AVATAR ADI DA SAMRAJ:
Earlier today I was talking with a few people about their
childhood upbringing and the religious ideas of their childhood.
There is a common notion people associate with God, or the
Divine, and that they identify as a basic religious feeling
or concept. I described it as the feeling you may have that
even when you are alone there is Somebody Else in the room.
This notion is the antithesis of the point of view of real
Spiritual life.
Although I am speaking about God all the time, I am actually
making a different proposition, or Speaking from a "Point
of View" that is different from the conventional religious
one. Perhaps, by contrast, it could be said that this "Point
of View" is summarized in the notion that no matter how
many people are in the room there is still only One Person
there!
In general, discussions about God or religion tend to be
associated naively with this idea of the "Other"
Power, the "Other" One, which corresponds to a rather
childish or even infantile sense of reality. Children are
not in general great metaphysicians or great mystics. They
have some very primitive kinds of awareness as well as some
remarkable kinds of awareness, which adults tend to dismiss,
but when children communicate their feeling of God, they very
often express a feeling that has been dictated to them by
their parents. They naively describe reality according to
a child's psychology, that free, child-made awareness of the
total reality that is not natively associated with great,
abstract propositions.
It is not that children are free of mind, and therefore
their religious concepts are purer than those of adults. The
religious concepts to which a child can be sensitive and responsive
are generally built upon the psychology of his or her situation,
which is dependence on a parent or parents, particularly on
the mother. In the conventional parent-child relationship,
the parent is a great, experienced person there to protect
the smaller, vulnerable person. Such a relationship provides
the naive basis for childish religious views and for what
are commonly called "religious" views in general.
And the notion that you have of God, previous to or apart
from God-Realization Itself, generally is a carryover from
your childhood situation.
Therefore, religion tends to be a solution for a rather
infantile problem: the need to be protected, sustained, and
made to feel that everything is all right and that everything
is going to be all right, the need to feel that there is a
superior, Other Power that is in charge of everything.
When parents communicate to their children about God, they
generally speak of God as a kind of super-version of mommy
and daddy. When you speak to one another about your earliest
religious awareness (and it is more a kind of mental attitude
than it is an experience), you commonly talk to one another
in the terms of a child's model of reality. In fact, however,
to enter truly into the religious process you must transcend
the child's version of reality. To become human, to be an
adult, a mature human personality, you should have overcome
that childish view, but people commonly have not. Thus, to
the degree that people are religious, it is that portion of
themselves that is basically childish or infantile that is
being religious or that needs religion. The whole domain of
religion is commonly the domain of subhumanity, or of childishness
and adolescence, rather than real human maturity.
When someone "believes in" God, that person is
actually believing that everything outside him or her is epitomized
in some Person, Force, or Being that is not merely making
and controlling everything but that is in charge and is going
to protect everyone, and especially that this Other Person
will even help people to get the things they want if they
will enter into a special kind of relationship with that One.
Such a relationship is very similar to the relationship your
parents offered you: "Be good and we will love you and
protect you and give you the things you want."
Thus, popular religion is largely a cultural domain of social
morality wherein people are asked to behave in a fashion that
is called "good" in order to maintain a right association
with the parentlike God, so that they will be loved and protected
by that One and given the things they want, while they are
alive and after death. Religion is therefore largely an enterprise
of one's childhood, of the dependent, childish state.
When people become adults, however, they have more hard facts
to deal with in life. They feel much less protected than they
did as children in the household of their parents. Therefore,
they begin to question and to doubt the existence of this
Parental Deity. Such individuals may continue to be religious
in some sense, willing to play the game of social morality
and good behavior, but they carry on a rather adolescent relationship
of dependence-independence, or embrace-withdrawal, with this
God-Person.
Atheism is the ultimate form of denial of the Parental God.
Atheism is not founded on anyone's real experiences of the
ultimate facts of the universe. It is itself a kind of adolescent
development of the human species. What characterizes the dogma
of atheism is not a discovery that there is no God but a refusal
to acknowledge the Parental God of childish religion.
If such childish religion actually amounts to an experience
rather than just a state of mind, it could basically be defined
as a very primitive sense that invades all of your life but
that you feel most strongly in your solitariness, your individuality.
It is the sense that when you are alone — and you are
in some sense always alone, since you have a private destiny
— Somebody Else, the Great One, the Great Parent, is
always there. That One sees everything you do and represents
a Parental Will relative to what you do. That One wants you
to do certain things, wants you not to do other things, and
will presumably reward you if you do the things that It wants
you to do and punish you in various ways if you do not do
those things.
Out of this kind of Parent-Godism come all the traditions
associated with the notions of sin, or the valuation of events
not merely factually but in relation to the Parental Deity.
If something negative happens to you, it is generally regarded
as a Divinely given punishment or a result of your conventional
moral activity, or what you have done as a social personality.
If good things happen to you, they are presumed to be gifts
or rewards from the same Source.
Examine the point of view of conventional "downtown"
religion…
You must see that such religion basically corresponds to
the structure of notions I have just described, and it is
therefore primarily a development of the infantile state of
awareness and the original parent bond of childhood, and it
is complicated by the dissociative individuation that develops
in adolescence and that tends to characterize so-called adulthood
as well.
