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C. G. Jung and
Numinosity
Copyright © 2008, Michael W. Clark,
Ph.D. All
rights
reserved.
Introduction
This essay was written during a
formative period as a graduate student in the department of Religious Studies at
the University of Ottawa, Canada. Submitted in August 1994, my thinking has matured since that time. I post it here, however,
(with some minor editing) for its sound coverage of Jung's ideas and also for several interesting asides. When citing this essay please use one of the
standard citation
styles for online sources.
—Michael Clark,
November 2 2006
In
the Beginning...God said, "Let there be light"
~Genesis 1-3
This paper will outline the
significance of numinosity in C. G. Jung's analytical psychology and, by
implication, its relevance for those who may be termed, 'persons of numinosity.'
It will be suggested, ala Jung, that both the positive and negative aspects of
numinosity may be potentially useful for human psychological and spiritual
development. Last, Jung's stance on inflation and numinosity will be applied and
contrasted to the Christian - especially Catholic - view of numinosity as
spiritual influence.
* * *
Jung's use of numinosity is modified from its
long standing roots in the etymological tree. According to The Encyclopedia of
Religion,(1) Numinosity is adapted from the Latin term numen, based on the
Indo-European root neu-, from which the similar Greek term, neuma, arose.(2)
Numen is further derived from the verbs adnuere and abnuere which respectively
translate to "agree with a nod of the head" and "refuse with a nod in the head;"
the term therefore has encoded within its linguistic past a dual meaning which
as we shall see, is reflected in Jung's definition of numinosity.
Before we look at Jung, however, mention of the
German scholar, Rudolf Otto, is essential. Otto popularized the term numinosity*(3)
[fn* A similar form was used by philosopher Immanuel Kant (see endnote 3)] in
his 'classic'(4) The Idea of the Holy,(5) which bears the test of time perhaps
partly due to Otto's travels in the Asian subcontinent and his knowledge of
Sanskrit, the language which Indian scholars claim is phonetically suited to
communicate the experience of the numinous.(6) As a Lutheran interested in the
mystical aspects of Martin Luther's life, however, Otto reveals a distinct bias
for his own tradition; while for Otto the Judeo-Christian tradition contains a
mature, "supreme and unparalleled"(7) form of religious mysticism, he suggests
experience of the numinous may not be confined to it.
In defining numinosity, Otto designates it as
an actual and powerful aspect of religion. That is, unlike his French
contemporary, Emile Durkheim,(8) who saw religious experience as a fundamentally
biological, emotional "effervescence" generated by socio-religious rites and
rituals,(9) Otto terms the numinous in the converse--not in the Durkheimian
'below to above' (essential 'ground of being' resting in the physical, empirical
world), but in an 'above to below' mode (essential ground in a non-physical,
supramundane locus or loci). This "science/religion" dichotomy,(10) initiated
perhaps at the dawn of human history,(11) is continued throughout social and
intellectual history and remains today with diverse paradigms and systems of
approach co-existing - often uneasily - within the international political,
denominational, and pedagogical spheres: i.e. in the overall societal scene.(12)
For Otto, the numinous does not replace, but
supplements and vivifies the socio-structures of religion. Otto describes the
numinous as an awe-filled encounter with ultimate reality (UR).(13) UR is
designated by Otto as a mysterium tremendum(14) and a majestus(15) as it is
experienced as a powerful sentient force, worthy of utmost respect. It inspires
not only awe, but also fear. While the subject is urgently attracted to this
ineffable source of creation, it may in some instances frighten, humble and
'purify.' Otto also notes subjects may perceive some sense of creaturely
wretchedness and unworthiness, standing naked, as it were, in the face of a
great and powerful, "wholly other"(16) UR-Creator-God.(17)
This is Otto's version of UR as found within
Christianity. The numinous, however, may take an 'inferior,' 'dark' form; for
Otto, this is found in other religious systems and in pantheism.(18) The human
psychological experience of the presence of a 'lesser' pagan god may translate
into an impressive instance of numinosity, but not necessarily equal in
character and quality to the Christian variety.(19) This rather basic
distinction of Otto's is important, for Jung too makes a somewhat elementary
distinction between types of numinosity, and like Otto, he too displays what I
shall term a 'Christocentric' preference.
