Christmas Eve. The night of the year that we celebrate the birth of a baby who would grow up to reveal himself as a seer, a man with a direct connection to the Divine.
I believe that we all have the potential to have such a connection. In fact, I think it’s our birthright as humans, and it’s an ability we share with other animals as well.
All of us animals sleep and dream, and during our dreams we experience the same non-ordinary reality that the prophets and mystics have been telling us about—men like Socrates, Jesus or Mohammed who heard the voices of divine spirits.
For the past two thousand years or so, Western philosophy has been working steadily to wall off the connections between the natural world, including other animals, and human beings.
But in our dreams, those walls come tumbling down, as we visit landscapes and mingle with animals whose messages we strive to remember and interpret when we awake.
I am very intrigued by the recognition of religious scholar and eco-philosopher Thomas Berry that what human civilization urgently needs, in this time of ecological crisis, is to re-open the psychic channels connecting us to our planetary home.
He calls for a revalidation of the “shamanic personality”; shaman referring to a human being who can enter non-ordinary reality at will, and access valuable wisdom from the spirit world (or the Divine, as Western tradition would call it).
Berry argues that every human being is “genetically coded” to have access to the wisdom of the dreamland, whether in sleep or in the trance of deliberate shamanic journeying. And, he says, this is where we are going to find the solutions to the ecological crises we face today.
Change is not going to come from politics and protests, Berry says. It’s going to come through a psychic shift in which “we awaken to the numinous powers ever present in the phenomenal world around us,” which manifest themselves in human beings in our most creative moments. “Poets and artists continually invoke these spirit powers, which function less through words than through symbolic forms,” he says, continuing:
“In moments of confusion such as the present, we are not left simply to our own rational contrivances. We are supported by the ultimate powers of the universe as they make themselves present to us through the spontaneities within our own beings. We need only become sensitized to these spontaneities, not with a naïve simplicity, but with critical appreciation. This intimacy with our genetic endowment, and through this endowment with the larger cosmic process, is not primarily the role of the philosopher, priest, prophet or professor. It is the role of the shamanic personality, a type that is emerging once again in our society.
“More than any other of the human types concerned with the sacred, the shamanic personality journeys into the far regions of the cosmic mystery and brings back the vision and the power needed by the human community….
“The shamanic personality speaks and best understands the language of the various creatures of the earth….This shamanic insight is especially important just now when history is being made not primarily within nations or between nations, but between humans and the earth, with all its living creatures….
“If the supreme disaster in the comprehensive story of the earth is our present closing down of the major life systems of the planet, then the supreme need of our times is to bring about a healing of the earth through this mutually enhancing human presence to the earth community.
“To achieve this mode of pressure, a new type of sensitivity is needed, a sensitivity that is something more than romantic attachment to some of the more brilliant manifestations of the natural world, a sensitivity that comprehends the larger patterns of nature, its severe demands as well as its delightful aspects, and is willing to see the human diminish so that other lifeforms might flourish.”
Another way to name the “sensitivity” Berry is talking about here is, quite simply LOVE.
The same love practiced and preached by Jesus Christ, but expanded to include the entire earth community, not just the human branch.
I am continually amazed by the generosity with which the natural world gives and gives to support the cause of a flourishing earth community. Death comes that life may continue. A clearcut forest patiently begins the work of recreating itself, from the soil bacteria on up. There is no such thing as guilt or blame in the natural world, only endless patience and a resilient creativity, always seeking better paths towards the goal of abundance and teeming myriad forms of life.
Thomas Berry says that we humans, as part and parcel of the earth community, are genetically coded to participate in this great unfolding of exuberant life.
For a long time (at least since the time of Gilgamesh, who harshly slew Humbaba, the guardian of the forests, and cut down an entire cedar forest just because he could) human culture has been working tirelessly to sever our connection to the divinity immanent in the natural world.
“In relation to the earth,” Berry says, “we have been autistic for centuries.”
But now, “the planet Earth and the life communities of the earth are speaking to us through the deepest elements of our nature, through our genetic coding….Only now have we begun to listen with some attention and with a willingness to respond to the earth’s demands that we cease our industrial assault, that we abandon our inner rage against the conditions of our earthly existence, that we renew our human participation in the grand liturgy of the universe” (Berry, The Dream of the Earth, 210-215).
There is a lot to ponder here. Berry seems to be proposing that in our genetic make-up is an ability to communicate on a deep level with the earth, including other animals and life forms. Under the spell of Western civilization, we have allowed ourselves to become alienated not only from the natural world, but also from our own innate ability to commune with “the dream of the earth,” through our inherent shamanic/psychic powers. We have been content to delegate the connection to the Divine to others—prophets, seers, priests—rather than to cultivate within ourselves that “sensitivity” to divine inspiration and that access to the powerful creative pulse of the universe which we all experience in dreams.
This alienation has led us inexorably to the hairline edge upon which human civilization now perches. After 10,000 years of a stable climate, warmly conducive to the development of prosperous human communities, we are on the brink of another great break in planetary history, this one brought on by our own insensitivity and inability to listen and understand the many cues the natural world has been giving us.
If a new Messiah is to arise and lead us to safety, it must be one who can reawaken in us the loving ethical responsibility that all humans are born with.
I believe that the potential to become this leader lies dormant in each one of us. My question this Christmas, which is really a question for myself above all: how are you going to manifest, in your own life and in the larger earth community in which we all live, the divine LOVE that Jesus Christ, in his purest form, represents?
Dean
/ December 24, 2014We can do much as individuals, but we need the bond of ‘together’ to make progress back to the beginning. Thank you for the gentle push, Jennifer. You seem to be always there to supply that. It is mind boggling, how much we need it.
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
/ December 24, 2014So true–to manifest change in the human community, we must act as a community. But there is something about the singularity of shamanic journeying that intrigues me. Just as in our nighttime dreams, we make the journey alone. There is a responsibility there that must be lived up to.
Inez Aponte
/ December 24, 2014Hi Jennifer. Thanks for this beautiful post. I just posted something that relates to some of the same issues. http://somesmallholding.wordpress.com/2014/12/24/the-long-remembering/ Have a beautiful connected Midwinter.
Jennifer Browdy, Ph.D.
/ January 28, 2015Thank you, Inez! Lovely post!
fostertude
/ December 31, 2014Thank you.
Matt Syrdal
/ November 30, 2016Thank you for your authentic, courageous, and insightful conversation with Thomas Berry – especially during Advent! I am especially intrigued with the rediscovery of the lost shamanic nature of Jesus the Christ – not just a guide to Spirit and the Upperworld, but also guide to the Underworld, the Soul of the universe. I am a pastor who is training as a nature-based guide through Animas Valley Institute and am looking to connect with soul-friends. Would love to connect sometime! http://www.churchoflostwalls.org/blog/; http://www.churchoflostwalls.org/programs-offerings/
Jennifer Browdy, Ph.D.
/ November 30, 2016Matt, looking through your website I can see we are indeed soul friends! It sounds like great work you’re doing. I am especially glad to see you attributing your sense of wonder to early time spent “running wild” in the woods–the same is true for me, and I suspect for many of us who are fortunate enough to have been able to connect deeply with the natural world in childhood, and keep that connection alive despite the severe socialization processes we’re subjected to. My forthcoming memoir, What I Forgot…And Why I Remembered, is about just this. It would be interesting to compare notes on the socializing we got, as we are quite different by most human measures–but clearly that original initiation in the woods is more important than anything that came later….