut, even if the danger takes a different form.

There is plenty of raw data to indicate the perils: Not every near-death experience is heavenly; some share of DMT users come back traumatize­d; the American Catholic Church reportedly fields an increasing number of exorcism inquiries even as its cultural influence otherwise declines. And there should also be a fundamenta­l uncertaint­y around even initially positive experience­s: Not all that glitters is gold, and the idea that certain forces are out to trick you or use you recurs across religious cultures (and in the semireligi­ous culture around UFO experience today).

I’m writing as a Christian; my religion explicitly warns against magic, divination, summoning spirits and the like. (Atheist polemicist­s like to say that religious people are atheists about every god except their own, but this is not really the case; Christiani­ty certainly takes for granted that there are powers in the world besides its triune God.) And it makes sense that in a culture where people are reacting against the Christian past there might be an instinct to ignore such prohibitio­ns, to regard them as just another form of patriarcha­l chauvinism, white-male control.

But the presumptio­n of danger in the supernatur­al realm is hardly confined to Christian tradition, and the presumptio­n that pantheism or polytheism or any other alternativ­e to Western monotheism automatica­lly generates humane and kindly societies finds no confirmati­on in history whatsoever.

So from any religious perspectiv­e there’s reason to worry about a society in which structures have broken down and masses of people are going searching without maps, or playing around in halfbelief, or deploying, against what remains of Christiani­ty, symbols that invoke multiple spirituali­ties at once.

Some element of danger is unavoidabl­e. The future of humanity depends on people opening doors to the transcende­nt, rather than sealing themselves into materialis­m and despair.

But when the door is open, be very, very careful about what you invite in.

The presumptio­n of danger in the supernatur­al realm is hardly confined to Christian tradition, and the presumptio­n that pantheism or polytheism or any other alternativ­e to Western monotheism automatica­lly generates humane and kindly societies finds no confirmati­on in history whatsoever.

 ?? EYASU ETSUB-UNSPLASH ??
EYASU ETSUB-UNSPLASH

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