Can you demonstrate a 'divine nature of the human being'? If not, is it possible you are in over your head in claiming there is one?
Sorry, i should not have been so snarky. But the whole thing does come across as a nice imaginary world.
Thank you for the apology. Let’s tie in your first question with your last statement. I can see how, on the surface, it seems a little like Santa Claus, that is, something imaginary. But consider that there’s a difference between “imaginary” and
imagination. There’s a
bona fide term in theology called “the theological imagination.”
Leland Ryken states of the
literary imagination (which is closely tied to the theological imagination: “The function of the literary imagination is to incarnate meaning in concrete images, characters, events, and settings rather than abstract or propositional arguments.” Dorothy Sayers posits that the imagination “images forth” its subject, and in turn it is a commonplace that what literature “images forth” is human experience.
There is an “interior world” to the human psyche; we all know that. It’s a part of us that digs deeper than simple stimulus of the senses. Internal experience is assigned meaning. That meaning is often expressed imaginatively, rather than formulaically, because doing so helps us to tell our story. In the many images imagined is a divine nature (larger or deeper than our sensory perceptions). Often, that nature is given a “character” in the story. We call it “God.” Mind you, many religious would disagree with me; this is simply how
I see it. For me, life, itself, is divine, because life is larger than me, and I am beholden to life for my existence. Additionally, I perceive that life also encompasses all other beings. Therefore, there is something larger than us, that remains a mystery. We don’t understand what lies beyond the Standard Model.
What this all boils down to (for me) is that there is this larger sense that we call the “divine nature.” I am divine. So are you. So is everything. The character of “God” is simply an anthropomorphic “place holder” that characterizes Being itself (as opposed to God as
A being — an object). Spirituality is a very
subjective thing.
Not very many therapists will do their work within the framework of the theological imagination.
It has nothing to do with an imaginary friend, and everything to do with the perception that life is deeper and bigger than we understand. THAT, for me, is spirituality.