KnightoftheRose
Well-Known Member
Okay, this is a little weird, but I was reading for my college religion class a while ago a statement made concerning rituals. Rituals are described basically as special times in our life set aside for involvement with the Divine - whether as rituals as common as prayer before dinner or as something which occurs only once in our lives, like birthing rituals. Rituals are also performed during special, sacred times, like fasting Ramadan, if you're Muslim, or ceremonial activity during (correct me if I'm wrong) special phases of the moon, if you're a Neo-Pagan.
With that in mind, all cultures have rituals concerning that final special time in our lives, Death. Some kind of 'last words for the dead' seem universal (like the priest praying over the coffin); there is a kind of 'burial', which can be a literal burial, or a cremation, or whatever; and there is usually a period of mourning (Eastern religions hold various exceptions to this last rule). So, the point here is, we have ritualized death with various customs and traditions.
However, what I'm wondering is, is Death itself a ritual? Rituals exist in three states - kenosis and plerosis, with a liminal state in-between. In kenosis, one's spiritual vitality has dried out, and a distancing between once previous state and a new state is necessary to regain that vitality. Once one has distanced himself from the previous, 'empty' state, one proceeds towards renewal. In between these to states - spiritual emptiness and refilling - is the liminal state, the state in which one is empty and has not refilled yet. An example of how these stages of ritual work out can be seen in something as simple as Baptism. In certain Christian views, one exists in a state of spiritual emptiness before the Baptism, right before the actual ceremony, one exists in a transitional state - a liminal state. And after the Baptism, one exists in a state of rebirth and renewal.
With all this in mind, one can make out obvious parallels between the stages of ritual and the stages of Death. In death, one's life source has dried out, one's soul has fled the body, existing in a state of emptiness, of disconnection. Then there is the liminal state, the transition of the soul from earthly body into whatever afterlife (whether Heaven or Hell or Nirvana or Brahman or Whatever) awaits it. And there, wherever 'there' may be, one has returned to his spiritual center.
So, my question is, is death just a symbolic ritual phase between life and whatever afterlife exists? And if death is just a symbolic ritual, a transition, a phase, an illusion - what is life? If death is just an illusion created by transition, is there truly a distinct seperation between mortal life and eternal afterlife?
Anyways, I realize this is just pointless speculation (leaving us all wondering, "So what?"), but I think it does create interesting philosophical questions - like, if there is no seperation between mortal life and eternal afterlife, then is the sinner existing already in a state of hell, or the saint already in a state of heaven?...etc...
Anyways, I'm tired of writing . Peace, y'all...
With that in mind, all cultures have rituals concerning that final special time in our lives, Death. Some kind of 'last words for the dead' seem universal (like the priest praying over the coffin); there is a kind of 'burial', which can be a literal burial, or a cremation, or whatever; and there is usually a period of mourning (Eastern religions hold various exceptions to this last rule). So, the point here is, we have ritualized death with various customs and traditions.
However, what I'm wondering is, is Death itself a ritual? Rituals exist in three states - kenosis and plerosis, with a liminal state in-between. In kenosis, one's spiritual vitality has dried out, and a distancing between once previous state and a new state is necessary to regain that vitality. Once one has distanced himself from the previous, 'empty' state, one proceeds towards renewal. In between these to states - spiritual emptiness and refilling - is the liminal state, the state in which one is empty and has not refilled yet. An example of how these stages of ritual work out can be seen in something as simple as Baptism. In certain Christian views, one exists in a state of spiritual emptiness before the Baptism, right before the actual ceremony, one exists in a transitional state - a liminal state. And after the Baptism, one exists in a state of rebirth and renewal.
With all this in mind, one can make out obvious parallels between the stages of ritual and the stages of Death. In death, one's life source has dried out, one's soul has fled the body, existing in a state of emptiness, of disconnection. Then there is the liminal state, the transition of the soul from earthly body into whatever afterlife (whether Heaven or Hell or Nirvana or Brahman or Whatever) awaits it. And there, wherever 'there' may be, one has returned to his spiritual center.
So, my question is, is death just a symbolic ritual phase between life and whatever afterlife exists? And if death is just a symbolic ritual, a transition, a phase, an illusion - what is life? If death is just an illusion created by transition, is there truly a distinct seperation between mortal life and eternal afterlife?
Anyways, I realize this is just pointless speculation (leaving us all wondering, "So what?"), but I think it does create interesting philosophical questions - like, if there is no seperation between mortal life and eternal afterlife, then is the sinner existing already in a state of hell, or the saint already in a state of heaven?...etc...
Anyways, I'm tired of writing . Peace, y'all...