ON RELIGION
1. Strictly speaking, religion is concerned
with absolutes, whether diabolic or divine.
There is a relative phase of religious development, as in
Christianity, but the anthropomorphic god, viz. Christ, is endowed with divine
attributes, becomes transcendent in His alleged conquest of death. Christians don't simply worship a man but a
man who became divine through His Ascension into Heaven, that is to say,
through attainment of the supra-atomic plane in pure spirit. This is perhaps a Protestant bias on Christ,
whereas a Catholic bias will often lay greater emphasis, by contrast, on His
stemming from the Father and, hence, link with the Mother. Either way, whether the stress be on alpha or omega, the relative is endowed with absolute
significance. But, for all that, the
Christian stage of religious evolution essentially corresponds to the relative,
and we may take it that both aspects of Christ's theological integrity have
been equally stressed whenever an evolutionary balance has obtained between the
Father and the Holy Spirit, but that this has not precluded a simultaneous
worship of the Father.
2. In religious affairs, we may distinguish
between worship of the Father and/or Christ and self-realization, as to some
extent taught by Christ but necessitating, at some point in evolutionary time,
a denial of the Father and wholly transcendental orientation rooted in the
impersonal cultivation of spirit for beatific ends, whether or not such ends
are formally acknowledged. Thus in an
extreme stage of human evolution, worship and self-realization become mutually
exclusive. The breaking of the link with
the Father presupposes a simultaneous denial, in a manner of speaking, of the
Son, since He is rooted in the alpha and thereby entitled to worship. However, that is precisely what a transcendental
stage of religious evolution can have no truck with.... I concede, though, that
worship can imply more than service.
Christ has been worshipped for his divine attributes, as, from a
Christian standpoint, the first 'man' to attain to transcendence. Thus the positive attitude to worship
presupposes homage, or admiration for a quality or achievement beyond one's own
powers. And yet even this style of
worship would be irrelevant to a society which had made self-realization the
foundation of its religious integrity, since worship (as implying prayer,
adulation, or devotion to an image, a book, hymn, etc.) can impede
self-realization to the extent that awareness is directed at something -
namely, the object of worship - outside itself,
and so functions as will, which is precisely what must be overcome if
self-awareness is to be cultivated to any significant spiritual extent.
3. If religion is primarily concerned with
absolutes, either in terms of worship of the alpha or, in its highest
manifestation, an aspiration towards the omega, we cannot discount the fact
that it is possible to worship, in a quasi-religious context, manifestations of
life which stem from the subatomic absolute in varying degrees of
materialism. Thus it is possible to
worship - as at various times men have in fact done - nature, animals, women,
and (last but not least), men or, at any rate, certain categories of men,
including avatars. Now my fundamental
contention here is that the lower the stage of human evolution the more likely
it is that men will worship the subatomic in one form or another, whereas as
human evolution attains to higher stages of advancement, so the focal-points of
worship correspondingly change, in consequence of which first nature, then
animals, then women, etc., become the principal focal-points of human
worship. Of course, they don't have to
change in a strictly logical order or within the compass of any given
civilization. There are civilizations
that specialize in one or other of these focal-points of quasi-worship - the
ancient Egyptian in animals, the ancient Greek in nature, the Roman Catholic
civilization of medieval Europe in women (the Blessed Virgin), with the
possibility of a shift from one level to another or, indeed, the simultaneous
combination, in varying degrees, of more than one of these natural objects of
worship, as in the case of the ancient Roman, with its compromise between
nature, animals, and women.
4. I do not wish to over-simplify, but there
are many people alive today, within the confines of the bourgeois/proletarian
West, who are essentially worshippers of nature, animals, and women, though
their mode of worship may be less sacramental and correspondingly more
unconscious than were the parallel modes of the ancients, with their pagan bias. Of the three focal-points listed above, I
would argue that the third is the most popular, because the least natural, and
I am prepared to see in coitus a sacrificial confirmation of a quasi-religious
attitude towards women. After all, a man
doesn't make love to a woman unless he finds something to admire in her! More usually this something is physical. Admittedly, it is possible
for a woman to worship a man, but more often than not a woman, as a creature
capable of self-consciousness, will worship herself - the attention she
lavishes on make-up, clothing, and hair being the visible embodiments of this
self-worship.
5. Of all modes of
natural worship, the highest is for man, who is the least natural of nature's
phenomena. The motivations for worship
may vary considerably with the individual concerned, but most worship of men
will have transcendent motivations, as when someone is admired because he is
clever or can box well or has just scaled a high mountain, etc. Institutionalized worship of a religious
figure, like Christ, signifies the apotheosis of male hero-worship, beyond
which it is impossible to go. Of all the
Christian faiths, it is Protestantism that best illustrates institutionalized
worship of man as God ... in the person of Christ. Roman Catholicism is more given, as already
noted, to upholding worship of the Virgin, a fact which accords with its
semi-pagan, grand-bourgeois, alpha-stemming integrity in sensation. Probably Eastern Orthodoxy is more biased, in
its relative fundamentalism, towards the Father.