The Way of Adidam is not a development of this childish or
conventional religion. When I speak of God — and I also
use other terms than "God", but this is one of the
forms of reference I use — I am not speaking of this
Parental Deity. I have frequently had occasion to criticize
the childish manner of relating to such terms and to the whole
process of religion and Spiritual life.
I could compare the "Point of View" that I "Consider"
with you to this childish religious point of view by saying
that true religion is not founded in the primitive feeling
that even when you are alone there is always Someone Else
present. Rather, I describe the basis of true religion as
a mysterious experience or intuition that no matter how many
others are present, no matter how many people are present,
including yourself, no matter what is arising, there is only
One Reality, One "Self", One Condition. That One
is not "other". That One is not your parent. And,
in phenomenal and experiential terms, That One is not merely
devoted to rewarding and punishing you, supporting you and
protecting you. Rather, That One is manifested as all kinds
of phenomenal conditions, opposites, even contradictions.
You cannot account for That One in childish terms.
In fact, if you really examine the nature of conditional
Nature, or of phenomenal existence, there is no justification
for believing in the Parental Deity at all. I would say there
is zero justification for it. But this is for you to "consider".
Where is the justification for it? It is simply not true to
the facts of existence altogether that there is a great, omniscient,
omnipresent, omnipotent Being making everything happen, in
charge of everything happening and making things turn out
well for those who acknowledge that One and obey certain moral
principles. It is simply not so. It is not so that there is
such a Parental Deity controlling history, working out a great
plan for humanity, making a great revelation of Truth historically
once and for all, as is presumed of Jesus and other prophets
and great figures.
The Divine, or God, the One to be Realized, is not other
than your real Condition. That One transcends your personal,
conditional existence, but your conditional existence arises
in That One. All of this appearing here is a modification
of That One, a play upon That One. To Realize That One, you
must enter profoundly into the Divine Self-Position, but not
by means of the traditional method of inversion or of turning
attention inward, which is simply one of the ego-based solutions
to the presumed problem of existence.
That Which is to be Realized is in the Divine Self-Position.
And it is to be Realized not by appealing to Something outside
yourself or by entering into childish dependence on some great
Principle but by transcending the limits on the Divine Self-Position
and Realizing the Ultimate Potency of That in Which you inhere.
You do not become truly religious unless you truly reach
this understanding and awaken to its point of view. The Parental
God of childish religion cannot be proven. That One does not
exist. The struggle to prove the existence of such a One is
a false struggle. It is an expression of the common disease,
the problem-consciousness of threatened egoity. This does
not mean that people should all become like atheistic psychiatrists
and throw religion away — although on the basis of a
very intelligent "consideration" much of what is
called "religion" should be thrown away, because
it is just a consolation for rather childish egos. But there
is much more to true religion than what is contained in these
childish propositions. It is That Which goes beyond these
childish propositions that I Call you to "consider"
in the form of My Wisdom-Teaching and also in the evidence
of the Great Tradition, or the total global inheritance of
human culture.
There is the Great Being, the Great Divine Reality. There
is that Truth. And there is a Way of entering into the Realization
of That One. That Way requires great maturity, not childishness,
not adolescence, not egoity, and it involves the transcendence
of everything conventionally religious that is associated
with your childish and adolescent personality. You do not
enter into that Realization by appealing to the Other Power,
the objective Parental Deity outside you, as proposed by conventional
religion. The Way of Adidam does not even involve appeal to
that Great Other One in the form of mystical or subtle* objects
of any kind.
God is not the white-bearded Character of the Old Testament
myths (or, more precisely, of popular Judeo-Christian mythology),
but neither is God a kind of all-pervading Parentlike Essence.
God is not even present as a separate Personality in any exclusive
sense anywhere in cosmic Nature. Nor is God to be identified
with any subtle object in cosmic Nature, or with any of the
lights observable via mystical consciousness.
You only Realize and, therefore, ultimately prove the existence
of the One that is God by entering most profoundly into the
Divine Self-Position, the Domain of your True Existence, Is-ness,
Being Itself.
The God of conditional Nature, the "Creator-God",
cannot be proven, because that One does not exist as proposed.
But the Great God is Transcendental (and Inherently Spiritual)
and Exists in the Divine Self-Position. In other words, That
One exists at the level of your eternal Existence and not
at the level of the objects related to your conditional existence,
your manifested independence. This same One is also present
to you in the form of all others, all objects, all states
of conditional Nature — not as Other, but rather as
That One in Which you inhere.
That One is present as the Divinely Self-Realized Spiritual
Master, the human Transmitter of the Divine Being, but not
in any exclusive sense, not as the Holy Other but as That
Which Manifests the Power of the Divine Self-Position. That
One is Present as Spiritual Force, Transmitted through the
Spiritual Master's Spiritual Baptism and Good Company.
The purpose of your reception of My Spiritual Heart-Transmission,
therefore, is to lead you into the Realization of That Which
is in the Divine Self-Position. Its purpose is not to call
you to conform to an apparent Power outside yourself that
requires you to engage in activities very similar to the childish
social routines of conventional religiosity.
Thus, the Truth that is to be Realized may be summarized
simply as the Realization that no matter what is arising,
no matter how many others are present, there is only One Being.
This is precisely different from the childish proposition
that even when you are alone there is always Someone Else
present.
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