Jung's concept of numinosity is essential to
the dynamic of change and growth within his model of the Self.(20) According to
Jung, through what he metaphorically describes as an 'alchemical'(21) process,
the Self undergoes something akin to the ordeal of a lobster, or the
dismemberment of Osiris--it 'dies,' 'cooks,' 'boils,' is torn apart, and yet
through numinosity it is also properly cooked or reconfigured; in psychological
parlance, it is restored to a new and balanced sense of life--what Jung terms
'wholeness.'(22) Jung adapts Otto's definition of numinosity to refer to
unusual, non-ordinary or heightened modes of psychological awareness. To fully
understand Jung's development of the term numinosity, however, we must briefly
look at his notion of the archetype.(23)
The archetype acts as an underlying organizing
principle where constellations of collectively unconscious libido(24) impulses
are rendered into recognizable and meaningful gestalts to be grasped by the
human ego. According to Jung
Archetypes, so far as we can observe and
experience them at all, manifest themselves only through their ability to
organize images and ideas, and this will always be an unconscious process
which cannot be detected until afterward.(25)
Jung differentiates the archetypal image from
the archetype itself by suggesting the archetype proper is never amenable to
representation(26) and cannot reach ego consciousness.(27) The diverse 'crystal
lattice' structures of the archetypes are represented through various archetypal
images and ideas.(28) These imagos are expressed in art, architecture, religion
- i.e, human civilization - and are individually experienced either in dream or
waking consciousness with corresponding 'feeling values.' It is these feeling
values which may take the form of the 'numinous.'
For Jung, the precipitating object of
numinosity may be externally or inwardly perceived stimuli. In the latter, the
object is not immediately subject to verification through observable
consensus.(29)
The numinosum is either a quality belonging
to a visible object or the influence of an invisible presence that causes a
peculiar alteration of consciousness.(30)
Thus not perceptible in itself, one of the
hallmarks of the archetype's influence on the ego is numinosity.
Numinosity from archetypal experience may
appear simply destructive, but if properly guided through the analytical, or
some other functional process, it aids the individuation process of the Self.
Success for, and the uniquely individual outcome of, individuation depends on
many factors. One's cultural location - to include gender, ethnic, and
socio-economic status - to a large extent influences the optimal relation
between the numinous and the ego.(31)
For Westerners, then, if regulated and made
conscious by the ego, Jung says archetypal numinosity is enriching; on the
negative side, it may invoke regression or a host of other psychological
maladies.(32) Concerning one of these, Jungian inflation, I would like to
elaborate on its relation to numinosity. For this, Jung's account of inflation
is useful:
An inflated consciousness is always
egocentric and conscious of nothing but its own existence. It is incapable
of learning from the past, incapable of understanding contemporary events,
and incapable of drawing right conclusions about the future. It is
hypnotized by itself and therefore cannot be argued with...inflation is a
regression of consciousness into unconsciousness(33)
Elsewhere(34) I have noted the monumental role
the ego plays in mediating the various internal and external demands of the
psyche/world continuum as postulated by Jung's theory. While inflation
represents one of the dangers involved in the individuation process, Jung says
it should not be confused with conscious self-aggrandizement.(35) Inflation is
entirely hidden and unconscious. The distinguishing feature is the subject's
ability or inability to "discriminate" between conscious and unconscious
contents, which for Jung is the "sin qua non of all consciousness."(36)
In comparison with the Christian aspiring
towards the ideal of perfection instead of completeness, in this instance the
power of discrimination does not vanish; it is, however, altered and renamed.
Discrimination becomes 'discernment' ("the gift for judging spirits")(37) and
instead of 'discriminating' between consciousness and unconsciousness, certain
sectors of Christian faith(38) contend the ego 'discerns' between things good
(of God) and evil (of Satan). This discernment ideally takes place both within
one's own self and towards other selves. That is, the true discerner recognizes
the influence of evil spirits within her or his own consciousness and has also
been given the ability to recognize this dynamic in others.(39)
Unfortunately this monochromatic world view is
contradicted within both the parameters of Christianity in general, and
Catholicism in particular. The Anglican, Baptist, Pentecostal, Presbyterian and
United Churches disagree on key and fundamental issues - for example the role of
women, lesbians/dikes, and gays/queers(40) in the "good vs. evil" diad - and the
Catholic Church which claims legitimate authority to deliver a chosen portion of
individuals to salvation through discernment itself lacks integration, and
despite its newly released catechism, is rife with internal disagreement,
sometimes taking the form of protectionism and other
alleged issues.(41)
The official Papal response to such failings
asserts that faulty praxis does not invalidate infallible doctrine. That is, it
attempts to incorporate evil within the original premises of Catholicism, these
being reinforced by various 'church-verified' apparitional appearances said to
have emanated from Mary, the Madonna.* [fn* At Mudjegorje the apparitions but
not the messages are authorized by the church. The overall discourse,
nonetheless, is important to Catholic belief and practice]. In essence, these
alleged contemporary manifestations of Mary inform believers, "excuse me for
this, but you must realize that Satan exists"...this is "the hour of Satan."(42)
To summarize the discourse reportedly given to Mirjana Dragicevic at Medjugorje:
Lucifer went to God's throne and asked
permission to unleash his minions of evil - demons - throughout the Church
for one century [ours]. God granted his evil and fallen archangel such
license so as to submit the Church to a period of trial and to fulfil Old
and New Testament scripture for ultimately good reasons impossible to mortal
comprehension.(43)
Satan, Catholics(44) now believe, is present in
the Church. His evil influence makes the importance of discernment even greater
than before, where the church apparently could be relied on for 'good
counsel.'(45)
If Satan has just recently infiltrated the
church, internal myopia to the greed and horrors of the crusades, inquisitions
and political poisonings makes Jung and specifically, inflation, again relevant.
