Feeling as though one received great wisdom,
but it cannot be put in words, no way to tell
anyone about what you learned.
That would cancel out all the prophets etc,
would it not?
No, it just means that most of what they had learned got lost in the transmission from them to us. For example, Ezekiel sees a vision. I don't think for one second that what is written in scripture does justice to what he experienced. I think it is absolutely hopeless the way that people try to figure out what he was talking about. They just aren't going to have his experience.
Most of Israel's prophets basically say something like this "You sinful Israel, God says he is going to discipline you for your idolatry and heck you can't even imagine what is going to happen. But THEN he is going to bring you back and restore you and bless you and the wolf will lie down with the lamb..."
That's a kind of lattice upon which they hang imagery. And the imagery is the attempt to put into words what they really saw and experienced. But can any of the bad crap that they say really put into words the chilling feeling they got when they realized that Israel was in for some consequences? Or does any of their "beating swords into plowshares" do justice to the beatific vision?
Has anyone had wires hooked up when the
had a religious experience such as you describe?
And also-what significance do you attribute
to whatever brain wave patterns are seen during
religious practice / experience?
It's been a while since I've read anything. If my memory serves me right, yes. They found people who had specific behaviors (such as meditation or singing or chanting) that they used to induce mystical experiences, and had the machines on during the occurrence. But that seems to be in my mind very small and far away.
Okay, I googled, and found one such study using MRI and Carmelite nuns having mystical experiences.
https://institutpsychoneuro.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Beauregard2006-Carmelites-fmri.pdf
The really big thing in my brain, meaning it would be more recent and a larger study, was one in which they tested Tibetan monks meditating and Franciscan nuns and an even Muslims doing their own kind of meditation and compared the differences to a baseline and to each other (not all the religions got the same result).
I don't have an opinion formed yet on the imaging patterns formed. I find it curious, but I'm still looking for significant patterns. Some of the things reported are just stupidness, like "While praying, the language centers of catholic nuns lit up." well DUH. Other things seem part of the discipline of meditation. I'm more curious to see what studies of PASSIVE experiences show, such as the link I gave you. We need many many more of these done, to see if results are replicated. Then we can begin drawing conclusions.