Sunday, October 24, 2004

Jeff Sharlet: Our Magical President

Following in the footsteps of Ron Suskind's recent article Without a Doubt Sharlet examines Bush's faith as a New Age "power of belief":

An excerpt:

Believing, it seems, is more important to the President than the substance of his belief. Jesus Christ’s particular teachings -- well, those are good, too. But what really matters is that if you believe you can do something, you can.

What Suskind misses, and what Bush’s more orthodox Christian supporters seem to dodge, is that this is not Christian doctrine by any definition. It is, in fact, a key element of the broad, heterodox movement known as New Age religion.

A common aspect of many New Age schools of thought (though not all) is a gentle disdain for perceived reality. That's different from the fundamentalist aversion to worldliness; rather, this approach views the "real world" as that which is within the mind or heart or spirit of the believer. That idea is often dismissed as a modern bastardization of psychology, but many New Agers argue that their beliefs are actually ancient; and, despite the fact that the superficial characteristics are often of a recent vintage, there’s some truth to that assertion. New Age religions are, literally, reactionary, responses to what’s been called the disenchantment of the world. Another word for that process is the Enlightenment, with its claims of empirical accuracy. New Age movements attempt to revive -- or create anew --pre-Enlightenment ideas about magic, alchemy, ghosts, and whatever else practitioners can glean from a record for the most part expunged by institutional Christianity.


Our Magical President: How Bush goes beyond the Bible to create his own reality

2 comments:

Michael Hawkins said...

Excellent post, Thivai. I believe I'll link to it today. Suskind's "reality based community" cringes at "faith based" ideology, though I believe the two are not necessarily mutually-exclusive. Spiritual awareness is, of course, not the problem. It's extremism in either direction that produces a planet on the brink of annhilation.

Michael said...

I agree completely Michael, rationality was behind the organized genocides of the 20th century--what is the most efficient manner to deal with a troublesome population--extreme rationality has its very unique brand of horror that can easily compete with the fundamentalist's extremes.

Your idea of balance reminds me of my calls to practice rapprochment (sp? its french for bringing supposedly opposed ideas into interactive dialogue in order to create new meanings and demonstrate their common cause).

I think you would like the Here on Earth post below... thanks for reminding me of the spiritual aspects at your site--which then inspires me on my site--peace