The Catholic discernment of evil spirits adhering to the true self is loosely
analogous to Jung's differentiation of the shadow from mature ego consciousness.
From Jung's standpoint, however, rather than being "wise like serpents and
harmless as doves,"(46) Catholics are the opposite. They are hypnotized by their
own unconsciousness, and their 'discernments' emerge from within the bounds of a
relatively small archetypal area--that is, they are unwittingly fixated in an
unconscious type and must view everything external from within the 'borders' and
highly intransigent, more or less rigid and largely inert rules and regulations
of that socio-psychological structure, or 'space.'(47) Interestingly, they
retain ego consciousness, but as Jung suggests, it seems limited and
un-whole,(48) at times discerning between 'good' and 'evil' on what from a
scholarly perspective seems not merely insipid, but unethical and perhaps even
clannishly destructive. Consider ex-journalist and Catholic Michael H. Brown's
lamentations concerning the influence of Satan in postwar popular culture:
Instead of Yoruba drums, we had movies, the
stereo, the television. One of the hit TV shows was called Bewitched.(49)
As exemplifying the careless - or perhaps
careful - selectivity of the Catholic approach, Brown overlooks the fact that
the Yoruba themselves distinguish between good and evil,(50) that stereos and
televisions may be used to further one's relation to a believed in God (for
surely that same Catholic-defined omniscient God directs all of creation), and
concerning Bewitched, he also overlooks the fact that the protagonist,
'Samantha,' was depicted as a good witch who declined to use her powers unless
absolutely necessary--usually as a countermeasure to her meddling Mother, Endora.(51)
While Judeo-Christian saints and wonder-workers with similar powers emphasise
personal humility, attributing all agency to God, Brown disregards the NT
statement of "ye are gods."(52) For the NT Son of God himself says the 'gods'
may act as he does--in the service of the creator-God.(53) Regarding the
possibility of miraculous abilities, Jung would contend such 'powers' originate
from an archetype.(54) In occidental societies that often misconstrue numinosity
as indicative of deviance, popular depictions of unearthly abilities - as in
Bewitched - could inspire personal and mass acceptance of the potentially
numinous aspects of psychological growth.*(55) [fn* See my graduate paper,
"Synchronicity: Carl Jung, Consciousness and Chance" for Dr. Naomi R. Goldenberg
at the University of Ottawa (April, 1994:10) re the temporary utility of
inflation for the traumatized personal unconscious. I would suggest that
personal complexes created in the childhood/family/significant-other spheres and
deposed to the 'personal' unconscious ultimately stem from both interpersonal
and collective-historical forces of human development. That is, a seemingly
personal cumulative trauma may be transmitted - unconsciously - to progeny,
throughout generations (studies of child molestation demonstrate a statistically
high percentage of repeated generational abuse. And if not physically repeated,
it may be psychologically)]
Concerning inflation, Jung links it to
numinosity when it evokes the experience of an archetype. Although rendered in a
philosophical-scientific code for acceptance for a primarily scientific
audience, Jung's "archetype" is alternately represented within other discursive
areas - both positively and negatively - by such competing terms as 'ghost'
'spirit,' 'god,' 'Devil,' and 'God,'(56) to note a just a few. And with Jung's
division of the archetypal 'image' from the 'archetype proper,' theological
philosophers such as St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Augustine likewise suggest that
'angels' manifest themselves in forms recognizable to humans, yet not in
accordance with their true unmanifest angelic character,(57) which is comparable
- but not identical -to Jung's description of the archetypal image--a numinous
psychological content which mediates a tension of opposites via the
'transcendent function,' leading the ego but never fully connecting it to the 'psychoid'
aspect of the archetype. However, Jung's recency does not instantly provide his
ideas a higher degree of accuracy over Aquinas' ideas, or any other so-called
'great' thought. This fallacy of chronological progress over linear time(58) is
often used to justify scholarly emphasis on "current thought" while valuable
insights from the past may be overlooked or simply and unknowingly reiterated.
