Manoah
Member
On the one hand, many faiths call on us to worship with all of our strength, soul, mind, and heart. A faith divorced completely from emotion might be heartless and cold.
Yet emotionalism is rightly considered an unhealthy extreme. Here are some thoughts by Aldous Huxley that are likely to apply to many faiths because it comes from his universal treatment of religions in The Perennial Philosophy:
From one of my sacred sources comes the idea that "to the pure, all things are pure," so in theory almost anything can be sanctified. Yet as C.S. Lewis said of Love, when anything is made a god, it becomes a demon.
What do you consider to be the blessings and dangers of emotion in your religion?
Yet emotionalism is rightly considered an unhealthy extreme. Here are some thoughts by Aldous Huxley that are likely to apply to many faiths because it comes from his universal treatment of religions in The Perennial Philosophy:
In the light of what has been said above, we can understandthe peculiar spiritual dangers by which every kind of pre-dominantly emotional religion is always menaced. A hell-fire faith that uses the theatrical techniques of revivalism in order to stimulate remorse and induce the crisis of sudden conver-
sion; a saviour cult that is for ever stirring up what St.Bernard calls the amor carnalis or fleshly love of the Avatar and personal God; a ritualistic mystery-religion that generates high feelings of awe and reverence and aesthetic ecstasy by means of its sacraments and ceremonials, its music and its incense, its numinous darknesses and sacred lights in its own special way, each one of these runs the risk of becoming a form
of psychological idolatry, in which God is identified with the ego's affective attitude towards God and finally the emotion becomes an end in itself, to be eagerly sought after and worshipped, as the addicts of a drug spend life in the pursuit of their artificial paradise. All this is obvious enough. But it is no less obvious that religions that make no appeal to the emotions have very few adherents. Moreover, when pseudo-religions with a strong emotional appeal make their appearance, they immediately win millions of enthusiastic devotees from among the masses to whom the real religions have ceased to have a meaning or to be a comfort.
From one of my sacred sources comes the idea that "to the pure, all things are pure," so in theory almost anything can be sanctified. Yet as C.S. Lewis said of Love, when anything is made a god, it becomes a demon.
What do you consider to be the blessings and dangers of emotion in your religion?