Monday, May 11, 2015

Religious Re-newal: Eros, Alchemy and "Love-Speak"






Karl Jaspers once wrote, “A look at the beloved is like a look at Being itself.” I never forgot that bit. It is in the rapture of love, of Being in the grip of it that we gift presence to an ‘Other’. Latour called it a form of renewal. He has reiterated time and again that religious affirmation has been lost on those who go through the motions of ritual without consciously ‘renewing’ the love that makes gift of presence possible. He likened it to “love-speak” in couples. I think everybody would agree that humans innately know when a partner’s love-speak is sincere. It’s when these words evoke chills or the hair on the back of your neck stands up; that filling of absolute affirmation when your lover expresses words of love. Likewise, we also know, sometimes inexplicably, when these same words are counterfeit. There are times when loves-speak is said without the feeling of renewal.


It’s utter affirmation of sincerity that we should strive for in our religious ritual. It’s that renewal that is the basis for ideas of the ‘alchemical wedding’ and marrying the Sophia in godhead. Our religious rites are designed to evoke ‘love-speak’ and in doing so grant metaphysics of presence to our deities. But often times, religious ritual is a monotonous droning of liturgy and unfelt, unconscientious habits that fail in delivering the evocation of presence. Being cannot erupt into existence without a conscious interaction between Man and the beloved. It is these interactions that Couliano described as Eros and should be the goal of any so-called religious person. 

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