At any rate, to close with a challenge to,
instead of a mere summary of, Jung's thoughts on numinosity, the Indian guru and
the Judeo-Christian nun, monk, saint, or religious/spiritually-minded lay-person
offer alternatives to Jung's view. Here a human individual is, as Max Weber puts
it, "empowered to distribute grace," and to some extent sanctified - and/or
rejected(59) - by others. In this interactive model, the Jungian shadow
contents, or in the Catholic sense, 'hindering spirits' and 'demons' are
transferred from the afflicted person to an apparently benevolent religious who
in the process of prayer, ritual and/or concentration on God (or some godly
manifestation of God) rids her or himself - and by implication, the first person
- of the evil and is propelled to a higher level of self-knowledge.(60) We could
imagine such a system of reciprocal yet upwardly sequential sanctification to
increase endlessly, or near endlessly up to the heavens (as the OT account of
Jacob's Ladder might be interpreted to indicate).(61)
A tentative parallel of this to Jungian thought
is found in his distinction between devouring (regressive or inflatory) and
nurturing (healing, purifying and/or humbling)(62) types of numinosity, and Jung
mentions, if in a comparatively underdeveloped way, the possibility of an
interactive, interpersonal dynamic to numinosity.(63) Yet while the
other-worldly theodicean doctrine of St. Irenaeus views 'necessary evil' as
something that propels believers towards an eternal afterlife in a paradisal
heaven, Jung suggests in a more worldly vein that if regulated, the entire
'alchemical' process of both devouring and nurturing archetypal numinosity is
conducive to individuation in this world. Moreover, while many Catholics(64)
might see the numinous influences of various archetypes as the workings of evil
gods, Jung suggests these 'lesser gods' may be integrated within his concept of
the Self as a psychic totality, consisting of the conjunctio oppositorium. As
Jung sees it:
On account of his sinlessness
Christ...lives in the Platonic realm of pure ideas whither only man's
thoughts can reach but not he himself in his totality.(65)
* * *
This brief survey of the various goals and
orientations of Jungian and religious models of the psyche will be developed in
subsequent work. The key, and it must be stressed, general difference, however,
seems to be an increased concern for one's afterlife status in most religious
models,(66) while Jung emphasizes this-worldly life, describing it as a possible
but unproved(67) precursor to other-worldly afterlife.
With his discussion on numinosity, Jung
continues the ongoing science vs. religion debate noted at the outset. As a
psychologist, he hopes to harness the psychological power and grace of the
numinous by appropriating philosophies and religions of antiquity. By so doing
he attempts to straddle positivist and mystical methodologies as most of his
cosmological data suggest a temporal, effete, earthly 'becoming' which
undergirds, supports,(68) or precedes finer afterlife realms of 'true
being.'(69) Thus claiming to use but extending positivism to the edge of the
ineffable, Jung echoes Plato's view on life as something of a 'preparation' for
death--that is, new life in an eternal world of Forms.(70)
Endnotes
1) The Encyclopedia of Religion, Vol. 11,
Mircea Eliade ed. (New York: Macmillan Pub. Co., 1987: 21-22, 178).
2) Daryl Sharp, C. G. Jung Lexicon (Toronto:
Inner City Books, 1991: 92).
3) Immanuel Kant's realm of the noumena is
ineffable in itself but 'practically' known by the "intelligible order of
things" in the world of phenomena. Immanuel Kant cited in Roger Scruton, A Short
History of Modern Philosophy: From Descartes to Wittgenstein (London: Ark
Paperbacks 1984: 157).
4) See endnote 20(a) and (b).
5) Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy, John W.
Harvey, trans. (London: Oxford University Press, 1973 (1923)).
6) Ibid., 192-193.
7) Ibid., 142.
8) Durkheim was the first Jew admitted to the
Catholic École Normal Superieure in France.
9) Originally a Jew, Durkheim converted to
Catholicism. In his theoretical work, however, he argued the 'science' of
sociology could justifiably describe religious and economic activity as 'social
facts.' See the discussion on 'totemism' in Emile Durkheim, The Elementary Forms
of the Religious Life, Joseph Ward Swain trans. (London: Allen & Unwin 1964).
10) P. D. Ouspensky suggests this split may be
traced to the 'Scholastic' philosophy of Aristotelian logic where truth was
approached by reasoning from "seemingly incontestable premises," vs. the "more
or less occult" approach of Platonic and Pythagorian schools apparently derived
from Egyptian philosophy (the 'Hermetic' philosophy founded by Hermes
Trismegistus). P. D. Ouspensky, A New Model of the Universe (New York: Vintage
Books, 1971 (1931): 196).
