The
Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions, by Karen
Armstrong
NB: to properly understand this book and the time, I
will be walking on some difficult terrain, especially when it comes to the
Israelites and aspects of the Jewish tradition beyond that which pointed to
Jesus. I am not trying to understand or
develop theology when I note the history: there is much of Old Testament Jewish
history prior to the times of the prophets that is greatly similar to all
Middle Eastern cultures of the time: wars, territories conquering and conquered,
massacres, slavery, dislocation, etc., etc., etc.
Why do I point this out?
The Old Testament, absent that which points to Jesus, can be a history
about any of the tribes and gods in the Middle East of the time. Change the names and the victors, and it is
the same story: my god is bigger than your god; god will lead us to victory in
battle; god, why have you forsaken your people; god, why have you abandoned us?
In the beginning was the Word. The Word became flesh. This is unique. In the Old Testament, it is what points to
this Word that is unique – unique vs. other Middle Eastern religions and
unique, to my knowledge, among any of the major religions around the world. Without the Word, it is just tribes
doing battle and hoping that my god is stronger than your god.
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Armstrong turns to the ninth century BC, the time that
straddled the aftermath of the collapse of the Bronze Age and began the journey
toward the Axial Age. Again, to pinpoint
one particular time as the transition across four major cultures – Greek,
Middle East, Indian, and Chinese – is painting with too broad a stoke. In any case, let’s see if the picture is still
worth painting.
First, the Greeks. The
collapse of the earlier Greek civilization left them in centuries of what
Armstrong calls a dark age. Now, as they
were coming back to life (documented via trading with Canaanites, known to the
Greeks as Phoenicians), a spiritual limbo remained:
…Greek religion was pessimistic and
uncanny, its Gods dangerous, cruel, and arbitrary…. Their rituals and myths
would always hint at the unspeakable and the forbidden….
In the beginning there was no benevolent creator god and no divine
order. There were two gods, Chaos and
Gaia (Earth). They were too hostile to
procreate, so they each generated offspring independently. Children and grandchildren of the gods were
born, some so hated that they were forced back into the womb. Genitals cut off during intercourse. Children swallowed such that they would not
be able to succeed the parent in power and authority. And these were just the offspring of Gaia! So much for worshipping mother earth.
From Chaos’s clan came tales of abusing offspring and
murdering of parents. Banquet stews
containing the bodies of the host’s sons.
Sacrificing children. Meanwhile,
humans are presented in myth as completely impotent.
But Greek rituals did also allow people to see that they
could live through fear and pain and come out the other side; it was essential
to not deny this reality of human suffering.
Greek ritual would end in katharsis (purification), the gods were
appeased and the miasma dispersed.
Meanwhile in the Middle East, the Israelites were dealing
with the might of the Egyptians – and benefitting. They expanded into former territories of the
Canaanites, destroyed by Egypt. But there
remained foreign gods, including Baal worship.
Yahweh was the most powerful God within the rivalries amongst the gods:
Psalm
89: 6 For who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? who among the
sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord? 7 God is greatly to be feared in the assembly
of the saints, and to be had in reverence of all them that are about him. 8 O Lord God of hosts, who is a strong Lord
like unto thee? or to thy faithfulness round about thee?
According to Armstrong, with the time of Elijah there was a
turning: Israel’s God grew increasingly concerned about social justice,
accusing the other deities of neglecting this duty. It was not that this concept was alien to the
Middle East; it was merely that the God of Israel was becoming more complete,
obviating the necessity of other gods to complement Yahweh in this task.
Israel was about to embark on a
lonely, painful journey of severance from the mythical and cultic consensus of
the Middle East.
The Chinese were also concerned about preserving the natural
order of things via rituals, ensuring that human society would conform to the
Way (dao). Chinese would not be
interested in a god who was entirely separate from the natural order; Heaven
and Earth were complementary.
They saw a continuum between Heaven and Earth, a continuum
with their ancestors. They weren’t looking
“out there” for something holy; they were looking to make the world
divine. When the king was on the right
path, he opened the Way for heaven on Earth.
He would also conquer enemies and attract loyal followers; if he was not
on the right path, his authority would become malign.
The right path offered a king with supreme power, but one
not free to do as he would choose. He
had to follow the right path. If he
carried out the rituals properly, all things would be calm and docile.
During the third century BC, the Chinese philosopher Xunzi
would look back to the earlier period and give some context and understanding
to the meaning of the rituals:
“The mature person takes joy in
carrying out the Way; the petty man takes joy in gratifying his desires. He who curbs his desires in accordance with
the Way will be joyful and free from disorder, but he who forgets the Way in
pursuit of desire will fall into delusion and joylessness.”
And in two sentences, Xunzi has summarized today’s meaning
crisis.
In India, the move was to take practices that might lead to violence
out of the sacrificial rituals. No harm
or injury was to come to any of the participants. It seems to strike a new meaning into the
term “sacrifice.” Someone who knew
ritual science didn’t even have to attend the ritual sacrifice and still find
his way to heaven!
Conclusion
So, where are we? One
might begin to find something approaching natural law in the Chinese concept of
the Way. One might also find something
of the shape of natural law in the Greek path of confronting pain and
suffering.
I would add that the Old Testament offered that man was made
in God's image – something that I do not recall Armstrong having touched
on. But put all of this together, and
some foundations of natural law are forming.