DocM wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 6:11am:Actually, the article about spiritual bypassing can apply to any form of spirituality which is used to bypass the substance and emotions of a real life situation. The author mostly applied the discussion to New Age or Eastern philosophies which stress that the ego is the illusory part of ourselves.
However, some conventional fundamentalists of the great religions (christianity, judaism, islam) make use of this quite nicely. A fundamentalist will say "the Bible tells me what to think/feel," and so there is no need to explore the painful emotion or feeling. For some there may be a comfort to be told what to think and feel since the source book is touted as the unalterable truth. But as the article points out, if we cloak ourselves in the pride of any spiritual philosophy and don't process and absorb the emotions, then we are likely to be disturbed and not progress overall. We've seen this happen on the board where unhappy people have responded to such discussions with platitudes from a biblical source without true discussion of the issues.
I do agree that we have to go over the issues ourselves, Alan, but I don't think that makes the individual person infallible. And I don't personally believe that the written texts are, themselves infallible. So yes, going within for the answer; facing the negative emotions, processing them and integrating them is the key rather than saying that you will ignore them because your religion or philosophy tells you what to think.
Food for thought.
M
I think you are quite correct in saying that all religions can be used to bypass emotions of yourself and of others that seem too painful or too counter-self-imageish to process. But do you think it is only religions that serve for this purpose? The more I think of it, the more I believe that many convicions and habits can be used to the same purpose. Èxample. I`m afraid, to take one common fear, of cancer. Now I could tell myself, consciously or subconsciously "If I live healthy and exercise a lot and never eat too much and think positive I will never get cancer." I see this line of thought quite a lot recently. This, ofc, is much easier than to go where this fear comes from: The fear of death, the fear of the unknown, the intuitive knowledge that this body is not invincible and will fail one day. Bypassing of this nature is also much easier than to face this kind of thing and try to find your way to live with the human reality without despairing.
Hm. The more I write the more I think that it`s important to say I don`t mean to be arrogant with this. It is very human to try and find a viable way to deal with your fears without having to go "the whole hog" and integrate and process them fully. But what I gather from the article you originally posted, Matthew, and what I have seen with suffering people, is that if you go the easy way in this, you will fall all the harder once pain that can not be bypassed comes along. For example, the death of a loved one, life-threatening illness or even an unwanted total change in your life.