Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Religious Experience and Revelation
- Direct
- Encounter God directly
- Paul on the road to Damascus met the risen Jesus
- Otto: "an apprehension of the wholly other."
- It is an ineffable experience, a Mysterium Tremendum
- An awareness, feeling or sensation that is directly in the mind
- Indirect
- The mind of the individual focuses on God
- People are inspired by the beauty of nature
- Swinburme
- Public Experiences
- Ordinary
- Natural events have
reigious significance
- Extraordinary
- Experiences that violate
the workings of nature
- Private Experiences
- Describable
- Dreams
- Non-desribable
- God is revealed
beyond description
- Non-specific
- Looking st the world from
a religious perspective
- Visions
- God or the divine is
'seen' or 'observed'.
Information may be
relealed
- Teresa of Avila
Anmerkungen:
- "saw Christ at my side - or, to put it better, I was conscious of Him, for neither with the eyes of the body or of the soul did I see anything"
- Intellectual experience,
meaning what is seen is an
experience rather than
observation
- St Bernadette of Lourdes
Anmerkungen:
- She was told to dig in the ground at the feet of Mary. Upon doing so, she discovered a mountain spring.
- Corporeal vision
because Bernadette
sees Mary as a form
or image
- Joseph
Anmerkungen:
- Told in a dream not to be afraid of marrying MAry even though she is pregnant.
- Imaginative vision,
a message from
God through a
dream
- Voices
- Communication
of knowledge
- Usually specific
Anmerkungen:
- For example when God calls Samuel to be a prophet. In the baptism of Jesus when God's voice declares Jesus as his son.
- The voice is disembodied and
shows the presence of God
- The voice communicates a
relalation from God
Anmerkungen:
- The message is said to be noetic, meaning it reveals something og God and God's wishes.
- The voice is authoritative and
passess on God's authority
Anmerkungen:
- "You are my beloved Son, with you i am well pleased." (Mark 1:11)
- Teresa of Avila had
criteria to determine if the
voice is God
- 1. Does the experience
fit in with Christian
Church teaching?
- 2. Does the experience
leave you at peace with
the world and God?
- Conversion
- A complete inner transformation
that is empirically verifiable
through the chaged or reformed
behaviour of the individual in
their life
- Edwin Starbuck
Anmerkungen:
- Conversion experiences are not really that dissimilar to the normal phases of identity that people go through.
- Corporate Religious Experiences
- Experience that happens
simultaneously to a number of people
- Toronto Blessing
Anmerkungen:
- January 1994 at the Toronto Airport Vineyard Church. Participants in the conferences and meetings have reported healings, incidents of personal transformation and a greater awareness of God's love in their lives. Leaders of the meetings and participants claim that these are physical manifestations of the Holy Spirit's presencce and power.
- Hank Hanegraaff
- Are Religious Experiences Veridical of God?
- People, generally speaking are more likely to
believe something if it has been experienced.
- Jonathon Edwards
Anmerkungen:
- "The degree in which our experience is productive in practice shows the degree in which our evidence is spiritual and divine."
- Swinburne
- Two criteria for studying religious experiences
- The Principle of 'Credulity'
- With other things being equal, we have good
reason to believe what a person tells us
- There are three reasons why one could disbelieve evidence
- If we have strong reasons to challenge God's
existence, it undermines the experience as 'religious'
- Evidence could
suggest it was not
caused by God
- There may be reasons to
believe the person was
mistaken, e.g. under the
influence
- The Principle of 'Testimony'
- It is reasonable to
believe that what
someone tells you
- You may find it unusual or investigate further, but wouldn't automatically reject what they say
- William Alston
- Whether it is possible to
speak of a person
experiencing God and
gaining knowledge from
the experience
- He argued that in normal life the
evidence of something is what you
can gather from experience
- E.g. referring to something you've
observed via senses. You are not doubted
because others may have shared in that
- Religious experiences are sense
perceptions and there is no need to reject
is just because it may seem unusual
- Other sense observations can
determine something's
verifiability, so can we really
reject people's religious
experiences on the same gounds?
- William James
- Aims to survey the various types of
religious experiences as a psychologist
and to present the findings and its
implications for philosophy in his work
'The Varieties of Religious Experience'
- "the feelings, acts, and experiences of
individual men in their solitude, so far as they
apprehend themselves to stand in relation to
whatever they may consider the divine"
- These feelings, acts and experiences are shaped, and the
revelation of facts and knowledge aid this. Religion
requires intellectual commitment, for the receiver to
actively engage with the requirements of religious belief
- For James, it's important to note that when it comes
to engaging with religion, we do not simply interpret
existing facts but may even be given new ones
Anmerkungen:
- "Religion... is not a mere illumination of facts already...given, not a mere passion, like love, which views things in a rosier light. It is indeed that... but it is something more, namely a postulator of new facts as well."
- The 'prothets of all the different religions' for example, can certainly help construct our perceptions
an outlook towards faith, and in turn sustain it. Those among us not touched by these experiences
and traditions will stand outside of them, noting that they can be used to validate a variety of beliefs.
- Religious experience stands at the heart of religion.
Teaching, practices and attitudes are secondary and
develop later as individuals commit themselves
- James suggested that religious experiences were events which were
'solitary' and in which individuals experiences the divine or God.
- James viewed conversion as a transformation from a
divided or imperfect self to a more unified consciousness
- Some felt these experiences
were a psychological
disorder, though James
challenged this and placed
experiences as central to
understanding religion
- Any mystical experience,
which he understood to be
the direct revelation of God
and union with the divine,
contain four characteristics
- Ineffability
Anmerkungen:
- Experiences that are beyond the capacity of words to describe.
- Noetic
Anmerkungen:
- Experience is a state of knowledge, but a type of knowledge beyond normal experience.
- Transciency
Anmerkungen:
- The experiences in themselves last only the briefest of time, but their effects are life-changing.
- Passivity
Anmerkungen:
- People affected feel as if their own will is in abeyance (been set aside) as if in the grip of a superior power.
- James often cited the case study of Teresa of Avila
- Conclusions
- James did not accept
religious experiences to be
unquestionably true, but
that they could be indicative
of God.
- Religious experiences are psychological
phenomena that occur in our brains but may
have a supernatural element as well as a physical
one.
- Empiricism
Anmerkungen:
- The effects of religious experiences produces empirical evidence. This evidence points towards a higher reality beyond what we see and hear.
- Pluralism
Anmerkungen:
- Experiences were similar across different faiths.
- Pragmatism
Anmerkungen:
- The truth was not always fixed and truth is determined by what is of great value for us.
- Challenges and expansions of James' Argument
- "Where there is contradiction
there cannot be truth"
- "Religious experiences are
the product of a faulty mind"
- "In the natural sciences and industrial
arts, it never occurs to anyone to try to
refute opinions by showing up their
author's neurotic constitution."
- Dr. H. M. Maudsley
Anmerkungen:
- "What rights have we to believe Nature is under any obligation to do her work by complete minds only?"
- "Religious experiences
are induced"
- "The drunken consciousness
is one bit of the mystic
consciousness, and our total
opinion of it must find its
place in our opinion of that
larger whole"
- "Religious experiences are emotionally driven
and no more that a personal response"
- There is no problem with it being emotional, and
establishes the connection between thought and
action. Feelings associated with religion and the
conduct inspired by those feelings are similar
- Irrespective of the
religion studied you
would find two
universal areas
- A certain uneasiness
- The solution to this
- Wider Ideas
- J.L. Mackie
- Schleiermacher
- Buber
- Jung
- Kant
- Alston
- Broad