Often times we emphasize the positive effects of spiritual experiences, the feelings of love, peace, and fulfillment. We seem to ignore the negative ones.
My first spiritual experience (or at least the first spiritual experience that I remember) made me cynical, overwhelmed with the futility of existence and the purposelessness of life. Not only did I feel so small and insignificant, God Himself seemed so small and insignificant as well, bound by laws greater than Himself.
It was a beautiful day on Zelph's Mound, (a place many of us knew nothing about), as a group of us 11 year-old boys hiked up its subtle slope. The night before, we were reading the Book of Mormon over the campfire, trying to discuss and apply it to our personal lives.
We were laughing and joking together as we hiked up the trail, unaware of where we were going and why. When we got to the top, our church leaders told us to be silent for a moment. In the silence, I became aware of the words of Mother Teresa that I would read years later.
"God is the friend of silence."
There was a peace in the silence, a silence you rarely find when you're a gabby 11 year-old from a Spanish-American family that would often talk over each other. At the dinner table, it was understood that the loudest person obviously had the most important thing to share.
In that moment of silence on Zelph's Mound surrounded by my 11 year-old comrades and our church leaders, a man came out from behind a tree on the small hill across from ours. He was dressed in garb from the 1800s, complete with suspenders and a wide-brimmed hat. He told us he was with Joseph Smith in Zion's Camp.
He said he was with them when they found the Native American burial ground that we were standing on and when Joseph Smith asked them to dig it up. (I would later question the ethics of such an act, but I'm sure it was considered disturbingly normal in that time period)
He told us about how he was present when Joseph Smith prophesied regarding the skeleton of a man they found buried there, saying it belonged to a Lamanite so righteous he turned white. The man dressed in 1800s garb bore his testimony to us of how he knew Joseph Smith's prophecy was true by the power of the Holy Spirit.
We left that hill in silence with a feeling as if God had descended and touched each of our hearts. I was the first to speak (of course) after what seemed like several minutes of hiking in silence. I wanted to discuss the many thoughts that were entering and overwhelming my mind.
(The Book of Mormon)
"But there is a law given, and a punishment affixed, and a repentance granted; which repentance, mercy claimeth; otherwise, justice claimeth the creature and executeth the law, and the law inflicteth the punishment; if not so, the works of justice would be destroyed, and God would cease to be God.”
(The Book of Mormon)
The thought that buzzed in my head like no other after that moment was the idea I was taught that even God had laws He needed to follow just to be God. There was something greater than Him, something without personality that governed even His existence.
That Law He had to follow was to me this alien, uncontrollable, All-Powerful, Cthulhu-like thing, where God was but a pawn, doing what he had to in order to avoid utter destruction. I couldn't wrap my head around the idea of free will being a real thing with such a cynical worldview taking over my thoughts, especially not as a child.
I would do what I had to do in order to experience happiness, because that's all a human being would ever want anyway (obviously), but there was only one path towards that happiness, (i.e. following "the Law"), so of course I had to follow it just like God had to follow the path He was on or experience misery. This was what the Law was to me.
For weeks, I pondered the purposelessness and inevitability of the Universe, of existence, of morality, of Godhood itself.
The words of Queen made so much sense to me in that time:
"Anyone can see nothing really matters."
Although I had many other spiritual experiences after this one in and out of Mormonism that would help me to be more invested in life and that would guide me towards a greater sense of fulfillment and purpose, this one for one reason or another left me with nothing but apathy for many weeks.
I enjoyed reading this. :) But it was the Queen quote that really made this amazing. I look forward to reading many more if these. . I always learn something interesting or enlightening from your posts.
ReplyDeleteThat was an awesome experience. Please, tell us what was Zelph's mound, and what was the significance of it for the leaders? Did everyone see and experience the same thing?
ReplyDeleteI can understand why you, as an 11 year old boy, felt overwhelmed. The profound effects of an experience like you had were more than your mind was able to cope with and gain from, as an more mature mind would have.
I have had dark spiritual experiences, and luckily I have been able to benefit from them. I will share some of them in future responses. Now, I would like to present some points to ponder. Take them. Leave them. Dispute them. It's up to you.
God has aligned himself with Truth. Some people say that there are no absolutes, but that is an absolute. Therefore, by its own premise, it is false. Many laws, which define the path of Truth, are freeing.
People are free to use meth, cocaine, heroine, etc., but their use often leads to a loss of freedom. The same is true of stepping off of the top of a skyscraper. You can choose to step off, but can't step back on, if you change your mind. Choices carry consequences with them. When considering a choice, we should consider the consequences not only to ourselves, but to those around us. Our families and friends, as well as society in general may also pay a cost for our choices. Put the effects of guilt aside and think about this with a clear mind.
If the choices lead to freedom, then the consequences are beneficial, whether those consequences are experienced immediately or occur further down the line in time. A choice, which leads to a loss of the ability to carry out future choices, binds us.
Agency, the ability to choose, is never lost. However, loss of the ability to carry out our choices often follows choosing to use, say, heroine. The choices leading to freedom allow us to choose and carry out those choices in the future.
To me it doesn't take a lot of thinking to decide which type of choice I will make. I don't want to be bound and unable to make and carry out my choices, however profound or trivial. I think that that is the way God follows. He is able to carry out his choices, unlike ours. We often find out that our choices were not based on all of the facts. He has all of the facts and can see their consequences. I wish I could, too.
I still struggle with which choice is best, and I'm glad that I have guidelines, eternal as well as mortal laws if you will, to help me make those choices. I have made less than progressive choices in the past, and lost my freedom, until I decided to change and found a way to free myself from the consequences of those choices. I choose to align myself with Truth as much and as often as I can. It just makes sense to me.