11) Perhaps cave-persons debated the relative
importance of sketching gods on cave walls versus tool-making and hunting.
Likely, the two were seen as intertwined--i.e. the 'god' represented on the wall
was also believed to inspire (via spiritual influence) technological inventions.
Whether or not the cave-persons saw it as such, or if this indeed was so, is
open to debate.
12) On the 'scientific' side of the spectrum,
current studies link specific types of numinous experience to physio-biological
alterations. Henry James, for example, notes a relationship between
neuroendocrine activity, emotion, and the religious archetype. He suggests early
family/social events engender biological "triggers" that internally enhance
psychological experience during such "sacred moments" as mother-infant bonding.
In the event of psychic trauma, access to emotions and archetypes [Jung
postulates these as biologically encoded] is inhibited. See Henry P. James,
"Religious Experience, Archetypes and the Neurophysiology of Emotions" Zygon,
1986 Mar Vol 21(1) 47-74 in PsycLIT Database, American Psychological Assn.
(1987). Disregarding the reference to archetypes, James' study may be partially
explained by Freudian theory. Freud, himself a neurologist, precursed the notion
of afferent and efferent neurons with his theory of defence mechanisms. For
Freud trauma blocks libidinal energy and in fact re-directs it to protect the
stricken area through the defence mechanism of repression or any one of the
various other types of defences which stem from and/or are elaborations of this
'master' mechanism. Notes from undergraduate course conducted by Dr. Donald
Carveth (York University: Fall, 1981). While Jung is often seen as
underemphasizing what he terms the personal unconscious, he does point out that
an undifferentiated personal unconscious will distort one's perceptions of an
essential archetypal purity, and potentially project the distortion onto objects
in one's surroundings. C. G. Jung, Alchemical Studies in The Collected Works of
C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire et al., trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series
XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954-79) Vol. 13, 348; and C.
G. Jung, in Sharp, Jung Lexicon, 104.
13) The term 'ultimate reality' is borrowed
from the Christian scholar, Joachim Wach, who separates religious from magical
experience: The former is a continuous (yet with intermittences) response to a
"powerful, comprehensive, shattering, and profound" experience of UR that must
simultaneously involve the hierarchical elements of intellect, affect, and
volition, and which leads to definite and imperative action, while the latter is
a mere series of "unconnected thrills." Interestingly, Wach's 'action' includes
contemplation, and in distinguishing this from slothful indifference, Wach notes
William James' pragmatism: "Our practice is the only sure evidence even to
ourselves, that we are genuinely Christians." In Joachim Wach, The Comparative
Study of Religions, Joseph M. Kitagawa ed. (New York: Columbia University Press,
1958: 31-35).
14) Otto, The Idea of the Holy, 12.
15) Ibid., 19.
16) Ibid., 25-27, 28.
17) Ibid., 8-49.
18) Ibid., 29, 31-33.
19) Ibid., 142.
20) (a) Various current publications on
numinosity seem to reinforce both Otto and, as we shall see, Jung's position.
This is impressive for both Otto and Jung, who could be seen as the 'Founding
Fathers' [see (b) below] for the discursive formulation of an apparently
non-discursive phenomenon. In comparing the near-death experience to the
numinosum, for instance, Sally Leighton argues a high degree of similarity.
Sally M. Leighton, "God and the God Image," Journal of Near-Death Studies, 1991
Sum Vol. 9(4) 233-246 in PsycLIT Database APA (1992). Likewise, in contrast to
the experience of artists, Paul Pruyser suggests aspects of the artistic process
may relate to the numinous element of religious experience, yet the latter
apparently has a unique and indivisible quality not found in the former. Paul W.
Pruyser, "Lessons from Art Theory for the Psychology of Religion," Journal for
the Scientific Study of Religion, 1976 Mar Vol. 15(1) 1-14 in PsycLIT Database
APA (1976). In this connection, William Henkin describes a personal
semi-conscious encounter with a numinous female figure which later fostered his
artistic creativity. William A. Henkin, "Two Non-Ordinary Experiences of Reality
and their Integration," Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, 1983 Vol. 15(2)
137-142 in PsycLIT Database APA (1985). From this it would seem the numinous
spawns creativity and not the converse. (b)Feminist scholars point out that most
intellectual and social history is written within a patriarchal context
(attributed to men, by men, from a male perspective), and does not credit novel
ideas to women by largely ignoring their contributions, persepectives, and
actual accounts (except a salient few, such as Joan of Arc).
21) Jung, The Collected Works, Vol. 8, 427-428.
