“A Prophetic Criticism of Great Religions
(pages 77 – 83)” From THE ALETHEON (Final
Ruchira-Sannyasin-Order-Authorized Edition) –
Author(s):
A PROPHETIC CRITICISM
OF GREAT RELIGIONS
The religious awareness and
experience of the Western world is
trapped within an archaic structure of myths, dogmas, and
irreducible social conflicts that no longer serve the right
religious and Spiritual process of humankind.
These myths, dogmas, and irreducible social conflicts are,
even now, being forcedly perpetuated by the large-scale
cultural, political, and economic dominance of the
religions of the ancient world.
Human beings themselves cannot awaken to the esoteric
process that fulfills their Spiritual heart-impulse until
the spell of mythological and ego-possessed thinking is
broken. And a unified, whole bodily culture of humankind, in
which East and West will realize a new cultural synthesis,
cannot take place until all the old religions
are submitted to the Principle of Truth Itselfor to
the Universal Principle of Prior Unity and the Intrinsically
egoless Transcendental Spiritual Principle (or Self-Nature,
Self-Condition, and Self-State) That Is Reality Itself. As a
matter of urgent necessity (for the sake of global
cooperative order and peace), it must be universally
accepted that every human being, and every collective human
manifestationand, thus, every
religionmust be always held subordinate
and accountable to the Self-Evident (and Universally
Self-Manifested) Truth That Is Reality Itself.
People tend to think of religion as a benign
influence on individual thought and behaviorand this
is, indeed, the case when the more benign aspects of
religious awareness and experience
begin to inform the thought and behavior of any individual.
Yet, in the context of the larger world of the
collective of all of humankind, religion is only
rarely found to be functioning on the basis of its benign
aspectsand, indeed, most characteristically, the
ego-based and even negative aspects of religion
are most apparent in the collective (and inherently
non-sectarian) larger world of
all-of-humankind-together. And, at large, it is certainly
the case that very few individuals become truly creative
personalities, mystics, Saints, or even reliably good men or
women as a result of their religious beliefs and
associations.
Religion is, in general, an exoteric cultic
phenomenon that controls the thought and behavior of
individuals through external and psychologically
manipulative techniques. Thus, the principal
religious phenomenon that is common in the
world at large is not true (or free)
religious awareness and benign behavioral habits
on the part of individuals. The principal phenomenon of
religion is all the separate and separative
institutions that contain and otherwise manipulate broad and
massive segments of the human population.
The primary institution within any religious
tradition is (itself) the religioninsofar
as any religion affects the world at
large. And large-scale (or great) institutional
religion isbecause of its
worldly public statusnot primarily a
benign power in human society. One has only to look at the
cultural and political conflicts in the total
world of today to see that the immense
institutions of ancient religion have now
become, for the most part, contentious, absolutist, and the
perennial sources of irreducible social conflicts. And
great religions characteristically are
established (and their power legitimized) by a
nearly indivisible union with the State (or the otherwise
secular national power). And the problematic nature of all
of this is made extreme by the immensity of these
great religious institutions, each of which
controls even many millions of people.
The power of the great traditional
religious institutions is, for the most part, a
worldly power. That is to say, these
institutions are actually political and broadly social
agencies that manipulate the political, social, and economic
motivations of the citizens of all nations. The only public
alternative is control of the people by exclusively secular
political institutions, which tend to suppress and exclude
not only religious institutions but also every
kind of benign religious (and, otherwise,
esoteric) awareness, experience, practice, and
associationand this pattern of enforced secularization
has also begun to spread to many areas of the Earth that
have, traditionally, been under the powerful influence of
religious institutions.
In the popular media of the present time, small,
non-establishment religious groups are often
(with negative and demonizing intent) called
cultsthus making such groups fair
game for hostile and suppressive commentaries.
