Showing posts with label Religious Evolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religious Evolution. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

The Evolution of God

From State Hwy. 128 near the Colorado River - Utah
From Yahweh to Adonai

In Mormon theology, Elohim is God the Father, Yahweh or Jehovah is The Son. This differs from the etymology of faith gleaned from the archeological and written record.

The word “Elohim” occurs more than 2500 times in the Hebrew Bible but it means something quite different than God the Father’s actual name... it’s used as a common noun.  Uniquely, it is both singular and plural even though it carries the plural suffix “im.”   Yahweh is frequently referred to as the Elohim of Israel or God of Israel.  In the same token, Exodus 12:12 speaks of the Elohim of Egypt or Gods of Egypt.  In 1 Samuel 28:13, the witch of Endor tells Saul she sees elohim or spirits coming up out of the Earth.  It is only after the Babylonian conquest that Yahweh is replaced with Elohim as God’s referred to name.  There also was a shift in the sanctity of the name.  It was increasingly regarded as too sacred to be uttered and Adonai, “My Lord”, came into ritual use.   Today, haShem or “The Name” is used in conversation.  They all refer to the same diety, God.

I know biblical literalists will insist our monotheistic worship of God has its roots with the first man, Adam, and was codified under Moses.  Actually, like most belief systems, it was an answer to a socio-economical problem and evolved over time.

Yahweh worship stems from the pre-Israelite peoples all across the Levant and was shared by many cultures.  In fact, ancient Judaism was polytheistic with a pantheon of various local gods borrowing heavily from West Semite, Phoenician,  and Canaanite traditions.  Given the worship of Asherah as consort to Yahweh right up to the destruction of the temple by Babylonian forces, monotheism didn’t become prevalent among the Jews until the 6th century BCE.

Now, you’re probably thinking, “this doesn’t sound anything like what I read in the Old Testament.”  Well, you’d be right.  It isn’t... for good reason.

We might want to think of tradition as something immoveable and constant.  It’s not.  It can change... and change quickly.  Within a few short generations, the Jews went from a polytheistic society dominated by the worship of Yahweh to the monotheistic one centered on Elohim... purging “foreign influences” along the way through clever retelling of the familiar stories reflecting a newer evolved spirituality.  Anthropologists believe this took place as Jews sought a common identity more distinct from their neighbors and captors.

Now, it wasn’t just the name or number of gods that changed.  Depending on the particular period in Jewish history, God has taken on strikingly different characteristics.  He has been portrayed as violent, bloodthirsty, and vengeful to loving, nurturing, and forgiving.... the creator of life, the harbinger of death... patient, impulsive... and everything in between.  There are interesting geo-political correlations where shifts in regional power or prosperity influenced this evolving spiritual heritage of billions.

We can follow the evolution of our faith clear back into pre-history.  Something never spawns from nothing... even where God is concerned.  Faith and belief have always been a reaction to something.  It is the answer to a question and answers change to meet the questions.  Religion evolves much like life.  It has always been this way and continues on even today.

In the early days of the Mormon faith, gifts of the spirit were common place during Sunday meetings.  From speaking in tongues, seeing ministering spirits, to the working of miracles; it was once said these things defined the true church of God... these days, God is a little less Las Vegas.  Now, I think the most exciting thing to happen during Sacrament Meeting might be someone bursting into tears.  The days of revival, so common on the frontier in those early years, are gone.  We tend to want something a bit more dignified and solemn.  This modern view is also reflected in our perception of God.  From destroyer of nations to quiet patriarch... God, it seems, is what we choose him to be.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

My Natural Law

Spanning the Colorado River - near Moab Utah

Christianity
A Follower of Jesus

Now you might be thinking that for someone who is of the opinion that no truth is absolute given our current intellectual state and everything is relative, my beliefs are pretty well defined and fixed.  In reality, they are a developing collection that reflect my chosen paradigm.

Religion is always evolving to meet the needs of people at any given point in history.  All the great religions of the past have slowly faded into mythology or even been forgotten all together only to be replaced with something newer and more relevant.  Odin and Frigg, Zeus and Hera, and farther back than we have record to recall, once mighty systems of faith fall to the relentless march of social evolution.  Allah, God, Buddha, Jesus... all the great religions of today’s world will, at some point, join our pantheon of mythology and be relegated to the history of once practiced and revered faith.

Some of the faithful cling desperately to an imaginary permanence and refuse to see the subtle changes evident even during our own short recorded history.  “What is is and will always be” just isn’t.

So if religion isn’t absolute and forever, is there any value in it?  Of course there is!  There still is a continuity of truth... it’s just much more fluid than many feel comfortable admitting to.

Christianity was given me by my parents.  Just like it was given to them by theirs.  It shapes my understanding.  It colors my perceptions.  It molds my thoughts and feelings.  It is a vessel of truth and not necessarily the truth itself.  It is a philosophy that helps defines the universe in which I live.  Its comfortable confines concentrate and focus my perceptions.  It is the allegorical model which gives course and direction to my inner spiritual journey.

I strive to uncover and incorporate the ideals and teachings attributed to Jesus of Nazareth as I understand and need them to be.  I value the concept of the Christ and am intent on unlocking its gift.

“For it is an indubitable and evident thing that he who is born a Christian, Jew, Pagan, Turk, Infidel, or whatever religion it may be, can arrive at the perfection of this Work or Art and become a Master, but he who hath abandoned his natural Law, and embraced another religion opposed to his own, can never arrive at the summit of this sacred Science.”
~ Rabbi Yaakov Moelin 1365-1427 CE