22) Not to be confused with the Christian sense
of the term, wholeness. As described more fully in pp. 5-7, Christian
'wholeness' implies complete rejection of all 'evil' and the reception of a new
level of existential grace to be carried into afterlife, while Jung's term
advocates an at times volatile integration of 'good' and 'evil' to realistically
combat the pressures of earthly life, and to prevent the projection of one's
shadow onto others.
23) The three paragraphs following this note
have been modified from my unpublished graduate paper "Ego, Archetype and Self:
C. G. Jung and Modernity" for Dr. Naomi R. Goldenberg at the University of
Ottawa (May, 1993:2-3).
24) Jung's definition of libido has been
critically assessed in my unpublished paper, "Plumbing the Depths: Carl Jung,
Freud and Hinduism" for Dr. N. Goldenberg, Graduate Studies in Religious
Studies, University of Ottawa. Jung defines libido as: ...an energy value
which is able to communicate itself to any field of activity whatsoever, be it
power, hunger, hatred, sexuality, or religion, without ever being a specific
instinct. Jung, Symbols of Transformation in The Collected Works of C. G.
Jung, ed. William McGuire et al., trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series XX
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954-79) Vol. 5, 137.
25) Ibid, 231.
26) C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of
the Psyche in The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire et al.,
trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University
Press, 1954-79) Vol. 8, 214. Jung seems to overlook the fact that the words he
writes are a type of representation.
27) Ibid, 213. Granted Jung's formulation of
archetypal images and ideas, we must still ask: if the numinosity of the
archetypal image or idea originates from the archetype, is not the ego at least
dimly aware of that archetypal source which it `feels'?
28) Ibid, 214.
29) Jung claims to have to overcome the problem
of consensus by correlating a vast amount of what he interprets as analogous
dream and mythological material. As only a select few dreams were published, we
are impelled to trust he did indeed observe a great number of them. See Jung,
Psychology and Alchemy in The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire
et al., trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1954-79) Vol. 12, 46.
30) C. G. Jung, Psychology and Religion: West
and East in The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire et al.,
trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University
Press, 1954-79) Vol. 11, 7.
31) Ibid, 205.
32) C. G. Jung, Civilization in Transition in
The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire et al., trans. R. F. C.
Hull, Bollingen Series XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954-79)
Vol. 10, 237.
33) Jung, The Collected Works Vol. 12, 480-481.
34) Unpublished graduate paper "Ego, Archetype
and Self" (2, 9-10).
35) In a similar vein, Joseph Campbell argues
that cultural notions of God's (or gods') immanence may take the form of mythic
identification (ego absorbed by spirit), mythic inflation (spirit overcome by
aggrandized ego), mythic subordination (ego is instrument of spirit) or mythic
dissociation (ego has a 'relationship' with God). Whether or not the examples
Campbell provides to support these categories indeed reflect actual
social-historical conditions remains open to question. See Joseph Campbell, The
Masks of God: Oriental Mythology (New York: Penguin Books, 1962: 80, 101-107).
36) Jung, The Collected Works, Vol. 12,
480-481.
37) Michael H. Brown, Prayer of the Warrior
(Milford, OH: Faith Publishing Co., 1993: 193).
38) Michael Brown being an excellent example.
39) Compare to Jung's definition of 'demonism.'
As Jung contends: Demonism (synonomous with daemonomania=possession) denotes a
peculiar state of mind characterized by the fact that certain psychic contents,
the so-called complexes, take over the control of the total personality in place
of the ego, at least temporarily, to such a degree that the free will of the ego
is suspended. In certain of these states ego-consciousness is present, in others
it is eclipsed. C. G. Jung, The Symbolic Life in The Collected Works of C. G.
Jung, ed. William McGuire et al., trans. R. F. C. Hull, Bollingen Series XX
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954-79) Vol. 18, 648.
40) In citing 1 Corinthians 6:9,10 and Romans
1:26,27, Catholic writer Michael H. Brown views homosexuality as possession by a
contrasexual spirit or spirits. See Brown, Prayer, 180-186.
41) To the point of sheltering numerous priest
and brother child molesters from public notice and other
allegations. Brown, Prayer 129-131. We must remember that the only publicly verified allegations are
about sex abuse and sheltering offenders. All the rest outlined by Brown
in Prayer remain mere allegations strongly denied by the Vatican (Michael
Clark, November 2, 2008).
42) Brown, Prayer, 67-68.
43) Ibid.
44) My observations on "Catholics" are in part
from an ongoing participant observational study conducted for approximately 1
year, in both Ottawa and Toronto. This involved 'undercover' practice as a
pseudo Catholic (as far as Papally permitted for non-Catholics) and interviews
with several priests, the Vicar General of Ottawa, a current Cistercian monk, an
ex-Franciscan monk, and with various laity in bookstores, churches, and
devotional outlets.
