Two of them (Christmas and Easter) are widely known to all people, Christians and non-Christians.
The   third feast, Pentecost, officially taking place this year on 12 June  close to one of the longest total lunar eclipses (15 June 2011), is more   unfamiliar and even several believers do not know much about it.
Perhaps   this is because, unlike the other festivities, it does not involve   extra days of vacation, specific things to buy or culinary associations,   such as Christmas pudding, turkey, Easter eggs and lamb.[i]
Yet,   in actual fact, this feast does relate with food consumption, since it   originally celebrates the Jewish fruition of the harvest. In Christian   imagery it also refers to Jesus as “the first-fruits of all who have   fallen asleep” (1 Corinthians 15:20) exemplified by “I am the   bread of life. He who comes to me will never be hungry, he who believes   in me will never thirst.” (John 6:35). This may sound like a   catering slogan, yet it does not necessarily promote ordinary business   and consumerism, which is perhaps why there is not much fuss about   Pentecost.
Pentecost,  also called Whitsunday (especially  in Britain), is the 50th day after  Easter, marking the anniversary of  the Ten Commandments, and most of  all, as for Christians, the descent of  the Holy Spirit on the Apostles.  On that occasion the disciples and the  Virgin Mary “were meeting  together in one place. Suddenly, there was a  sound from heaven like the  roaring of a mighty windstorm, and it filled  the house where they were  sitting. Then, what looked like flames or  tongues of fire appeared and  settled on each of them. And everyone  present was filled with the Holy  Spirit and began speaking in other  languages, as the Holy Spirit gave  them this ability.” (Acts 2:1-4).[ii]
Most   Christians consider Pentecost as the official Birth of the Church.   Before that event the followers of Jesus were scattered and unfocused,   then after the descent of the Holy Spirit they got a lot of enthusiasm,   came together and started to establish their practices and teachings.
The   Second Vatican Council describes the action of the Holy Spirit as “an   interior, saving work which is also expressed externally in the birth  of  a community and institution of salvation… permeated with love, which   overcomes all differences and divisions of an earthly nature… with an   expression of faith in God which is understandable to all, despite the   differences in language.”
The  Church born at Pentecost,  rather than a building or hierarchical  organization, is the gathering of  those who, filled with the Holy  Spirit, have received the “gift of  tongues”, so that when they speak  everyone hear them in their native  language. This gift establishes  communication in the Spirit rather than  in the language.
As  Alan Watts puts it “when the mind is  no longer spell-bound, the  confusion of tongues gives place to the gift  of tongues – the power to  use the Word without being enthralled by it.”  For this reason  “Catholicism has always insisted that spiritual  authority resides in  the living Church rather than in the ‘dead letter’  of Scripture. But  the Church has authority only in so far as it remains  truly the Church,  the company of those who realise effectively that they  are one with  the Author by whose Word the universe of time, space, and  duality is  exfoliated from eternity.”[iii]
What were then the customs of this early Church?
Although   this is too much of a controversial topic to deal with in a few   sentences, what appears clear is that scriptures did not play a   privileged role. This is also because the Gospels became available only   one hundred or even two hundreds years after the Pentecost.
Early   Christian writings and several references in the Bible indicate more  an  emphasis on joyous celebration, dance, music, contemplation and  trance,  rather than reading or analysing sacred texts. Dance was a  vital part  of the religious practices of ancient Israelites, and people  were  regularly exhorted to dance and play loud music in the Old  Testament.  Yet what I perceive as most significant in those dances and  in all early  Christian practices is the shamanic trance and  shape-shifting element,  which is also the essence of Pentecost itself.
The   disciples are filled with the Holy Spirit and, as a result, begin to   speak in alien languages. And it was indeed this capacity to enter into a   non-ordinary state of consciousness and surrender one’s body and mind   entirely to God that represented the sine qua non for gaining admission   to the early Church.
The ancient shamanic practice of glossolalia (see: http://astore.amazon.co.uk/astroshamanis-21/detail/1556358539), or Speaking in tongues,   is still the most prominent trait of Pentecostalism, Charismatic   movements, and Charismatic Catholicism, which are also the fastest   growing groups in today’s Christianity. Their practices, besides   speaking in tongues, involve dancing in circles, jumping, shouting,   crying and laughing, falling on, or rolling across, the floor, and other   cathartic experiences.
Another  form of trance common to  early Christian mystics and saints, such as  Anthony of Egypt, Benedict,  Columba of Iona and later Francis of  Assisi, Theresa of Avila, John of  the Cross, to name just a few,  involved unceasing contemplation and  sensory deprivation, which are  also customary elements of all deep  shamanic experiences and vision  quests.
The  core element  of the original Church is the direct experience of God’s  presence as  Love, through the intervention of the Holy Spirit.
The   function of the Holy Spirit is to heal our fragmented mind. This means   dissolving the insane idea of existing in a separate reality  filled   with solitary identities in perpetual conflict or mutual threat, and   unveiling our true common nature unceasingly united with God.
The Holy Spirit teaches that “Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists.” (ACIM,   T, I:2). He mediates between reality and the illusion of our separated   self. This is possible because, “while on the one hand He knows the   truth, on the other He also recognizes our illusions, but without   believing in them. It is the Holy Spirit's goal to help us escape from   the dream world by teaching us how to reverse our thinking and unlearn   our mistakes. Forgiveness is the Holy Spirit's great learning aid in   bringing this thought reversal about.” (ACIM, Preface, xi).
|  | 
| Pentecost Dome, St Marks, Venice | 
Forgiveness   involves shifting from a perception based on separation to an ongoing   communion with whomever and whatever exists. Spirituality is not a race   for individual enlightenment or a fight to impose one’s religious  ideas.
The   Church is a holy communion of people. This is not founded upon the   rightness of their doctrine. It is firmly based on the value of their   loving connection with God and with one another.
“As  you  come closer to a brother you approach me, and as you withdraw from  him I  become distant to you. Salvation is a collaborative venture. It  cannot  be undertaken successfully by those who disengage themselves  from the  Sonship, because they are disengaging themselves from me. God  will come  to you only as you will give Him to your brothers.” (ACIM, T4,VI.8:1-4)
The   early Christian practices are most pragmatic in the above respect. The   Church becomes a sacred gathering where we step out of our private   madness and safely release it as a common collective insanity. Through   dance, trance, sounds and songs, overt or silent, grievances are burned   away and turned into prayer. This is the Blessed Way of Passion   that leads to the ecstatic presence of the void. Here the Holy Spirit   unfolds and we can all sense our loving unity, sharing it with others,   and shining it back as we see it in our brothers and sisters.
And, by the grace of God and the Pentecost, this is the trance original essence of the Church.
[i] As a matter of fact, in the Jewish equivalent of Pentecost (Shavuot), it is customary to eat dairy food and there are also special Shavuot recipes on this occasion.
[ii] The phrase “roaring of a mighty windstorm” is the literal translation of the Hebrew word ruah, meaning “spirit of God”, or in astroshamanic idiom, with the term Ruha, “spirit of Fire”.
[iii] Alan Watts, Myth and Ritual in Christianity, p. 189-190.
© Franco Santoro, Cluny Hill College, Forres IV36 2RD, UK, info@astroshamanism.org
Click http://astroshamanic.blogspot.com/p/programmes.html for our Findhorn Foundation calendar of holistic and astroshamanic events.
- Find Astroshamanism in Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/Astroshamanism
- For the Astroshamanic Blog see: http://astroshamanic.blogspot.com/
- For Holistic Christianity in Facebook see: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Holistic-Christianity/220503611298579
Books related to the above article:


 
No comments:
Post a Comment