Nevertheless, any religious (or, otherwise,
esoteric) group (or non-orthodox sect, or even
great religion) may appropriately be called a
cult, if the word cult is intended
simply to mean a system and a culture of devotion to a
particular subject. Therefore, all exoteric
religions and all esoteric sects (or cultural
entities) are cultsand to use the word
cult with bad intentions is nothing but a
power-game, whereby established cults (and the
agencies, within the larger society, which support the
dominance of the local established cults) make
suppressive efforts to subordinate, de-legitimize, and
exclude the non-established cults. Indeed, the
fact of the matter is that, in general,
non-establishment cults (or minority sects) are,
characteristically, oriented toward the promotion of a more
universal (or de-provincialized, and non-tribal,
and not at all bonded-to-the-State) form of the
religious (or, otherwise, esoteric) practice of
life. Truly, the worldly domain of the
establishment of so-called great
institutional religionsand not the small-scale
(and, especially, esoteric) domain of
non-establishment religions and otherwise sacred
institutionsrepresents the more direct and practical
threat to human development, and (ultimately) to the
communication of the Truth of Reality Itself.
Why is it that great religious institutions,
which seem to be founded on the greater human and cultural
persuasions, ultimately become the primary basis of social
conflict and even personal neurosis? The reason is that
great (or popular, and, necessarily,
public-oriented, and even State-bonded)
religious institutions are (because of their
orientation) obliged to include (and identify with, and even
to pander to) masses of immature people who have very little
will or capability for the practical personal and cultural
exercise of right religious or (otherwise)
Spiritual (or esoteric) life. As a result, the institutions
of great religion develop much like the
institutions of State develop under the same conditions of
universal human immaturityand, indeed, because of that
likeness, great religions (and even all
“establishment institutions) are, characteristically,
bonded to the State in which they are
established (and by which their public power is
legitimized). Thus, right religious practice
(or, otherwise, esotericism in general) characteristically
eschews mere popularism, and all subordination to
establishment cults, and all tendencies toward
the non-separation between religion and
State.
Every popular (or even great)
religious institution tendsexcept during
periods of renewal by living Adept-Realizersto become
more and more dogmatic, and, eventually, to become
irrevocably associated with fixed ideas that, in one manner
or another (and to one or another degree), deny the very
(and, necessarily, esoteric, recondite, and intensively
demanding) Truth relative to Which all religions
(and all mere ideas) are mere pointers. Likewise, the
fixed-mindedness of dogmatic popular religiosity
also tends to vigorously (and in a presumptuous
culturally superior manner) deny the
religious authenticity or religious
completeness of people who belong to other
religious institutions or cultures. The
conventional (or ego-based, and ordinary, or merely
public-oriented, and, therefore, less than Truth-oriented)
religious institution, like any other mortal (or
inherently threatened) entity in the world,
tends to become more and more centered in itselfand
more and more devoted (more or less exclusively) to its own
survival (and its own public power).
Conventional religious (or even esoteric)
institutions learn how to survive by serving and
manipulating a massive membership that is largely incapable
of right religious (or, otherwise, esoteric)
responsibility in practice. This is done by minimizing the
right religious (or, otherwise, esoteric) demand
for literal and personal conversion of mind and action, and
replacing that difficult demand with the easier
(less rigorous) and more secular demand for mere allegiance
to systems of myth, belief, ritual, dogma, and rote practice
of ego-supportive methods and ego-reinforcing
techniques. Thus, the condition for membership
in most institutions of great (or merely
public-oriented and society-bound) religion is
allegiance to fixed ideas and other outward (or superficial)
signs of belonging to the cultwhereas right
religious (or, otherwise, esoteric) practice is
founded on active conversion of body and mind to the Divine
Reality, and on the acceptance of behavioral disciplines
that (at the very least) make the individual an outwardly
benign (or socially self-restrained)
character.
Of course, great institutional
religions do recommend various social
morality attitudes, but the practice of
self-restraint is not made a condition of
membershipexcept, perhaps, in the case of a few
selected acts that are, often for absurd reasons, taboo.
Furthermore, institutionalized morality tends to
be associated with archaic, neurotic, and petty sexual and
social taboos, rather than with the truly human obligations
of ego-transcending love, service, and compassion. Likewise,
most religious institutions today have abandoned
the detailed (and even ancient) religious
disciplines associated with right
lifeincluding, for example, the ancient
recommendations relative to personal disciplines of a
healthful dietary nature, such as the obligation to avoid
meat or other killed food, impure food, toxic stimulants,
and so forth. And the esoteric and universal Spiritual
teachings that are the only real significance of
religion have been almost totally abandoned and
even lost by the non-esoteric orthodoxy of the
great religions.
