Ritualism and creeds have been overemphasized

Ritualism and creeds have been overemphasized.

Ritualism and creeds have been overemphasized, and I am Myself partly to blame, since at one point those were the most important thing in the world to Me.  I am hoping I can open their hearts to something new, without unduly disturbing their good and faithful practices.

 

 

“A drop of water.”

My friend’s experience was in a more impressive setting than the two experiences I remembered from years ago.  The first occurred when I was just a kid.  One of my chores was watering the lawn.  I had just finished running water in the shrubs and bent down to turn off the outdoor faucet.  Don’t know why I lingered for a moment, crouching down, looking at the tap but, as I did, a last drop of water slowly formed on the bottom edge.

I looked at that drop of water in a way I had never looked at anything before.  Saw it—how to describe it?—in its full presence, its suchness, its integrity as an independent existent in the community of being.  When I later read in Buber about seeing Nature as a Thou, this experience came to mind.  It was not as if the drop of water had a mind or soul or was looking back at me or anything like that.  But I no longer saw it as merely an it, merely an item in the inventory of the universe.  I saw the drop of water as, in a sense, a member of what Immanuel Kant calls the Kingdom of Ends—the community of all beings who should be respected as ends-in-themselves, not just means for the use of others.  This is, of course, language I now use.  I don’t know how I would have described the experience at the time.  I was just a kid, after all, and the experience did not seem worth telling.