Just some thoughts ...
Somewhere down the line, someone made the assumption that esoteric knowledge within one given hermeneutic, immediately allows access to all esoteric knowledge in every given hermeneutic.
This is a dangerous supposition; superfically it is made by those who wish to be perceived as 'universal spokesmen on everything', but at a deeper level it indicates a failure to understand the true principle of esoterism, and the meaning of the term 'revelation'.
So what is 'esoteric' precisely?
Generally, it implies the 'interior knowledge' of a thing, something that does not disclose itself superficially, but in reality it cannot be quantified or qualified, because it is not an objective determination — much as people try and make it — it is a subjective measure. What is esoteric to me might be common sense to you, and vice versa.
My favourite example is the internal combustion engine. To me, and to most people, a mechanic qualifies as an esoterist in the domain of car engines. Part of the problem is that 'esoterica' has accrued a certain cachet, like 'mystic', and has become an object of desire, a bright cup, in its own right.
So we have Buddhist esoterism, Moslem esoterism, and so on. We even have sub-esoterisms of the different schools ... and yet someone decided that if one is a Buddhist, a daoist of Hebrew esoterist, then one 'naturally' has access to the esoterisms of every other tradition.
Why? On what grounds, precisely? A brilliant car mechanic does not assume to be a brain surgeon or a farmer ...
Again, because of the assumption that 'all truth is one' — Now this is true, at the level of Truth as such but as such Truth qualifies as a Transcendental and an Absolute — above and beyond the domain not only of appearances, but of manifestation. No apprehenable truth is in itself One — else he who knows it knows as much as God knows.
So to the human intellectus, not all truth is one, and nor is all revealed truth one, so there is a hierarchy among religions ... but this is simply too contentious to discuss ... rather one should acknowledge that the 'confessional horizons' of the various traditions differ, and each tradition is, in effect, a self-enclosed and self-sufficient world — an hermetically sealed environment — with its own spiritual ecology.
My contention then is that it is an error of assume that because one knows a lot about 'this', one automatically is an authority on 'that'.
The aspects common to all religions are, by that very fact exoteric, something can hardly be considered Christian esoterica if it is prevalent in Islam, Daoism, etc.,
But what happens is people collect all these bits of data, and present it as an esoteric key, as if because it is there in all religions, it has a profound and occult significance. What is missed is that people are people the world over, and all religions will therefore share certain commonalities because they have the same common audience.
My point is that if it is common, even if discreet, then it is not esoteric.
Likewise if one applies the esoterism of one religion to another, because of these given commonalities, one assumes that the same symbols and signifiers are subject to the same constraint ... which they are not ... and this is where meaningful esoterism comes into play ... and this is precisely where it is missed ... a Christian symbol carries an esoteric understanding that is common (its exoterism) and an esoterism that is unique ... but the modern esoterist says, 'that must mean 'X' because that's what it means here and here...' again an assumption, and in making such one misses the point completely.
So to be esoteric means to go deep into ... but today people assume it means knowing every alternative theory, not matter how far-fetched (a prime example of this is to tack the word 'gnostic' onto something).
Call it 'orthodox' and it's a dead duck. Its hierarchical, its authoritarian, and its untrue. It's doctrine and it's dogma. Call it gnostic or alternative or liberal and it's immediately a true, authentic, viable, different, individual, special ... most of all it is egoic and a glamour, in the true sense of the word.
Was it a native American who said 'walk a mile in another man's shoes' or is that an apocrypha? I know a Zen teacher who said 'you won't understand Zen until you do it' ... but to be a Christian? That's a doddle, all you've got to do is say it. And what do you have to do, exactly ... anything you like ...
Sorry if that offends anyone, but this is the esoteric thread ... no room for sentimentality ...
Thomas
Somewhere down the line, someone made the assumption that esoteric knowledge within one given hermeneutic, immediately allows access to all esoteric knowledge in every given hermeneutic.
This is a dangerous supposition; superfically it is made by those who wish to be perceived as 'universal spokesmen on everything', but at a deeper level it indicates a failure to understand the true principle of esoterism, and the meaning of the term 'revelation'.
So what is 'esoteric' precisely?
Generally, it implies the 'interior knowledge' of a thing, something that does not disclose itself superficially, but in reality it cannot be quantified or qualified, because it is not an objective determination — much as people try and make it — it is a subjective measure. What is esoteric to me might be common sense to you, and vice versa.
My favourite example is the internal combustion engine. To me, and to most people, a mechanic qualifies as an esoterist in the domain of car engines. Part of the problem is that 'esoterica' has accrued a certain cachet, like 'mystic', and has become an object of desire, a bright cup, in its own right.
So we have Buddhist esoterism, Moslem esoterism, and so on. We even have sub-esoterisms of the different schools ... and yet someone decided that if one is a Buddhist, a daoist of Hebrew esoterist, then one 'naturally' has access to the esoterisms of every other tradition.
Why? On what grounds, precisely? A brilliant car mechanic does not assume to be a brain surgeon or a farmer ...
Again, because of the assumption that 'all truth is one' — Now this is true, at the level of Truth as such but as such Truth qualifies as a Transcendental and an Absolute — above and beyond the domain not only of appearances, but of manifestation. No apprehenable truth is in itself One — else he who knows it knows as much as God knows.
So to the human intellectus, not all truth is one, and nor is all revealed truth one, so there is a hierarchy among religions ... but this is simply too contentious to discuss ... rather one should acknowledge that the 'confessional horizons' of the various traditions differ, and each tradition is, in effect, a self-enclosed and self-sufficient world — an hermetically sealed environment — with its own spiritual ecology.
My contention then is that it is an error of assume that because one knows a lot about 'this', one automatically is an authority on 'that'.
The aspects common to all religions are, by that very fact exoteric, something can hardly be considered Christian esoterica if it is prevalent in Islam, Daoism, etc.,
But what happens is people collect all these bits of data, and present it as an esoteric key, as if because it is there in all religions, it has a profound and occult significance. What is missed is that people are people the world over, and all religions will therefore share certain commonalities because they have the same common audience.
My point is that if it is common, even if discreet, then it is not esoteric.
Likewise if one applies the esoterism of one religion to another, because of these given commonalities, one assumes that the same symbols and signifiers are subject to the same constraint ... which they are not ... and this is where meaningful esoterism comes into play ... and this is precisely where it is missed ... a Christian symbol carries an esoteric understanding that is common (its exoterism) and an esoterism that is unique ... but the modern esoterist says, 'that must mean 'X' because that's what it means here and here...' again an assumption, and in making such one misses the point completely.
So to be esoteric means to go deep into ... but today people assume it means knowing every alternative theory, not matter how far-fetched (a prime example of this is to tack the word 'gnostic' onto something).
Call it 'orthodox' and it's a dead duck. Its hierarchical, its authoritarian, and its untrue. It's doctrine and it's dogma. Call it gnostic or alternative or liberal and it's immediately a true, authentic, viable, different, individual, special ... most of all it is egoic and a glamour, in the true sense of the word.
Was it a native American who said 'walk a mile in another man's shoes' or is that an apocrypha? I know a Zen teacher who said 'you won't understand Zen until you do it' ... but to be a Christian? That's a doddle, all you've got to do is say it. And what do you have to do, exactly ... anything you like ...
Sorry if that offends anyone, but this is the esoteric thread ... no room for sentimentality ...
Thomas