45) A major 20th century and 'Church-approved'
mystic, Sister Mary Faustina Kowalska writes in the context of confession, now
re-termed reconciliation: "A priest who is not at peace with himself will not be
able to inspire peace in another soul." Sister Mary Faustina Kowalska, Divine
Mercy in My Soul: The Diary of the Servant of God Sister M. Faustina Kowalska
(Stockbridge, Mass.: Marian Press, 1987: 38). This rather heroic statement made
by a 1920's convent nun implies one should regulate the openness of one's
confidences in confession according to the purity of the priest--perhaps a
truism for secular individuals confiding amongst themselves. If uttered in the
medieval era, Faustina likely would have been branded as a witch, tortured by
trial, and executed for heresy, in accordance with legitimized church practice.
See Stuart Gordon, The Encyclopedia of Myths and Legends (London: Headline
House, 1993: 735-737).
46) Matt. 10:16
47) Jung, The Collected Works, Vol. 11,
109-200.
48) Ibid.
49) (a) Brown, Prayer 103. This type of
cultural and individual scapegoating is hardly unprecedented. See J. G. Frazer,
"The Transference of Evil," "The Public Expulsion of Evils" and "On Scapegoats
in General" in The Golden Bough, abridged (London: Papermac, 1987: 538-582).
50) Ulli Beier, ed. Yoruba Myths (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1980).
51) Endora embodies the Jungian 'trickster'
archetype: not evil, but mischievous ultimately to a good end.
52) John 10:34; Brown, Prayer, 149.
53) John, 10:34.
54) In less contemporary terms, Greek
pre-Socratics believed this power emanated from a 'god' (in the OT sense of
pagan 'gods') and operated in the service of a master deity, Zeus. This idea is
repeated in Virgil where various superhuman beings must inevitably "submit to
the divine will." Virgil, The Aeneid, Betty Radice and Robert Baldick eds. (Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1956: 133).
55) (a) Using abstract mathematics to argue the
limits of rationalistic materialism, Robin Robertson argues that common,
'physical reality' is no more nor less actual than common 'mystical realities.'
Robin Robertson. "Godel and Jung: The Twilight of Rational Consciousness?" in
Psychological Perspectives, Fall Vol. 18/2, 1987: 304-318 in PsycLIT Database
APA, 1988. (b) Jung defines the numinous as if it occurs rarely, yet seems to
imply its recurrence throughout his own and the life of his patients. See Daniel
Hoy, "Numinous Experience, Frequent or Rare?" in Journal of Analytical
Psychology, Jan. Vol. 28/1, 1983: 17-32 in PsycLIT Database APA, 1983.
56) Vera M. Buhrmann suggests occidental fear
of the numinous has lead to its general rejection, with acceptance only in
highly circumscribed social contexts--such as Jungian analysis. Vera M.
Buhrmann's "correspondence" to Daniel Hoy [see endnote 55 (b)] in Journal of
Analytical Psychology Jan: Vol. 29/1 1984:79-80 in PsycLIT Database APA, 1985.
57) See St. Thomas Aquinas, "Whether Angels
Assume Bodies" in The Basic Writings of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Anton C. Pegis ed.
(New York: Random House, 1945:493) where it is argued angels intercede via
imagination -Jung's archetypal image - or in bodily form. St. Augustine makes a
simpler distinction between angelic 'celestial' and 'earthly' bodies. St.
Augustine, On the Free Choice of the Will, Anna S. Benjamin and L. H. Hackstaff,
trans. (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merril Co., 1984:114).
58) See the discussion on temporality in my
unpublished graduate paper "Synchronicity: Carl Jung, Consciousness and Chance"
for Dr. Naomi R. Goldenberg, at the University of Ottawa (April, 1994:8).
59) (a) Weber notes in his treatment of
prophets that miraculous powers are said to originate from the godhead; the
socio-political system and the specific nature of the prophet, he contends,
determines their expression. See Max Weber, "The Prophet" and "Soteriology and
Types of Salvation" in The Sociology of Religion, Ephraim Fischoff, trans.
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1964 (1922):46-59, 184-206, 189). (b) Mircea Eliade notes
that Tungus shamans abandon their special vocation if not recognized nor
supported by their culture. He further notes that potential shamans usually
undergo a spiritual crisis marked by confusion; an experienced spiritual teacher
acts as guide towards the disciple's new supramundane vocation. See Mircea
Eliade, Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, trans. Willard R. Trask,
Bollingen Series LXVIII (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1964: 17, 33.
