This
article was originally published on the London Colney Christians website.
In answer to the question whether I am a believer or a Christian, I tend to answer in
the spirit of that it depends on what is meant by the word believer or Christian. If it is
the conviction that someone historically died and thereby actually took my sins -that I am
currently commiting- on his shoulders; that all I need to do in this life is believe in
his Name and I will go to some eternal heaven and that this is literally the truth,
I decline. I am not saying that there is no truth to be found in this statement, but that
its literal explanation is to me unacceptable.
Why? Quite simply, because it robs me of all responsibility for my own actions and
makes me dependent on someone or something outside of my own being and control. Simply
put, it is downright disempowering.
In my opinion religion is about empowering people. Religion gives purpose to our lives.
Religion comes from the Latin word meaning to bind back. To me that means to reconnect
with our Source. Religion is not about comfort, it is about development. Personal
development. Empowerment is more than allowing people to take responsibility for
their actions. It is also about creating conducive circumstances so that they actually do
something. It means helping them see that a pro-active mindset provides the impetus to
create and fulful their lives. It means teaching them that they are able to exert
influence to alter their experience of everyday life.
Does being a Christian then preclude empowerment? What then is an esoteric
Christian?
Esoteric means hidden, in contradistinction to exoteric, which means outer, or visible.
The one cannot exist without the other, as the exoteric is the vehicle for the esoteric. A
story, for example, can be interpreted on many levels - the individual words, the
sentences, the story and the message. The words and sentences are the exoteric vehicle for
the story; the story in its turn is the vehicle for the underlying message. An esoteric
approach is therefore directed at understanding layers of meaning. What is this story
trying to tell me? Jesus' parables are an excellent example. He also tries to teach that
it isn't about the story itself, but the message contained within that story.
An esoteric Christian is therefore someone who values the Christian tradition, yet does
not interpret this tradition in a literal sense. An esoteric Christian reads between the
lines - is someone who attempts to find the underlying layers of meaning in a passage. The
purpose is to see how a particular story can give insight into the processes and
experiences encountered in daily life. The emphasis is not about rules (thou shalt
not
), but on understanding.
But this is not the end of the story. Understanding something implies that we change
the way we think. The way we think influences the way we feel. The way we feel has a
direct result in how we act. These aren't statements of rhetoric. Modern scientific
research corroborates that our attitude dictates -via the hypothalamus in the brain- which
neuropeptides are released into our body. These neuropeptides in turn determine our
emotional state of being. Understanding this process means we understand the power of the
mind. By consciously utilising our minds we make ourselves creators, or co-creators with
God.
The ramifications of embracing an esoteric approach to life -and hence to Christianity-
are immense. It makes teachers of our religious leaders. Seen from this point of view the
first duty of a priest is to make himself or herself redundant. The task at hand is to
help people develop the tools so that they can make their own connection with God. It
makes leaders of their followers, makes them independent - they no longer require an
intermediary to plead their case. This necessarily poses questions about power, authority
and responsibility that extend into how we arrange our organisations. I believe that the
early Christians were fully aware of these issues. Before Christianity became an organised
religion and was used as a political force, small communities with different forms of
expression co-existed. It wasn't about one, sanctioned way but about the true and valid
experience of each and every individual.
What then is an Esoteric Christian today?
I think the best summary runs something like this: An esoteric Christian is someone who
takes the teachings of Christ seriously. Not the word of the teaching, but the
implication. The teaching translates into attitude towards life. An esoteric Christian is
someone who seeks Christ in all creation, in all people. Someone who applies what has been
learnt in this process and accordingly changes the way he or she lives. Someone who not
only takes responsibilty for their actions but also dares to step out of the box, to try
new things, to become creators. Being an esoteric Christian is not a state of being but an
on-going process of ever deepening insights, an ever-clearer sense of how to fulfil this
life in this time and in this place. To sum up, it is not about the destination, it is
about the journey!