| What is the Archetype of the Apocalypse all about? |
| Written by William Van Dusen Wishard | |
| Sunday, 14 November 2004 | |
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The word Apocalypse (revelation) is from the Greek meaning "uncovering what has been hidden." In other words, the revelation of new truth. What is the Archetype of the Apocalypse all about? For starters, it’s at the very core of what C.G. Jung believed is happening to the world today. Jung's psychology is the only school of psychology that believes there are two centers to the psyche---the ego being the center of consciousness, and the archetype of the Self being the center of what he called the objective psyche, or the collective unconscious. Other psychological schools certainly acknowledge two realms of the psyche, the conscious and unconscious, but only Jung posits the existence of two totally independent centers. Looking back, it may well have taken six hundred years for Christianity to emerge into being as a “religion.” Many of the themes Jesus espoused go back at least to Ezekiel, who referred to himself as "Son of Man" (symbolically, "Son of God"), which was the way Jesus referred to himself. Many of the early Church “fathers” believed some of the Psalms prefigured Jesus. After Jesus died, it took another three hundred years for Christianity to solidify into a religion. It wasn't that Jesus suddenly came on the scene, worked miracles and preached magnificent sermons, and presto, Christianity bloomed. Not at all. Jesus articulated and manifested what had been gradually growing in the collective psyche over an extended period of time. And this happened as the gods of the Greco-Roman world were losing their hold on the imagination of the Greco-Roman “creative minority.” Nietzsche's 1882 cry, "God is dead," was heard throughout the Roman Empire 2,000 years earlier in a similar cry, "Great Pan is dead." In other words, the prevailing God-image of the Greco-Roman world had been losing its resonance and relevance in the depths of the collective psyche of the Greco-Roman world. But at the same time, there was a psychic maturation taking place, which the old gods failed to express, but which Jesus expressed and manifested in a manner that resonated in the depths of the collective soul of that time. Joseph Henderson, the only living analyst who actually worked with Jung, said that Jung once told him he loved to read the Bible not only for its spiritual insights, but more for its psychological significance. Jung felt he gained great psychological understanding by reading the Bible. As Thomas Cahill has written, the story of the Hebrew Bible is “the story of an evolving consciousness, a consciousness that went through many stages of development.” While many of the primary themes of the Old Testament (especially the Pentateuch) originated in the Mythic Age, all of the New Testament was written not long after the close of the Axial Age. The defining characteristic of the Axial Age, according to the German philosopher Karl Jaspers who coined the term “Axial Age,” was the move out of the Mythic Age, into an era when “man becomes conscious of Being as a whole, of himself and his limitations.” Consciousness, Jaspers wrote, became “conscious of itself.” Jesus may well have been the greatest exemplar of this emergent consciousness. So the New Testament (as well as pre-Socratic Greek philosophy and science, which has much more the feel of the spiritual life than does the later dry-as-dust Western philosophy and science, which tend to be one-sidedly rational) were the first expressions after the Axial Age. So these expressions were vital. They were a reflection of what Rudolf Otto in The Idea of the Holy called the numinous, a word used to describe the awesome emotional intensity common to all spiritual experience regardless of culture or sect. This is why Jung felt he learned so much psychologically from reading the Bible. But we’ve now moved centuries away from that time. We’ve so completely alienated ourselves from nature and its essential role in the human psyche, and our state of knowledge and psychic development are so totally different than 2000 years ago, that, for many people, the Bible no longer has the same numinosity and living quality that gripped people in earlier times. So a new process of spiritual redefinition and psychological maturation has been unfolding for at least the past two centuries. If one believes public opinion polls, God is alive and well. But when one looks at the products of the "creative minority" of the Western world over the past two centuries, it's clear that those at the cutting edge of life no longer found resonance and meaning in the spiritual tradition that had come to be known as Christendom. Hegel was the first to spell it out in 1827: "God has died---God is dead---this is the most frightful of all thoughts, that everything eternal and true is not, that negation itself is found in God." This belief was echoed throughout the whole of 19th century European culture, and was picked up in the 1920s by American culture (That's what The Great Gatsby is really about). The public opinion polls are totally misleading in telling us how religious America is. Those who crowd the mega-churches are the same people who swallow whole the technocratic/utilitarian/consumerist ethic that characterizes American life today. © William Van Wishard 2004. E-mail: vwishard@worldnet.att.net (Sources: the collected works of C.G. Jung and of Edward F. Edinger.) 11.08.04 |