(c) The influence of greater socio-cultural evaluation of 'nonordinary
experience' is noted by Larry G. Peters, "The Tamang Shamanism of Nepal" in
Shamanism: An Expanded View of Reality, Shirley Nicholson, ed. (Wheaton, IL.:
Theosophical Publishing House, 1987: 166-167).
60) (a) In the case of the Shaman, s/he is
believed to 'travel' - while in inviolate trance - to an otherworld abode of
spirits to recover 'stolen' souls to the rightful bodies of afflicted
individuals. See Eliade, Shamanism, 309. (b) In discussion with two Catholic
monks and one Catholic religious layperson, they suggested one would receive
'evil' and 'human spirits' from other people, but ultimately benefit from the
process.
61) Here angels are described as "ascending and
descending." Gen. 28:12
62) C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections,
revised, ed. Aniela Jaffé, trans. Richard and Clara Winston (New York: Vintage
Books, 1961:154).
63) Jung says projected psychic facts may
influence others in a magical manner. See C. G. Jung, Alchemical Studies in The
Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. William McGuire et al., trans. R. F. C. Hull,
Bollingen Series XX (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954-79) Vol.
13, 24-25.
64) This is based on statements made in the
field of actual practice by lay, priestly and monastic Catholics in discussing
Jung and non-Catholic and non-Christian religions (See endnote 44). Opinions
varied, from non-Catholic 'otherness' representing or partially representing
Satan, to being highly acceptable; interestingly, the Cistercian Monastery in
Orangeville, Ontario, sells non-Catholic books, and the liason Monk-Priest
appreciated Japanese art and seemed to convey approval when informed I had lived
in India. Likewise, the Catholic monk Thomas Merton advocates the poetic
discourse of the Chinese philosopher Chaung Tzu (circa 300 B.C.) and expresses
kinship with other non-Catholics who find "something they vastly prefer in
solitude." The Way of Chuang Tzu, Thomas Merton, ed., secondary trans. (New
York: Penguin, 1965: 10).
65) Jung, The Collected Works, Vol. 11, 177.
Jung overlooks that Plato's 'pure ideas' exist on a wholly different ontological
level than imperfect 'human thoughts.' Likewise, Judeo-Christian scripture (and
most mystics of that tradition) claim heaven to be 'higher' than human thoughts.
See for instance, Isaiah 55:6-9.
66) Hindu and Judeo-Christian perspectives
contain 'this-worldly' elements: for example, Swami Vivekananda's 'Practical
Vedanta' and the Protestant emphasis on 'good works.' Believing Jehovah's
Witness anticipate an immortal physical, earth-bound life on the basis of OT
passages pertaining to inheritances of land "for ever and ever." Sam. 7:16, 1
Chron. 17:23-27. See Swami Vivekananda, Karma Yoga and Bhakti Yoga (New York:
Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center, 1955: 54-55), and Max Weber, The Protestant
Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Talcott Parsons, trans. (New York: Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1958:53-54, 108).
67) Elizabeth Kübler-Ross would disagree; she
claims to have studied 20,000 cases of people declared clinically dead and then
restored to life, and regards their testimonials as proof of an afterlife.
Regarding visions of dead friends and relatives she suggests: The only thing
that prevents...people from sharing their experience...is the incredible
tendency to label, to belittle, or to deny such stories when they make us
uncomfortable and don't fit into our own scientific or religious model.
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, On Life After Death (Berkeley: Celestial Arts, 1991: 9,
55-56).
68) Both Egyptian and Indian 'gods' reportedly
require human devotees to sustain their divine life. Frazer, The Golden Bough
52.
69) (a) A view proposed by Platonic, Christian,
and much 'New Age' discourse. Not to imply these to be identical, however. In
Orhpic and Homeric cosmologies, for instance, one goes to the abode of death in
much the same manner as he or she existed in earthly life (warriors take their
human form and even weapons) whereas in the NT the faithful believer is
transformed into something like an angel, "neither male nor female." See
Vittorio D. Macchioro, From Orpheus to Paul: A History of Orphism (New York:
Henry Holt & Co., 1930: 32-52); Matt. 22:30, Mark 12:25, Luke 20:36. (b) Jung
speaks of blissful "deliriums and visions" experienced while ill and likens
death to "stepping out of a tight shoe." See Jung, Memories, 289-298.
70) Jungian legend has it that as Jung died his
favourite tree in the garden at Küsnacht was struck by lightning, and on the day
before hearing of Jung's death his old friend Laurens van der Post dreamed Jung
waved to him and said 'I'll be seeing you.' Gordon, Encyclopedia of Myths, 385.
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