6. Thus in this ultimate form of natural
worship it is homage rather than service that constitutes the basis, indeed the
essence, of worship. It is of course
possible to pay homage to beauty, and hence to women. Yet the actual worship of women usually takes
the form of service, as manifesting in propagation and the material support, by
a husband, for his wife and offspring.
Similarly, animals are more usually served than paid homage to. But man, except when service of a tyrant is at
stake, is more usually the focal-point of homage worship, and primarily on
account of what he signifies, what he has achieved or is capable of
achieving. Higher still than the homage
paid to a particular man for his achievements ... is the homage paid to the achievements
themselves, whatever their nature, and here worship becomes artificial.
7. The highest mode of artificial worship is
the homage paid to great art, and this whether the art in question be
pictorial, literary, musical, or sculptural, though a sort of hierarchical
distinction will obtain between each mode of fine art in a descending order, so
I contend, from painting to sculpture via music and literature. Also significant in our assessment of artistic
hierarchies will be the historical or epochal integrity of any given mode of
art, so that worship, say, of twentieth-century abstract painting will rank
higher than the corresponding worship of nineteenth-century romantic or
eighteenth-century classical or seventeenth-century baroque art. Nevertheless, when all's said and done, one
cannot go beyond the worship of fine art on worshipful terms; for homage paid
to the creative achievements of man is the ultimate homage, the raison
d'être of our commitment to and interest in art. Art doesn't fulfil itself for us until we
desire to pay it homage, having come to perceive its creative or symbolic
value. I don't regularly listen to music
I dislike, either because I cannot understand it or because I consider it of
inferior quality. I have to like
the music and, in regularly listening to it, I pay homage to its excellence,
since it represents an achievement worthy of admiration.
8. Thus regularly listening to certain kinds of
music or contemplating certain paintings or reading certain books or stroking
certain sculptures ... constitutes a quasi-religion, the essence of which is
worship of a remarkable artificial achievement.
Such worship, manifesting in homage, corresponds to the ultimate form of
worship and constitutes the final stage of worship-centred religious
development, a stage superior to each of the preceding naturalistic stages ...
from absolute service-worship of the Father (or some theocratic equivalent
thereof) to relative homage-worship of a particular man or group of men for
his/their sporting, creative, educational, or other achievements. I would say that, in the case of worship of a
particular football team, the homage paid in this relative context is divisible
between the individuals and their achievements, in consequence of which a
degree of service of the individuals, manifesting in the turnstile fee, enters
into one's worship. By contrast, the
ultimate stage of worship, as applying to fine art, implies the attainment to a
kind of homage absolutism which embraces only the achievement,
without simultaneous or accompanying reference to its creator. We are at leisure, in an admission-free
public gallery, to contemplate many fine paintings without having to pay
anything to their creators (or trustees) or, indeed, even think about them. So we can take it as a general rule that the
purer the worship of fine art, the less the artist, as an individual, will
enter into account. Worship thereupon
becomes predominantly absolute, albeit on grounds diametrically antithetical to
its earliest manifestation in service of the Father.
9. Needless to say, not everyone is given to
this highest mode or worship, a mode which appeals, as a rule, only to a small
percentage of humanity, and to them in varying degrees. The majority of people are given to the
service/homage relativity of worship of a football team or pop stars or film
stars or sportsmen generally. The
worship of women cannot be excluded from a reckoning of majority habits, though
women are gradually losing ground to the above-listed focal-points of popular
worship. Beneath them, however, comes
the worship, mainly from a service angle, of animals and nature, which nowadays
appeals only to a minority of people, albeit a minority at the opposite remove
from the admirers of fine art - a grand-bourgeois as opposed to a
petty-bourgeois minority who, from the evolutionary standpoint, constitute a
backward and generally primitive class of people. Yet not so backward or
primitive, for all that, as the even smaller minority who could be described as
genuine Father-worshippers, like Christian fundamentalists.
10. Considered from a class-evolutionary
standpoint, the evolution of worship from absolute to extreme relative stages
may be said to extend from aristocratic absolutism in Father-worship through
various relativistic bourgeois stages, beginning with an earlier and a later
grand-bourgeois phase (the earlier implying nature-worship and the later
animal-worship), progressing to a bourgeois stage-proper (as implying the
worship of women), and culminating in a petty-bourgeois stage also divisible
into an earlier and a later phase (as implying some kind of hero-worship in the
earlier phase and, by contrast, an almost absolute worship of fine art in the
later phase). The present century being,
despite its bourgeois/proletarian status, a largely petty-bourgeois age, it is
hardly surprising that worship has entered into extreme relativities of human
achievement, the earlier relativity biased towards the achievements of various
people without, however, allowing the individuals concerned to be eclipsed by
them, the later relativity more radically biased towards the achievements of
various, in the main, artists, who are largely, though not exclusively,
eclipsed by their works. It is here,
with the later petty-bourgeois relativity, that civilized worship ends. However, with the future development of
proletarian civilization, only self-realization will be upheld, as a return is
made, though on completely antithetical terms, to a religious absolutism - the
absolutism, one might say, of a direct aspiration towards omega divinity.