In the conventional affair of popular
religion, the communication of rigorous demands
(and, also, of esoteric understanding and practice) is
avoided, because conventional religious
institutions are trying to survive (and, also, to achieve
or, otherwise, maintain public power) by acquiring and
maintaining massive memberships. Thus, conventional (or
popular, public-oriented) religion is promoted
and sold by hyped appeals to the non-discriminating mind of
Everyman.
In contrast to conventional popular religion,
esotericism is a superior human impulse, founded in
self-understanding and profound psycho-physical
conversion (or change). However, over time, it tends to be
more and more the case that only false and merely exoteric
(or popular, and public-oriented) religious
inventions are communicated by so-called great
religions. And, at last, not only is the esoteric
Truth and practice of the esoteric Way eliminated as the
core of religious instruction, but the survival
pressures of dogmatic popularism tend to make both Truth and
right practice unacceptable. Thus, over time, great
religions tend, in fact, to make right
religious practice secondary to
membershipand, likewise, great
(popular) religions (or cults of
dogmatic belief) tend to become the enemies of authentic
esotericism (or of the experiential knowledge
and the gnosis, or the tacit
knowledge-beyond-mind, that makes both mere
belief and mere ideas obsolete).
This was the situation that confronted Jesus of
Galileeand it was (and is) the situation confronted by
all prophets of right religious life and all
Realizers within esoteric schools and traditions.
Since actual and mature (and both true and right)
religious practice has been generally (or
popularly) replaced by outward adherence to false (or
deluding) exoteric beliefs and merely superficial behavioral
modifications, the true esoteric core of
religion has lost its use within the
great traditional cults that exist
today. The entire affair of traditional
religious institutions has become (in a sense)
dangerous, because such religious institutions
long ago abandoned the practice of making right
religious or (otherwise) esoteric participation
a condition of membership within the official
domain of popular religious institutions. If the
demand for authentic (or wholly true and right)
participation had, historically, been continued, the
institutions of religion that are now, as a
matter of convention, called great would likely
have remained small esoteric communities (if they survived
at all). However, the ancient religious
institutions chose gross survival and worldly
power, to the exclusion of Truthand, therefore, they
adapted to the world, rather than persist in the
demand that the world change itself.
Right religious (and even esoteric) practice
is a universal and (necessarily) ego-transcending
psycho-physical motivation of human beings. However, up to
the present stage in human history, only relatively few
individuals in any generation have been willing and able to
make the gesture that is such right practice. In their great
numbers, most people have, up to now, never yet been ready
or willing to adapt to the true (and progressive) practical,
moral, devotional, Spiritual, and Transcendental
Wisdom-culture of right life.
An authentic religious (or, otherwise,
esoteric) institution must be devoted entirely to both the
communication and the practice of religious (or,
otherwise, esoteric) Truth and the unrelenting demand for
right and always greater human transformation (and,
ultimately, Perfect Truth-Realization). Historically, only
relatively few people in any generation of humankind have
been interested in accepting that Truth-message!
An authentic religious (or, otherwise,
esoteric) institution must never subordinate itself or its
message to either the pattern and the demands of egoity
itself or to the stream of daily secular or
worldly society. Indeed, until humankind in
general is able to embrace right religious
practice (or, otherwise, to become Really Awake), right
religion (or, otherwise, right esotericism) must
remain largely prophetic in its function. That is to say,
right religion (or, otherwise, right
esotericism) must (even always) accept the role of critic
(and, thus, of the outsider) in the (public and
popular) worldand right
religion (or, otherwise, right esotericism) must
never become like the world (or function as an
insider within the world) in order
to become powerful and great in the
world.
<< Previous Section Next Section >>
© The Avataric Samrajya of Adidam Pty Ltd, as
trustee for The Avataric Samrajya of Adidam.
All rights reserved. Perpetual copyright claimed.
|