One of them began screaming because her sister had stolen
the imaginary chicken off her plate. The grandmother writes: “It did not matter
to her that it was pretend fried chicken. She was inconsolable, and no amount
of reasoning could calm her. I had to admit, I shed a few tears myself –
laughing hysterically.”
In the devotion the author proceeded to compare her
grandchildren’s spat to petty squabbles that adults have. It was a good article,
and the story got me thinking beyond her application. It is not an exaggeration
to say that we live in an imaginary world. I am not saying that we are coppertops plugged
into the Matrix. I am saying that the world is not what we think it is. This is
a theme in ancient philosophy from Plato’s allegory of the cave to the Indian
teaching of maya.
Take our nation as an example. Countries are products of
human imagination. They do not exist in reality. From the International Space
Station the earth does not display national boundaries. There is no dividing
line between the US and Canada from space. It is only in our minds. The same
with our southern neighbor, in spite of the Rio Grande and the wall. Rivers and
walls are national boundaries only in the human mind.
Nations exist only in our heads. They have their origins in early
primate society, but they did not exist before humans came on the scene. They will
not exist after our species is extinct. Politics is an imaginary game created
to govern an imaginary national entity. Like three-year-olds, we scream at each
other until we are red in the face over offenses which exist only in our imagination.
I am not saying that qualities like liberty, justice and
human rights are not important. But they are important only within the story of
human society. As we play our roles in this temporal drama, such ideals may be
worth living, fighting and dying for – relatively speaking. But in the end it
is like fighting over imaginary chicken. “It is a tale told by an idiot, full
of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
There is an unimagined Reality, an eternal reality that
existed before our species and will continue after it. It includes what we
perceive as reality but transcends it. It goes by many names. I use words like the
Divine, Ultimate Reality, the Absolute, the Ground of Being, Being Itself, and
many more. Different spiritual traditions use different religious vocabulary to
label it, but no labels stick. This Unnamable Reality is the subject of
spirituality, as well as music, art, and all forms of creativity.
When I speak of spirituality, I am not talking about
religion. Religion is just another human construct populated with imaginary
beings, beliefs, and rules. People scream, fight and kill over these imagined
differences between mental constructions. When religions join forces with nations,
they can get really deadly. I am not talking about religion. I am talking about
spirituality.
Spirituality grounds humans in Reality. Spiritual Reality is beyond human ideas. It
cannot be described in human words. This Truth cannot be encapsulated in creeds
or doctrines. This Way cannot be enforced with rules or laws. It cannot be
defined. For that reason many people think this spiritual unicity, which
includes all multiplicity, does not exist. They think it is just another
fantasy of the human mind. Perhaps these skeptics are correct. But experience says
otherwise.
In every generation mystical souls in all religions bear
witness to the self-authenticating experience of the Ground of Being that
underlies the world. Their testimonies of transcendence strike a chord in our
hearts. At some level we are all intuitively aware of this unspeakable Reality
during moments of beauty, awe and love. This Holy Reality is the real world.
Jesus called it the Kingdom of God.
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